CIR v. Mirant

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 11

SECOND DIVISION

[G.R. No. 172129. September 12, 2008.]

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE , petitioner, vs . MIRANT


PAGBILAO CORPORATION (Formerly SOUTHERN ENERGY QUEZON,
INC.) ,respondent.

DECISION

VELASCO, JR ., J : p

Before us is a Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 assailing and


seeking to set aside the Decision 1 dated December 22, 2005 of the Court of Appeals
(CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 78280 which modi ed the March 18, 2003 Decision 2 of the
Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) in CTA Case No. 6133 entitled Mirant Pagbilao Corporation
(Formerly Southern Energy Quezon, Inc.) v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue and
ordered the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to refund or issue a tax credit certi cate
(TCC) in favor of respondent Mirant Pagbilao Corporation (MPC) in the amount
representing its unutilized input value added tax (VAT) for the second quarter of 1998.
Also assailed is the CA's Resolution 3 of March 31, 2006 denying petitioner's motion for
reconsideration.
The Facts
MPC, formerly Southern Energy Quezon, Inc., and also formerly known as
Hopewell (Phil.) Corporation, is a domestic rm engaged in the generation of power
which it sells to the National Power Corporation (NPC). For the construction of the
electrical and mechanical equipment portion of its Pagbilao, Quezon plant, which
appears to have been undertaken from 1993 to 1996, MPC secured the services of
Mitsubishi Corporation (Mitsubishi) of Japan.
Under Section 13 4 of Republic Act No. (R.A.) 6395, the NPC's revised charter,
NPC is exempt from all taxes. In Maceda v. Macaraig , 5 the Court construed the
exemption as covering both direct and indirect taxes. EAaHTI

In the light of the NPC's tax exempt status, MPC, on the belief that its sale of
power generation services to NPC is, pursuant to Sec. 108 (B) (3) of the Tax Code, 6
zero-rated for VAT purposes, led on December 1, 1997 with Revenue District Of ce
(RDO) No. 60 in Lucena City an Application for Effective Zero Rating. The application
covered the construction and operation of its Pagbilao power station under a Build,
Operate, and Transfer scheme.
Not getting any response from the BIR district of ce, MPC re led its application
in the form of a "request for ruling" with the VAT Review Committee at the BIR national
of ce on January 28, 1999. On May 13, 1999, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue
issued VAT Ruling No. 052-99, stating that "the supply of electricity by Hopewell Phil. to
the NPC, shall be subject to the zero percent (0%) VAT, pursuant to Section 108 (B) (3)
of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997". TAcSaC

It must be noted at this juncture that consistent with its belief to be zero-rated,
MPC opted not to pay the VAT component of the progress billings from Mitsubishi for
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com
the period covering April 1993 to September 1996 for the E & M Equipment Erection
Portion of MPC's contract with Mitsubishi. This prompted Mitsubishi to advance the
VAT component as this serves as its output VAT which is essential for the
determination of its VAT payment. Apparently, it was only on April 14, 1998 that MPC
paid Mitsubishi the VAT component for the progress billings from April 1993 to
September 1996, and for which Mitsubishi issued Of cial Receipt (OR) No. 0189 in the
aggregate amount of PhP135,993,570.
On August 25, 1998, MPC, while awaiting approval of its application aforestated,
led its quarterly VAT return for the second quarter of 1998 where it re ected an input
VAT of PhP148,003,047.62, which included PhP135,993,570 supported by OR No.
0189. Pursuant to the procedure prescribed in Revenue Regulations No. 7-95, MPC led
on December 20, 1999 an administrative claim for refund of unutilized input VAT in the
amount of PhP148,003,047.62. IcDESA

