CIR Vs Phil. Global Communications, GR 167146, Oct. 31, 2006

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 4

CIR vs Phil. Global Communications, GR 167146, Oct.

31, 2006
Facts
respondent received a Preliminary Assessment Notice dated 13 April
1994 for deficiency income tax in the amount of P118,271,672.00
On the following day, 22 April 1994, respondent received a Formal
Assessment Notice with Assessment Notice No. 000688-80-7333, dated 14
April 1994, for deficiency income tax in the total amount
of P118,271,672.00.
Respondent,
through
its
counsel
Ponce Enrile Cayetano Reyes
and Manalastas Law Offices, filed a formal protest.
Respondent requested for the cancellation of the tax assessment, which
they alleged was invalid for lack of factual and legal basis.[4]
On 16 October 2002, more than eight years after the assessment was
presumably issued, the Ponce EnrileCayetano Reyes and Manalastas Law
Offices received from the CIR a Final Decision dated 8 October 2002
denying the respondents protest .
Respondent filed a Petition for Review with the CTA. After due notice and
hearing, the CTA rendered a Decision in favor of respondent on 9 June
2004.[6] The CTA ruled on the primary issue of prescription and found it
unnecessary to decide the issues on the validity and propriety of the
assessment. It decided that the protest letters filed by the respondent
cannot constitute a request for reinvestigation, hence, they cannot toll the
running of the prescriptive period to collect the assessed deficiency income
tax.
The assessment, in this case, was presumably issued on 14 April 1994 since
the respondent did not dispute the CIRs claim. Therefore, the BIR had
until 13 April 1997. However, as there was no Warrant of Distraint and/or
Levy served on the respondents nor any judicial proceedings initiated by the
BIR, the earliest attempt of the BIR to collect the tax due based on this
assessment was when it filed its Answer in CTA Case No. 6568 on 9 January
2003, which was several years beyond the three-year prescriptive
period. Thus, the CIR is now prescribed from collecting the assessed tax.

Issue: WON the CIR can still collect the alleged tax deficiency from respondent.

NO.

The law prescribed a period of three years from the date the return was actually
filed or from the last date prescribed by law for the filing of such return, whichever
came later, within which the BIR may assess a national internal revenue tax.

The assessment, in this case, was presumably issued on 14 April 1994 since the
respondent did not dispute the CIRs claim. Therefore, the BIR had until 13 April
1997. However, as there was no Warrant of Distraint and/or Levy served on the
respondents nor any judicial proceedings initiated by the BIR, the earliest attempt
of the BIR to collect the tax due based on this assessment was when it filed its
Answer in CTA Case No. 6568 on 9 January 2003, which was several years beyond
the three-year prescriptive period. Thus, the CIR is now prescribed from collecting
the assessed tax.

In the present case, the separate letters of protest dated 6 May 1994 and 23 May
1994 are requests for reconsideration. The CIRs allegation that there was a
request for reinvestigation is inconceivable since respondent consistently and
categorically refused to submit new evidence and cooperate in any reinvestigation
proceedings.

The distinction between a request for reconsideration and a request for


reinvestigation is significant. It bears repetition that a request for
reconsideration, unlike a request for reinvestigation, cannot suspend the
statute of limitations on the collection of an assessed tax. If both types of
protest can effectively interrupt the running of the statute of limitations, an
erroneous assessment may never prescribe. If the taxpayer fails to file a
protest,
then
the
erroneous
assessment
would
become
final
[29]
and unappealable.
On the other hand, if the taxpayer does file the protest
on a patently erroneous assessment, the statute of limitations would
automatically be suspended and the tax thereon may be collected long after
it was assessed. Meanwhile the interest on the deficiencies and the
surcharges continue to accumulate. And for an unrestricted number of
years, the taxpayers remain uncertain and are burdened with the costs of
preserving their books and records. This is the predicament that the law on
the statute of limitations seeks to prevent.
Note:

In a number of cases, this Court has also clarified that the statute of
limitations on the collection of taxes should benefit both the Government
and the taxpayers. In these cases, the Court further illustrated the harmful
effects that the delay in the assessment and collection of taxes inflicts upon
taxpayers.
In Republic of the Philippines v. Ablaza,[19] this Court emphatically
explained that the statute of limitations of actions for the collection of taxes
is justified by the need to protect law-abiding citizens from possible
harassment:
The law prescribing a limitation of actions for the collection of
the income tax is beneficial both to the Government and to its
citizens; to the Government because tax officers would be
obliged to act promptly in the making of assessment, and to
citizens because after the lapse of the period of prescription
citizens would have a feeling of security against unscrupulous
tax agents who will always find an excuse to inspect the books
of taxpayers, not to determine the latters real liability, but to
take advantage of every opportunity to molest, peaceful, lawabiding citizens. Without such legal defense taxpayers would
furthermore be under obligation to always keep their books and
keep them open for inspection subject to harassment by
unscrupulous tax agents. The law on prescription being a
remedial measure should be interpreted in a way conducive to
bringing about the beneficient purpose of affording protection to
the taxpayer within the contemplation of the Commission which
recommended the approval of the law.
And again in the recent case Bank of the Philippine Islands v. Commissioner
of Internal Revenue,[20] this Court, in confirming these earlier rulings,
pronounced that:

Though the statute of limitations on assessment and collection


of national internal revenue taxes benefits both the Government
and the taxpayer, it principally intends to afford protection to
the taxpayer against unreasonable investigation. The indefinite
extension of the period for assessment is unreasonable because
it deprives the said taxpayer of the assurance that he will no
longer be subjected to further investigation for taxes after the
expiration of a reasonable period of time.
Thus, in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. B.F. Goodrich,[21] this Court
affirmed that the law on prescription should be liberally construed in order
to protect taxpayers and that, as a corollary, the exceptions to the law on
prescription should be strictly construed.

The Tax Code of 1977, as amended, provides instances when the


running of the statute of limitations on the assessment and collection of
national internal revenue taxes could be suspended, even in the absence of
a waiver, under Section 271 thereof which reads:

You might also like