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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION

OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

TMAP TAX UPDATES FOR SEPTEMBER 2017


Prepared by:
Romulo Mabanta Buenaventura Sayoc & De los Angeles

SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

PSALM v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ((En Banc) G.R. No. 198146, 8 August
2017)

• The sale of power plants by PSALM pursuant to the EPIRA is not subject to
VAT.

The sale of power plants by PSALM by virtue of Section 50 of the EPIRA law is not
subject to VAT. The sale of the power plants is not in pursuit of a commercial or
economic activity but a mandatory government function, hence not done in the course
of trade or business. The repeal of section 13 of R.A. No. 6395 (exemption from VAT of
NPC) by Section 24 of RA No. 9337 does not apply since the sale conducted here was
done by PSALM, not NPC. The argument of CIR that the sale is considered an incidental
transaction, which is now deemed covered in the phrase “in the course of trade or
business”, since the assets are owned by NPC and only held in trust by NPC is also
erroneous since under EPIRA, these assets are already owned by PSALM.

• The DOJ (not the CTA) has jurisdiction to resolve tax assessments issued
against government agencies

In a tax case involving only government agencies, the jurisdiction in resolving disputes
arising therefrom lies with the DOJ, not the CTA. This is pursuant to PD No. 242, which,
though earlier issued than the 1997 NIRC (a general law), is a special law hence is
applied as an exception to the general rule. This rule will not apply if there is at least one
co-party who is a private person/entity – in such a case, the jurisdiction is with the CTA.

Dissenting Opinion (Mariano, J.; shared by Bersamin, J.):

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

It is the CTA which has jurisdiction and not the DOJ. PD No. 242 is a general law that
applies to all disputes between or among national government offices, while RA No.
1125, as amended by R.A. No. 9282 is a specific law vesting exclusive and primary
jurisdiction to the CIR and the CTA on cases pertaining to disputed tax assessments, tax
laws, and refunds of national revenue taxes. To state otherwise will deprive the CIR any
judicial recourse. Decisions of the DOJ can be appealed to the Office of the President, but
cannot, thereafter, be appealed to the Court of Appeals (via Rule 43) since the Court of
Appeals does not have jurisdiction over tax cases, pursuant to R.A. No. 9282.

Edison (Bataan) Cogeneration Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (GR


No. 201665, 30 August 2017)

• The Commissioner’s admission in a Memorandum Report issued prior to the


filing of the Petition for Review is not a judicial admission. A judicial
admission must be in the Joint Stipulation of Facts and Issues or in the
Answer.

Edison (Bataan) Cogeneration Corporation (“EBCC”) claims that the CTA En Banc erred
in failing to consider the judicial admission made by the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue (“CIR”) in her Memorandum that EBCC remitted Final Withholding Tax
(“FWT”). The Supreme Court ruled against EBCC stating that a careful reading of the
Memorandum reveals that the alleged remittance of FWT was based on a Memorandum
Report prepared by the revenue officers recommending the denial of EBCC's protest,
which was issued prior to EBCC's filing of its Petition for Review before the CTA and
there was no mention of such remittance in the Joint Stipulations of Facts and Issues by
the parties and in the Answer filed by the CIR.

COURT OF TAX APPEALS EN BANC DECISIONS

Hedcor Sibulan, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA EB No. 987, 15


August 2017)

• The ERC Registration and Certificate of Compliance is essential to qualify the


sale of power from renewable energy sources as VAT zero-rated.

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

To qualify for VAT zero-rating under Section 108(B)(7) of the Tax Code (sale of power or
fuel generated through renewable sources of energy), petitioner must prove, by
sufficient evidence, that it is engaged in the sale of power or fuel generated through
renewable sources of energy and is duly authorized by the Energy Regulation
Commission (ERC) pursuant to Section 4.108-3 of Revenue Regulations No. 16-2005. As
petitioner failed to submit its ERC Registration and Certificate of Compliance (COC),
petitioner cannot be considered to have been duly authorized by the ERC to operate
facilities used in the generation of electricity. Thus, its sales cannot qualify for VAT zero-
rating under Section 108(B)(7) of the Tax Code.

Composite Materials Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA EB Case No.


1314, 15 August 2017)

• An appeal to the CTA En Banc of a Decision or an Amended Decision of a


Division must be preceded by a timely motion for reconsideration.

Before an appeal of the Decision of the Court in Division may be filed before the Court
En Banc it must be preceded by the filing of a timely motion for reconsideration or new
trial with the Division. The same holds true with respect to Amended Decisions.

If, however – as in this case – an Amended Decision is merely denominated as such but
is effectively a resolution of a Motion for Reconsideration as it did not alter nor modify
but rather upheld the findings and conclusions in the previous Decision, there is no
need to file another Motion for Reconsideration before appealing the same to the Court
En Banc considering that the rules of the CTA do not allow the filing of a second Motion
for Reconsideration or for new trial.