Since the BIR Commissioner failed to act on its claim for refund and obviously to
forestall the running of the two-year prescriptive period under Sec. 229 of the National
Internal Revenue Code (NIRC), MPC went to the CTA via a petition for review, docketed
as CTA Case No. 6133.
Answering the petition, the BIR Commissioner, citing Kumagai-Gumi Co. Ltd. v.
CIR, 7 asserted that MPC's claim for refund cannot be granted for this main reason:
MPC's sale of electricity to NPC is not zero-rated for its failure to secure an approved
application for zero-rating.
Before the CTA, among the issues stipulated by the parties for resolution were, in
gist, the following:
1. Whether or not [MPC] has unapplied or unutilized creditable input VAT
for the 2nd quarter of 1998 attributable to zero-rated sales to NPC which are
proper subject for refund pursuant to relevant provisions of the NIRC;
2. Whether the creditable input VAT of MPC for said period, if any, is
substantiated by documents; and
3. Whether the unutilized creditable input VAT for said quarter, if any, was
applied against any of the VAT output tax of MPC in the subsequent quarter. HaTISE

To provide support to the CTA in verifying and analyzing documents and gures
and entries contained therein, the Sycip Gorres & Velayo (SGV), an independent auditing
firm, was commissioned.
The Ruling of the CTA
On the basis of its af rmative resolution of the rst issue, the CTA, by its
Decision dated March 18, 2003, granted MPC's claim for input VAT refund or credit, but
only for the amount of PhP10,766,939.48. The fallo of the CTA's decision reads:
In view of all the foregoing, the instant petition is PARTIALLY GRANTED.
Accordingly, respondent is hereby ORDERED to REFUND or in the alternative,
ISSUE A TAX CREDIT CERTIFICATE in favor of the petitioner its unutilized input
VAT payments directly attributable to its effectively zero-rated sales for the
second quarter of 1998 in the reduced amount of P10,766,939.48, computed as
follows: EAcTDH

Claimed Input VAT P148,003,047.62


Less: Disallowances
As summarized by SGV & Co. in its initial report (Exh.
a)
P)
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com
I. Input Taxes on Purchases of Services:
1. Supported by documents
other than VAT Ors P10,629.46
2. Supported by photocopied VAT OR 879.09
II. Input Taxes on Purchases of Goods:
1. Supported by documents other than
VAT invoices 165,795.70
2. Supported by Invoices with TIN only 1,781.82
3. Supported by photocopied VAT
invoices 3,153.62
III. Input Taxes on Importation of Goods:
1. Supported by photocopied documents
[IEDs and/or Bureau of Customs
(BOC) Ors] 716,250.00

2. Supported by broker's computations 91,601.00 990,090.69
========
b) Input taxes without supporting documents as
summarized in Annex A of SGV & Co.'s
supplementary report (CTA records, page 134) 252,447.45
c) Claimed input taxes on purchases of services from
Mitsubishi Corp. for being substantiated by dubious
135,996,570.00 8
OR

Refundable Input P10,766,939.48
==========
SO ORDERED. 9
Explaining the disallowance of over PhP137 million claimed input VAT, the CTA
stated that most of MPC's purchases upon which it anchored its claims for refund or
tax credit have not been amply substantiated by pertinent documents, such as but not
limited to VAT ORs, invoices, and other supporting documents. Wrote the CTA: IaCHTS

We agree with the above SGV ndings that out of the remaining taxes of
P136,246,017.45, the amount of P252,477.45 was not supported by any
document and should therefore be outrightly disallowed.
As to the claimed input tax of P135,993,570.00 (P136,246,017.45 less
P252,477.45 ) on purchases of services from Mitsubishi Corporation, Japan, the
same is found to be of doubtful veracity. While it is true that said amount is
substantiated by a VAT of cial receipt with Serial No. 0189 dated April 14,
1998 . . ., it must be observed, however, that said VAT allegedly paid pertains to
the services which were rendered for the period 1993 to 1996. . . .acSECT

