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COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE vs.


CEBU PORTLAND CEMENT COMPANY and COURT OF TAX APPEALS
G.R. No. L-29059 December 15, 1987

FACTS:
By virtue of a decision of the Court of Tax Appeals rendered on June 21, 1961, as modified on appeal by the
Supreme Court on February 27, 1965, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue was ordered to refund to the Cebu Portland
Cement Company the amount of P359,408.98, representing overpayments of ad valorem taxes on cement produced and
sold by it after October 1957.
On March 28, 1968, following denial of motions for reconsideration filed by both the petitioner and the private
respondent, the latter moved for a writ of execution to enforce the said judgment.
The motion was opposed by the petitioner on the ground that the private respondent had an outstanding sales tax
liability to which the judgment debt had already been credited. In fact, it was stressed, there was still a balance owing on
the sales taxes in the amount of P 4,789,279.85 plus 28% surcharge.
On April 22, 1968, the Court of Tax Appeals granted the motion, holding that the alleged sales tax liability of the
private respondent was still being questioned and therefore could not be set-off against the refund.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the judgment debt can be enforced against private respondent’s sales tax liability, the latter still
being questioned.

RULING:
The argument that the assessment cannot as yet be enforced because it is still being contested loses sight of the
urgency of the need to collect taxes as "the lifeblood of the government." If the payment of taxes could be postponed by
simply questioning their validity, the machinery of the state would grind to a halt and all government functions would be
paralyzed.
The Tax Code provides: Sec. 291. Injunction not available to restrain collection of tax. - No court shall have
authority to grant an injunction to restrain the collection of any national internal revenue tax, fee or charge imposed by this
Code.
It goes without saying that this injunction is available not only when the assessment is already being questioned in
a court of justice but more so if, as in the instant case, the challenge to the assessment is still-and only-on the
administrative level. There is all the more reason to apply the rule here because it appears that even after crediting of the
refund against the tax deficiency, a balance of more than P 4 million is still due from the private respondent.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE vs.


ALGUE and THE COURT OF TAX APPEALS
G.R. No. L-28896 February 17, 1988

FACTS:
The Philippine Sugar Estate Development Company had earlier appointed Algue as its agent, authorizing it to sell
its land, factories and oil manufacturing process. Pursuant to such authority, Alberto Guevara, Jr., Eduardo Guevara,
Isabel Guevara, Edith, O'Farell, and Pablo Sanchez, worked for the formation of the Vegetable Oil Investment
Corporation, inducing other persons to invest in it. Ultimately, after its incorporation largely through the promotion of the
said persons, this new corporation purchased the PSEDC properties. For this sale, Algue received as agent a commission
of P126,000.00, and it was from this commission that the P75,000.00 promotional fees were paid to the aforenamed
individuals.
The petitioner contends that the claimed deduction of P75,000.00 was properly disallowed because it was not an
ordinary reasonable or necessary business expense. The Court of Tax Appeals had seen it differently. Agreeing with
Algue, it held that the said amount had been legitimately paid by the private respondent for actual services rendered. The
payment was in the form of promotional fees.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the Collector of Internal Revenue correctly disallowed the P75,000.00 deduction claimed by
private respondent Algue as legitimate business expenses in its income tax returns.

RULING:
The Supreme Court agrees with the respondent court that the amount of the promotional fees was not excessive.
The amount of P75,000.00 was 60% of the total commission. This was a reasonable proportion, considering that it was
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the payees who did practically everything, from the formation of the Vegetable Oil Investment Corporation to the actual
purchase by it of the Sugar Estate properties.
It is said that taxes are what we pay for civilization society. Without taxes, the government would be paralyzed for
lack of the motive power to activate and operate it. Hence, despite the natural reluctance to surrender part of one's hard
earned income to the taxing authorities, every person who is able to must contribute his share in the running of the
government.

C.N. HODGES vs. MUNICIPAL BOARD OF THE CITY OF ILOILO


G.R. No. L-18129 January 31, 1963

FACTS:
On June 13, 1960, the Municipal Board of the City of Iloilo enacted Ordinance No. 33, series of 1960, pursuant to
the provisions of Republic Act No. 2264, known as the Local Autonomy Act, requiring any person, firm, association or
corporation to pay a sales tax of 1/2 of 1% of the selling price of any motor vehicle and prohibiting the registration of the
sale of the motor vehicle in the Motor Vehicles Office of the City of Iloilo unless the tax has been paid.
C. N. Hodges, who was engaged in the business of buying and selling second-hand motor vehicles in the City of
Iloilo, is one of those affected by the enactment of the ordinance, and believing that the same is invalid for having been
passed in excess of the authority conferred by law upon the municipal board, he filed on June 27, 1960 a petition for
declaratory judgment with the Court of First Instance of Iloilo praying that said ordinance be declared void ab initio.
The court a quo rendered decision on December 8, 1960 holding that that part of the ordinance which requires the
owner of a used motor vehicle to pay a sales tax of 1/2 of 1% of the selling price is valid, but the portion thereof which
requires the payment of the tax as a condition precedent for the registration of the sale in the Motor Vehicles Office is
invalid for being repugnant to Section 2(h) of Republic Act 2264. Both parties have appealed.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the ordinance in question is valid even with regard to the portion which requires the payment of
the tax as a condition precedent for the registration of the sale in the Motor Vehicles Office of said city.

RULING:
The City of Iloilo has the authority and power to approve the ordinance in question for it merely imposes a
percentage tax on the sale of a second-hand motor vehicle that may be carried out within the city by any person, firm,
association or corporation owning or dealing with it who may come within the jurisdiction.
The requirement of the ordinance cannot be considered a tax in the light viewed by the court a quo for the same is
merely a coercive measure to make the enforcement of the contemplated sales tax more effective. Well-settled is the
principle that taxes are imposed for the support of the government in return for the general advantage and protection
which the government affords to taxpayers and their property. Taxes are the lifeblood of the government.

ASSOCIATION OF CUSTOM BROKERS, INC. vs. MUNICIPAL BOARD


G.R. No. L-4376 May 22, 1953

FACTS:
The Association of Customs Brokers, Inc., which is composed of all brokers and public service operators of motor
vehicles in the City of Manila challenge the validity Ordinance No. 3379 on the ground that (1) while it levies a so-called
property tax it is in reality a license tax which is beyond the power of the Municipal Board of the City of Manila; (2) said
ordinance offends against the rule of uniformity of taxation; and (3) it constitutes double taxation.
The respondents contend on their part that the challenged ordinance imposes a property tax which is within the
power of the City of Manila to impose under its Revised Charter [Section 18 (p) of Republic Act No. 409], and that the tax
in question does not violate the rule of uniformity of taxation, nor does it constitute double taxation.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the ordinance is null and void

RULING:
The ordinance infringes the rule of the uniformity of taxation ordained by our Constitution. Note that the ordinance
exacts the tax upon all motor vehicles operating within the City of Manila. It does not distinguish between a motor vehicle
for hire and one which is purely for private use. Neither does it distinguish between a motor vehicle registered in the City
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of Manila and one registered in another place but occasionally comes to Manila and uses its streets and public
highways. This is an inequality which we find in the ordinance, and which renders it offensive to the Constitution.

ESSO STANDARD EASTERN, INC v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE


G.R. Nos. L-28508-9, July 7, 1989

FACTS:
In CTA Case No. 1251, Esso Standard Eastern Inc. (Esso) deducted from its gross income for 1959, as part of its
ordinary and necessary business expenses, the amount it had spent for drilling and exploration of its petroleum
concessions. This claim was disallowed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) on the ground that the expenses
should be capitalized and might be written off as a loss only when a "dry hole" should result. Esso then filed an amended
return where it asked for the refund of P323,279.00 by reason of its abandonment as dry holes of several of its oil wells.
Also claimed as ordinary and necessary expenses in the same return was the amount of P340,822.04, representing
margin fees it had paid to the Central Bank on its profit remittances to its New York head office.
On August 5, 1964, the CIR granted a tax credit of P221,033.00 only, disallowing the claimed deduction for the
margin fees paid on the ground that the margin fees paid to the Central Bank could not be considered taxes or allowed as
deductible business expenses.
Esso appealed to the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) for the refund of the margin fees it had earlier paid contending
that the margin fees were deductible from gross income either as a tax or as an ordinary and necessary business
expense. However, Esso’s appeal was denied.

ISSUE:
(1) Whether or not the margin fees are taxes.
(2) Whether or not the margin fees are necessary and ordinary business expenses.

RULING:
(1) No. A tax is levied to provide revenue for government operations, while the proceeds of the margin fee are
applied to strengthen our country's international reserves. The margin fee was imposed by the State in the exercise of its
police power and not the power of taxation.
(2) No. Ordinarily, an expense will be considered 'necessary' where the expenditure is appropriate and helpful in
the development of the taxpayer's business. It is 'ordinary' when it connotes a payment which is normal in relation to the
business of the taxpayer and the surrounding circumstances. Since the margin fees in question were incurred for the
remittance of funds to Esso's Head Office in New York, which is a separate and distinct income taxpayer from the branch
in the Philippines, for its disposal abroad, it can never be said therefore that the margin fees were appropriate and helpful
in the development of Esso's business in the Philippines exclusively or were incurred for purposes proper to the conduct
of the affairs of Esso's branch in the Philippines exclusively or for the purpose of realizing a profit or of minimizing a loss in
the Philippines exclusively.

PROGRESSIVE DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION v. QUEZON CITY


G.R. No. L-36081, April 24, 1989

FACTS:
On December 24, 1969, the City Council of Quezon City adopted Ordinance No. 7997, otherwise known as the
Market Code of Quezon City. Section 3 of said ordinance provides that “privately owned and operated public markets
shall submit monthly to the Treasurer's Office, a certified list of stallholders showing the amount of stall fees or rentals
paid daily by each stallholder, ... and shall pay 10% of the gross receipts from stall rentals to the City, ... , as supervision
fee”.
On July 15, 1972, Progressive Development Corporation (Progressive), owner and operator of a public market
known as the "Farmers Market & Shopping Center" filed a Petition for Prohibition with Preliminary Injunction against
Quezon City on the ground that the supervision fee or license tax imposed by the above-mentioned ordinance is in reality
a tax on income which Quezon City may not impose, the same being expressly prohibited by Republic Act No. 2264, as
amended, otherwise known as the Local Autonomy Act.
In its Answer, Quezon City, through the City Fiscal, contended that it had authority to enact the questioned
ordinances, maintaining that the tax on gross receipts imposed therein is not a tax on income.
The lower court ruled that the questioned imposition is not a tax on income, but rather a privilege tax or license
fee which local governments, like Quezon City, are empowered to impose and collect.

ISSUE:
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Whether the tax imposed by Quezon City on gross receipts of stall rentals is properly characterized as partaking
of the nature of an income tax.

RULING:
No. The tax imposed in the controverted ordinance constitutes, not a tax on income, not a city income tax (as
distinguished from the national income tax imposed by the National Internal Revenue Code) within the meaning of Section
2 (g) of the Local Autonomy Act, but rather a license tax or fee for the regulation of the business in which Progressive is
engaged. While it is true that the amount imposed by the questioned ordinances may be considered in determining
whether the exaction is really one for revenue or prohibition, instead of one of regulation under the police power, it
nevertheless will be presumed to be reasonable.

PHILIPPINE AIRLINES, INC. v. EDU


G.R. No. L- 41383, August 15, 1988

FACTS:
The Philippine Airlines (PAL) is a corporation engaged in the air transportation business under a legislative
franchise, Act No. 42739. Under its franchise, PAL is exempt from the payment of taxes.
Sometime in 1971, however, Land Transportation Commissioner Romeo F. Elevate (Elevate) issued a regulation
pursuant to Section 8, Republic Act 4136, otherwise known as the Land and Transportation and Traffic Code, requiring all
tax exempt entities, among them PAL to pay motor vehicle registration fees.
Despite PAL's protestations, Elevate refused to register PAL's motor vehicles unless the amounts imposed under
Republic Act 4136 were paid. PAL thus paid, under protest, registration fees of its motor vehicles. After paying under
protest, PAL through counsel, wrote a letter dated May 19,1971, to Land Transportation Commissioner Romeo Edu (Edu)
demanding a refund of the amounts paid. Edu denied the request for refund. Hence, PAL filed a complaint against Edu
and National Treasurer Ubaldo Carbonell (Carbonell).

The trial court dismissed PAL's complaint. PAL appealed to the Court of Appeals which in turn certified the case
to the Supreme Court.

ISSUE:
Whether or not motor vehicle registration fees are considered as taxes.

RULING:
Yes. If the purpose is primarily revenue, or if revenue is, at least, one of the real and substantial purposes, then
the exaction is properly called a tax. Such is the case of motor vehicle registration fees. The motor vehicle registration
fees are actually taxes intended for additional revenues of the government even if one fifth or less of the amount collected
is set aside for the operating expenses of the agency administering the program.

VILLEGAS v. HIU CHIONG TSAI PAO HO


G.R. No. L-29646, November 10, 1978

FACTS:
On February 22, 1968, the Municipal Board of Manila passed City Ordinance No. 6537. The said city ordinance
was also signed by then Manila Mayor Antonio J. Villegas (Villegas).
Section 1 of the said city ordinance prohibits aliens from being employed or to engage or participate in any
position or occupation or business enumerated therein, whether permanent, temporary or casual, without first securing an
employment permit from the Mayor of Manila and paying the permit fee of P50.00 except persons employed in the
diplomatic or consular missions of foreign countries, or in the technical assistance programs of both the Philippine
Government and any foreign government, and those working in their respective households, and members of religious
orders or congregations, sect or denomination, who are not paid monetarily or in kind.
Hiu Chiong Tsai Pao Ho (Tsai Pao Ho) who was employed in Manila, filed a petition with the CFI of Manila to
declare City Ordinance No. 6537 as null and void for being discriminatory and violative of the rule of the uniformity in
taxation.
The trial court declared City Ordinance No. 6537 null and void. Villegas filed the present petition.

ISSUE:
Whether or not City Ordinance No. 6537 is a tax or revenue measure.
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RULING:
Yes. The contention that City Ordinance No. 6537 is not a purely tax or revenue measure because its principal
purpose is regulatory in nature has no merit. While it is true that the first part which requires that the alien shall secure an
employment permit from the Mayor involves the exercise of discretion and judgment in the processing and approval or
disapproval of applications for employment permits and therefore is regulatory in character the second part which requires
the payment of P50.00 as employee's fee is not regulatory but a revenue measure. There is no logic or justification in
exacting P50.00 from aliens who have been cleared for employment. It is obvious that the purpose of the ordinance is to
raise money under the guise of regulation.

COMPAÑIA GENERAL DE TABACOS DE FILIPINAS vs.


CITY OF MANILA, ET AL
G.R. No. L-16619 June 29, 1963

FACTS:
Petitioner filed an action in the CFI Manila to recover from City of Manila(City ) the sum of P15,280.00 allegedly
overpaid by it as taxes on its wholesale and retail sales of liquor for the period from the third quarter of 1954 to the second
quarter of 1957, inclusive, under Ordinances Nos. 3634, 3301, and 3816.
Tabacalera's action for refund is based on the theory that, in connection with its liquor sales, it should pay the
license fees but not the municipal sales taxes; and since it already paid the license fees aforesaid, the sales taxes paid by
it — amounting to the sum of P15,208.00 — under the three ordinances is an overpayment made by mistake, and
therefore refundable.
The City contends that for the permit issued to it Tabacalera is subject to pay the license fees prescribed by
Ordinance No. 3358, aside from the sales taxes imposed by Ordinances Nos. 3634, 3301, and 3816.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the taxes imposed are valid

RULING:
Ordinance No. 3358 is clearly one that prescribes municipal license fees for the privilege to engage in the
business of selling liquor or alcoholic beverages. On the other hand, it is clear that Ordinances Nos. 3634, 3301, and 3816
impose taxes on the sales of general merchandise, wholesale or retail, and are revenue measures enacted by the
Municipal Board of Manila by virtue of its power to tax dealers for the sale of such merchandise.
That Tabacalera is being subjected to double taxation is more apparent than real. As already stated what is
collected under Ordinance No. 3358 is a license fee for the privilege of engaging in the sale of liquor. On the other hand,
what the three ordinances mentioned heretofore impose is a tax for revenue purposes based on the sales made of the
same article or merchandise. It is already settled in this connection that both a license fee and a tax may be imposed on
the same business or occupation, or for selling the same article, this not being in violation of the rule against double
taxation.

AMERICAN MAIL LINE, ET AL vs. CITY OF BASILAN, ET AL


G.R. No. L-12647 May 31, 1961

FACTS:
Appellees are foreign shipping companies licensed to do business in the Philippines, with offices in Manila. Their
vessels call at Basilan City and anchor in the bay or channel within its territorial waters. As the city treasurer assessed
and attempted to collect from them the anchorage fees prescribed in the aforesaid amendatory ordinance, they filed the
present action for Declaratory Relief to have the courts determine its validity. Upon their petition the lower court issued a
writ of preliminary injunction restraining appellants from collecting or attempting to collect from them the fees prescribed
therein.
Appellant contended that, through its city council, it had authority to enact the questioned ordinance in the
exercise of either its revenue-raising power or of its police power. The question to be resolved is whether the City of
Basilan has the authority to enact Ordinance 180 and to collect the anchorage fees prescribed therein.

ISSUE:
Is the ordinance valid exercise of taxing power of the City of Basilan.
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RULING:
Under paragraph (a) sec. 14, R.A. 288, it is clear that the City of Basilan may only levy and collect taxes for
general and special purposes in accordance with or as provided by law; in other words, the city of Basilan was not granted
a blanket power of taxation. The use of the phrase "in accordance with law" — which, in our opinion, means the same as
"provided by law" — clearly discloses the legislative intent to limit the taxing power of the City.
It has been held that the power to regulate as an exercise of police power does not include the power to impose
fees for revenue purposes. Appellant city's own contention that the questioned ordinance was enacted in the exercise of
its power of taxation, makes it obvious that the fees imposed are not merely regulatory.

JOHN H. OSMEÑA vs. OSCAR ORBOS et al


G.R. No. 99886 March 31, 1993

FACTS:
October 10, 1984, President Ferdinand Marcos issued P.D. 1956 creating a Special Account in the General Fund,
designated as the Oil Price Stabilization Fund (OPSF). The OPSF was designed to reimburse oil companies for cost
increases in crude oil and imported petroleum products resulting from exchange rate adjustments and from increases in
the world market prices of crude oil. Subsequently, the OPSF was reclassified into a "trust liability account,". President
Corazon C. Aquino promulgated E. O. 137 expanding the grounds for reimbursement to oil companies for possible cost
under recovery incurred as a result of the reduction of domestic prices of petroleum products.
The petitioner argues inter alia that "the monies collected pursuant to . . P.D. 1956, as amended, must be treated
as a 'SPECIAL FUND,' not as a 'trust account' or a 'trust fund,' and that "if a special tax is collected for a specific purpose,
the revenue generated therefrom shall 'be treated as a special fund' to be used only for the purpose indicated, and not
channeled to another government objective." Petitioner further points out that since "a 'special fund' consists of monies
collected through the taxing power of a State, such amounts belong to the State, although the use thereof is limited to the
special purpose/objective for which it was created."

