088-City Government of San Pablo v. Reyes, March 25, 1999
088-City Government of San Pablo v. Reyes, March 25, 1999
088-City Government of San Pablo v. Reyes, March 25, 1999
127708 1 of 7
GONZAGA-REYES, J.:
This is a petition under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court to review on a pure question of law the decision of the
Regional Trial Court (RTC) of San Pablo City, Branch 29 in Civil Case No. SP-4359(96), entitled "Manila Electric
Company vs. City of San Pablo, Laguna, City Treasurer of San Pablo Laguna, and the Sangguniang Panglunsod of
San Pablo City, Laguna." The RTC declared the imposition of a franchise tax under Section 2.09 Article D of
Ordinance No. 56 otherwise known as the Revenue Code of the City of San Pablo as ineffective and void insofar as
the respondent MERALCO is concerned for being violative of Act No. 3648, Republic Act No. 2340 and PD 551.
The RTC also granted MERALCO'S claim for refund of franchise taxes paid under protest.
The following antecedent facts are undisputed:
Act No. 3648 granted the Escudero Electric Service Company a legislative franchise to maintain and operate an
electric light and power system in the City of San Pablo and nearby municipalities. Section 10 of Act No. 3648
provides:
. . . In consideration of the franchise and rights hereby granted, the grantee shall pay unto the
municipal treasury of each municipality in which it is supplying electric current to the public under
this franchise, a tax equal to two percentum of the gross earnings from electric current sold or
supplied under this franchise in each said municipality. Said tax shall be due and payable quarterly
and shall be in lieu of any and all taxes of any kind nature or description levied, established or
collected by any authority whatsoever, municipal, provincial or insular, now or in the future, on its
poles, wires, insulator, switches, transformers, and structures, installations, conductors, and
accessories placed in and over and under all public property, including public streets and highways,
provincial roads, bridges and public squares, and on its franchise, rights. privileges, receipts,
revenues and profits from which taxes the grantee is hereby expressly exempted.
Escudero's franchise was transferred to the plaintiff (herein respondent) MERALCO under Republic Act No. 2340.
Presidential Decree No. 551 was enacted on September 11, 1974. Section 1 thereof provides the following:
Sec. 1. Any provision of law or local ordinance to the contrary notwithstanding, the franchise tax
payable by all grantees of franchise to generate, distribute and sell electric current for light, heat and
power shall be two percent (2%) of their gross receipts received from the sale of electric current and
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from transactions incident to the generation, distribution and sale of electric current.
Such franchise tax shall be payable to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue of his duly authorized
representative on or before the twentieth day of the month following the end of each calendar
quarter or month as may be provided in the respective franchise or pertinent municipal regulation
and shall, any provision of the Local Tax Code or any other law to the contrary notwithstanding, be
in lieu of all taxes and assessments of whatever nature imposed by any national or local authority on
earnings, receipts, income and privilege of generation, distribution and sale of electric current.
Republic Act No. 7160, otherwise known as the "Local Government Code of 1991" (hereinafter referred to as
LGC) took effect on January 1, 1992. The said Code authorizes the province/city to impose a tax on business
enjoying a franchise at a rate not exceeding fifty percent (50%) of one percent (1%) of the gross annual receipts for
the preceding calendar year realized within its jurisdiction.
On October 5, 1992, the Sangguniang Panglunsod of San Pablo City enacted Ordinance No. 56, otherwise known
as the Revenue Code of the City of San Pablo. The said Ordinance took effect on October 30, 1992. 1
Sec. 2.09, Article D of said Ordinance provides:
Sec. 2.09. Franchise Tax There is hereby imposed a tax on business enjoying a franchise, at a rate
of fifty percent (50%) of one percent (1%) of the cross annual receipts, which shall include both
cash sales and sales on account realized during the preceding calendar year within the city.
Pursuant to the above-quoted Section 2.09, the petitioner City Treasurer sent to private respondent a letter
demanding payment of the aforesaid franchise tax. From 1994 to 1996, private respondent paid "under protest" a
total amount of P1,857,711.67. 2
The private respondent subsequently filed this action before the Regional Trial Court to declare Ordinance No. 56
null and void insofar as it imposes the franchise tax upon private respondent MERALCO 3 and to claim for a
refund of the taxes paid.
The Court ruled in favor of MERALCO and upheld its argument that the LGC did not expressly or impliedly repeal
the tax exemption/incentive enjoyed by it under its charter The dispositive portion of the decision reads:
WHEREFORE, the imposition of a franchise tax under Sec. 2.09, Article D of Ordinance No. 56
otherwise known as the Revenue Code of the City of San Pablo, is declared ineffective and null and
void insofar as the plaintiff MERALCO is concerned for being of Republic Act. No. 2340, PD 551,
and Republic Act No. 7160 and defendants are ordered to refund to the plaintiff the amount of ONE
MILLION EIGHT HUNDRED FIFTY SEVEN THOUSAND SEVEN HUNDRED ELEVEN &
67/100 (P1,857,711.67) and such other amounts as may have been paid by the plaintiff under said
Revenue Ordinance No. 56 after the filling of the complaint. 4
SO ORDERED.