The Ruling of the CA


Aggrieved, MPC appealed the CTA's Decision to the CA via a petition for review
under Rule 43, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 78280. On December 22, 2005, the CA
rendered its assailed decision modifying that of the CTA decision by granting most of
MPC's claims for tax refund or credit. And in a Resolution of March 31, 2006, the CA
denied the BIR Commissioner's motion for reconsideration. The decretal portion of the
CA decision reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the instant petition is GRANTED. The
assailed Decision of the Court of Tax Appeals dated March 18, 2003 is hereby
MODIFIED. Accordingly, respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue is
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com
ordered to refund or issue a tax credit certi cate in favor of petitioner Mirant
Pagbilao Corporation its unutilized input VAT payments directly attributable to
its effectively zero-rated sales for the second quarter of 1998 in the total
amount of P146,760,509.48.
SO ORDERED. 1 0
The CA agreed with the CTA on MPC's entitlement to (1) a zero-rating for VAT
purposes for its sales and services to tax-exempt NPC; and (2) a refund or tax credit for
its unutilized input VAT for the second quarter of 1998. Their disagreement, however,
centered on the issue of proper documentation, particularly the evidentiary value of OR
No. 0189.
The CA upheld the disallowance of PhP1,242,538.14 representing zero-rated
input VAT claims supported only by photocopies of VAT OR/Invoice, documents other
than VAT Invoice/OR, and mere broker's computations. But the CA allowed MPC's
refund claim of PhP135,993,570 representing input VAT payments for purchases of
goods and/or services from Mitsubishi supported by OR No. 0189. The appellate court
ratiocinated that the CTA erred in disallowing said claim since the OR from Mitsubishi
was the best evidence for the payment of input VAT by MPC to Mitsubishi as required
under Sec. 110 (A) (1) (b) of the NIRC. The CA ruled that the legal requirement of a VAT
Invoice/OR to substantiate creditable input VAT was complied with through OR No.
0189 which must be viewed as conclusive proof of the payment of input VAT. To the
CA, OR No. 0189 represented an undisputable acknowledgment and receipt by
Mitsubishi of the input VAT payment of MPC. SEHTAC

The CA brushed aside the CTA's ruling and disquisition casting doubt on the
veracity and genuineness of the Mitsubishi-issued OR No. 0189. It reasoned that the
issuance date of the said receipt, April 14, 1998, must be taken conclusively to
represent the input VAT payments made by MPC to Mitsubishi as MPC had no real
control on the issuance of the OR. The CA held that the use of a different exchange rate
re ected in the OR is of no consequence as what the OR undeniably attests and
acknowledges was Mitsubishi's receipt of MPC's input VAT payment.
The Issue
Hence, the instant petition on the sole issue of "whether or not respondent [MPC]
is entitled to the refund of its input VAT payments made from 1993 to 1996 amounting
to [PhP]146,760,509.48". 1 1 HASTCa