ISSUE:
Whether or not the funds collected under PD 1956 is an exercise of the power of taxation

RULING:

The levy is primarily in the exercise of the police power of the State. While the funds collected may be referred to
as taxes, they are exacted in the exercise of the police power of the State.
What petitioner would wish is the fixing of some definite, quantitative restriction, or "a specific limit on how much
to tax." The Court is cited to this requirement by the petitioner on the premise that what is involved here is the power of
taxation; but as already discussed, this is not the case. What is here involved is not so much the power of taxation as
police power. Although the provision authorizing the ERB to impose additional amounts could be construed to refer to the
power of taxation, it cannot be overlooked that the overriding consideration is to enable the delegate to act with
expediency in carrying out the objectives of the law which are embraced by the police power of the State.
It would seem that from the above-quoted ruling, the petition for prohibition should fail.

REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, vs. BACOLOD-MURCIA MILLING CO., INC., MA-AO SUGAR CENTRAL CO., INC.,
and TALISAY-SILAY MILLING COMPANY
G.R. Nos. L-19824, L-19825 and 19826 July 9, 1966

FACTS:
Joint appeal by three sugar centrals, respondents herein. from a decision of the Court of First Instance of Manila
finding them liable for special assessments under Section 15 of Republic Act No. 632.
The appellants' thesis is simply to the effect that the "10 centavos per picul of sugar" authorized to be collected
under Sec. 15 of Republic 632 is a special assessment. As such, the proceeds thereof may be devoted only to the
specific purpose for which the assessment was authorized, a special assessment being a levy upon property predicated
on the doctrine that the property against which it is levied derives some special benefit from the improvement. It is not a
tax measure intended to raise revenues for the Government.

ISSUE:
Is the imposition of special assessment an exercise of the taxing power

RULING:
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The Court deemed it relevant to discuss its holding in Lutz v. Araneta. For in this Lutz case, Commonwealth Act
567, otherwise known as the Sugar Adjustment Act, all collections made thereunder "shall accrue to a special fund in the
Philippine Treasury, to be known as the 'Sugar Adjustment and Stabilization Fund,' and shall be paid out only for any or all
of the following purposes or to attain any or all of the following objectives, as may be provided by law." Analysis of the Act,
and particularly Section 6, will show that the tax is levied with a regulatory purpose, to provide means for the rehabilitation
and stabilization of the threatened sugar industry. In other words, the act is primarily an exercise of the police power.

On the authority of the above case, then, We hold that the special assessment at bar may be considered as
similarly as the above, that is, that the levy for the Philsugin Fund is not so much an exercise of the power of taxation, nor
the imposition of a special assessment, but, the exercise of the police power for the general welfare of the entire country.
It is, therefore, an exercise of a sovereign power which no private citizen may lawfully resist.

VICTORIAS MILLING CO., INC. vs. THE MUNICIPALITY OF VICTORIAS, PROVINCE OF NEGROS OCCIDENTAL
G.R. No. L-21183 September 27, 1968

FACTS:
This case calls into question the validity of Ordinance No. 1, series of 1956, of the Municipality of Victorias, Negros
Occidental.
The disputed ordinance imposed license taxes on operators of sugar centrals and sugar refineries. The changes
were: with respect to sugar centrals, by increasing the rates of license taxes; and as to sugar refineries, by increasing the
rates of license taxes as well as the range of graduated schedule of annual output capacity.
For, the production of plaintiff Victorias Milling Co., Inc. in both its sugar central and its sugar refinery located in
the Municipality of Victorias comes within these items.
Plaintiff filed suit below to ask for judgment declaring Ordinance No. 1, series of 1956, null and void. The plaintiff
contends that the ordinance is discriminatory since it singles out plaintiff which is the only operator of a sugar central and
a sugar refinery within the jurisdiction of defendant municipality.
The trial court rendered its judgment declaring that the ordinance in question refers to license taxes or fees. Both
plaintiff and defendant directly appealed to the Supreme Court.

ISSUE:
Was Ordinance No. 1, series of 1956, passed by defendant's municipal council as a regulatory enactment or as a
revenue measure?

RULING:
The present imposition must be treated as a levy for revenue purposes. A quick glance at the big amount of
maximum annual tax set forth in the ordinance, P40,000.00 for sugar centrals, and P40,000.00 for sugar refineries, will
readily convince one that the tax is really a revenue tax. And then, we read in the ordinance nothing which would as much
as indicate that the tax imposed is merely for police inspection, supervision or regulation. Given the purposes just
mentioned, we find no warrant in logic to give our assent to the view that the ordinance in question is solely for regulatory
purpose. Plain is the meaning conveyed. The ordinance is for raising money. To say otherwise is to misread the purpose
of the ordinance.

WALTER LUTZ vs. J. ANTONIO ARANETA


G.R. No. L-7859 December 22, 1955

FACTS:
This case was initiated in the Court of First Instance of Negros Occidental to test the legality of the taxes imposed
by Commonwealth Act No. 567, otherwise known as the Sugar Adjustment Act.
Plaintiff, Walter Lutz seeks to recover from the Collector of Internal Revenue the sum of P14,666.40 paid by the
estate as taxes, under section 3 of the Act, for the crop years 1948-1949 and 1949-1950; alleging that such tax is
unconstitutional and void, being levied for the aid and support of the sugar industry exclusively, which in plaintiff's opinion
is not a public purpose for which a tax may be constitutioally levied. The action having been dismissed by the Court of
First Instance, the plaintifs appealed the case directly to the Supreme Court.

ISSUE:
Is the tax provided for in Commonwealth Act No. 567 a pure exercise of the taxing power?
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RULING:
Analysis of the Act, and particularly of section 6 will show that the tax is levied with a regulatory purpose, to
provide means for the rehabilitation and stabilization of the threatened sugar industry. In other words, the act is primarily
an exercise of the police power.
The protection and promotion of the sugar industry is a matter of public concern, it follows that the Legislature
may determine within reasonable bounds what is necessary for its protection and expedient for its promotion. If objective
and methods are alike constitutionally valid, no reason is seen why the state may not levy taxes to raise funds for their
prosecution and attainment. Taxation may be made the implement of the state's police power.

REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, represented by the PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION ON GOOD GOVERNMENT


(PCGG) vs. COCOFED, ET AL. and BALLARES, ET AL., EDUARDO M. COJUANGCO JR. and the
SANDIGANBAYAN (First Division)
G.R. No. 147062-64 December 14, 2001

FACTS:
The PCGG issued and implemented numerous sequestrations, freeze orders and provisional takeovers of
allegedly ill-gotten companies, assets and properties, real or personal.
Among the properties sequestered by the Commission were shares of stock in the United Coconut Planters Bank
(UCPB) registered in the names of the alleged "one million coconut farmers," the so-called Coconut Industry Investment
Fund companies (CIIF companies) and Private Respondent Eduardo Cojuangco Jr.
On January 23, 1995, the trial court rendered its final Decision nullifying and setting aside the Resolution of the
Sandiganbayan which lifted the sequestration of the subject UCPB shares.

ISSUE:
Are the Coconut Levy Funds raised through the State’s police and taxing powers?

RULING:
Indeed, coconut levy funds partake of the nature of taxes which, in general, are enforced proportional
contributions from persons and properties, exacted by the State by virtue of its sovereignty for the support of government
and for all public needs.
Based on this definition, a tax has three elements, namely: a) it is an enforced proportional contribution from
persons and properties; b) it is imposed by the State by virtue of its sovereignty; and c) it is levied for the support of the
government.
Taxation is done not merely to raise revenues to support the government, but also to provide means for the
rehabilitation and the stabilization of a threatened industry, which is so affected with public interest as to be within the
police power of the State.

WENCESLAO PASCUAL vs. THE SECRETARY OF PUBLIC WORKS AND COMMUNICATIONS, ET AL.
G.R. No. L-10405 December 29, 1960

FACTS:
On August 31, 1954, petitioner Wenceslao Pascual instituted this action for declaratory relief, with injunction, upon
the ground that Republic Act No. 920, entitled "An Act Appropriating Funds for Public Works", approved on June 20, 1953,
contained, in section 1-C (a) thereof, an item (43[h]) of P85,000.00 "for the construction, reconstruction, repair, extension
and improvement" of Pasig feeder road terminals; that, at the time of the passage and approval of said Act, the
aforementioned feeder roads were "nothing but projected and planned subdivision roads, not yet constructed, . . . within
the Antonio Subdivision . . . situated at . . . Pasig, Rizal" which projected feeder roads "do not connect any government
property or any important premises to the main highway";
Respondents moved to dismiss the petition upon the ground that petitioner had "no legal capacity to sue", and
that the petition did "not state a cause of action".

ISSUE:
Should appropriation using public funds be made for public purposes only?

RULING:
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The right of the legislature to appropriate funds is correlative with its right to tax, and, under constitutional
provisions against taxation except for public purposes and prohibiting the collection of a tax for one purpose and the
devotion thereof to another purpose, no appropriation of state funds can be made for other than for a public purpose.
The test of the constitutionality of a statute requiring the use of public funds is whether the statute is designed to
promote the public interest, as opposed to the furtherance of the advantage of individuals, although each advantage to
individuals might incidentally serve the public.

OSMEÑA VS. ORBOS


G.R. No. 99886 March 31, 1993

FACTS:
October 10, 1984, President Ferdinand Marcos issued P.D. 1956 creating a Special Account in the General Fund,
designated as the Oil Price Stabilization Fund (OPSF). The OPSF was designed to reimburse oil companies for cost
increases in crude oil and imported petroleum products resulting from exchange rate adjustments and from increases in
the world market prices of crude oil. Subsequently, the OPSF was reclassified into a "trust liability account,". President
Corazon C. Aquino promulgated E. O. 137 expanding the grounds for reimbursement to oil companies for possible cost
under recovery incurred as a result of the reduction of domestic prices of petroleum products.
The petitioner argues inter alia that "the monies collected pursuant to . . P.D. 1956, as amended, must be treated
as a 'SPECIAL FUND,' not as a 'trust account' or a 'trust fund,' and that "if a special tax is collected for a specific purpose,
the revenue generated therefrom shall 'be treated as a special fund' to be used only for the purpose indicated, and not
channeled to another government objective." Petitioner further points out that since "a 'special fund' consists of monies
collected through the taxing power of a State, such amounts belong to the State, although the use thereof is limited to the
special purpose/objective for which it was created."

ISSUE:
Do the powers granted to the ERB under P.D. 1956 partake of the nature of the taxation power of the State?

RULING:
NO. The OPSF was established "for the purpose of minimizing the frequent price changes brought about by
exchange rate adjustment and/or changes in world market prices of crude oil and imported petroleum products. While the
funds collected may be referred to as taxes, they are exacted in the exercise of the police power of the State.

PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF THE PHIILIPPINES, INC. VS. MUNICIPALITY OF TANAUAN


G.R. No. L-31156 February 27, 1976

FACTS:
In February 1963, plaintiff commenced a complaint seeking to declare Section 2 of R.A. 2264 (Local Autonomy
Act) unconstitutional as an undue delegation of taxing power and to declare Ordinance Nos. 23 and 27 issued by the
Municipality of Tanauan, Leyte as null and void.
Municipal Ordinance No. 23 levies and collects from soft drinks producers and manufacturers one-sixteenth (1/16)
of a centavo for every bottle of soft drink corked. On the other hand, Municipal Ordinance No. 27 levies and collects on
soft drinks produced or manufactured within the territorial jurisdiction of the municipality a tax of one centavo (P0.01) on
each gallon of volume capacity. The tax imposed in both Ordinances Nos. 23 and 27 is denominated as "municipal
production tax.”

ISSUES:
1. Is Section 2 of R.A. 2264 an undue delegation of the power of taxation?
2. Do Ordinance Nos. 23 and 24 constitute double taxation and impose percentage or specific taxes?

RULING:
1. NO. The power of taxation is purely legislative and cannot be delegated to the executive or judicial
department of the government without infringing upon the theory of separation of powers. But as an
exception, the theory does not apply to municipal corporations. Legislative powers may be delegated to local
governments in respect of matters of local concern.

2. NO. The Municipality of Tanauan discovered that manufacturers could increase the volume contents of each
bottle and still pay the same tax rate since tax is imposed on every bottle corked. To combat this scheme,
Municipal Ordinance No. 27 was enacted. As such, it was a repeal of Municipal Ordinance No. 23. In the
10
stipulation of facts, the parties admitted that the Municipal Treasurer was enforcing Municipal Ordinance
No. 27 only. Hence, there was no case of double taxation.

SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEM VS. CITY OF BACOLOD


G.R. No. L-35726 July 21, 1982

FACTS:
Petitioner Social Security System, for operation purposes, maintains a five-storey building in Bacolod City
occupying four parcels of land. Said lands and buildings were assessed for taxation. Petitioner failed to pay the realty
taxes for the years 1968, 1969 and 1970. Consequently, the City of Bacolod levied upon said lands and buildings and
declared them forfeited in its favor. In protest, petitioner wrote the city mayor through the city treasurer seeking
reconsideration of the forfeiture proceeding on the ground that it is a government-owned and controlled corporation and
as such, should be exempt from payment of real estate taxes. No action was however taken. Thereafter, petitioner filed an
action in court for the nullification of the court proceedings. The court ruled that the properties of petitioner are not exempt
from the payment of real property tax because these are not one of the exemptions under Section 29 of the Charter of
Bacolod City and there is no other law providing for its exemption.

ISSUE:
Should the subject properties maintained by petitioner SSS be exempt from payment of real property tax?

RULING:
YES. Whether a government owned and controlled corporation is performing governmental or proprietary function
is immaterial. Section 29 of the Charter of Bacolod City does not contain any qualification whatsoever in providing for the
exemption from real estate taxes of "lands and buildings owned by the Commonwealth or Republic of Philippines." Hence,
when the legislature exempted lands and buildings owned by the government from payment of said taxes, what it
intended was a broad and comprehensive application of such mandate, regardless of whether such property is devoted to
governmental or proprietary purpose.
Further, P.D. 24 has amended the Social Security Act of 1954 expressly exempting the SSS from payment of any
tax thereby removing all doubts as to its exemption.

SEA-LAND SERVICE, INC. VS. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 122605 April 30, 2001

FACTS:
Petitioner Sea-Land Service Incorporated, an American international shipping company licensed by the Securities
and Exchange Commission to do business in the Philippines entered into a contract with the United States Government to
transport military household goods and effects of U.S. military personnel assigned to the Subic Naval Base. Sea-Land
paid its corresponding corporate income tax for the taxable year 1984 at the rate of 1.5% in accordance with Section 25(a)
(2) of the National Internal Revenue Code in relation to Article 9 of the RP-US Tax Treaty. Subsequently, Sea-Land filed a
claim for refund alleging that the taxes it paid were made in mistake because under the RP-US Military Base Agreement,
it is exempt from the payment of taxes.

ISSUE:
Does the income that petitioner derived from services in transporting the household goods and effects of U.S.
military personnel fall within the tax exemption provided in the RP-US Military Bases Agreement?

RULING:
NO. Laws granting exemption from tax are construed strictissimi juris against the taxpayer and liberally in favor of
the taxing power. The transport or shipment of household goods and effects of U.S. military personnel is not included in
the term "construction, maintenance, operation and defense of the bases.” Neither could the performance of this service
to the U.S. government be interpreted as directly related to the defense and security of the Philippine territories

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE vs.


MITSUBISHI METAL CORPORATION
G.R. No. L-54908. January 22, 1990
11
FACTS:
On April 17, 1970, Atlas Consolidated Mining and Development Corporation entered into a Loan and Sales
Contract with Mitsubishi Metal Corporation for purposes of the projected expansion of the productive capacity of the
former's mines in Toledo, Cebu. Under said contract, Mitsubishi agreed to extend a loan to Atlas 'in the amount of
$20,000,000.00, United States currency. Atlas, in turn undertook to sell to Mitsubishi all the copper concentrates produced
for a period of fifteen (15) years. Mitsubishi thereafter applied for a loan with the Export-Import Bank of Japan (Eximbank)
for purposes of its obligation under said contract. Its loan application was approved on May 26, 1970 in the equivalent
sum of $20,000,000.00 in United States currency at the then prevailing exchange rate.
Pursuant to the contract between Atlas and Mitsubishi, interest payments were made by the former to the latter
totaling P13,143,966.79 for the years 1974 and 1975. The corresponding 15% tax thereon in the amount of
P1,971,595.01 was withheld pursuant to Section 24 (b) (1) and Section 53 (b) (2) of the National Internal Revenue Code,
as amended by Presidential Decree No. 131, and duly remitted to the Government.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the interest income from the loans extended to Atlas by Mitsubishi is excludible from gross income
taxation pursuant to Section 29 of the tax code and, therefore, exempt from withholding tax.

RULING:
The court ruled in the negative. Eximbank had nothing to do with the sale of the copper concentrates since all that
Mitsubishi stated in its loan application with the former was that the amount being procured would be used as a loan to
and in consideration for importing copper concentrates from Atlas. Such an innocuous statement of purpose could not
have been intended for, nor could it legally constitute, a contract of agency. The conclusion is indubitable; MITSUBISHI,
and NOT EXIMBANK, is the sole creditor of ATLAS, the former being the owner of the $20 million upon completion of its
loan contract with EXIMBANK of Japan.

It is settled a rule in this jurisdiction that laws granting exemption from tax are construed strictissimi juris against
the taxpayer and liberally in favor of the taxing power. Taxation is the rule and exemption is the exception.

31st INFANTRY POST EXCHANGE vs. POSADAS


G.R. No. 33403. September 4, 1930

FACTS:
The 31st Infantry Post Exchange is a post exchange constituted in accordance with Army regulations and the laws
of the United States. in the course of its duly authorized business transactions, the Exchange made many purchases of
various and diverse commodities, goods, wares and merchandise from various merchants in the Philippines. The
Commissioner collected a sales tax of 1 1/2 % of the gross value of the commodities, etc. from the merchants who sold
said commodities to the Exchange. A formal protest was lodged by the Exchange.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the petitioner is exempt from the sales tax imposed against its suppliers.

RULING:
The court ruled in the negative. Taxes have been collected from merchants who made sales to Army Post
Exchanges since 1904 (Act 1189, Section 139). Similar taxes are paid by those who sell merchandise to the Philippine
Government, and by those who do business with the US Army and Navy in the Philippines. Herein, the merchants who
effected the sales to the Post Exchange are the ones who paid the tax; and it is the officers, soldiers, and civilian
employees and their families who are benefited by the post exchange to whom the tax is ultimately shifted.
An Army Post Exchange, although an agency within the US Army, cannot secure exemption from taxation for
merchants who make sales to the Post Exchange.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE vs. MARUBENI CORPORATION


G.R. No. 137377. December 18, 2001

FACTS:
Respondent Marubeni Corporation is a foreign corporation and is duly registered to engage in business in the
Philippines. Sometime in November 1985, petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued a letter of authority to
examine the books of accounts of the Manila branch office of respondent corporation.
12
In the course of the examination, petitioner found respondent to have undeclared income from two (2)
contracts in the Philippines. Petitioner's revenue examiners recommended an assessment for deficiency income, branch
profit remittance, contractor's and commercial broker's taxes. Respondent questioned this assessment. Respondent then
received a letter form petitioner assessing respondent several deficiency taxes. On September 26, 1986, respondent filed
two (2) petitions for review with the Court of Tax Appeals.
Earlier, on August 2, 1986, Executive Order (E.O.) No. 41 declaring a one-time amnesty covering unpaid income
taxes for the years 1981 to 1985 was issued. Under this E.O., a taxpayer who wished to avail of the income tax amnesty
should comply with certain requirements. In accordance with the terms of E.O. No. 41, respondent filed its tax amnesty
return dated October 30, 1986. On November 17, 1986, the scope and coverage of E.O. No. 41 was expanded by
Executive Order (E.O.) No. 64.