• A referral memorandum issued by the RDO to an examiner not named in the


LOA does not authorize the tax examination and thus the resulting assessment
is void.

The examination of a taxpayer by a revenue officer in the absence of an LOA is a


violation of the taxpayer’s right to due process. The resulting assessment is void. The
reassignment of the audit by a Revenue District Officer, through a Referral
Memorandum, to another revenue officer who is not listed in the LOA, is not equivalent

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

to an LOA. The resulting assessment by the second revenue officer therefore, even if
authorized by the Referral Memorandum of the Revenue District Officer, is void.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Coral Bay Nickel Corporation


Coral Bay Nickel Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA EB Case
Nos. 1543 and 1546, 16 August 2017)

• The failure to move for reconsideration of an Amended Decision is a ground


for dismissal of the Petition.

The failure to move for a reconsideration of an Amended Decision of the CTA Division
is a ground for the dismissal of the Petition for Review filed with the CTA En Banc
pursuant to the Supreme Court case of Asiatrust Development Bank, Inc. v. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue (G.R. No. 201530, April 19, 2017). In this case, both parties failed to file
their respective motions for reconsideration of the Amended Decision. Thus, their
respective Petitions for Review must be dismissed.

P.J. Del Rosario, Concurring and Dissenting Opinion:

It is only the party adversely affected by the assailed Amended Decision that should
move for its reconsideration. Considering that the rules of the CTA prohibit the filing of
a second motion for reconsideration, it is procedurally improper for the party whose
previous motion for reconsideration was partially granted under the Amended Decision
to file another motion for reconsideration of the Amended Decision.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Hoya Glass Disk Philippines, Inc.


Hoya Glass Disk Philippines, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA EB
Case No. 1524 and CTA EB No. 1529, 16 August 2017)

• A wrong entry in the return due to mistake does not make the return a false
return.

Pursuant to the Supreme Court case of Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philippine


Daily Inquirer (G.R. No. 213943, March 22, 2017), the entry of wrong information due to
mistake, carelessness, or ignorance, without intent to evade tax, does not constitute a
false return.

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

A mistake on the part of the taxpayer in the preparation of its return or payment of its
tax does not automatically result to the operation of the ten-year prescriptive period to
assess based on a false return. A mistake on the return shall not be considered a falsity
if:

(i) There was no design to mislead or deceive on the part of the taxpayer;
(ii) There was no intentional non-disclosure or omission so as to put the BIR at
a disadvantage in the investigation since the BIR was not prevented from
issuing the deficiency assessment within the general three-year period;
and
(iii) There was no fraudulent intent or willful intent to evade the payment of
the correct amount of tax.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Kep (Philippines) Realty Corporation (CTA EB


Case No. 1504, 18 August 2017)

• It is not necessary that there be a zero-rated transaction at the time the input tax
sought to be refunded was incurred.

Neither the law nor the implementing regulations provide that in a claim for refund of
input VAT that there be zero-rated or effectively zero-rated transactions at the time the
claimed input VAT was incurred or paid. Neither does it provide that the input tax in
the purchase of land be refunded only when it was sold or input tax thereon be
apportioned to the period of lease. Neither does the law nor the implementing
regulations provide that the option to carry over to the succeeding quarters any
unutilized input tax or to file a claim for refund and availing of an option precludes
choosing that of the other.

What the law and the implementing regulations provide is that a taxpayer who has
zero-rated or effectively zero-rated transactions were allowed to apply for the issuance
of a tax credit certificate or a tax refund for input taxes paid, in addition to the option to
carry forward the input taxes against future output tax liabilities.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philippine Aerospace Development


Corporation (CTA EB Case No. 1516, 23 August 2017)

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

The failure of the CIR to present the PAN during trial is tantamount to its failure to issue
one to the taxpayer which is a violation of its due process.

Qatar Airways Company with Limited Liability v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue


(CTA EB No. 1468 [CTA Case No. 8816], 5 September 2017)

As the denial of an application for abatement of surcharge involves the interpretation


and application of Section 204(B) of the Tax Code, it clearly falls under the phrase “other
matters arising under the Tax Code”, pursuant to Section 7(a) (1) of R.A. No. 1125, as
amended. However, the sole authority to abate tax liability rests upon the sole discretion
of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Hence, the Court of Tax Appeals may not dip
its finger into it in observance of the principle of separation of powers.

National Grid Corporation of the Philippines v. Central Board of Assessment


Appeals, et al. (CTA EB No. 1392 [CBAA Case No. M-35, LBAA Case No. 01-2013], 5
September 2017)

• Reiterates the rule that payment under protest is not required if the issue is not
the reasonableness or correctness of the real property tax assessment.