The Court's Ruling


As a preliminary matter, it should be stressed that the BIR Commissioner, while
making reference to the gure PhP146,760,509.48, joins the CA and the CTA on their
disposition on the propriety of the refund of or the issuance of a TCC for the amount of
PhP10,766,939.48. In ne, the BIR Commissioner trains his sight and focuses his
arguments on the core issue of whether or not MPC is entitled to a refund for
PhP135,993,570 (PhP146,760,509.48 - PhP10,766,939.48 = PhP135,993,570) it
allegedly paid as creditable input VAT for services and goods purchased from
Mitsubishi during the 1993 to 1996 stretch.
The divergent factual ndings and rulings of the CTA and CA impel us to evaluate
the evidence adduced below, particularly the April 14, 1998 OR 0189 in the amount of
PhP135,996,570 [for US$5,190,000 at US$1: PhP26.203 rate of exchange]. Verily, a
claim for tax refund may be based on a statute granting tax exemption, or, as
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Fortune Tobacco Corporation 1 2 would have it, the
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com
result of legislative grace. In such case, the claim is to be construed strictissimi juris
against the taxpayer, 1 3 meaning that the claim cannot be made to rest on vague
inference. Where the rule of strict interpretation against the taxpayer is applicable as
the claim for refund partakes of the nature of an exemption, the claimant must show
that he clearly falls under the exempting statute. On the other hand, a tax refund may be,
as usually it is, predicated on tax refund provisions allowing a refund of erroneous or
excess payment of tax. The return of what was erroneously paid is founded on the
principle of solutio indebiti, a basic postulate that no one should unjustly enrich himself
at the expense of another. The caveat against unjust enrichment covers the
government. 1 4 And as decisional law teaches, a claim for tax refund proper, as here,
necessitates only the preponderance-of-evidence threshold like in any ordinary civil
case. 1 5
We apply the foregoing elementary principles in our evaluation on whether OR
0189, in the backdrop of the factual antecedents surrounding its issuance, suf ciently
proves the alleged unutilized input VAT claimed by MPC.
The Court can review issues of fact where there are divergent findings by the
trial and appellate courts
As a matter of sound practice, the Court refrains from reviewing the factual
determinations of the CA or reevaluate the evidence upon which its decision is founded.
One exception to this rule is when the CA and the trial court diametrically differ in their
ndings, 1 6 as here. In such a case, it is incumbent upon the Court to review and
determine if the CA might have overlooked, misunderstood, or misinterpreted certain
facts or circumstances of weight, which, if properly considered, would justify a different
conclusion. 1 7 In the instant case, the CTA, unlike the CA, doubted the veracity of OR No.
0189 and did not appreciate the same to support MPC's claim for tax refund or credit.
Petitioner BIR Commissioner, echoing the CTA's stand, argues against the
suf ciency of OR No. 0189 to prove unutilized input VAT payment by MPC. He states in
this regard that the BIR can require additional evidence to prove and ascertain payment
of creditable input VAT, or that the claim for refund or tax credit was led within the
prescriptive period, or had not previously been refunded to the taxpayer.
To bolster his position on the dubious character of OR No. 0189, or its
insuf ciency to prove input VAT payment by MPC, petitioner proffers the following
arguments:
(1) The input tax covered by OR No. 0189 pertains to purchases by MPC from
Mitsubishi covering the period from 1993 to 1996; however, MPC's claim for tax refund
or credit was led on December 20, 1999, clearly way beyond the two-year prescriptive
period set in Sec. 112 of the NIRC;
(2) MPC failed to explain why OR No. 0189 was issued by Mitsubishi (Manila)
when the invoices which the VAT were originally billed came from the Mitsubishi's head
office in Japan;
(3) The exchange rate used in OR No. 0189 was pegged at PhP26.203: USD1 or
the exchange rate prevailing in 1993 to 1996, when, on April 14, 1998, the date OR No.
0189 was issued, the exchange rate was already PhP38.01 to a US dollar;
(4) OR No. 0189 does not show or include payment of accrued interest which
Mitsubishi was charging and demanded from MPC for having advanced a considerable
amount of VAT. The demand, per records, is embodied in the May 12, 1995 letter of
Mitsubishi to MPC; IHCSTE

CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com


(5) MPC failed to present to the CTA its VAT returns for the second and third
quarters of 1995, when the bulk of the VAT payment covered by OR No. 0189
speci cally PhP109,329,135.17 of the total amount of PhP135,993,570 was billed by
Mitsubishi, when such return is necessary to ascertain that the total amount covered by
the receipt or a large portion thereof was not previously refunded or credited; and
(6) No other documents proving said input VAT payment were presented except
OR No. 0189 which, considering the fact that OR No. 0188 was likewise issued by
Mitsubishi and presented before the CTA but admittedly for payments made by MPC
on progress billings covering service purchases from 1993 to 1996, does not clearly
show if such input VAT payment was also paid for the period 1993 to 1996 and would
be beyond the two-year prescriptive period. aIAEcD

The petition is partly meritorious.