ISSUE:
Whether or not herein respondent's deficiency tax liabilities were extinguished upon respondent's availment of tax
amnesty under Executive Orders Nos. 41 and 64.

RULING:
Section 4 (b) of E.O. No. 41 is very clear and unambiguous. It excepts from income tax amnesty those taxpayers
"with income tax cases already filed in court as of the effectivity hereof." The point of reference is the date of effectivity of
E.O. No. 41. The difficulty lies with respect to the contractor's tax assessment and respondent's availment of the amnesty
under E.O. No. 64 including estate and donor's taxes and tax on business.
In the instant case, the vagueness in Section 4 (b) brought about by E.O. No. 64 should be construed strictly
against the taxpayer. The term "income tax cases" should be read as to refer to estate and donor's taxes and taxes on
business while the word "hereof," to E.O. No. 64. Since Executive Order No. 64 took effect on November 17, 1986,
consequently, insofar as the taxes in E.O. No. 64 are concerned, the date of effectivity referred to in Section 4 (b) of E.O.
No. 41 should be November 17, 1986. There is nothing in E.O. No. 64 that provides that it should retroact to the date of
effectivity of E.O. No. 41, the original issuance. Neither is it necessarily implied from E.O. No. 64 that it or any of its
provisions should apply retroactively.

REAGAN vs. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE


G.R. No. L-26379, 27. December 27, 1969

FACTS:
William Reagan imported a tax-free 1960 Cadillac car with accessories valued at US $ 6,443.83, including freight,
insurance and other charges. After acquiring a permit to sell the car from the base commander of Clark Air Base, Reagan
sold the car to a certain Willie Johnson Jr. of the US Marine Corps stationed in Sangley Point, Cavite for US$ 6,600.
Johnson sold the same, on the same day to Fred Meneses, a Filipino. As a result of the transaction, the Commissioner
rendered Reagan liable for income tax in the sum of P2,970. Reagan claimed that he was exempt as the transaction
occurred in Clark Air Base, which as he contends is “a base outside the Philippines.”

ISSUE:
Whether or not petitioner Reagan was covered by the tax exemption.

RULING:
The court ruled in the negative. The Philippines, as an independent and sovereign country, exercises its authority
over its entire domain. Any state may, however, by its consent, express or implied, submit to a restriction of its sovereign
rights. It may allow another power to participate in the exercise of jurisdictional right over certain portions of its territory. By
doing so, it by no means follows that such areas become impressed with an alien character. The areas retain their status
as native soil. Clark Air Base is within Philippine territorial jurisdiction to tax, and thus, Reagan was liable for the income
tax arising from the sale of his automobile in Clark. The law does not look with favor on tax exemptions and that he who
would seek to be thus privileged must justify it by words too plain to be mistaken and too categorical to be misinterpreted.
Reagan has not done so, and cannot do so.

TIU vs. COURT OF APPEALS


GR. No. 127410 January 20, 1999

FACTS:
Congress, with the approval of the President, passed into law RA 7227 entitled "An Act Accelerating the
Conversion of Military Reservations Into Other Productive Uses, Creating the Bases Conversion and Development
13
Authority for this Purpose, Providing Funds Therefor and for Other Purposes." Section 12 thereof created the Subic
Special Economic Zone and granted there to special privileges. President Ramos issued Executive Order No. 97,
clarifying the application of the tax and duty incentives. The President issued Executive Order No. 97-A, specifying the
area within which the tax-and-duty-free privilege was operative. The petitioners challenged before this Court the
constitutionality of EO 97-A for allegedly being violative of their right to equal protection of the laws. This Court referred
the matter to the Court of Appeals. Proclamation No. 532 was issued by President Ramos. It delineated the exact metes
and bounds of the Subic Special Economic and Free Port Zone, pursuant to Section 12 of RA 7227. Respondent Court
held that "there is no substantial difference between the provisions of EO 97-A and Section 12 of RA 7227. In both, the
'Secured Area' is precise and well-defined as '. . . the lands occupied by the Subic Naval Base and its contiguous
extensions as embraced, covered and defined by the 1947 Military Bases Agreement between the Philippines and the
United States of America, as amended . . .'"

ISSUE:
Whether or not Executive Order No. 97-A violates the equal protection clause of the Constitution

RULING:
No. The Court found real and substantive distinctions between the circumstances obtaining inside and those
outside the Subic Naval Base, thereby justifying a valid and reasonable classification. The fundamental right of equal
protection of the laws is not absolute, but is subject to reasonable classification. If the groupings are characterized by
substantial distinctions that make real differences, one class may be treated and regulated differently from another. The
classification must also be germane to the purpose of the law and must apply to all those belonging to the same class.

JOHN PEOPLES ALTERNATIVE COALITION vs. BCDA


GR. No. 119775 October 24, 2003

FACTS:
Republic Act No. 7227 set out the policy of the government to accelerate the sound and balanced conversion into
alternative productive uses of the former military bases. It created Bases Conversion and Development Authority. It also
created the Subic Special Economic and Free Port Zone. It granted the Subic SEZ incentives. It expressly gave authority
to the President to create through executive proclamation, subject to the concurrence of the local government units
directly affected, other Special Economic Zones in the areas covered. BCDA entered into a Memorandum of Agreement
and Escrow Agreement with Tuntex and Asiaworld. BCDA, Tuntex and Asiaworld executed a Joint Venture Agreement.
The Sangguniang Panlungsod of Baguio City asked BCDA to exclude all the barangays partly or totally located within
Camp John Hay from the reach or coverage of any plan or program for its development. The sanggunian adopted and
submitted a 15-point concept for the development of Camp John Hay. BCDA, Tuntex and AsiaWorld agreed to some, but
rejected or modified the other proposals. They stressed the need to declare Camp John Hay a SEZ as a condition
precedent in accordance R.A. No. 7227. The sanggunian requested the Mayor to order the determination of realty taxes
which may be collected from real properties of Camp John Hay. It was intended to intelligently guide the sanggunian in
determining its position on whether Camp John Hay be declared a SEZ, it being of the view that such declaration would
exempt the camp’s property and the economic activity therein from local or national taxation. The sanggunian passed a
resolution seeking the issuance by President Ramos of a presidential proclamation declaring an area of 288.1 hectares of
the camp as a SEZ. President Ramos issued Proclamation No. 420 which established a SEZ on a portion of Camp John
Hay.

ISSUE:
Whether Proclamation No. 420 is constitutional

RULING:
While the grant of economic incentives may be essential to the creation and success of SEZs, free trade zones
and the like, the grant thereof to the John Hay SEZ cannot be sustained. The incentives under R.A. No. 7227 are
exclusive only to the Subic SEZ, hence, the extension of the same to the John Hay SEZ finds no support therein. Neither
does the same grant of privileges to the John Hay SEZ find support in the other laws specified under Section 3 of
Proclamation No. 420, which laws were already extant before the issuance of the proclamation or the enactment of R.A.
No. 7227. More importantly, the nature of most of the assailed privileges is one of tax exemption. It is the legislature,
unless limited by a provision of the state constitution, that has full power to exempt any person or corporation or class of
property from taxation, its power to exempt being as broad as its power to tax. The challenged grant of tax exemption
would circumvent the Constitution’s imposition that a law granting any tax exemption must have the concurrence of a
majority of all the members of Congress.
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COCONUT OIL REFINERS ASSOCIATION INC. vs. BCDA


G.R. No. 132527 July 29, 2005

FACTS:
Republic Act No. 7227 was enacted providing for the sound and balanced conversion of the Clark and Subic
military reservations and their extensions into alternative productive uses in the form of special economic zones in order to
promote the economic and social development of Central Luzon in particular and the country in general. President Ramos
issued Executive Order No. 80 which declared that Clark shall have all the applicable incentives granted to the Subic
Special Economic and Free Port Zone under Republic Act No. 7227. The CSEZ shall have all the applicable incentives in
the Subic Special Economic and Free Port Zone under RA 7227. The CSEZ Main Zone covering the Clark Air Base
proper shall have all the investment incentives, while the CSEZ Sub-Zone covering the rest of the CSEZ shall have limited
incentives. The full incentives in the Clark SEZ Main Zone and the limited incentives in the Clark SEZ Sub-Zone shall be
determined by the BCDA. BCDA passed Board Resolution No. 93-05-034 allowing the tax and duty-free sale at retail of
consumer goods imported via Clark for consumption outside the CSEZ. The President issued EO No. 97, “Clarifying the
Tax and Duty Free Incentive Within the Subic Special Economic Zone Pursuant to R.A. No. 7227.” EO 97-A was issued,
“Further Clarifying the Tax and Duty-Free Privilege Within the Subic Special Economic and Free Port Zone.”

ISSUE:
Whether or not Executive Order No. 97-A, Section 5 of Executive Order No. 80, and Section 4 of BCDA Board
Resolution No. 93-05-034 are null and void

RULING:
The Court finds that the setting up of such commercial establishments which are the only ones duly authorized
to sell consumer items tax and duty-free is still well within the policy enunciated in Section 12 of Republic Act No. 7227
that “. . .the Subic Special Economic Zone shall be developed into a self-sustaining, industrial, commercial, financial and
investment center to generate employment opportunities in and around the zone and to attract and promote productive
foreign investments.” The Court reiterates that the second sentences of paragraphs 1.2 and 1.3 of Executive Order No.
97-A, allowing tax and duty-free removal of goods to certain individuals, even in a limited amount, from the Secured Area
of the SSEZ, are null and void for being contrary to Section 12 of Republic Act No. 7227. Said Section clearly provides
that “exportation or removal of goods from the territory of the Subic Special Economic Zone to the other parts of the
Philippine territory shall be subject to customs duties and taxes under the Customs and Tariff Code and other relevant tax
laws of the Philippines.”

PROVINCE OF ABRA vs. HERNANDO


G.R. No. L-49336 August 31, 1981

FACTS:
On the face of this certiorari and mandamus petition, it clearly appears that the actuation of respondent Judge
Hernando left much to be desired. There was a denial of a motion to dismiss an action for declaratory relief by Roman
Catholic Bishop of Bangued desirous of being exempted from a real estate tax followed by a summary judgment granting
such exemption, without even hearing the side of petitioner. It was the submission of counsel that an action for declaratory
relief would be proper only before a breach or violation of any statute, executive order or regulation. Moreover, there
being a tax assessment made by the Provincial Assessor on the properties of respondent, petitioner failed to exhaust the
administrative remedies available under PD No. 464 before filing such court action. Respondent Judge alleged that there
"is no question that the real properties sought to be taxed by the Province of Abra are properties of the respondent Roman
Catholic Bishop of Bangued, Inc." The very next sentence assumed the very point it asked when he categorically stated:
"Likewise, there is no dispute that the properties including their procedure are actually, directly and exclusively used by
the Roman Catholic Bishop of Bangued, Inc. for religious or charitable purposes." For him then: "The proper remedy of the
petitioner is appeal and not this special civil action."

ISSUE:
Whether or not the properties of respondent Roman Catholic Bishop should be exempt from taxation

RULING:
Respondent Judge would not have erred so grievously had he merely compared the provisions of the present
Constitution with that appearing in the 1935 Charter on the tax exemption of "lands, buildings, and improvements." There
is a marked difference. Under the 1935 Constitution: "Cemeteries, churches, and parsonages or convents appurtenant
thereto, and all lands, buildings, and improvements used exclusively for religious, charitable, or educational purposes
15
shall be exempt from taxation." The present Constitution added "charitable institutions, mosques, and non-profit
cemeteries" and required that for the exemption of ":lands, buildings, and improvements," they should not only be
"exclusively" but also "actually and "directly" used for religious or charitable purposes. The Constitution is worded
differently. The change should not be ignored. It must be duly taken into consideration.

TOLENTINO vs. SECRETARY OF FINANCE


G.R. No. 115455 October 30, 1995

FACTS:
Motions were filed seeking reconsideration of the Supreme Court decision dismissing the petitions for the
declaration of unconstitutionality of R.A. No. 7716, otherwise known as the Expanded Value-Added Tax Law. The
motions, of which there are 10 in all, have been filed by the several petitioners in these cases.

ISSUES:
1. Whether or not R.A. No. 7716 did not "originate exclusively" in the House of Representatives as required by Art.
VI Sec. 24 of the Constitution.
2. Whether or not R.A. No. 7716 is violative of press freedom and religious freedom under Art. III Secs. 4 and 5 of
the Constitution.
3. Whether or not there is violation of the rule on taxation under Art. VI Sec. 28 (1) of the Constitution.
4. Whether or not there is an impairment of obligation of contracts under Art. III Sec. 10 of the Constitution.
5. Whether or not there is violation of the due process clause under Art. III Sec. 1 of the Constitution.

RULING:
1. While Art. VI Sec. 24 provides that all appropriation, revenue or tariff bills, bills authorizing increase of the
public debt, bills of local application, and private bills must "originate exclusively in the House of Representatives," it also
adds, "but the Senate may propose or concur with amendments." In the exercise of this power, the Senate may propose
an entirely new bill as a substitute measure.

2. Since the law granted the press a privilege, the law could take back the privilege anytime without offense to the
Constitution. The VAT is not a license tax. It is not a tax on the exercise of a privilege, much less a constitutional right. It is
imposed on the sale, barter, lease or exchange of goods or properties or the sale or exchange of services and the lease
of properties purely for revenue purposes. To subject the press to its payment is not to burden the exercise of its right any
more than to make the press pay income tax or subject it to general regulation is not to violate its freedom under the
Constitution.

3. The Constitution does not really prohibit the imposition of indirect taxes which, like the VAT, are regressive.
What it simply provides is that Congress shall "evolve a progressive system of taxation."

4. Contracts must be understood as having been made in reference to the possible exercise of the rightful
authority of the government and no obligation of contract can extend to the defeat of that authority.

5. On the alleged violation of due process, hardship to taxpayers alone is not an adequate justification for
adjudicating abstract issues. Otherwise, adjudication would be no different from the giving of advisory opinion that does
not really settle legal issues. We are told that it is our duty under Art. VIII, Sec. 1 (2) to decide whenever a claim is made
that "there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or
instrumentality of the government." This duty can only arise if an actual case or controversy is before us.

ABAKADA Guro Party List vs. Ermita


G.R. No. 168056 September 1, 2005

FACTS:
Before R.A. No. 9337 took effect, petitioners ABAKADA GURO Party List, et al., filed a petition for prohibition on
May 27, 2005 questioning the constitutionality of Sections 4, 5 and 6 of R.A. No. 9337, amending Sections 106, 107 and
108, respectively, of the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC). Section 4 imposes a 10% VAT on sale of goods and
properties, Section 5 imposes a 10% VAT on importation of goods, and Section 6 imposes a 10% VAT on sale of services
and use or lease of properties. These questioned provisions contain a uniform proviso authorizing the President, upon
16
recommendation of the Secretary of Finance, to raise the VAT rate to 12%, effective January 1, 2006, after specified
conditions have been satisfied. Petitioners argue that the law is unconstitutional.

ISSUES:
1. Whether or not there is a violation of Article VI, Section 24 of the Constitution.
2. Whether or not there is undue delegation of legislative power in violation of Article VI Sec 28(2) of the
Constitution.
3. Whether or not there is a violation of the due process and equal protection under Article III Sec. 1 of the
Constitution.

RULING:
1. Since there is no question that the revenue bill exclusively originated in the
House of Representatives, the Senate was acting within its constitutional power to introduce amendments to the House
bill when it included provisions in Senate Bill No. 1950 amending corporate income taxes, percentage, and excise and
franchise taxes.

2. There is no undue delegation of legislative power but only of the discretion as to the execution of a law. This is
constitutionally permissible. Congress does not abdicate its functions or unduly delegate power when it describes what
job must be done, who must do it, and what is the scope of his authority; in our complex economy that is frequently the
only way in which the legislative process can go forward.

3. The power of the State to make reasonable and natural classifications for the purposes of taxation has long
been established. Whether it relates to the subject of taxation, the kind of property, the rates to be levied, or the amounts
to be raised, the methods of assessment, valuation and collection, the State’s power is entitled to presumption of validity.
As a rule, the judiciary will not interfere with such power absent a clear showing of unreasonableness, discrimination, or
arbitrariness.

MISAMIS ORIENTAL ASSOCIATION OF COCO TRADERS, INC. vs.


DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE SECRETARY
G.R. No. 108524 November 10, 1994

FACTS:
Petitioner Misamis Oriental Association of Coco Traders, Inc. is a domestic corporation engaged in the buying and
selling of copra in Misamis Oriental. The petitioner alleges that prior to the issuance of Revenue Memorandum Circular
47-91 on June 11, 1991, which implemented VAT Ruling 190-90, copra was classified as agricultural food product under
Sec. 103(b) of the National Internal Revenue Code and, therefore, exempt from VAT at all stages of production or
distribution.
Petitioner sought to nullify Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 47-91 and enjoin the collection by respondent
revenue officials of the Value Added Tax (VAT) on the sale of copra by members of petitioner organization as the
classification had the effect of denying to the petitioner the exemption it previously enjoyed when copra was classified as
an agricultural food product under Sec. 103(b) of the NIRC

ISSUE:
Whether there is violation of equal protection clause because while coconut farmers and copra producers are
exempt, traders and dealers are not, although both sell copra in its original state.

RULING:

There is a material or substantial difference between coconut farmers and copra producers, on the one hand, and
copra traders and dealers, on the other. The former produce and sell copra, the latter merely sell copra. The Constitution
does not forbid the differential treatment of persons so long as there is a reasonable basis for classifying them differently.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE vs. COURT OF APPEALS


G.R. No. 119761 August 29, 1996

FACTS:
17
Fortune Tobacco Corporation ("Fortune Tobacco") is engaged in the manufacture of different brands of
cigarettes. The Philippine Patent Office issued to the corporation separate certificates of trademark registration over
"Champion," "Hope," and "More" cigarettes. The initial position of the CIR was to classify 'Champion,' 'Hope,' and 'More'
as foreign brands since they were listed in the World Tobacco Directory as belonging to foreign companies. However,
Fortune Tobacco changed the names of 'Hope' to 'Hope Luxury' and 'More' to 'Premium More,' thereby removing the said
brands from the foreign brand category.
RA No. 7654, was enacted and became effective on 03 July 1993. It amended Section 142(c)(1) of the NIRC.
About a month after the enactment and two (2) days before the effectivity of RA 7654, Revenue Memorandum Circular
No. 37-93 ("RMC 37-93") Reclassification of Cigarettes Subject to Excise Tax, was issued by the BIR. Fortune Tobacco
requested for a review, reconsideration and recall of RMC 37-93. The request was denied on 29 July 1993. The following
day, or on 30 July 1993, the CIR assessed Fortune Tobacco for ad valorem tax deficiency amounting to P9,598,334.00.
On 03 August 1993, Fortune Tobacco filed a petition for review with the CTA. The CTA upheld the position of
Fortune Tobacco and adjudged RMC No. 37-93 as defective.