There are two situations where a taxpayer of real property taxes may question the real
property tax assessment: (1) he may question the reasonableness or correctness of the
assessment, or (2) question the legality or validity of the assessment.

An example for the first scenario is when a taxpayer disputes the reasonableness of an
increase in a real property tax assessment. In such a case, the taxpayer must first pay the
assessment under protest and then file its protest. In the event that the protest is denied
or not acted upon within 60 days from filing, the taxpayer may then file an appeal with
the LBAA. The decision of the LBAA may be appealed to the CBAA.

The payment of the taxes under protest is jurisdictional. Non-payment thereof will
render the LBAA (and the appellate bodies, including the CTA) without jurisdiction to
issue a decision.

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

An example for the second scenario is when a taxpayer or the owner or person having
legal interest in a property questions the very authority and power of the assessor to
impose the assessment, or questions the authority and power of the treasurer to collect
the tax – which becomes a legal question properly cognizable by the proper trial court.
In such case, the taxpayer may appeal directly to the proper RTC and appeal the
decision of the RTC before a division of the CTA.

Unisys Philippines Limited v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA EB No. 1450,


6 September 2017)

The notice of hearing of a motion must be addressed to all parties and state the specific
date and time of the hearing. If not complied with, a motion is considered pro forma
and the court has no authority to act upon it. It likewise does not toll the running of the
prescriptive period for an appeal or the filing of the requisite pleading.

People of the Philippines v. Joel C. Mendez (CTA EB Crim. No. 038, 8 September 2017)

• The civil liability can be included in the judgment in the criminal case only if
the Commissioner issued a formal tax assessment.

Section 205 of the NIRC provides that either civil or criminal action or both
simultaneously may be pursued in the discretion of the authorities charged with the
collection of taxes, and that the judgment in the criminal case shall not only impose the
penalty but shall also order payment of the taxes subject of the criminal case as finally
decided by the Commissioner. However, for the civil liability be included in the
judgment in the criminal case, there must first be a formal assessment of the taxes by the
Commissioner.

COURT OF TAX APPEALS DECISIONS

Splash Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA Case No. 8483, 18


August 2017)

• A new LOA should be issued if a revenue officer not named in the LOA will
continue the audit; otherwise, the resulting assessment is void.

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

The issuance of an LOA prior to the conduct of an examination of a taxpayer’s books


and other accounting records by any revenue officer is indispensable to the validity of
an assessment. Continuation of audit by a revenue officer other than the revenue officer
named in a previous LOA requires the issuance of a new LOA. If a new LOA for the
new revenue officer conducting the audit is not issued, the resulting assessment will be
null and void.

Following the Supreme Court case of Medicard Philippines Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue (G.R. No. 222743, April 5, 2017) failure to raise the issue of lack of authority of
the examining revenue officers in the administrative level as well as in the Petition for
Review does not preclude the petitioner from subsequently insisting upon motion for
reconsideration that the assessment is intrinsically void for want of a valid LOA.

Arturo E. Villanueva v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA Case No. 8935, 18


August 2017)

If the taxpayer denies having received an assessment from the BIR, it becomes
incumbent upon the latter to prove that such notice was indeed received by the
taxpayer. To prove the fact of mailing, it is essential to present the registry receipt issued
by the Bureau of Posts or the Registry return card which would have been signed by the
taxpayer or its authorized representative.

Substantial under declaration or failure to report sales or income in an amount


exceeding 30% of that declared per return, merely operates as a prima facie evidence of
fraud, which can still be contradicted by other evidence. While the Total Sales was
without any amount, there can be no under-declaration of sales because the amounts for
Net Income, Taxable Income and Tax Due were properly indicated in petitioner's ITR.

Telstar Manufacturing Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA Case


No. 8900, 18 August 2017)

In this case, the waivers of the statute of limitations under the Tax Code were alleged to
be defective as: (1) the person who signed the waiver on behalf of petitioner was not
specifically authorized by petitioner’s Board of Directors and (2) the waivers failed to
specify the type of tax and the amount of tax due.

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

The CTA held that since petitioner itself is partly to blame for the flaws of the waivers,
petitioner cannot be allowed to benefit from the flaws of its own waivers and insist on
its invalidity to escape its responsibility to pay deficiency taxes.

Moreover, petitioner is likewise estopped from challenging the validity of the subject
waiver as petitioner allowed the respondent to rely on the waivers they have executed
and remained silent on the waivers' defects. It did not raise any objection against the
waivers' validity up until it was already assessed with deficiency taxes and penalties.

San Miguel Brewery, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA Case No. 8955,
18 August 2017)

• A collateral attack on the validity of an RMC in a claim for refund is not


allowed.