Belated payment by MPC of its obligation for creditable input VAT
As no less found by the CTA, citing the SGV's report, the payments covered by OR
No. 0189 were for goods and service purchases made by MPC through the progress
billings from Mitsubishi for the period covering April 1993 to September 1996 for the
E & M Equipment Erection Portion of MPC's contract with Mitsubishi. 1 8 It is likewise
undisputed that said payments did not include payments for the creditable input VAT of
MPC. This fact is shown by the May 12, 1995 letter 1 9 from Mitsubishi where, as earlier
indicated, it apprised MPC of the advances Mitsubishi made for the VAT payments, i.e.,
MPC's creditable input VAT, and for which it was holding MPC accountable for interest
therefor. HDITCS

In net effect, MPC did not, for the VATable MPC-Mitsubishi 1993 to 1996
transactions adverted to, immediately pay the corresponding input VAT. OR No. 0189
issued on April 14, 1998 clearly re ects the belated payment of input VAT
corresponding to the payment of the progress billings from Mitsubishi for the period
covering April 7, 1993 to September 6, 1996. SGV found that OR No. 0189 in the
amount of PhP135,993,570 (USD5,190,000) was duly supported by bank statement
evidencing payment to Mitsubishi (Japan). 2 0 Undoubtedly, OR No. 0189 proves
payment by MPC of its creditable input VAT relative to its purchases from Mitsubishi.
OR No. 0189 by itself sufficiently proves payment of VAT
The CA, citing Sec. 110 (A) (1) (B) of the NIRC, held that OR No. 0189 constituted
suf cient proof of payment of creditable input VAT for the progress billings from
Mitsubishi for the period covering April 7, 1993 to September 6, 1996. Sec. 110 (A) (1)
(B) of the NIRC pertinently provides:
Section 110 . Tax Credits.
A. Creditable Input Tax.
(1) Any input tax evidenced by a VAT invoice or of cial receipt
issued in accordance with Section 113 hereof on the following transactions
shall be creditable against the output tax:
(a) Purchase or importation of goods:
xxx xxx xxx

(b) Purchase of services on which a value-added tax has been


actually paid . (Emphasis ours.)
Without necessarily saying that the BIR is precluded from requiring additional
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com
evidence to prove that input tax had indeed paid or, in ne, that the taxpayer is indeed
entitled to a tax refund or credit for input VAT, we agree with the CA's above
disposition. As the Court distinctly notes, the law considers a duly-executed VAT
invoice or OR referred to in the above provision as suf cient evidence to support a
claim for input tax credit. And any doubt as to what OR No. 0189 was for or tended to
prove should reasonably be put to rest by the SGV report on which the CTA notably
placed much reliance. The SGV report stated that "[OR] No. 0189 dated April 14, 1998
is for the payment of the VAT on the progress billings" from Mitsubishi Japan "for the
period April 7, 1993 to September 6, 1996 for the E & M Equipment Erection Portion of
the Company's contract with Mitsubishi Corporation (Japan)". 2 1 ScEaAD

VAT presumably paid on April 14, 1998


While available records do not clearly indicate when MPC actually paid the
creditable input VAT amounting to PhP135,993,570 (USD5,190,000) for the aforesaid
1993 to 1996 service purchases, the presumption is that payment was made on the
date appearing on OR No. 0189, i.e., April 14, 1998. In fact, said creditable input VAT
was reflected in MPC's VAT return for the second quarter of 1998.
The aforementioned May 12, 1995 letter from Mitsubishi to MPC provides
collaborating proof of the belated payment of the creditable input VAT angle. To
reiterate, Mitsubishi, via said letter, apprised MPC of the VAT component of the service
purchases MPC made and reminded MPC that Mitsubishi had advanced VAT payments
to which Mitsubishi was entitled and from which it was demanding interest payment.
Given the scenario depicted in said letter, it is understandable why Mitsubishi, in its
effort to recover the amount it advanced, used the PhP26.203: USD 1 exchange formula
in OR No. 0189 for USD5,190,000.
No showing of interest payment not fatal to claim for refund
Contrary to petitioner's posture, the matter of nonpayment by MPC of the
interests demanded by Mitsubishi is not an argument against the fact of payment by
MPC of its creditable input VAT or of the authenticity or genuineness of OR No. 0189;
for at the end of the day, the matter of interest payment was between Mitsubishi and
MPC and may very well be covered by another receipt. But the more important
consideration is the fact that MPC, as con rmed by the SGV, paid its obligation to
Mitsubishi, and the latter issued to MPC OR No. 0189, for the VAT component of its
1993 to 1996 service purchases.
The next question is, whether or not MPC is entitled to a refund or a TCC for the
alleged unutilized input VAT of PhP135,993,570 covered by OR No. 0189 which
sufficiently proves payment of the input VAT. DIEcHa

We answer the query in the negative.