ISSUE:
Whether or not there is a violation of the due process of law.

RULING:
A reading of RMC 37-93, particularly considering the circumstances under which it has been issued, convinces us
that the circular cannot be viewed simply as a corrective measure or merely as construing Section 142(c)(1) of the NIRC,
as amended, but has, in fact and most importantly, been made in order to place "Hope Luxury," "Premium More" and
"Champion" within the classification of locally manufactured cigarettes bearing foreign brands and to thereby have them
covered by RA 7654.
In so doing, the BIR not simply intrepreted the law; verily, it legislated under its quasi-legislative authority. The due
observance of the requirements of notice, of hearing, and of publication should not have been then ignored. The Court is
convinced that the hastily promulgated RMC 37-93 has fallen short of a valid and effective administrative issuance.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE vs.


LINGAYEN GULF OF ELECTRIC POWER
G.R. No. L-23771 August 4, 1988

FACTS:
The respondent taxpayer, Lingayen Gulf Electric Power Co., Inc., operates an electric power plant serving the
adjoining municipalities of Lingayen and Binmaley, Pangasinan, pursuant to the municipal franchise granted it by their
respective municipal councils, under Resolution Nos. 14 and 25 of June 29 and July 2, 1946, respectively. Section 10 of
these franchises provides that said grantee shall pay 2% of their gross earnings obtained thru this privilege. On November
21, 1955, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) assessed against and demanded from the private respondent the total
amount of P19,293.41 representing deficiency franchise taxes and surcharges for the years 1946 to 1954 applying the
franchise tax rate of 5% on gross receipts from March 1, 1948 to December 31, 1954 as prescribed in Section 259 of the
National Internal Revenue Code, instead of the lower rates as provided in the municipal franchises.Pending the hearing of
the said cases, Republic Act (R.A.) No. 3843 was passed on June 22, 1 963, granting to the private respondent a
legislative franchise for the operation of the electric light, heat, and power system in the same municipalities of
Pangasinan. Section 4 thereof provides that: In consideration of the franchise and rights hereby granted, the grantee shall
pay into the Internal Revenue office of each Municipality in which it is supplying electric current to the public under this
franchise, a tax equal to two per centum of the gross receipts from electric current sold or supplied under this franchise.
The petitioner submits that the said law is unconstitutional insofar as it provides for the payment by the private respondent
of a franchise tax of 2% of its gross receipts, while other taxpayers similarly situated were subject to the 5% franchise tax
imposed in Section 259 of the Tax Code, thereby discriminatory and violative of the rule on uniformity and equality of
taxation.

ISSUE:
Whether or not Section 4 of R.A. No. 3843 is unconstitutional for being violative of the "uniformity and equality of
taxation" clause of the Constitution.

RULING:
Uniformity means that all property belonging to the same class shall be taxed alike The Legislature has the
inherent power not only to select the subjects of taxation but to grant exemptions. Tax exemptions have never been
deemed violative of the equal protection clause. Charters or special laws granted and enacted by the Legislature are in
the nature of private contracts. They do not constitute a part of the machinery of the general government.
18

KAPATIRAN NG MGA NAGLILINGKOD SA PAMAHALAAN vs. TAN


G.R. No. 81311 June 30, 1988

FACTS:
This petition seeks to nullify Executive Order No. 273 (EO 273, for short), issued by the President of the
Philippines on 25 July 1987, to take effect on 1 January 1988, and which amended certain sections of the National
Internal Revenue Code and adopted the value-added tax (VAT, for short), for being unconstitutional in that its enactment
is not alledgedly within the powers of the President; that the VAT is oppressive, discriminatory, regressive, and violates
the due process and equal protection clauses and other provisions of the 1987 Constitution.

ISSUE:
Whether or not EO 273 was enacted by the president with grave abuse of discretion and whether or not such law is
unconstitutional.

RULING:
Petitioners have failed to show that EO 273 was issued capriciously and whimsically or in an arbitrary or despotic
manner by reason of passion or personal hostility. It appears that a comprehensive study of the VAT had been extensively
discussed by this framers and other government agencies involved in its implementation, even under the past
administration. The petitioners have failed to adequately show that the VAT is oppressive, discriminatory or unjust.
Petitioners merely rely upon newspaper articles which are actually hearsay and have evidentiary value. To justify the
nullification of a law, there must be a clear and unequivocal breach of the Constitution, not a doubtful and argumentative
implication. The disputed sales tax is also equitable. It is imposed only on sales of goods or services by persons engage
in business with an aggregate gross annual sales exceeding P200,000.00. Small corner sari-sari stores are consequently
exempt from its application.

SISON vs. ANCHETA


G.R. No. L-59431 July 25, 1984

FACTS:
Petitioner assailed the validity of Section 1 of Batas Pambansa Blg. 135 which further amends Section 21 of the
National Internal Revenue Code of 1977, which provides for rates of tax on citizens or residents on (a) taxable
compensation income, (b) taxable net income, (c) royalties, prizes, and other winnings, (d) interest from bank deposits
and yield or any other monetary benefit from deposit substitutes and from trust fund and similar arrangements, (e)
dividends and share of individual partner in the net profits of taxable partnership, (f) adjusted gross income.

Petitioner as taxpayer alleges that by virtue thereof, "he would be unduly discriminated against by the imposition
of higher rates of tax upon his income arising from the exercise of his profession vis-a-vis those which are imposed upon
fixed income or salaried individual taxpayers. He characterizes the above section as arbitrary amounting to class
legislation, oppressive and capricious in character.

ISSUE:
Whether or not BP 135 Sec 1 is violative of due procee and equal protection clause.

RULING:
The difficulty confronting petitioner is thus apparent. He alleges arbitrariness. A mere allegation, as here. does not
suffice. There must be a factual foundation of such unconstitutional taint. Considering that petitioner here would condemn
such a provision as void or its face, he has not made out a case. This is merely to adhere to the authoritative doctrine that
were the due process and equal protection clauses are invoked, considering that they arc not fixed rules but rather broad
standards, there is a need for of such persuasive character as would lead to such a conclusion. Absent such a showing,
the presumption of validity must prevail. Due process was not violated.

VILLEGAS vs. HUI CHIONG TSAI PAO


G.R. No. L-29646 November 10, 1978

FACTS:
19
On February 22, 1968, the Municipal Board of Manila passed City Ordinance No. 6537. The said city
ordinance was also signed by then Manila Mayor Antonio J. Villegas (Villegas).
Section 1 of the said city ordinance prohibits aliens from being employed or to engage or participate in any
position or occupation or business enumerated therein, whether permanent, temporary or casual, without first securing an
employment permit from the Mayor of Manila and paying the permit fee of P50.00 except persons employed in the
diplomatic or consular missions of foreign countries, or in the technical assistance programs of both the Philippine
Government and any foreign government, and those working in their respective households, and members of religious
orders or congregations, sect or denomination, who are not paid monetarily or in kind.
Hiu Chiong Tsai Pao Ho (Tsai Pao Ho) who was employed in Manila, filed a petition with the CFI of Manila to
declare City Ordinance No. 6537 as null and void for being discriminatory and violative of the rule of the uniformity in
taxation.
The trial court declared City Ordinance No. 6537 null and void. Villegas filed the present petition.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the 50.00 employment permit fee imposed by virtue of Ordinance No. 6537 is a violation of the
equal protection clause.

RULING:
The P50.00 fee is unreasonable not only because it is excessive but because it fails to consider valid substantial
differences in situation among individual aliens who are required to pay it. Although the equal protection clause of the
Constitution does not forbid classification, it is imperative that the classification should be based on real and substantial
differences having a reasonable relation to the subject of the particular legislation. The same amount of P50.00 is being
collected from every employed alien whether he is casual or permanent, part time or full time or whether he is a lowly
employee or a highly paid executive. Ordinance No. 6537 is void because it does not contain or
suggest any standard or criterion to guide the mayor in the exercise of the power which has been granted to him by the
ordinance.

VILLANUEVA v. CITY OF ILOILO


G.R. No. 26521 December 28, 1968

FACTS:
The municipal board of Iloilo City enacted Ordinance 86, imposing license tax fees as follows: 1) tenement house,
P25.00anually; 2) tenement house, partly or wholly engaged in or dedicated to business in the streets of J.M. Basa, Iznart
Aldequer, P24.00 per apartment; 3) tenement house, partly or wholly engaged in business in any other streets, P12.00
per apartment.

The validity and constitutionality of this ordinance were challenged by the spouses Villanueva, owners of 4
tenement houses containing 34 apartments.

ISSUE:
Does Ordinance 11 violate the rules of uniformity of taxation?

RULING:
No. This court has ruled that tenement houses constitute a distinct class of property. It has likewise ruled that
taxes are uniform and equal when imposed upon all properties of the same class or character within the taxing authority.”
The fact, therefore, that the owners of other classes of buildings in the City of Iloilo do not pay the taxes imposed by the
ordinance in question is no argument at all against uniformity and equality of the tax imposition.

PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC. v. CITY OF BUTUAN


G.R. No. 22814 August 28, 1968

FACTS:
The City of Butuan enacted Ordinance No. 110 which was subsequently amended by Ordinance No. 122.
Ordinance No. 110 as amended, imposes a tax on any person, association, etc. of P0.10 per case of 24 bottles of Pepsi-
Cola and the plaintiff Pepsi-Cola paid under protest. The plaintiff filed a complaint for the recovery of the amount paid
under protest on the ground that Ordinance No. 110 is illegal, that the tax imposed is excessive and that it is
unconstitutional. Plaintiff maintains that the ordinance is null and void because it is unjust and discriminatory.
20

ISSUE:
Whether or not the ordinance in question is violative of the uniformity required by the Constitution?

RULING:
Yes. Only sales by “agents or consignees” of outside dealers would be subject to the tax. Sales by local dealers,
not acting for or on behalf of other merchants, regardless of the volume of their sales, and even if the same exceeded
those made by said agents or consignees of producers or merchants established outside the City of Butuan, would be
exempt from the disputed tax. The classification to be valid and reasonable must be: 1) based upon substantial
distinctions; 2)germane to the purpose of the ordinance; 3) applicable, not only to present conditions, but also to future
conditions substantially identical to those present; and 4) applicable equally to all those who belong to the same class.
These conditions are not fully met by the ordinance in question.

ORMOC SUGAR COMPANY, INC. v. TREASURER OF ORMOC CITY


G.R. No. 23794 February 17, 1968

FACTS:
The Municipal Board of Ormoc City passed Ordinance No. 4 imposing “on any and all productions of centrifugal
sugar milled at the Ormoc Sugar Company, Inc., in Ormoc City a municipal tax equivalent to one per centum (1%) per
export sale to USA and other foreign countries.” Payments for said tax were made, under protest, by Ormoc Sugar
Company, Inc. Ormoc Sugar Company, Inc. filed before the Court of First Instance of Leyte a complaint against the City of
Ormoc as well as its Treasurer, Municipal Board and Mayor alleging that the ordinance is unconstitutional for being
violative of the equal protection clause and the rule of uniformity of taxation. The court rendered a decision that upheld the
constitutionality of the ordinance. Hence, this appeal.

ISSUE:
Whether or not constitutional limits on the power of taxation, specifically the equal protection clause and rule of
uniformity of taxation, were infringed?

RULING:
Yes. Equal protection clause applies only to persons or things identically situated and does not bar a reasonable
classification of the subject of legislation, and a classification is reasonable where 1) it is based upon substantial
distinctions; 2) these are germane to the purpose of the law; 3) the classification applies not only to present conditions,
but also to future conditions substantially identical to those present; and 4) the classification applies only to those who
belong to the same class.

A perusal of the requisites shows that the questioned ordinance does not meet them, for it taxes only centrifugal
sugar produced and exported by the Ormoc Sugar Company, Inc. and none other. The taxing ordinance should not be
singular and exclusive as to exclude any subsequently established sugar central for the coverage of the tax.

LUTZ v. ARANETA
G.R. No. 7859 December 22, 1955

FACTS:
This case was initiated in the Court of First Instance of Negros Occidental to test the legality of the taxes imposed
by Commonwealth Act No. 567 (Sugar Adjustment Act). Section 3 of the said law levies on owners or persons in control of
lands devoted to the cultivation of sugar cane and ceded to others for a consideration, on lease or otherwise a tax
equivalent to the difference between the money value of the rental or consideration collected and the amount representing
12 per centum of the assessed value of such land. Plaintiff Lutz, in his capacity as Judicial Administrator of the Intestate
Estate of Ledesma, seeks to recover from the Collector of Internal Revenue the sum paid by him as taxes alleging that
such tax is unconstitutional and void, being levied for the aid and support of the sugar industry exclusively, which in
plaintiff’s opinion is not a public purpose for which a tax may be constitutionally levied. The action having been dismissed
by the Court of First Instance, the plaintiffs appealed the case.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the law in question is constitutional?
21

RULING:
Yes. The tax levied is with a regulatory purpose, to provide means for the rehabilitation and stabilization of the
threatened sugar industry. The act is primarily an exercise of the police power. That the tax to be levied should burden the
sugar producers themselves can hardly be a ground of complaint. It appears rational that the tax be obtained precisely
from those who are to be benefited from the expenditure of the funds derived from it. At any rate, it is inherent in the
power to tax that a state be free to select the subjects of taxation, and it has been repeatedly ruled that “inequalities which
result from a singling out of one particular for taxation or exemption infringe no constitutional limitation.” It appears of no
moment that the funds raised under the Sugar Stabilization Act, now in question, should be exclusively spent in aid of the
sugar industry, since it is that very enterprise that is being protected.

ASSOCIATION OF CUSTOMS BROKERS et al. vs.


THE MUNICIPALITY BOARD of Manila et al.
G.R. No. L-4376, May 22, 1953

FACTS:
This is a petition for declaratory relief to test the validity of Ordinance No. 3379 passed by the Municipal Board of
the City of Manila on March 24, 1950.The petitioners which is composed of all brokers and public service operators of
motor vehicles in the City of Manila, and G. Manlapit, Inc., a member of said association, also a public service operator of
the trucks in said City, challenge the validity of said ordinance on the ground that (1) while it levies a so-called property tax
it is in reality a license tax which is beyond the power of the Municipal Board of the City of Manila.

ISSUE:
Whether or not Ordinance No. 3379 is valid as held by the CFI of Manila.

RULING:

No. The ordinance in question while it refers to property tax and it is fixed ad valorem yet we cannot reject the
idea that it is merely levied on motor vehicles operating within the City of Manila with the main purpose of raising funds to
be expended exclusively for the repair, maintenance and improvement of the streets and bridges in said city. This is
precisely what the Motor Vehicle Law (Act No. 3992) intends to prevent, for the reason that, under said Act, municipal
corporation already participate in the distribution of the proceeds that are raised for the same purpose of repairing,
maintaining and improving bridges and public highway (section 73 of the Motor Vehicle Law). This prohibition is intended
to prevent duplication in the imposition of fees for the same purpose. It is for this reason that we believe that the ordinance
in question merely imposes a license fee although under the cloak of an ad valorem tax to circumvent the prohibition
above adverted to.

EASTERN THEATRICAL CO., INC., ET AL. vs. VICTOR, ALFONSO


G.R. No. L-1104 May 31, 1949

FACTS:
Twelve corporation engaged in motion picture business filed a complaint to impugn the validity of Ordinance No.
2958 of the City of Manila- AN ORDINANCE IMPOSING A FEE ON THE PRICE OF EVERY ADMISSION TICKET SOLD
BY CINEMATOGRAPHS, THEATERS VAUDEVILLE COMPANIES THEATRICAL SHOWS AND BOXING EXHIBITION.

Plaintiffs, operator of theaters in Manila And distributor of local or imported films impugns Sections 1, 2 and 4 of
said ordinance as null and void upon the following grounds: (a) For violation the Constitution more particular the provision
regarding the uniformity and equality of taxation and the equal protection of the laws; (b) because it contravenes, violates
and is inconsistent with, existing national legislation more particularly revenue and tax laws and (c) because it is unfair,
unjust, arbitrary capricious unreasonable oppressive and is contrary to and violation our basic and recognizes principles of
taxation and licensing laws.

ISSUE:
Whether or not Ordinance No. 2958 violated the principle of equality and uniformity of taxation enjoined by the
Constitution.

RULING:
22
No, the said Ordinance does not violate the principle of equality and uniformity of taxation. The fact that some
places of amusement are not taxed while others, such as cinematographs, theaters, vaudeville companies, theatrical
shows, and boxing exhibitions and other kinds of amusements or places of amusement are taxed, is no argument at all
against the equality and uniformity of the tax imposition. Equality and uniformity of the tax imposition. Equality and
uniformity in taxation means that all taxable articles or kinds of property of the same class shall be taxed at the same rate.
The taxing power has the authority to make reasonable and natural classifications for purposes of taxation; and the
appellants cannot point out what places of amusement taxed by the ordinance do not constitute a class by themselves
and which can be confused with those not included in the ordinance.

PHILIPPINE TRUST COMPANY vs. YATCO


G.R. Nos. L-46255, 46256, 46259 and 46277 January 23, 1940

FACTS:
Prior to the filing of these suits, and for a number of years, the plaintiffs-appellants had been paying capital and
deposit taxes without protest, formerly under section 111 of Act No. 1189, and later under section 1499 of the Revised
Administrative Code of 1917, as amended.
Appellants challenge the constitutionality of the aforesaid section of the Revised Administrative Code, principally
on the grounds that it violates the rule regarding uniformity of taxation, and that it is discriminatory, and therefore violative
of the equal protection clause of the Constitution. Appellants stoutly maintain that although the foregoing provision is of
general application and operates on all banks of the same kind doing business in the Philippines, the exemption of the
National City Bank of New York from the impositions therein specifically provided (National City Bank of New York v.
Posadas [296 U.S. 497, 80 Law ed. 351], makes the law discriminatory and violates the rule of uniformity in taxation

ISSUE:
Whether or not the said section of the Revised Administrative Code violates the rule on uniformity of taxation.

RULING:
No. A tax is considered uniform when it operates with the same force and effect in every place where the subject
may be found. Section 1499 of the Revised Administrative Code, as amended, applies uniformly to, and operates on, all
banks in the Philippines without distinction and discrimination, and if the National City Bank of New York is exempted from
its operation because it is a federal instrumentality subject only to the authority of Congress, that alone could have the
effect of rendering it violative of the rule of uniformity. In every well-regulated and enlightened state or government, certain
descriptions of property and also certain institutions are exempt from taxation, but these exemptions have never been
regarded as disturbing the rules of taxation, even where the fundamental law had ordained that it should be uniform.