Its motion for records for reconsideration having been denied by the trial court. 5 the petitioners filed the instant
petition with this Court raising pure question of law based on the following grounds:
I. RESPONDENT JUDGE GRAVELY ERRED IN HOLDING THAT ACT NO.
3648, REPUBLIC ACT NO 2340 AND PRESIDENTIAL DECREE NO. 551, AS
AMENDED, INSOFAR AS THEY GRANT TAX INCENTIVES, PRIVILEGES
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exemptions or incentives granted to, or presently enjoyed by all persons, whether natural or
juridical, including government-owned or controlled corporations, except local water districts,
cooperatives duly registered under R.A. 6938, non- stock and non-profit hospitals and educational
institutions, are hereby withdrawn upon the effectivity of this Code.
Sec. 534 (f) Repealing Clause All general and special law, acts, city charters, decrees,
executive orders, proclamation and administrative regulations, or part or parts thereof which are
inconsistent with any of the provisions of this code are hereby repealed or modified accordingly.
Sec. 534 (f), the repealing clause of the LGC, provides that all general and special laws, act, city charters, decrees,
executive orders, proclamations and administrative regulations or parts thereof which are inconsistent with any of
the provisions of the Code are hereby repealed or modified accordingly.
This clause partakes of the nature of a general repealing clause. 7 It is certainly not an express repealing clause
because it fails to designate the specific act or acts identified by number or title, that are intended to be repealed. 8
Was there an implied repeal by Republic Act No. 7160 of the MERALCO franchise insofar as the latter imposes a
2% tax "in lieu of all taxes and assessments of whatever nature"?
We rule affirmatively.
We are mindful of the established rule that repeals by implication are not favored as laws are presumed to be
passed with deliberation and full knowledge of all laws existing on the subject. A general law cannot be construed
to have repealed a special law by mere implication unless the intent to repeal or alter is manifest 9 and it must be
convincingly demonstrated that the two laws are so clearly repugnant and patently inconsistent that they cannot co-
exist. 10
It is our view that petitions correctly rely on the provisions of Sections 137 and 193 of the LGC to support their
position that MERALCO`s tax exemption has been withdrawn. The explicit language of Section 137 which
authorizes the province to impose franchise tax "notwithstanding any exemption granted by any law or other
special law" is all-encompassing and clear. The franchise tax is imposable despite any exemption enjoyed under
special laws.
Sec. 193 buttresses the withdrawal of extant tax exemption privileges. By stating that unless otherwise provided in
this Code, tax exemptions or incentives granted to or presently enjoyed by all persons whether natural or juridical,
including government-owned or controlled corporations except 1) local water districts, 2) cooperatives duly
registered under R.A. 6938, (3) non-stock and non-profit hospitals and educational institutions, are withdrawn upon
the effectivity of this code, the obvious import is to limit the exemptions to the three enumerated entities. It is a
basic precept of statutory construction that the express mention of one person, thing, act, or consequence excludes
all others as expressed in the familiar maxim expressio untus est exclusio alterius. 11 In the absence of any
provision of the Code to the contrary, and we find no other provision in point, any existing tax exemption or
incentive enjoyed by MERALCO under existing law was clearly intended to be withdrawn.
Reading together Sections 137 and 193 of the LGC, we conclude that under the LGC the local government unit
may now impose a local tax at a rate not exceeding 50% of 1% of the gross annual receipts for the preceding
calendar year based on the incoming receipts realized within its territorial jurisdiction. The legislative purpose to
withdraw tax privileges enjoy under existing law or charter is clearly manifested by the language used in Sections
137 end 193 categorically withdrawing such exemption subject only to the exceptions enumerated. Since it would
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be not only tedious and impractical to attempt to enumerate all the existing statutes providing for special tax
exemptions or privileges, the LGC provided for an express, albeit general, withdrawal of such exemptions or
privileges. No more unequivocal language could have been used.
It is true that the phrase "in lieu of all taxes" found in special franchises has been held in several cases to exempt
the franchise holder from payment of tax on its corporate franchise imposed of the Internal Revenue Code, as the
charter is in the nature of a private contract and the exemption is part of the inducement for the acceptance of the
franchise, and that the imposition of another franchise tax by the local authority would constitute an impairment of
contract between the government and the corporation. 12 But these "magic words" contained in the phrase "shall be
in lieu of all taxes'' 13 have to give way to the peremptory language of the LGC specifically providing for the
withdrawal of such exemption privileges.
Accordingly in Mactan Cebu International Airport Authority vs.