Claim for refund or tax credit filed out of time
The claim for refund or tax credit for the creditable input VAT payment made by
MPC embodied in OR No. 0189 was led beyond the period provided by law for such
claim. Sec. 112 (A) of the NIRC pertinently reads:
(A) Zero-rated or Effectively Zero-rated Sales. Any VAT-registered
person, whose sales are zero-rated or effectively zero-rated may, within two (2)
years after the close of the taxable quarter when the sales were made ,
apply for the issuance of a tax credit certi cate or refund of
creditable input tax due or paid attributable to such sales , except
transitional input tax, to the extent that such input tax has not been applied
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com
against output tax: . . . . (Emphasis ours.)
The above proviso clearly provides in no uncertain terms that unutilized input
VAT payments not otherwise used for any internal revenue tax due the taxpayer must
be claimed within two years reckoned from the close of the taxable quarter when
the relevant sales were made pertaining to the input VAT regardless of
whether said tax was paid or not . As the CA aptly puts it, albeit it erroneously
applied the aforequoted Sec. 112 (A), "[P]rescriptive period commences from the close
of the taxable quarter when the sales were made and not from the time the input VAT
was paid nor from the time the of cial receipt was issued". 2 2 Thus, when a zero-rated
VAT taxpayer pays its input VAT a year after the pertinent transaction, said taxpayer
only has a year to le a claim for refund or tax credit of the unutilized creditable input
VAT. The reckoning frame would always be the end of the quarter when the pertinent
sales or transaction was made, regardless when the input VAT was paid. Be that as it
may, and given that the last creditable input VAT due for the period covering the
progress billing of September 6, 1996 is the third quarter of 1996 ending on September
30, 1996, any claim for unutilized creditable input VAT refund or tax credit for said
quarter prescribed two years after September 30, 1996 or, to be precise, on September
30, 1998. Consequently, MPC's claim for refund or tax credit led on December 10,
1999 had already prescribed.
Reckoning for prescriptive period under Secs. 204 (C) and 229 of the NIRC
inapplicable
To be sure, MPC cannot avail itself of the provisions of either Sec. 204 (C) or 229
of the NIRC which, for the purpose of refund, prescribes a different starting point for
the two-year prescriptive limit for the ling of a claim therefor. Secs. 204 (C) and 229
respectively provide: CSDAIa

Sec. 204. Authority of the Commissioner to Compromise, Abate and


Refund or Credit Taxes. The Commissioner may
xxx xxx xxx
(c) Credit or refund taxes erroneously or illegally received or penalties
imposed without authority, refund the value of internal revenue stamps when
they are returned in good condition by the purchaser, and, in his discretion,
redeem or change unused stamps that have been rendered un t for use and
refund their value upon proof of destruction. No credit or refund of taxes or
penalties shall be allowed unless the taxpayer les in writing with the
Commissioner a claim for credit or refund within two (2) years after
the payment of the tax or penalty : Provided, however, That a return led
showing an overpayment shall be considered as a written claim for credit or
refund.
xxx xxx xxx
Sec. 229. Recovery of Tax Erroneously or Illegally Collected. No suit or
proceeding shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any national
internal revenue tax hereafter alleged to have been erroneously or illegally
assessed or collected, or of any penalty claimed to have been collected without
authority, of any sum alleged to have been excessively or in any manner
wrongfully collected without authority, or of any sum alleged to have been
excessively or in any manner wrongfully collected, until a claim for refund or
credit has been duly led with the Commissioner; but such suit or proceeding
may be maintained, whether or not such tax, penalty, or sum has been paid
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com
under protest or duress.
In any case, no such suit or proceeding shall be led after the
expiration of two (2) years from the date of payment of the tax or
penalty regardless of any supervening cause that may arise after payment:
Provided, however, That the Commissioner may, even without a written claim
therefor, refund or credit any tax, where on the face of the return upon which
payment was made, such payment appears clearly to have been erroneously
paid. (Emphasis ours.) IECAaD