CHURCHILL vs. CONCEPCION


G.R. No. 11572 September 22, 1916

FACTS:
Section 100 of Act No. 2339 imposed an annual tax of P4 per square meter upon "electric signs, billboards, and
spaces used for posting or displaying temporary signs, and all signs displayed on premises not occupied by buildings."
This section was subsequently amended by Act No. 2432, effective by reducing the tax on such signs, billboards, etc., to
P2 per square meter or fraction thereof. Francis A. Churchill and Stewart Tait, owners of a sign or billboard containing an
area of 52 square meters constructed on private property in the city of Manila and exposed to public view, were taxes
thereon P104. The tax was paid under protest.
Plaintiffs assailed that they were gaining lesser profit than what they ought to receive because of the tax imposed
by the said law. However, it was proven that there was no attempt on the part of the plaintiffs to raise the advertising rates
in order to cope up with the said tax rates. It will thus be seen that the contention that the rates charged for advertising
cannot be raised is purely hypothetical, based entirely upon the opinion of the plaintiffs, unsupported by actual test, and
that the plaintiffs themselves admit that a number of other persons have voluntarily and without protest paid the tax herein
complained of.

ISSUE:
Is the tax void for lack of uniformity?

RULING:
23
A tax is uniform, within the constitutional requirement, when it operates with the same force and effect in every
place where the subject of it is found. "Uniformity," as applied to the constitutional provision that all taxes shall be uniform,
means that all property belonging to the same class shall be taxed alike. The statute under consideration imposes a tax of
P2 per square meter or fraction thereof upon every electric sign, bill-board, etc., wherever found in the Philippine Islands.
Or in other words, "the rule of taxation" upon such signs is uniform throughout the Islands. The Legislature selected signs
and billboards as a subject for taxation and it must be presumed that it, in so doing, acted with a full knowledge of the
situation.

MANILA ELECTRIC COMPANY v. PROVINCE OF LAGUNA and BENITO BALAZO in his capacity as Provincial
Treasurer of Laguna
G.R. No. 131359. May 5, 1999.

FACTS
Manila Electric Company (MERALCO) was granted a franchise from certain municipalities of Laguna. On
September 13, 1991, Republic Act 7160, otherwise known as the Local Government Code of 1991 was enacted, enjoining
loval government units to create their own sources of revenue and to levy taxes, fees and charges, subject to the
limitations expressed therein, consistent with the basic policy of local autonomy. Pursuant to this Code, respondent
province enacted a Provincial Ordinance providing that “a tax on business enjoying franchise, at a rate of 50% of 1% of
the gross annual receipts...” On the basis of such ordinance, the Provincial Treasurer sent a demand letter to MERALCO
for the tax payment. MERALCO paid under protest. Thereafter, a formal claim for refund was sent by MERALCO to the
Provincial Treasurer claiming that the franchise tax it had paid and continue to pay to the National Government already
includes the franchise tax as provided under Presidential Decree 551. The claim was denied. MERALCO filed an
appeal with the trial court but was dismissed. Thus the petition.

ISSUE
Whether the imposition of a franchise tax under section 2.09 of the Laguna Provincial Ordinance No. 01-92
violates the non-impairment clause of the Constitution.

RULING
No. Although local governments do not have the inherent power to tax, such power may be delegated to them
either by basic law or by statute. This is provided under Article X of the 1987 Constitution. The rationale for the current
rule is to safeguard the viability and self-sufficiency of local government units by directly granting them general and broad
tax powers.
The Local Government Code of 1991 repealed the Tax Code. It explicitly authorizes provincial governments,
notwithstanding “any exemption granted by any law, or other special laws, xxx (to) impose a tax on business enjoying a
franchise. The phrase, “in lieu of all taxes” have to give way to the peremptory language of the Local Government
Code.

THE PROVINCE OF MISAMIS ORIENTAL represented by its PROVINCIAL TREASURER v. CAGAYAN ELECTRIC
POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY
G.R. No. L-45355. January 12, 1990

FACTS
Cagayan Electric Power and Light Company, Inc. (CEPALCO) was granted a franchise on June 17, 1961 under
Republic Act 3247. It was amended by Republic Act 3570 and Republic Act 6020. On June 28, 1973, the Local Tax Code
was promulgated which provides that the province may impose a tax on businesses enjoying franchise. Pursuant thereto,
the Province of Misamis enacted Provincial Revenue Ordinance No. 19. It demanded payment. CEPALCO refused to pay,
alleging that it is exempt from all taxes except the franchise tax required by Republic Act 6020. The provincial fiscal
upheld the ordinance. CEPALCO paid under protest. On appeal to the Secretary of Justice, ruled in favor of CEPALCO.
The province filed a petition with the trial court but was dismissed. Thus, the petition.

ISSUE
Whether CEPALCO is exempt from paying the provincial franchise tax.

RULING
Yes. First off, there is no provision in PD No. 231 expressly or impliedly amending or repealing sec. 3 of RA 6020
which exempts CEPALCO. The rule is that a special and local statute applicable to a particular case is not repealed by a
24
later statute which is general in its terms, provisions and application even if the terms of the general act are broad
enough to include the cases in the special law unless there is manifest intent to repeal or alter the special law.
The franchise of CEPALCO expressly exempts it from payment of “all taxes of whatever authority” except 3% tax
on its gross earnings. Such exemption is part of the inducement for the acceptance of the franchise and the rendition of
public service by the grantee.
Local Tax Regulation No. 3-75 issued by the Secretary of Finance on June 26, 1976, has made it crystal clear
that the franchise tax provided in the Local Tax Code (P.D. No. 231, Sec. 9) may only be imposed on companies with
franchises that do not contain the exempting clause “in-lieu-of-all-taxes”.

CAGAYAN ELECTRIC POWER AND LIGHT CO., INC v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE and COURT OF
TAX APPEALS
G.R. No. L-60126. September 25, 1985

FACTS:
Petitioner Cagayan Electric Power and Light Co., Inc (CEPALCO) is the holder of a legislative franchise, Republic
Act 3247 under which, it is exempted from “taxes, and assessments of whatever authority upon privileges, earnings,
income, franchise, and poles, wires transformers, and insulators”.
On June 27, 1968, Republic Act 5431 amended Section 24 of the Tax Code, making the petitioner liable for
income tax in addition to franchise tax. On August 4, 1969, Republic Act 6020 was enacted under which, the petitioner
was again tax exempted.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) sent a demand letter on February 15, 1973, requiring petitioner to
pay the deficiency for income taxes for 1968-1971. Upon petitioner's contention, the CIR cancelled the assessments for
1970 but insisted those for 1968 and 1969.
Petitioner filed a petition for review with the tax court which held petitioner responsible only for the period from
January 1 to August 3, 1969, or before the passage of Republic Act 6420 which reiterated its tax exemption. Thus, the
appeal.

ISSUE:
Whether petitioner's franchise is a contract which can be impaired by an implied appeal.

RULING:
Yes. Congress could impair petitioner's franchise by making it liable for income tax from which heretofore it was
exempted by virtue of the exemption provided in its franchise. The Constitution provides that a franchise is subject to
amendment, alteration, or repeal by Congress when public interest so requires. Petitioner's franchise, under Republic Act
3247 also provide it is subject to the Constitution.
Republic Act 5431 withdrew petitioner's exemption but was restored by subsequent enactment. Thus, it is only
liable for the period of January 1 to August 3, 1969 when its tax exemption was modified.

LEALDA ELECTRIC CO., INC v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE and COURT OF TAX APPEALS
G.R. No. L-16428. April 30, 1963

FACTS:
On June 11, 1949, Alfredo, Mario and Benjamin Benito formed a partnership to operate an electric plant. Such
electric plant was granted a franchise in the year 1915 to supply electric current to the municipalities of Albay. The
franchise, the Certificate of public convenience and the electric plant was transferred to the said partnership. Under its
franchise, the original grantee and successors-in-interest paid a franchise tax of 2% on the gross earnings, until October
1, 1946, when section 259 of the National Internal Revenue Code was amended by Republic Act 39, which increased the
franchise tax to 5%.
On a date undisclosed, petitioner filed a petition for refund contending that on its charter, it was liable to pay a
franchise tax of 2% and not 5% of its earnings and receipts.
As several petitions were not given definite action, thus petitioner filed with the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) a
petition, praying for refund from the period of January 20, 1947 to October 14, 1958. The CTA dismissed the petition.
Thus, the petition, on the ground that Act No.2475, as amended by Act 2620, granting its franchise constitute a
private contract between the petitioner and the Government and such cannot be amended, altered or repealed by Section
259 of the Tax Code.

ISSUE
Whether petitioner should pay 5% of his gross earnings.
25

RULING
Yes. Petitioner's franchise does not specifically state that the rate of the franchise tax shall be 2% of his gross
earnings or receipts. It simply provides that the grantee and successors-in-interest shall pay the same franchise tax
imposed upon other grantees at the time Act No. 2475 was enacted. Franchise holders did pay the rate of 2% until the
rate was increased to 5%.
Also, prior to its amendment, Section 259 of the Tax Code merely provided that grantees of franchises should pay
on their gross earnings or receipts “such taxes...as are specified in special charters upon whom franchises are conferred”.
This does not cover franchise holders whose charters did not specify the rate of franchise tax. It was covered under
Section 10 of Act No. 3636. Consequently, section 259 of the Tax Code became the basic franchise tax to be paid by
holders of all existing and future franchises. Such being the case, the act amending the section must be deemed applied
to petitioner.

J. CASANOVAS vs. JNO. S. HORD


G.R. No. 3473 March 22, 1907

FACTS:
In 1897, the Spanish Government, in accordance with the provisions of the royal decree of 14 may 1867, granted
J. Casanovas certain mines in the province of Ambos Camarines, of which mines the latter is now the owner. That these
were validly perfected mining concessions granted to prior to 11 April 1899 is conceded. They were so considered by the
Collector of Internal Revenue and were by him said to fall within the provisions of Section 134 of Act 1189 (Internal
Revenue Act). The defendant Commissioner, JNO S. Hord, imposed upon these properties the tax mentioned in Section
134, which plaintiff Casanovas paid under protest.

ISSUE:
Whether or not Section 134 of Act 1189 is valid.

RULING:
The deed constituted a contract between the Spanish Government and Casanovas. The obligation in the contract
was impaired by the enactment of Section 134 of the Internal Revenue Law, thereby infringing the provisions of Section 5
of the Act of Congress of 1 July 1902. Furthermore, the section conflicts with Section 60 of the Act of Congress of 1 July
1902, which indicate that concessions can be cancelled only by reason of illegality in the procedure by which they were
obtained, or for failure to comply with the conditions prescribed as requisites for their retention in the laws under which
they were granted. There is no claim in this case that there was any illegality in the procedure by which these concessions
were obtained, nor is there any claim that the plaintiff has not complied with the conditions prescribed in the royal decree
of 1867. As to the allegation that the section violates uniformity of taxation, the Court found it unnecessary to consider the
claim in view of the result at which the Court has arrived.

AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY vs. CITY OF MANILA


G.R. No. L-9637 April 30, 1957

FACTS:
Plaintiff-appellant is a foreign, non-stock, non-profit, religious, missionary corporation duly registered and doing
business in the Philippines. The defendant appellee is a municipal corporation with powers that are to be exercised in
conformity with the provisions of the Revised Charter of the City of Manila. In the course of its ministry, the Philippine
agency of the American Bible Society has been distributing and selling bibles and/or gospel portions thereof throughout
the Philippines and translating the same into several Philippine dialets. The acting City Treasurer of Manila required the
society to secure the corresponding Mayor’s permit and municipal license fees, together with compromise covering
the period from the 4th quarter of 1945 to the 2nd quarter of 1953. The society paid such under protest, and filed suit
questioning the legality of the ordinances under which the fees are being collected.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the municipal ordinances violate the freedom of religious profession and worship.

RULING:
26
A tax on the income of one who engages in religious activities is different from a tax on property used or
employed in connection with those activities. It is one thing to impose a tax on the income or property of a preacher, and
another to exact a tax for him for the privilege of delivering a sermon. The power to tax the exercise of a privilege is the
power to control or suppress its enjoyment. Even if religious groups and the press are not altogether free from the
burdens of the government, the act of distributing and selling bibles is purely religious and does not fall under Section 27
(e) of the Tax Code (CA 466). The fact that the price of bibles, etc. are a little higher than actual cost of the same does not
necessarily mean it is already engaged in business for profit. Ordinance 2529 and 3000 are not applicable to the Society
for in doing so it would impair its free exercise and enjoyment of its religious profession and worship as well as its rights of
dissemination of religious beliefs.

ABRA VALLEY COLLEGE, INC vs.


HON. JUAN P. AQUINO, Judge, Court of First Instance, Abra
G.R. NO. 39086 June 15, 1988

FACTS:
Petitioner, an educational corporation and institution of higher learning duly incorporated with the Securities and
Exchange Commission in 1948, filed a complaint to annul and declare void the "Notice of Seizure' and the "Notice of Sale"
of its lot and building located at Bangued, Abra, for non-payment of real estate taxes and penalties amounting to
P5,140.31. Said "Notice of Seizure" by respondents Municipal Treasurer and Provincial Treasurer, defendants below, was
issued for the satisfaction of the said taxes thereon.
The parties entered into a stipulation of facts adopted and embodied by the trial court in its questioned decision.
The trial court ruled for the government, holding that the second floor of the building is being used by the director for
residential purposes and that the ground floor used and rented by Northern Marketing Corporation, a commercial
establishment, and thus the property is not being used “exclusively” for educational purposes. Instead of perfecting
an appeal, petitioner availed of the instant petition for review on certiorari with prayer for preliminary injunction before the
Supreme Court, by filing said petition on 17 August 1974.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the lot and building are used exclusively for educational purposes.

RULING:
Section 22, paragraph 3, Article VI, of the then 1935 Philippine Constitution, expressly grants exemption from
realty taxes for cemeteries, churches and parsonages or convents appurtenant thereto, and all lands, buildings, and
improvements used exclusively for religious, charitable or educational purposes.ン Reasonable emphasis has always been
made that the exemption extends to facilities which are incidental to and reasonably necessary for the accomplishment of
the main purposes. The use of the school building or lot for commercial purposes is neither contemplated by law, nor by
jurisprudence. In the case at bar, the lease of the first floor of the building to the Northern Marketing Corporation cannot
by any stretch of the imagination be considered incidental to the purpose of education. The test of exemption from
taxation is the use of the property for purposes mentioned in the Constitution.
The decision of the CFI Abra (Branch I) is affirmed subject to the modification that half of the assessed tax be
returned to the petitioner. The modification is derived from the fact that the ground floor is being used for commercial
purposes (leased) and the second floor being used as incidental to education (residence of the director).

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, vs.


BISHOP OF THE MISSIONARY DISTRICT OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL
CHURCH IN THE U.S.A. and THE COURT OF TAX APPEALS
G.R. No. L-19445 August 31, 1965

FACTS:
Respondent Bishop of the Missionary District of the Philippines Islands of the Protestant, Episcopal Church in the
U.S.A. is a corporation sole duly registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. On the other hand, the
Missionary District of the Philippine Islands of the Protestant Episcopal Church the U.S.A. (hereinafter referred to as
Missionary District) is a duly incorporated and established religious society and owns and operates the St. Luke's Hospital
in Quezon City, the Brent Hospital in Zamboanga City and the St. Stephen's High School in Manila.
27
In 1957 to 1959, the Missionary District received various shipments of materials, supplies, equipment and other
articles intended for use in the construction and operation of the new St. Luke’s Hospital. On these shipments, the
Commissioner collected compensation tax. The Missionary District filed claims for refund, but which was denied by the
Commissioner on the ground that St. Luke’s Hospital was not a charitable institution and therefore was not exempt
from taxes because it admits pay patients.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the shipments for St. Luke’s Hospital are tax-exempt.

RULING:
The following requisites must concur in order that a taxpayer may claim exemption under the law (1) the imported
articles must have been donated; (2) the donee must be a duly incorporated or established international civic
organization, religious or charitable society, or institution for civic religious or charitable purposes; and (3) the articles so
imported must have been donated for the use of the organization, society or institution or for free distribution and not for
barter, sale or hire.
As the law does not distinguish or qualify the enjoyment or the exemption (as the Secretary of Finance did in
Department Order 18, series of 1958), the admission of pay patients does not detract from the charitable character of a
hospital, if its funds are devoted exclusively to the maintenance of the institution. Thus, the shipments are tax exempt.

LLADOC v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue


G.R. No. L-19201 June 16, 1965

FACTS:
Sometime in 1957, the M.B. Estate, Inc., of Bacolod City, donated P10,000.00 in cash to Rev. Fr. Crispin Ruiz,
then parish priest of Victorias, Negros Occidental, and predecessor of herein petitioner, for the construction of a new
Catholic Church in the locality. The total amount was actually spent for the purpose intended.

On March 3, 1958, the donor M.B. Estate, Inc., filed the donor's gift tax return. Under date of April 29, 1960, the
respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued an assessment for donee's gift tax against the Catholic Parish of
Victorias, Negros Occidental, of which petitioner was the priest.

Petitioner lodged a protest to the assessment and requested the withdrawal thereof. The protest and the motion
for reconsideration presented to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue were denied. The petitioner appealed to the Court
of Tax Appeals.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the assessment for donee’s gift tax was valid, considering the fact that the Constitution exempts
petitioner from taxation

RULING:
Section 22 (3), Art. VI of the Constitution of the Philippines, exempts from taxation cemeteries, churches and
parsonages or convents, appurtenant thereto, and all lands, buildings, and improvements used exclusively for religious
purposes. The exemption is only from the payment of taxes assessed on such properties enumerated, as property taxes,
as contra distinguished from excise taxes. In the present case, what the Collector assessed was a donee's gift tax; the
assessment was not on the properties themselves. It did not rest upon general ownership; it was an excise upon the use
made of the properties, upon the exercise of the privilege of receiving the properties. Manifestly, gift tax is not within the
exempting provisions of the section just mentioned. A gift tax is not a property tax, but an excise tax imposed on the
transfer of property by way of gift inter vivos, the imposition of which on property used exclusively for religious purposes,
does not constitute an impairment of the Constitution.

HERRERA v. QUEZON CITY BOARD OF ASSESSMENT


GR.No.L-15270 September 30, 1961

FACTS:
On July 24, 1952, the Director of the Bureau of Hospitals authorized the petitioners to establish and operate the
"St. Catherine's Hospital", located at 58 D. Tuazon, Sta. Mesa Heights, Quezon City (Exhibit "F-1", p. 7, BIR rec.). On or
28
about January 3, 1953, the petitioners sent a letter to the Quezon City Assessor requesting exemption from payment of
real estate tax on the lot, building and other improvements comprising the hospital stating that the same was established
for charitable and humanitarian purposes and not for commercial gain. After an inspection of the premises in question and
after a careful study of the case, the exemption from real property taxes was granted effective the years 1953, 1954 and
1955.
Subsequently, however, the Quezon City Assessor notified the petitioners that the aforesaid properties were re-
classified from exempt to "taxable" and thus assessed for real property taxes. The petitioners appealed the assessment to
the Quezon City Board of Assessment Appeals, which affirmed the decision of the City Assessor. A motion for
reconsideration thereof was denied. From this decision, the petitioners instituted the instant appeal. The building involved
in this case is principally used as a hospital.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the lot, building and other improvements occupied by the St. Catherine Hospital are exempt from
the real property tax.