Marcos. 14 this Court held that Section 193 of the LGC prescribes the general rule, viz., the tax exemption or
incentives, granted to or presently enjoyed by natural or juridical persons are withdrawn upon the effectivity of the
LGC except with respect to those entities expressly enumerated. In the same vein, We must hold that the express
withdrawal upon effectivity of the LGC of all exemptions except only as provided therein, can no longer be
invoked by Meralco to disclaim liability for the local tax.
Private respondents further argue that the "in lieu of" provision contained in PD 551, Act. No. 3648 and RA 2340
does not partake of the nature of an exemption, but is a "commutative tax". This contention was raised but was not
upheld in Cagayan Electric Power and Light Co. Inc. vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue 15 wherein the
Supreme Court stated:
. . . Congress could impair petitioner's legislative franchise by making it liable for income tax from
which heretofore it was exempted by virtue of the exemption provided for in section 3 of its
franchise . . .
. . . Republic Act No. 5431, in amending section 24 of the Tax Code by subjecting to income tax all
corporate tax payers not expressly exempted therein and in section 27 of the Code, had the effect of
withdrawing petitioner's exemption from income tax . . .
Private respondent's invocation of the non-impairment clause of the Constitution is accordingly unavailing. The
LGC was enacted in pursuance of the constitutional policy to ensure autonomy to local governments 16 and to
enable them to attain fullest development as self-reliant communities. 17 Thus in Mactan Cebu International
Airport Authority vs. Marcos, supra, this Court pointed out, in upholding the withdrawal of the real estate tax
exemption previously enjoyed by the Mactan Cebu International Airport Authority, as follows:
Note that as reproduced in Section 234 (a) the phrase ''and any government-owned or controlled
corporation so exempt by its charter" was excluded. The justification for this restricted exemption in
Section 234(a) seems obvious: to limit further tax exemption privileges, especially in light of the
general provision on withdrawal of tax exemption privileges in Section 193 and the special
provision on withdrawal of exemption from payment of real property taxes in the last paragraph of
Section 234. These policy considerations are consistent with the State policy to ensure autonomy to
local governments and the objective of the LGC that they enjoy genuine and meaningful local
autonomy to enable them to attain their fullest development as self-reliant communities and make
them effective partners in the attainment of national goals. The power to tax is the most effective
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instrument to raise needed revenues to finance and support myriad activities of local government
units for the delivery of basic services essential to the promotion of the general welfare and the
enhancement of peace, progress, and prosperity of the people. It may also be relevant to recall that
the original reasons for the withdrawal of tax exemption privileges granted to government-owned or
controlled corporations and all other units of government were that such privilege resulted in serious
tax base erosion and distortions in the tax treatment of similarly situated enterprises, and there was a
need for these entities to share in the requirements of development, fiscal or otherwise, by paying
the taxes and other charges due from them. 18
The power to tax is primarily vested in Congress. However, in our jurisdiction, it may be exercised by local
legislative bodies, no longer merely by virtue of a valid delegation as before, but pursuant to direct authority
conferred by Section 5, Article X of the Constitution. 20 Thus Article X, Section 5 of the Constitution reads:
Sec. 5 Each Local Government unit shall have the power to create its own sources of revenue and
to levy taxes, fees and charges subject to such guidelines and limitations as the Congress may
provide, consistent with the basic policy of local autonomy. Such taxes, fees and charges shall
accrue exclusively to the Local Governments.
The important legal effect of Section 5 is that henceforth, in interpreting statutory provision on municipal
fiscal powers, doubts will have to resolved in favor of municipal corporations. 21
There is further basis for tire conclusion that the non-impairment of contract clause cannot be invoked to uphold
Meralco's exemption from the local tax. Escudero Electric Co. was originally given the legislative franchise under
Act. 3648 to operate an electric light and power system in the City of San Pablo and nearby municipalities. The
term of the franchise under Act. No. 3648 is a period of fifty years from the Act's approval in 1929. The said law
provided that the franchise is granted upon the condition that it shall be subject to amendment, or repeal by the
Congress of the United States. 22 Under the 1935. 23 the 1973 24 and the 1987 25 Constitutions, no franchise or
right shall be granted except under the condition that it shall be subject to amendment, alteration or repeal by the
National Assembly when the public interest so requires. With or without the reservation clause, franchises are
subject to alterations through a reasonable exercise of the police power; they are also subject to alteration by the
power to tax, which like police power cannot be contracted away. 26
Finally, while the matter is not of controlling significance, the Court notes that whereas the original Escudero
franchise exempted the franchise holder from all taxes levied or collected "now or in the future" 27 this phrase is
noticeably omitted in the counterpart provision of P.D. 551; that said omission is intended not to foreclose future
taxes may reasonably be deduced by statutory construction.
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is GRANTED. The decision of the Regional Trial Court of San Pablo City,
appealed from is hereby reversed and set aside and the complaint of MERALCO is hereby DISMISSED.
No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
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