Notably, the above provisions also set a two-year prescriptive period, reckoned
from date of payment of the tax or penalty, for the ling of a claim of refund or tax
credit. Notably too, both provisions apply only to instances of erroneous payment or
illegal collection of internal revenue taxes.
MPC's creditable input VAT not erroneously paid
For perspective, under Sec. 105 of the NIRC, creditable input VAT is an indirect
tax which can be shifted or passed on to the buyer, transferee, or lessee of the goods,
properties, or services of the taxpayer. The fact that the subsequent sale or transaction
involves a wholly-tax exempt client, resulting in a zero-rated or effectively zero-rated
transaction, does not, standing alone, deprive the taxpayer of its right to a refund for
any unutilized creditable input VAT, albeit the erroneous, illegal, or wrongful payment
angle does not enter the equation.
I n Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Seagate Technology (Philippines) , the
Court explained the nature of the VAT and the entitlement to tax refund or credit of a
zero-rated taxpayer:
Viewed broadly, the VAT is a uniform tax . . . levied on every importation
of goods, whether or not in the course of trade or business, or imposed on each
sale, barter, exchange or lease of goods or properties or on each rendition of
services in the course of trade or business as they pass along the production
and distribution chain, the tax being limited only to the value added to such
goods, properties or services by the seller, transferor or lessor. It is an indirect
tax that may be shifted or passed on to the buyer, transferee or lessee of the
goods, properties or services. As such, it should be understood not in the context
of the person or entity that is primarily, directly and legally liable for its payment,
but in terms of its nature as a tax on consumption. In either case, though, the
same conclusion is arrived at. DCaEAS

The law that originally imposed the VAT in the country, as well as the
subsequent amendments of that law, has been drawn from the tax credit
method. Such method adopted the mechanics and self-enforcement features of
the VAT as rst implemented and practiced in Europe . . . . Under the present
method that relies on invoices, an entity can credit against or subtract from the
VAT charged on its sales or outputs the VAT paid on its purchases, inputs and
imports.
If at the end of a taxable quarter the output taxes charged by a seller are
equal to the input taxes passed on by the suppliers, no payment is required. It is
when the output taxes exceed the input taxes that the excess has to be paid. If,
however, the input taxes exceed the output taxes, the excess shall be carried
over to the succeeding quarter or quarters. Should the input taxes result from
zero-rated or effectively zero-rated transactions or from the acquisition of
capital goods, any excess over the output taxes shall instead be refunded to the
taxpayer or credited against other internal revenue taxes. AaSHED

CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com


xxx xxx xxx
Zero-rated transactions generally refer to the export sale of goods and
supply of services. The tax rate is set at zero . When applied to the tax base,
such rate obviously results in no tax chargeable against the purchaser. The
seller of such transactions charges no output tax, but can claim a
refund of or a tax credit certi cate for the VAT previously charged by
suppliers . 2 3 (Emphasis added.)
Considering the foregoing discussion, it is clear that Sec. 112 (A) of the NIRC,
providing a two-year prescriptive period reckoned from the close of the taxable quarter
when the relevant sales or transactions were made pertaining to the creditable input
VAT, applies to the instant case, and not to the other actions which refer to erroneous
payment of taxes.
As a nal consideration, the Court wishes to remind the BIR and other tax
agencies of their duty to treat claims for refunds and tax credits with proper attention
and urgency. Had RDO No. 60 and, later, the BIR proper acted, instead of sitting, on
MPC's underlying application for effective zero rating, the matter of addressing MPC's
right, or lack of it, to tax credit or refund could have plausibly been addressed at their
level and perchance freed the taxpayer and the government from the rigors of a tedious
litigation. aSCDcH