RULING:
It is well settled, that the admission of pay-patients does not detract from the charitable character of a hospital, if
all its funds are devoted "exclusively to the maintenance of the institution" as a "public charity". In other words, where
rendering charity is its primary object, and the funds derived from payments made by patients able to pay are devoted to
the benevolent purposes of the institution, the mere fact that a profit has been made will not deprive the hospital of its
benevolent character"
Moreover, the exemption in favor of property used exclusively for charitable or educational purposes is "not
limited to property actually indispensable" therefor, but extends to facilities which are "incidental to and reasonably
necessary for" the accomplishment of said purposes.
Within the purview of the Constitutional exemption from taxation, the St. Catherine's Hospital is, therefore, a
charitable institution, and the fact that it admits pay-patients does not bar it from claiming that it is devoted exclusively to
benevolent purposes, it being admitted that the income derived from pay-patients is devoted to the improvement of the
charity wards, which represent almost two-thirds (2/3) of the bed capacity of the hospital, aside from "out-charity patients"
who come only for consultation.

BISHOP OF NUEVA SEGOVIA v. PROVINCIAL BOARD OF ILOCOS NORTE


G.RNo.L-27588 December 31, 1927

FACTS:
The plaintiff, the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church, represented by the Bishop of Nueva Segovia, possesses and
is the owner of a parcel of land in the municipality of San Nicolas, Ilocos Norte, all four sides of which face on public
streets. On the south side is a part of the churchyard, the convent and an adjacent lot used for a vegetable garden,
containing an area off 1,624 square meters, in which there is a stable and a well for the use of the convent. In the center
is the remainder of the churchyard and the church. On the north is an old cemetery with two of its walls still standing, and
a portion where formerly stood a tower, the base of which still be seen, containing a total area of 8,955 square meters.

As required by the defendants, on July 3, 1925 the plaintiff paid, under protest, the land tax on the lot adjoining
the convent and the lot which formerly was the cemetery with the portion where the tower stood.

The plaintiff filed this action for the recovery of the sum paid by to the defendants by way of land tax, alleging that
the collection of this tax is illegal. The lower court absolved the defendants from the complaint in regard to the lot adjoining
convent and declared that the tax collected on the lot, which formerly was the cemetery and on the portion where the
lower stood, was illegal. Both parties appealed from this judgment.

ISSUE
Whether or not the lots of petitioner are exempted from land tax

RULING
The exemption in favor of the convent in the payment of the land tax (sec. 344 [c] Administrative Code) refers to
the home of the parties who presides over the church and who has to take care of himself in order to discharge his duties.
In therefore must, in the sense, include not only the land actually occupied by the church, but also the adjacent ground
destined to the ordinary incidental uses of man.
29
The judgment appealed from is reversed in all it parts and it is held that both lots are exempt from land tax and the
defendants are ordered to refund to plaintiff whatever was paid as such tax, without any special pronouncement as to
costs.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of Appeals and YMCA


G.R.No.L-124043 October 14, 1998

FACTS:
Private Respondent YMCA is a non-stock, non-profit institution, which conducts various programs and activities
that are beneficial to the public, especially the young people, pursuant to its religious, educational and charitable
objectives.
In 1980, private respondent earned, among others, an income of P676,829.80 from leasing out a portion of its
premises to small shop owners, like restaurants and canteen operators, and P44,259.00 from parking fees collected from
non-members. On July 2, 1984, the commissioner of internal revenue (CIR) issued an assessment to private respondent,
in the total amount of P415,615.01 including surcharge and interest, for deficiency income tax, deficiency expanded
withholding taxes on rentals and professional fees and deficiency withholding tax on wages. Private respondent formally
protested the assessment and, as a supplement to its basic protest, filed a letter dated October 8, 1985. In reply, the CIR
denied the claims of YMCA.
Contesting the denial of its protest, the YMCA filed a petition for review at the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) on
March 14, 1989. In due course, the CTA issued this ruling in favor of the YMCA:

ISSUE:
Whether or not the YMCA is exempted from rental income derived from the lease of its properties

RULING
Petitioner argues that while the income received by the organizations enumerated in Section 27 (now Section 26)
of the NIRC is, as a rule, exempted from the payment of tax "in respect to income received by them as such," the
exemption does not apply to income derived "xxx from any of their properties, real or personal, or from any of their
activities conducted for profit, regardless of the disposition made of such income xxx" We agree with the commissioner.
In the instant case, the exemption claimed by the YMCA is expressly disallowed by the very wording of the last
paragraph of then Section 27 of the NIRC which mandates that the income of exempt organizations (such as the YMCA)
from any of their properties, real or personal, be subject to the tax imposed by the same Code.

LUNG CENTER OF THE PHILIPPINES vs.QUEZON CITY and CONSTANTINO P. ROSAS


G.R. No. 144104 June 29, 2004

FACTS:
The petitioner, a non-stock and non-profit entity is the registered owner of a parcel of land where erected in the
middle of the aforesaid lot is a hospital known as the Lung Center of the Philippines. A big space at the ground floor is
being leased to private parties, for canteen and small store spaces, and to medical or professional practitioners who use
the same as their private clinics for their patients whom they charge for their professional services. Almost one-half of the
entire area on the left side of the building along Quezon Avenue is vacant and idle, while a big portion on the right side, at
the corner of Quezon Avenue and Elliptical Road, is being leased for commercial purposes to a private enterprise known
as the Elliptical Orchids and Garden Center.

On June 7, 1993, both the land and the hospital building of the petitioner were assessed for real property taxes in
the amount of P4,554,860 by the City Assessor of Quezon City but the former filed a Claim for Exemption from real
property taxes with the City Assessor, predicated on its claim that it is a charitable institution.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the petitioner’S real properties are exempted from realty tax exemptions.

RULING:
Even as we find that the petitioner is a charitable institution, those portions of its real property that are leased to
private entities are not exempt from real property taxes as these are not actually, directly and exclusively used for
charitable purposes. What is meant by actual, direct and exclusive use of the property for charitable purposes is the direct
30
and immediate and actual application of the property itself to the purposes for which the charitable institution is
organized.
Hence, a claim for exemption from tax payments must be clearly shown and based on language in the law too
plain to be mistaken. Under Section 2 of Presidential Decree No. 1823, the petitioner does not enjoy any property tax
exemption privileges for its real properties as well as the building constructed thereon. If the intentions were otherwise, the
same should have been among the enumeration of tax exempt privileges under Section 2.

Procter and Gamble Philippines Manufacturing Corp. vs. Municipality of Jagna


G. R. No. L-24265 28 December 1979

FACTS:
Petitioner Procter and Gamble Philippines Manufacturing Corp. is a consolidated corporation of Procter and
Gamble Trading Company engaged in the manufacture of soap, edible oil, margarine and other similar products.
Petitioner maintains a “bodega” in the municipality of Jagna, where it stores copra purchased in the municipality and
ships the same for its manufacturing and other operations. In 1954, the Municipal Council of Jagna enacted Ordinance 4,
imposing storage fees of all exportable copra deposite in the bodega within the jurisdiction of the municipality of Jagna,
Bohol. From 1958 to 1963, the company paid the municipality, allegedly under protest, storage fees. In 1964, it filed suit,
wherein it prayed that the Ordinance be declared inapplicable to it, and if not, that it be declared ultra vires and void.

ISSUE:
Whether the Ordinance is void, as it amounts to double taxation.

RULING:
The validity of the Ordinance must be upheld pursuant to the broad authority conferred upon municipalities by
Commonwealth Act 472 (promulgated 1939), which was the prevailing law when the Ordinance is actually a municipal
license tax or fee on persons, firms and corporations exercising the privilege of storing copra within the municipality’s
territorial jurisdiction. Such fees imposed do not amount to double taxation. For double taxation to exist, the same property
must be taxed twice, when it should be taxed but once. A tax on the company’s products is different from the tax on the
privilege of storing copra in a bodega situated within the territorial boundary of the municipality.

PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF THE PHILIPPINES, INC. vs. MUNICIPALITY OF TANAUAN, LEYTE, THE
MUNICIPAL MAYOR, ET AL.
G.R. No. L-31156 February 27, 1976

FACTS:
On February 14, 1963, the plaintiff-appellant, Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company commenced a complaint before the
Court of First Instance of Leyte for that court to declare Section 2 of Republic Act No. 2264-the Local Autonomy Act,
unconstitutional as an undue delegation of taxing authority as well as to declare Ordinances Nos. 23 and 27, series of
1962, of the municipality of Tanauan, Leyte, null and void. M. O. No. 23, levies and collects "from soft drinks producers
and manufacturers a tai of one-sixteenth (1/16) of a centavo for every bottle of soft drink corked." On the other hand, M.
O. No. 27, which was approved on October 28, 1962, levies and collects "on soft drinks produced or manufactured within
the territorial jurisdiction of this municipality a tax of ONE CENTAVO (P0.01) on each gallon (128 fluid ounces, U.S.) of
volume capacity." The tax imposed in both Ordinances Nos. 23 and 27 is denominated as "municipal production tax.' The
CFI of Leyte rendered judgment "dismissing the complaint and upholding the constitutionality of [Section 2, Republic Act
No. 2264] declaring Ordinance Nos. 23 and 27 legal. Hence this petition. The petitioner contends Ordinances Nos. 23 and
27 constitute double taxation because these two ordinances cover the same subject matter and impose practically the
same tax rate and impose percentage or specific taxes.

ISSUES:
Do Ordinances Nos. 23 and 27 constitute double taxation and impose percentage or specific taxes?

RULING:
No, the Ordinances does not constitute double taxation. The difference between the two ordinances clearly lies in
the tax rate of the soft drinks produced: in Ordinance No. 23, it was 1/16 of a centavo for every bottle corked; in Ordinance
No. 27, it is one centavo (P0.01) on each gallon (128 fluid ounces, U.S.) of volume capacity. The intention of the Municipal
31
Council of Tanauan in enacting Ordinance No. 27 is thus clear: it was intended as a plain substitute for the prior
Ordinance No. 23, and operates as a repeal of the latter, even without words to that effect.

EUSEBIO VILLANUEVA, ET AL., vs.CITY OF ILOILO


G.R. No. L-26521 December 28, 1968

FACTS:
On January 15, 1960 the municipal board of Iloilo City, believing, obviously, that with the passage of Republic Act
2264, otherwise known as the Local Autonomy Act, it had acquired the authority or power to enact an ordinance similar to
that previously declared by this Court as ultra vires (taxing tenement houses), enacted Ordinance 11, series of 1960
which taxes those involve in the business of renting apartment houses.
In Iloilo City, the appellees Eusebio Villanueva and Remedios S. Villanueva are owners of five tenement houses,
aggregately containing 43 apartments, while the other appellees and the same Remedios S. Villanueva are owners of ten
apartments.
On July 11, 1962 and April 24, 1964, the plaintiffs-appellees filed a complaint, and an amended complaint,
respectively, against the City of Iloilo, in the aforementioned court, praying that Ordinance 11, series of 1960, be declared
"invalid for being beyond the powers of the Municipal Council of the City of Iloilo to enact, and unconstitutional for being
violative of the rule as to uniformity of taxation and for depriving said plaintiffs of the equal protection clause of the
Constitution," and that the City be ordered to refund the amounts collected from them under the said ordinance.
On March 30, 1966,1 the lower court rendered judgment declaring the ordinance illegal.

ISSUE:
Is Ordinance 11, series of 1960, of the City of Iloilo, illegal because it imposes double taxation?

RULING:
There is no double taxation. It is a well-settled rule that a license tax may be levied upon a business or occupation
although the land or property used in connection therewith is subject to property tax. In order to constitute double taxation
in the objectionable or prohibited sense the same property must be taxed twice when it should be taxed but once; both
taxes must be imposed on the same property or subject-matter, for the same purpose, by the same State, Government, or
taxing authority, within the same jurisdiction or taxing district, during the same taxing period, and they must be the same
kind or character of tax." It has been shown that a real estate tax and the tenement tax imposed by the ordinance,
although imposed by the same taxing authority, are not of the same kind or character.

Delpher Trades Corporation vs. IAC


G.R. No. L-69259. January 26, 1988.

FACTS:
Delfin Pacheco and his sister, Pelagia Pacheco, were the owners of 27,169 square meters of real estate in the
Municipality of Polo (now Valenzuela), Province of Bulacan (now Metro Manila). The said co-owners leased to
Construction Components International Inc. the same property and providing that during the existence or after the term of
this lease the lessor should he decide to sell the property leased shall first offer the same to the lessee and the letter has
the priority to buy under similar conditions. On August 3, 1974, lessee Construction Components International, Inc.
assigned its rights and obligations under the contract of lease in favor of Hydro Pipes Philippines, Inc. with the conformity
and consent of lessors Delfin Pacheco and Pelagia Pacheco. On January 3, 1976, a deed of exchange was executed
between lessors Delfin and Pelagia Pacheco and defendant Delpher Trades Corporation whereby the former conveyed to
the latter the leased property together with another parcel of land for 2,500 shares of stock of defendant corporation with a
total value of P1,500,000.00.
On the ground that it was not given the first option to buy the property, respondent Hydro Pipes Philippines, Inc., a
complaint for reconveyance of Lot. No. 1095 in its favor. The Court of First Instance of Bulacan ruled in favor of the
plaintiff. The lower court's decision was affirmed on appeal by the Intermediate Appellate Court.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the "Deed of Exchange" of the properties executed by the Pachecos on the one hand and the
Delpher Trades Corporation on the other was meant to be a contract of sale.
32
RULING:
We rule for the petitioners. In the case at bar, in exchange for their properties, the Pachecos acquired 2,500
original unissued no par value shares of stocks of the Delpher Trades Corporation. Consequently, the Pachecos became
stockholders of the corporation by subscription. "The essence of the stock subscription is an agreement to take and pay
for original unissued shares of a corporation, formed or to be formed."
In effect, the Delpher Trades Corporation is a business conduit of the Pachecos. What they really did was to
invest their properties and change the nature of their ownership from unincorporated to incorporated form by organizing
Delpher Trades Corporation to take control of their properties and at the same time save on inheritance taxes.
The records do not point to anything wrong or objectionable about this "estate planning" scheme resorted to by
the Pachecos. "The legal right of a taxpayer to decrease the amount of what otherwise could be his taxes or altogether
avoid them, by means which the law permits, cannot be doubted."

Heng Tong Textiles Co., Inc. Vs CIR


G.R. No. L-19737. August 26, 1968.

FACTS:
In 1952 the Collector of Internal Revenue assessed against the petitioner deficiency sales taxes and surcharges
for the year 1949 and the first four months of 1950 in the aggregate sum of P89,123.58. The assessment was appealed to
the Board of Tax Appeals, whence the case was transferred to the Court of Tax Appeals upon its organization in 1954,
and there was affirmed in its decision dated February 28, 1952. The deficiency taxes in question were assessed on
importations of textiles from abroad. The goods were withdrawn from Customs by Pan- Asiatic Commercial Co., Inc.,
which paid, in the name of the petitioner, the corresponding advance sales tax under section 183(b) of the Internal
Revenue Code. The assessment for the deficiency was made against the petitioner, Heng Tong Textiles Co., Inc. on the
ground that it was the real importer of the goods and did not pay the taxes due on the basis of the gross selling prices
thereof.

ISSUE:
Whether or not petitioner was guilty of fraud so as to warrant the imposition of a penalty of 50% on the deficiency.

RULING:
Petitioner excepts to the conclusion of the Court of Tax Appeals and avers that the importation papers were
placed in the name of the petitioner only for purposes of accommodation, that is, to introduce the petitioner to textile
suppliers abroad; and that the petitioner was not in a financial position to make the importations in question. These
circumstances show nothing but a private arrangement between the petitioner and Pan-Asiatic Commercial, which in no
way affected the role of the petitioner as the importer.
The arrangement resorted to does not by itself alone justify the penalty imposed. Section 183(a), paragraph 3, of
the Internal Revenue Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 253, speaks of willful neglect to file the return or willful
making of a false or fraudulent return. An attempt to minimize one's tax does not necessarily constitute fraud. It is a settled
principle that a taxpayer may diminish his liability by any means which the law permits.

Commissioner of Internal Revenues vs. Toda


G.R. No. 147188. September 14, 2004

FACTS:
On 2 March 1989, CIC authorized Benigno P. Toda, Jr., President and owner of 99.991% of its outstanding capital
stock, to sell the Cibeles Building. On 30 August 1989, Toda purportedly sold the property for P100 million to Rafael A.
Altonaga, who, in turn, sold the same property on the same day to Royal Match Inc. (RMI) for P200 million. Three and a
half years later Toda died. On 29 March 1994, the BIR sent an assessment notice and demand letter to the CIC for
deficiency income tax for the year 1989. On 27 January 1995, the Estate of Benigno P. Toda, Jr., represented by special
co-administrators Lorna Kapunan and Mario Luza Bautista, received a Notice of Assessment from the CIR for deficiency
income tax for the year 1989. The Estate thereafter filed a letter of protest. The Commissioner dismissed the protest. On
15 February 1996, the Estate filed a petition for review with the CTA. In its decision the CTA held that the Commissioner
failed to prove that CIC committed fraud to deprive the government of the taxes due it. It ruled that even assuming that a
pre-conceived scheme was adopted by CIC, the same constituted mere tax avoidance, and not tax evasion. Hence, the
CTA declared that the Estate is not liable for deficiency of income tax. The Commissioner filed a petition for review with
the Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals affirmed the decision of the CTA. Hence, this recourse to the SC.
33
ISSUE:
Whether or not this is a case of tax evasion or tax avoidance.

RULING:
Tax evasion connotes the integration of three factors: (1) the end to be achieved, i.e., the payment of less than
that known by the taxpayer to be legally due, or the non-payment of tax when it is shown that a tax is due; (2) an
accompanying state of mind which is described as being “evil,” in “bad faith,” “willfull,”or “deliberate and not accidental”;
and (3) a course of action or failure of action which is unlawful. All these factors are present in the instant case. The
scheme resorted to by CIC in making it appear that there were two sales of the subject properties, i.e., from CIC to
Altonaga, and then from Altonaga to RMI cannot be considered a legitimate tax planning. Such scheme is tainted with
fraud. Altonaga’s sole purpose of acquiring and transferring title of the subject properties on the same day was to create a
tax shelter. The sale to him was merely a tax ploy, a sham, and without business purpose and economic substance.
Doubtless, the execution of the two sales was calculated to mislead the BIR with the end in view of reducing the
consequent income tax liability.

Davao Gulf Lumber Corporation vs. CIR


G.R. No. 117359. July 23, 1998.

FACTS:
From July 1, 1980 to January 31, 1982 petitioner purchased, from various oil companies, refined and
manufactured mineral oils as well as motor and diesel fuels. Said oil companies paid the specific taxes imposed on the
sale of said products. Being included in the purchase price of the oil products, the specific taxes paid by the oil companies
were eventually passed on to the petitioner in this case.
Petitioner filed before Respondent CIR a claim for refund in the amount of P120,825.11, representing 25% of
the specific taxes actually paid on the above-mentioned fuels and oils that were used by petitioner in its operations as
forest concessionaire.
On January 20, 1983, petitioner filed at the CTA a petition for review. The CTA rendered its decision finding
petitioner entitled to a partial refund of specific taxes in the reduced amount of P2,923.15. In regard to the other
purchases, the CTA granted the claim, but it computed the refund based on rates deemed paid under RA 1435, and not
on the higher rates actually paid by petitioner under the NIRC.
Insisting that the basis for computing the refund should be the increased rates prescribed by Sections 153 and
156 of the NIRC, petitioner elevated the matter to the Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals affirmed the CTA Decision.
Hence, this petition for review.