In connection with a claim for refund, petitioner alleges that the excise tax rate specified
in RMC No. 90-2012 is directly contradictory to the express provisions of Section 143 of
the Tax Code and is therefore invalid.

While the CTA has the power to rule on the validity of a particular administrative rule
or regulation by virtue of its certiorari powers, petitioner should have directly attacked
RMC No. 90-2012 via a Petition for Certiorari at the earliest opportunity rather than
through a collateral attack via a judicial claim for refund.

Collateral attacks on a presumably valid law is not allowed. RMC No. 90-2012 is an
administrative rule with the force of law. Thus, unless and until RMC No. 90-2012 has
been declared invalid and unconstitutional through the proper proceeding, the same is
binding; and there is no basis for petitioner's claim for refund or Tax Credit Certificate.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA Case No.


9010, 18 August 2017)

There is no showing that BSP is bank which has been jurisprudentially defined as a
moneyed institute engaged in facilitating the borrowing, lending, and safekeeping of
money and in dealing in notes, bills of exchange, and credits. Correspondingly, since

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

the BSP is not considered a bank, the period of redemption under R.A. No. 8791 or the
General Banking Law of 2000 is not applicable to the purchase by BSP of a foreclosed
property. Rather, it is the one-year period of redemption under Section 6 of Act No.
3135, as amended by Act No. 4118, which must be applied in this case. From the
expiration of the said redemption period, BSP has thirty (30) days within which to file
the Capital Gains Tax Return and remit the capital gains tax due.

Saturn Holdings, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA Case No. 9085, 18
August 2017)

• The FLD without a due date for payment is void.

The FLD and FAN are void since the due date when the taxpayer should pay the
deficiency taxes is left blank. An assessment must not only contain a computation of tax
liabilities but also a demand for payment within a prescribed period.

Even assuming that the FLD and FAN are valid, the surcharges and interests are
cancelled considering that the taxpayer believed in good faith that at the time the tax
was due for payment, the taxpayer was not liable to pay the same on the basis of
previous rulings by the BIR.

Compromise penalties are only amounts suggested in settlement of criminal liability


and may not be imposed or exacted on the taxpayer in the event that a taxpayer refuses
to pay the same. The Court has no jurisdiction to compel a taxpayer to pay the
compromise penalty. In the absence of consent from the taxpayer, the assessment of
compromise penalty cannot be granted.

Pacifichub Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA Case No. 8895, 31


August 2017)

• The CTA cannot interfere with the exercise of discretion of the Commissioner
in abatement cases.

A petition praying for an order declaring a Warrant of Distraint and Levy and/or a
Notice of Denial to be void and of no legal force and effect falls within the jurisdiction of
the CTA under the term "other matters" in Section 7(a)(1) of R.A. No. 1125.

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

However, a declaration that the Notice of Denial has no force and legal effect does not
mean that the taxpayer is already entitled to its request for abatement. The
Commissioner of Internal Revenue has the sole authority or discretion to abate a
taxpayer’s tax liability. The CTA must not interfere with such exercise of discretion.

Wellington Investment and Manufacturing Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal


Revenue (CTA Case No. 8726, 14 September 2017)

Mere reimbursements-at-cost for shared expenses such as utilities and other


maintenance expenses of the leased areas, do not constitute income but are amounts
held in trust by the lessor for the service providers. Thus, they should not form part of
the taxable gross receipts of the lessor provided that the input tax pertaining to the share
of the tenants on the shared cost was not claimed, VAT is not passed on the tenants and
the same are receipted separately using NON-VAT Official Acknowledgment Receipts.

Taganito Mining Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CTA Case No.


8680 14 September 2017)

A BOI-registered company subject to 0% VAT may not seek a refund or issuance of tax
credit of the amount of the VAT passed onto it by its suppliers. The BOI-registered
company’s recourse is to seek reimbursement of the VAT amount from its suppliers.

National Power Corporation v. Province of Dinagat Islands and Ermilinda C. Biol


(CTA AC No. 117, 14 September 2017)

The EPIRA Law removed power generation from the ambit of local franchise taxes.
Therefore, NPC’s business of generating electricity is exempted from local franchise tax.

However, NPC’s missionary electrification function, through its Small Power Utilities
Group, involves the transmission of electricity which remains as a public utility. This
function of NPC is therefore still covered by local franchise tax.

REVENUE ISSUANCE

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TAX MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC.

__________________________________________________

Revenue Memorandum Circular No 69-2017 (17 August 2017)

Clarifies the registration and tax compliance requirements of individual professionals


(licensed/unlicensed) under a Job Order or Service Contract Agreement with the
Departments and Agencies of the Government, Instrumentalities, LGUs, State Colleges
and Universities, including GOCCs and GFIs. Said professionals were classified based
on gross receipts derived and on whether or not they had other sources of income.

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