The all too familiar complaint is that the government acts with dispatch when it
comes to tax collection, but pays little, if any, attention to tax claims for refund or
exemption. It is high time our tax collectors prove the cynics wrong.
WHEREFORE, the petition is PARTLY GRANTED. The Decision dated December
22, 2005 and the Resolution dated March 31, 2006 of the CA in CA-G.R. SP No. 78280
are AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATION that the claim of respondent MPC for tax refund
or credit to the extent of PhP135,993,570, representing its input VAT payments for
service purchases from Mitsubishi Corporation of Japan for the construction of a
portion of its Pagbilao, Quezon power station, is DENIED on the ground that the claim
had prescribed. Accordingly, petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue is ordered to
refund or, in the alternative, issue a tax credit certi cate in favor of MPC, its unutilized
input VAT payments directly attributable to its effectively zero-rated sales for the
second quarter in the total amount of PhP10,766,939.48.
No pronouncement as to costs. STcHDC

SO ORDERED.
Quisumbing, Carpio-Morales, Tinga and Brion, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1. Rollo, pp. 32-44. Penned by Associate Justice Rosmari D. Carandang and concurred in by
Associate Justices Andres B. Reyes, Jr. and Monina Arevalo-Zenarosa.
2. Id. at 47-63. Penned by Presiding Judge Ernesto D. Acosta concurred in by Associate Judges
Juanito C. Castaeda, Jr. and Lovell R. Bautista.
3. Id. at 45-46.
4. Sec. 13. Non-pro t Character of the Corporation; Exemption from all Taxes, Duties,
Fees, Imposts and other Charges by Government and Governmental
Instrumentalities . The [NPC] shall be non-pro t and shall devote all its returns . . . as
well as excess revenues from its operation, for expansion. To enable [NPC] to pay its
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com
indebtedness and obligations . . . [it] is hereby declared exempt: HDAECI

(a) From the payment of all taxes, duties, fees, imposts, charges, costs and service . . . and
duties to the Republic of the Philippines, its provinces, cities, municipalities and other
government agencies and instrumentalities; HEScID

(b) From all income taxes, franchise taxes and realty taxes . . .;

(c) From all import duties, compensating taxes and advanced sales tax, and wharfage fees on
import of foreign goods required for its operations and projects; and

(d) From all taxes, duties, fees, imposts, and all other charges imposed by the Republic of the
Philippines, its provinces, cities, municipalities and other government agencies and
instrumentalities, on all petroleum products used by the Corporation in the generation,
transmission, utilization, and sale of electric power.
5. G.R. No. 88291, May 31, 1991, 197 SCRA 771.
6. Transactions Subject to Zero Percent (%) Rate . The following services performed in the
Philippines by VAT-registered persons shall be subject to zero-percent rate: . . . (3)
Services rendered to persons whose exemption under special laws . . . effectively
subjects the supply of such services to zero percent (0%) rate.

7. CTA Case No. 4670, July 29, 1997.


8. Should be 135,993,570.00 as per this petition and CA decision.
9. Supra note 2, at 62.

10. Supra note 1, at 43.


11. Rollo, p. 15.

12. G.R. Nos. 167274-75, July 21, 2008. cIADaC

13. Atlas Consolidated Mining and Development Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal


Revenue, G.R. No. 159490, February 18, 2008, citing Commissioner of Internal Revenue v.
Solidbank Corp., G.R. No. 148191, November 25, 2003, 416 SCRA 436, 461.
14. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. , No. L-30644, March 9,
1987, 148 SCRA 315, cited in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Fortune Tobacco
Corporation, supra.
15. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Fortune Tobacco Corporation, ibid.

16. Uy v. Villanueva, G.R. No. 157851, June 29, 2007, 526 SCRA 73, 84.
17. Samala v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 130826, February 17, 2004, 423 SCRA 142, 146. IEAaST

18. Rollo, p. 57.

19. Id. at 60.


20. Id. at 57.

21. Id.
22. Id. at 37.

23. G.R. No. 153866, February 11, 2005, 451 SCRA 132, 141-143.
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. 2017 cdasiaonline.com

You might also like