ISSUE:
Whether or not petitioner is entitled to the refund of 25% of the amount of specific taxes it actually paid on various
refined and manufactured mineral oils.

RULING:
At the outset, it must be stressed that petitioner is entitled to a partial refund under Section 5 of RA 1435, which
was enacted to provide means for increasing the Highway Special Fund.
A tax cannot be imposed unless it is supported by the clear and express language of a statute; on the other hand,
once the tax is unquestionably imposed, “[a] claim of exemption from tax payments must be clearly shown and based on
language in the law too plain to be mistaken.” Since the partial refund authorized under Section 5, RA 1435, is in the
nature of a tax exemption, it must be construed strictissimi juris against the grantee. Hence, petitioner’s claim of refund
on the basis of the specific taxes it actually paid must expressly be granted in a statute stated in a language too clear to
be mistaken.

PHILIPPINE ACETYLENE CO., INC. vs. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE and COURT OF TAX APPEALS
G.R. No. L-19707 August 17, 1967

FACTS:
The petitioner is a corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of oxygen and acetylene gases. It made
various sales of its products to the National Power Corporation and to the Voice of America an agency of the United
States Government. The sales to the NPC amounted to P145,866.70, while those to the VOA amounted to P1,683, on
account of which the respondent Commission of Internal Revenue assessed against, and demanded from, the petitioner
the payment of P12,910.60 as deficiency sales tax and surcharge, pursuant to the Sec.186 of the National Internal
Revenue Code.
34
The petitioner denied liability for the payment of the tax on the ground that both the NPC and the VOA are
exempt from taxation.

ISSUE:
Is the petitioner exempt from paying tax on sales it made to the 1) NPC and the 2) VOA because both entities are
exempt from taxation?

RULING:
1) No. SC hold that the tax imposed by section 186 of the National Internal Revenue Code is a tax on the
manufacturer or producer and not a tax on the purchaser except probably in a very remote and inconsequential sense.
Accordingly its levy on the sales made to tax-exempt entities like the NPC is permissible.
2) No. Only sales made "for exclusive use in the construction, maintenance, operation or defense of the bases," in
a word, only sales to the quartermaster, are exempt under Article V from taxation. Sales of goods to any other party even
if it be an agency of the United States, such as the VOA, or even to the quartermaster but for a different purpose, are not
free from the payment of the tax.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Courts of Tax Appeal, et al


G.R. No. 115349 April 18, 1997

FACTS:
Ateneo de Manila is an educational institution with auxiliary units and branches all over the Philippines. One such
auxiliary unit is the Institute of Philippine Culture (IPC), which has no legal personality separate and distinct from that of
private respondent. The IPC is a Philippine unit engaged in social science studies of Philippine society and culture.
Occasionally, it accepts sponsorships for its research activities from international organizations, private foundations and
government agencies.
On July 8, 1983, private respondent received from petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue a demand letter
dated June 3, 1983, assessing private respondent the sum of P174,043.97 for alleged deficiency contractor's tax the
value of which was later on, upon private respondent’s request for reinvestigation, reduced to P46,516.41,
Unsatisfied, Private respondent filed in the Court of Tax Appeals a petition for review of the said letter-decision of
the petitioner which rendered a decision in its favor and ordered the tax assessment cancelled.

ISSUE:
Is Ateneo de Manila University, through its auxiliary unit or branch — the Institute of Philippine Culture —
performing the work of an independent contractor and, thus, subject to the three percent contractor's tax levied by then
Section 205 of the National Internal Revenue Code?

RULING:
No, The Supreme Court held that Ateneo de Manila University is not subject to the contractor’s tax. It explained
that to fall under its coverage, Section 205 of the National Internal Revenue Code requires that the independent contractor
be engaged in the business of selling its services. The Court, however, found no evidence that Ateneo's Institute of
Philippine Culture ever sold its services for a fee to anyone or was ever engaged in a business apart from and
independently of the academic purposes of the university.
Moreover, the Court of Tax Appeals accurately and correctly declared that the “funds received by the Ateneo de
Manila University are technically not a fee. They may however fall as gifts or donations which are tax-exempt" as shown
by private respondent's compliance with the requirement of Section 123 of the National Internal Revenue Code providing
for the exemption of such gifts to an educational institution.

Caltex Philippines, Inc. v. Commission on Audit


G.R. No. 92585 May 8, 1992

FACTS:
Respondent Commission on Audit (COA) directed petitioner Caltex Philippines, Inc. (CPI) to remit to the Oil Price
Stabilization Fund (OPSF) its collection of the additional tax on petroleum products pursuant to P.D. 1956, as well as
unremitted collections of the above tax covering the years 1986, 1987 and 1988, with interests and surcharges, and
advising it that all its claims for reimbursements from the OPSF shall be held in abeyance pending such remittance. COA
35
further directed petitioner oil company to desist from further offsetting the taxes collected against outstanding claims for
1989 and subsequent periods.
Its motion for reconsideration of the eventual decision of the COA on the matter having been denied, CPI imputes
that respondent commission erred in preventing the former from exercising the right to offset its remittances against the
reimbursement vis-à-vis the OPSF.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the amounts due to the OPSF from petitioner may be offset against the latter’s outstanding claims
from said fund?

RULING:
No. It is settled that a taxpayer may not offset taxes due from claims that he may have against the Government.
Taxes cannot be the subject of compensation because the Government and the taxpayer are not mutually creditors and
debtors of each other and a claim for taxes is not such a debt, demand, contract or judgment as is allowed to be set off.
The Court further ruled that taxation is no longer envisioned as a measure merely to raise revenue to support the
existence of the Government. Taxes may be levied for a regulatory purpose such as to provide means for the
rehabilitation and stabilization of a threatened industry which is affected with public interest, a concern which is within the
police power of the State to address.

LUZON STEVEDORING CORPORATION vs. COURT OF TAX APPEALS and the HONORABLE COMMISSIONER OF
INTERNAL REVENUE
G.R. No. No. L-30232 July 29, 1988

FACTS:
Herein petitioner imported various engine parts and other equipment for which it paid, under protest, the assessed
compensating tax. Unable to secure a tax refund from the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, it filed a Petition for Review
with the Court of Tax Appeals in order to be granted a refund. Petitioner contends that tugboats are included in the term
“cargo vessels” which are exemped from compensating tax under article 190 of the National Internal Revenue Code. He
argues that in legal contemplation, the tugboat and a barge loaded with cargoes with the former towing the latter for
loading and unloading of a vessel in part, constitute a single vessel. Accordingly, it concludes that the engines, spare
parts and equipment imported by it and used in the repair and maintenance of its tugboats are exempt from compensating
tax. On the other hand, respondent contends that "tugboats" are not "Cargo vessel" because they are neither designed
nor used for carrying and/or transporting persons or goods by themselves but are mainly employed for towing and pulling
purposes.

ISSUE:
Whether or not tugboats are included in the term “cargo vessels” which are exempted from compensating tax
under article 190 of the National Internal Revenue Code.

RULING:
No. tugboats are not included in the term “cargo vessels” which are exempted from compensating tax under
article 190 of the National Internal Revenue Code. The Supreme Court explained that under the definition of tugboat, “a
diesel or steam power vessel designed primarily for moving large ships to and from piers for towing barges and lighters in
harbors, rivers and canals.” Which clearly do not fall under the categories of passenger and/or cargo vessels. Thus, it is a
cardinal principle of statutory construction that where a provision of law speaks categorically, the need for interpretation is
obviated, no plausible pretense being entertained to justify non-compliance. All that has to be done is to apply it in every
case that falls within its terms.

NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY vs.


COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
G.R. No. No. L-53961 June 30, 1987

FACTS:
National Development Company (NDC) is a domestic corporation with principal offices in Manila. It entered into
contracts in Tokyo with several Japanese shipbuilding companies for the construction of twelve ocean-going vessels.
36
Initial payments were made in cash and through irrevocable letters of credit. Fourteen promissory notes were signed
for the balance by the NDC and, as required by the shipbuilders, guaranteed by the Republic of the Philippines.
Thereafter, remaining payments and the interests thereon were remitted in due time by the NDC to Tokyo. After the
vessels were delivered, the NDC remitted to the shipbuilders in Tokyo the interest on the balance of the purchase price.
No tax was withheld. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue held that the interest remitted to the Japanese shipbuilders
on the unpaid balance of the purchase price of the vessels acquired by petitioner is subject to income tax under the Tax
Code. The petitioner argues that the Japanese shipbuilders were not subject to tax under the Tax Code. Petitioner
contends that the interest payments were obligations of the Republic of the Philippines and that the promissory notes of
the NDC were government securities exempt from taxation under Section 29(b)[4] of the Tax Code.

ISSUE:
Whether petitioner should not be held liable due to the undertaking signed by the Secretary of Finance and
because the interest payments were obligations of the Republic of the Philippines and that the promissory notes of the
NDC were government securities exempt from taxation under Section 29(b)[4] of the Tax Code as alleged by petitioner.

RULING:
No. Petitioner should be held liable. There is nothing in Section 29(b)[4] of the Tax Code exempting the interests
from taxes. Furthermore in the said undertaking, petitioner has not established a clear waiver therein of the right to tax
interests. Tax exemptions cannot be merely implied but must be categorically and unmistakably expressed. Any doubt
concerning this question must be resolved in favor of the taxing power. It is not the NDC that is being taxed. It was the
income of the Japanese shipbuilders and not the Republic of the Philippines that was subject to the tax the NDC did not
withhold. In effect, therefore, the imposition of the deficiency taxes on the NDC is a penalty for its failure to withhold the
same from the Japanese shipbuilders.

MANILA ELECTRIC COMPANY vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue


G.R. Nos. No. L-29987s and L-23847 October 22, 1975

FACTS:
MERALCO is the holder of a franchise by the Municipal Board of the City of Manila to Mr. Charles M. Swift and
later assumed and taken over by petitioner to construct, maintain, and operate an electric light, heat, and power system in
the City of Manila and its suburbs. In two separate occasions, MERALCO imported copper wires, transformers, and
insulators for use in the operation of its business. The Collector of Customs, as Deputy of Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, levied and collected a compensating tax for the said importation. MERALCO claims for a refund alleging that it
was exempted from such compensating tax based on paragraph 9 of its franchise.
The court stated that MERALCO's claim for exemption from the payment of the compensating tax is not clear or
expressed. Hence, this appeal.

ISSUE:
Whether or not petitioner is exempted to pay compensating tax for its purchase or receipt of commodities, goods,
wares, or merchandise outside the Philippines.

RULING:
No. One who claims to be exempt from the payment of a particular tax must do so under clear and unmistakable
terms found in the statute. Tax exemptions are strictly construed against the taxpayer. In the case at bar, the Court is not
aware whether or not the tax exemption provisions contained in Par. 9, Part Two of Act No. 484 of the Philippine
Commission of 1902 was incorporated in the municipal franchise granted because no admissible copy of Ordinance of the
said Board was ever presented in evidence by the petitioner. Furthermore there is no "plain and unambiguous terms"
declaring petitioner MERALCO exempt from paying a compensating tax on its imports of poles, wires, transformers, and
insulators. The last clause of paragraph 9 merely reaffirms, what has been expressed in the first sentence that petitioner
is exempted from payment of property tax. A compensating tax is not a property tax but an excise tax imposed on the
performance of an act, the engaging in an occupation, or the enjoyment of a privilege.

ERNESTO M. MACEDA vs. HON. CATALINO MACARAIG, JR., et al.


G.R. No. No. 88291 May 31, 1991 and G.R. No. No. 88291 June 8, 1993

FACTS:
37
Commonwealth Act No. 120 created the NPC as a public corporation to undertake the development of
hydraulic power and the production of power from other sources. Several laws were enacted granting NPC tax and duty
exemption privileges such as taxes, duties, fees, imposts, charges and restrictions of the Republic of the Philippines, its
provinces, cities and municipalities "directly or indirectly," on all petroleum products used by NPC in its operation.
However P.D. No. 1931 withdrew all tax exemption privileges granted in favor of government-owned or controlled
corporations including their subsidiaries but empowered the President and/or the then Minister of Finance, upon
recommendation of the FIRB to restore, partially or totally, the exemption withdrawn. BIR ruled that the exemption
privilege enjoyed by NPC under said section covers only taxes for which it is directly liable and not on taxes which are
only shifted to it.

In 1986, BIR Commissioner Tan, Jr. states that all deliveries of petroleum products to NPC are tax exempt,
regardless of the period of delivery.Thereafter, the FIRB issued several Resolutions in different occasions restoring the
tax and duty exemption privileges of NPC indefinite period due to the restoration of the tax exemption privileges of NPC,
NPC applied with the BIR for a "refund of Specific Taxes paid on petroleum products. On August 6, 1987, the Secretary of
Justice, Opinion opined that "the power conferred upon Fiscal Incentives Review Board constitute undue delegation of
legislative power and, therefore, unconstitutional. However, respondents Finance Secretary and the Executive Secretary
declared that "NPC under the provisions of its Revised Charter retains its exemption from duties and taxes imposed on
the petroleum products purchased locally and used for the generation of electricity. Thereafter investigations were made
for the refund of the tax payments of the NPC which includes Millions of pesos Tax refund. Petitioner, as member of the
Philippine Senate introduced as Resolution Directing the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee, In Aid of Legislation, to conduct
a Formal and Extensive Inquiry into the Reported Massive Tax Manipulations and Evasions by Oil Companies, particularly
Caltex (Phils.) Inc., Pilipinas Shell and Petrophil, Which Were Made Possible By Their Availing of the Non-Existing
Exemption of National Power Corporation (NPC) from Indirect Taxes, Resulting Recently in Their Obtaining A Tax Refund
Totalling P1.55 Billion From the Department of Finance.

ISSUE:
Whether or not respondent NPC is legally entitled to the questioned tax and duty refunds.

RULING:
Yes. In G.R. No. No. 88291 the Supreme Court ruled in favor of exempting NPC to the said taxes. Also in G.R.
No. No. 88291 the Supreme Court ruled in favor of respondents. NPC under the provisions of its Revised Charter retains
its exemption from duties and taxes imposed on the petroleum products purchased locally and used for the generation of
electricity. Presidential Decree No. 938 amended the tax exemption of NPC by simplifying the same law in general terms.
It succinctly exempts NPC from "all forms of taxes, duties, fees, imposts, as well as costs and service fees including filing
fees, appeal bonds, supersedeas bonds, in any court or administrative proceedings." the NPC electric power rates did not
carry the taxes and duties paid on the fuel oil it used. The point is that while these levies were in fact paid to the
government, no part thereof was recovered from the sale of electricity produced. As a consequence, as of our most recent
information, some P1.55 B in claims represent amounts for which the oil suppliers and NPC are "out-of-pocket. There
would have to be specific order to the Bureaus concerned for the resumption of the processing of these claims.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE vs. JOHN GOTAMCO & SONS, INC. and THE COURT OF TAX
APPEALS
G.R. No. No. L-31092 February 27, 1987

FACTS:
The World Health Organization (WHO for short) is an international organization which has a regional office in
Manila. An agreement was entered into between the Republic of the Philippines and the said Organization on July 22,
1951. Section 11 of that Agreement provides, inter alia, that "the Organization, its assets, income and other properties
shall be: (a) exempt from all direct and indirect taxes.” The WHO decided to construct a building to house its own offices,
as well as the other United Nations offices stationed in Manila. A bidding was held for the building construction. The WHO
informed the bidders that the building to be constructed belonged to an international organization exempted from the
payment of all fees, licenses, and taxes, and that therefore their bids "must take this into account and should not include
items for such taxes, licenses and other payments to Government agencies." Thereafter, the construction contract was
awarded to John Gotamco & Sons, Inc. (Gotamco for short). Subsequently, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue sent a
letter of demand to Gotamco demanding payment of for the 3% contractor's tax plus surcharges on the gross receipts it
received from the WHO in the construction of the latter's building. WHO. The WHO issued a certification that the bid of
John Gotamco & Sons, should be exempted from any taxes in connection with the construction of the World Health
Organization office building because such can be considered as an indirect tax to WHO. However, The Commissioner of
38
Internal Revenue contends that the 3% contractor's tax is not a direct nor an indirect tax on the WHO, but a tax that is
primarily due from the contractor, and thus not covered by the tax exemption agreement

ISSUE:
Whether or not the said 3% contractor’s tax imposed upon petitioner is covered by the “direct and indirect tax
exemption” granted to WHO by the government.

RULING:
Yes. The 3% contractor’s tax imposed upon petitioner is covered by the “direct and indirect tax exemption”
granted to WHO. Hence, petitioner cannot be held liable for such contractor’s tax. The Supreme Court explained that
direct taxes are those that are demanded from the very person who, it is intended or desired, should pay them; while
indirect taxes are those that are demanded in the first instance from one person in the expectation and intention that he
can shift the burden to someone else. While it is true that the contractor's tax is payable by the contractor, However in the
last analysis it is the owner of the building that shoulders the burden of the tax because the same is shifted by the
contractor to the owner as a matter of self-preservation. Thus, it is an indirect tax against the WHO because, although it is
payable by the petitioner, the latter can shift its burden on the WHO.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Court of Appeals and YMCA


G.R. No. 124043, October 14, 1998

FACTS:
Private Respondent YMCA is a non-stock, non-profit institution, which conducts various programs and activities
that are beneficial to the public, especially the young people, pursuant to its religious, educational and charitable
objectives.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued an assessment to private respondent, in the total amount of
P415,615.01 including surcharge and interest, for deficiency income tax, deficiency expanded withholding taxes on rentals
and professional fees and deficiency withholding tax on wages. Private respondent formally protested the assessment
and, as a supplement to its basic protest, filed a letter dated October 8, 1985. In reply, the Commissioner denied the
claims of YMCA.
YMCA filed a petition for review at the Court of Tax Appeals. The CTA ruled in favor of the YMCA. The
Commissioner elevated the case to the Court of Appeals which initially decided in its favor by reinstating the assessment
of deficiency fixed, contract of Appeals which initially decided in its favor by reinstating the assessment of deficiency
fixed, contractor’s and income taxes. However, finding merit in YMCA’s motion for reconsideration , the appellate court
reversed itself and promulgated the first assessed resolution dated September 28, 1995 granting said motion of YMCA by
affirming the CTA’s decision in toto. On February 29, 1996, the Court of Appeals denied the Commissioner’s motion for
reconsideration.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the rental income of YMCA on its real estate is subject to tax.

RULING:
The Court ruled that the exemption claimed by the YMCA is expressly disallowed by the very wording of the last
paragraph of then Section 27 of the NIRC which mandates that the income of exempt organizations (such as the YMCA)
from any of their properties, real or personal, be subject to the tax imposed by the same Code. Because the last
paragraph of said section unequivocally subjects to tax the rent income of the YMCA from its real property, the Court is
duty-bound to abide strictly by its literal meaning and to refrain from resorting to any convoluted attempt at construction.

Nitafan vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue


G.R. No. L-78780, July 23, 1987

FACTS:
The Chief Justice has previously issued a directive to the Fiscal Management and Budget Office to continue the
deduction of withholding taxes from salaries of the Justices of the Supreme Court and other members of the judiciary.
This was affirmed by the Supreme Court en banc on December 4, 1987.
39
Petitioners are the duly appointed and qualified Judges presiding over Branches 52, 19 and 53, respectively,
of the RTC, National Capital Judicial Region, all with stations in Manila. They seek to prohibit and/or perpetually enjoin the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the Financial Officer of the Supreme Court, from making any deduction of
withholding taxes from their salaries. They contend that this constitutes diminution of salary contrary to Section 10, Article
VIII of the 1987 Constitution, which provides that the salary of the members of the Supreme Court and judges of lower
courts shall be fixed by law and that “during their continuance in office, their salary shall not be decreased.” With the filing
of the petition, the Court deemed it best to settle the issue through judicial pronouncement, even if it had dealt with the
matter administratively.
The Supreme Court dismissed the petition for prohibition.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the salaries of judges are subject to tax.

RULING:
The salaries of members of the Judiciary are subject to the general income tax applied to all taxpayers. Although
such intent was somehow and inadvertently not clearly set forth in the final text of the 1987 Constitution, the deliberations
of the 1986 Constitutional Commission negate the contention that the intent of the framers is to revert to the original
concept of “non-diminution” of salaries of judicial officers. Hence, the doctrine in Perfecto v. Meer and Endencia vs. David
do not apply anymore. Justices and judges are not only the citizens whose income has been reduced in accepting service
in government and yet subject to income tax. Such is true also of Cabinet members and all other employees.

Province of Abra vs. Hernando


G.R. No. L-49336, August 31, 1981

FACTS:
The provincial assessor made a tax assessment on the properties of the Roman Catholic Bishop of Bangued. The
bishop claims tax exemption from real estate tax based on the provisions of Section 17, paragraph 3, Article VII of the
1973 Constitution. He filed an action for declaratory relief. Judge Hernando of the CFI Abra presided over the case. The
petitioner province filed a motion to dismiss, based on lack of jurisdiction, which was denied. It was followed by a
summary judgment granting the exemption without hearing the side of the petitioner.
The Supreme Court granted the petition, set aside the June 19, 1978 resolution, and ordered the respondent
judge, or whoever is acting on his behalf, to hear the case on merit; without costs.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the properties of the Bishop of Bangued are tax-exempt.

RULING:
The 1935 and the 1973 Constitutions differ in language as to the exemption of religious property from taxes as
they should not only be “exclusively” but also “actually” and “directly” used for religious purposes. Herein, the judge
accepted at its face the allegation of the Bishop instead of demonstrating that there is compliance with the constitutional
provision that allows an exemption. There was an allegation of lack of jurisdiction and of lack of cause of action, which
should have compelled the judge to accord a hearing to the province rather than deciding the case immediately in favor of
the Bishop. Exemption from taxation is not favored and is never presumed, so that if granted, it must be strictly
construed against the taxpayer. There must be proof of the actual and direct use of the lands, buildings, and
improvements for religious (or charitable) purposes to be exempted from taxation.
The case was remanded to the lower court for a trial on merits.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Mitsubishi Metal Corporation


G.R. No. 54908 and G.R. No. 80041, January 22, 1990

FACTS:
Mitsubishi Metal Corporation, a Japanese corporation licensed to do business in the Philippines, entered into a
Loan and Sale Contract with Atlas Consolidated Mining and Development Coporation whereby Mitsubishi lent
$20,000,000 for the expansion of the latter’s mines, particularly the installation of a new concentrator for copper
40
production. Atlas, in turn, undertook to sell to Mitsubishi all of the copper concentrates produced by said machine for
15 years.
For this purpose, Mitsubishi applied for and was granted a loan by the Export- Import Bank of Japan (Eximbank)
and a consortium of Japanese banks. As agreed upon between Mitsubishi and Atlas, the latter gave interest payments for
1974 and 1975 amounting to P13,143,966.79, with the corresponding 15% tax thereon withheld and remitted to the
Government as required by the Tax Code.
On March 5, 1976, Mitsubishi filed a claim for tax credit of the sum of P1,972,595.01 representing the tax withheld
on the interest payment. That claim, not having been acted upon by the BIR, Mitsubishi then filed a petition contending
that Mitsubishi was a mere agent of Eximbank, a Japanese Government financing institution which financed the loan.
Such governmental status of Eximbank was the basis of Mitsubishi’s claim for exemption from paying tax on the interest
payments pursuant to Section 29 (b) (8) (A) (now, Section 32 [B][7][a], 1997 NIRC). The CTA granted the tax credit in
favor of Mitsubishi, which later executed a waiver in favor of Atlas.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the interest income from the loans extended to Atlas by Mitsubishi is excludible from gross income
taxation and thus exempt from withholding tax.

RULING:
It is settled that laws granting exemption from tax are construed strictissimi juris against the taxpayer and liberally
in favor of the taxing power. Taxation is the rule and exemption is the exception. The burden of proof rests upon the party
claiming exemption to prove that it is in fact covered by the exemption so claimed, which onus private respondents have
failed to discharge.
The taxability of a party cannot be blandly glossed over on the basis of a supposed “broad, pragmatic analysis”
alone without substantial supportive evidence, lest governmental operations suffer due to diminution of much needed
funds.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs Gotamco and Sons, Inc.


G.R. No. L-31092 February 27, 1987

FACTS:
The World Health Organization (WHO) entered into a Host Agreement with the Republic of the Philippines which
provides that "the Organization, its assets, income and other properties shall be exempt from all direct and indirect taxes.
When the WHO decided to construct a building to house its own offices in Manila, it entered into a further agreement with
the Government that it may import into the country materials and fixtures required for the construction free from all duties
and taxes. After inviting bids, the contract was awarded to respondent John Gotamco & Sons, Inc. for the stipulated price
of P370,000.00. Thereafter, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue sent a letter of demand to Gotamco demanding
payment of P16,970.40, representing the 3% contractor's tax plus surcharges on the gross receipts it received from the
WHO in the construction of the latter's building. Respondent Gotamco appealed the Commissioner's decision to the Court
of Tax Appeals, which after trial rendered a decision, in favor of Gotamco and reversed the Commissioner's decision.
Hence, petitioner brought the case to the Supreme Court.
Petitioner maintains the position that the contractor's tax is a tax due primarily and directly on the contractor, not
on the owner of the building. Since this tax has no bearing upon the WHO, it cannot be deemed an indirect taxation upon
it.

ISSUE:
Whether or not John Gotamco & Sons, Inc. should pay the 3% contractor's tax under Section 191 of the National
Internal Revenue Code.

RULING:
No, The Supreme Court held that Respondent John Gotamco and Sons, Inc. is not required to pay the 3%
contractor’s tax under the National Internal Revenue Code. It explained that direct taxes are those that are demanded
from the very person who, it is intended or desired, should pay them; while indirect taxes are those that are demanded in
the first instance from one person in the expectation and intention that he can shift the burden to someone else. The
contractor's tax is of course payable by the contractor but in the last analysis it is the owner of the building that shoulders
the burden of the tax because the same is shifted by the contractor to the owner as a matter of self-preservation. Thus, it
is an indirect tax. And it is an indirect tax on the WHO because, although it is payable by the petitioner, the latter can shift
its burden on the WHO. It is the WHO that will pay the tax indirectly through the contractor and it certainly cannot be said
that 'this tax has no bearing upon the World Health Organization. Accordingly, finding no reversible error committed by the
respondent Court of Tax Appeals, the Supreme Court affirmed the appealed decision.
41

31st Infantry Post Exchange vs. Posadas


G.R. No. 33403 September 4, 1930

FACTS:
Petitioner Thirty-first Infantry Post Exchange is an agency within the United States Army, under the control of the
officers of the Army. All of the goods sold to and purchased by the petitioner are intended for resale to and are in fact
resold to the officers, soldiers and the civilian employees of the Army, and their families. Juan Posadas, Jr., Collector of
Internal Revenue of the Philippine Islands, and his predecessors in that office, have collected from the merchants who
made the sales of the commodities, goods, wares, and merchandise to the plaintiff Exchange, taxes at the rate of one and
one-half per centum on the gross value in money of the commodities. The effect of the demand and collection of taxes
was to increase the cost thereof to the plaintiff Exchange. Contending that the merchandises are exempted from taxes,
petitioner brought the case before the Supreme Court.

ISSUE:
Whether or not merchandise is relieved from said tax when it is sold to the Army or Navy of the United States for
resale to individuals by means or through the post exchanges or ship's stores

RULING:
No, The Supreme Court ruled that merchandise is not exempted from taxes when it is sold to the Army of the
United States for resale. It explained that although The revenue laws at that time provided that "no specific tax shall be
collected on any articles sold and delivered directly to the United States Army or Navy for actual use or issue by the Army
or Navy, and any taxes which have been paid on articles so sold and delivered for such use or issue shall be refunded
upon such sale and delivery, the Court is not inclined to believe that goods sold to the soldiers and sailors of the Army and
Navy, even though they be sold through said exchanges by the intervention of officers of the Army and Navy, are goods
sold directly to the United States Army or Navy for actual use or issue by the Army or Navy.

PLDT vs. City of Davao


G.R. No. 143867 August 22, 2001

FACTS:
Petitioner Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co., Inc. (PLDT) applied for a Mayor's Permit to operate its Davao
Metro Exchange. However, Respondent City of Davao withheld action on the application pending payment by petitioner of
the local franchise tax in the amount of P3,681,985.72 for the first to the fourth quarter of 1999. Petitioner protested the
assessment of the local franchise tax and requested a refund of the franchise tax paid by it for the year 1997 and the first
to the third quarters of 1998. Petitioner contended that it was exempted from the payment of franchise tax based on an
opinion of the Bureau of Local Government Finance (BLGF) citing Section 23 of RA 7925 which provides equality of
treatment in the telecommunication industry. Nevertheless, respondent Adelaida B. Barcelona, City Treasurer of Davao,
denied the protest and claim for tax refund of petitioner.

ISSUE:
Whether or not PLDT is exempted to pay the local franchise tax.

RULING:
No, the Supreme Court held that Petitioner PLDT is not exempted from the local franchise tax because it does not
appear that, in approving §23 of R.A. No. 7925, Congress intended it to operate as a blanket tax exemption to all
telecommunications entities. It explained that the acceptance of petitioner's theory would result in absurd consequences.
It is different if Congress enacts a law specifically granting uniform advantages, favor, privilege, exemption, or immunity to
all telecommunications entities. Furthermore, the court emphasized that tax exemptions are highly disfavored.

Sea-Land Services, Inc. vs. Court of Appeals


G.R. No. 122605 April 30, 2001

FACTS:
42
Petitioner Sea-Land Service Incorporated (SEA-LAND), an American international shipping company licensed
by the Securities and Exchange Commission to do business in the Philippines entered into a contract with the United
States Government to transport military household goods and effects of U.S. military personnel assigned to the Subic
Naval Base. SEA-LAND filed with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) the corresponding corporate Income Tax Return
(ITR) and paid the income tax due thereon of 1.5% as required in Section 25 (a)(2) of the National Internal Revenue Code
(NIRC) in relation to Article 9 of the RP-US Tax Treaty, amounting to P870,093.12.
Claiming that it paid the aforementioned income tax by mistake, a written claim for refund was filed with the BIR.
However, before the said claim for refund could be acted upon by public respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
petitioner filed a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) to judicially pursue its claim for refund and to stop
the running of the two-year prescriptive period under the then Section 243 of the NIRC. The CTA rendered its decision
denying SEA-LAND’s claim for refund of the income tax it paid in 1984.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the income that petitioner derived from services in transporting the household goods and effects of
U.S. military personnel falls within the tax exemption provided in Article XII, paragraph 4 of the RP-US Military Bases
Agreement.

RULING:
No, The Supreme Court held that the petitioner is not included in the tax exemption provided in the RP-US Military
Bases Agreement. It explained that although the Military Bases agreement provides that no US national shall be liable to
pay income tax in the Philippines in respect of any profits derived under a contract made in the United States with the
government of the United States in connection with the construction, maintenance, operation and defense of the bases it
is obvious that the transport or shipment of household goods and effects of U.S. military personnel is not included in the
term "construction, maintenance, operation and defense of the bases." Neither could the performance of this service to
the U.S. government be interpreted as directly related to the defense and security of the Philippine territories.

MANILA ELECTRIC COMPANY VS. PROVINCE OF LAGUNA


G.R. No. 131359. May 5, 1999

FACTS:
Province of Laguna by virtue of existing laws then in effect, issued resolutions through their respective municipal
councils granting franchise in favor of petitioner Manila Electric Company (“MERALCO”) for the supply of electric light,
heat and power within their concerned areas. On 19 January 1983, MERALCO was likewise granted a franchise by the
National Electrification Administration to operate an electric light and power service in the Municipality of Calamba,
Laguna.
On 12 September 1991, “Local Government Code of 1991,” was enacted enjoining(directing) local government
units to create their own sources of revenue and to levy taxes, fees and charges, subject to the limitations expressed
therein, consistent with the basic policy of local autonomy. Pursuant to the provisions of the Code, respondent province
enacted Laguna Provincial Ordinance No. 01-92.
Respondent Provincial Treasurer sent a demand letter to MERALCO for the corresponding tax payment.
Petitioner MERALCO paid the tax, which then amounted to P19,520,628.42, under protest. A formal claim for refund was
thereafter sent by MERALCO to the Provincial Treasurer of Laguna claiming that the franchise tax it had paid and
continued to pay to the National Government pursuant to P.D. 551 already included the franchise tax imposed by the
Provincial Tax Ordinance. MERALCO contended that the imposition of a franchise tax under Section 2.09 of Laguna
Provincial Ordinance No. 01-92, insofar as it concerned MERALCO, contravened the provisions of Section 1 of P.D. 551.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the tax exemption should be withdrawn to give way to the authoritative language of the Local
Government Code specifically providing for the withdrawal of such exemption without violating the Constitutiion.

RULING:
Yes. Truly, tax exemptions of this kind may not be revoked without impairing the obligations of contracts. These
contractual tax exemptions, however, are not to be confused with tax exemptions granted under franchises. A franchise
partakes the nature of a grant which is beyond the purview of the non-impairment clause of the Constitution. Indeed,
Article XII, Section 11, of the 1987 Constitution, like its precursor provisions in the 1935 and the 1973 Constitutions, is
explicit that no franchise for the operation of a public utility shall be granted except under the condition that such privilege
shall be subject to amendment, alteration or repeal by Congress as and when the common good so requires.
43
TIU VS. COURT OF APPEALS
G.R. NO. 127410. JANUARY 20, 1999

FACTS:
Congress passed into law RA 7227. Section 12 thereof created the Subic Special Economic Zone and granted
thereto special privileges.The President issued Executive Order No. 97-A (EO 97-A), specifying the area within which the
tax-and-duty-free privilege was operative.
On October 26, 1994, the petitioners challenged before this Court the constitutionality of EO 97-A for allegedly
being violative of their right to equal protection of the laws. In a Resolution dated June 27, 1995, this Court referred the
matter to the Court of Appeals, pursuant to Revised Administrative Circular No. 1-95.
Petitioners contend that the SSEZ encompasses (1) the City of Olongapo, (2) the Municipality of Subic in
Zambales, and (3) the area formerly occupied by the Subic Naval Base. However, EO 97-A, according to them, narrowed
down the area within which the special privileges granted to the entire zone would apply to the present “fenced-in former
Subic Naval Base” only. It has thereby excluded the residents of the first two components of the zone from enjoying the
benefits granted by the law. It has effectively discriminated against them, without reasonable or valid standards, in
contravention of the equal protection guarantee.

ISSUE:
Whether the provisions of Executive Order No. 97-A confining the application of R.A. 7227 granting tax and duty
incentives only to businesses and residents within the secured area and excluding the residents of the zone outside of the
secured area is discriminatory or not.

RULING:
No. We rule in favor of the constitutionality and validity of the assailed EO. Said Order is not violative of the
equal protection clause; neither is it discriminatory. Rather, we find real and substantive distinctions between the
circumstances obtaining inside and those outside the Subic Naval Base, thereby justifying a valid and reasonable
classification.
There are substantial differences between the big investors who are being lured to establish and operate their
industries in the so-called “secured area” and the present business operators outside the area. On the one hand, we are
talking of billion-peso investments and thousands of new jobs. On the other hand, definitely none of such magnitude. In
the first, the economic impact will be national; in the second, only local. Even more important, at this time the business
activities outside the “secured area” are not likely to have any impact in achieving the purpose of the law, which is to turn
the former military base to productive use for the benefit of the Philippine economy. There is, then, hardly any reasonable
basis to extend to them the benefits and incentives accorded in RA 7227.
MACTAN CEBU INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT VS. MARCOS
G.R. No. 120082. September 11, 1996

FACTS:
Petitioner Mactan Cebu International Airport Authority (MCIAA) was created by virtue of Republic Act No. 6958,
mandated to “principally undertake the economical, efficient and effective control, management and supervision of the
Mactan International Airport in the Province of Cebu and the Lahug Airport in Cebu City, x x x and such other airports as
may be established in the Province of Cebu x x x” (Sec. 3, RA 6958).
Since the time of its creation, petitioner MCIAA enjoyed the privilege of exemption from payment of realty taxes in
accordance with Section 14 of its Charter
On October 11, 1994, however, Mr. Eustaquio B. Cesa, Officer-in-Charge, Office of the Treasurer of the City of
Cebu, demanded payment for realty taxes on several parcels of land belonging to the petitioner.
Petitioner objected to such demand for payment as baseless and unjustified, claiming in its favor the aforecited
Section 14 of RA 6958 which exempts it from payment of realty taxes. It was also asserted that it is an instrumentality of
the government performing governmental functions, citing Section 133 of the Local Government Code of 1991 which puts
limitations on the taxing powers of local government units.

ISSUE:
Can the City of Cebu demand payment of realty taxes on several parcels of land belonging to the petitioner?

RULING:
Yes. Since the last paragraph of Section 234 unequivocally withdrew, upon the effectivity of the LGC, exemptions
from payment of real property taxes granted to natural or juridical persons, including government-owned or controlled
corporations, except as provided in the said section, and the petitioner is, undoubtedly, a government-owned corporation,
44
it necessarily follows that its exemption from such tax granted it in Section 14 of its Charter, R.A. No. 6958, has been
withdrawn.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE vs.FRANK ROBERTSON


G.R. Nos. 70116-19. August 12, 1986

FACTS:
The question involving this case is the scope of the tax exemption provision in Article XII, Par. 2, of the RP-US
Military Bases Agreement of 1947.
The private respondents are citizens of the United States; holders of American passports and admitted as Special
Temporary Visitors under Section 9 (a) visa of the Philippine Immigration Act of 1940, as amended; civilian employees in
the U.S. Military Base in the Philippines in connection with its construction, maintenance, operation, and defense; and
incomes are solely derived from salaries from the U.S. government by reason of their employment in the U.S. Bases in
the Philippines."
The Court a quo after due hearing, rendered its judgment in favor of respondents cancelling and setting aside the
assessments for deficiency income taxes of respondents for the taxable years 1969-1972, inclusive of interests and
penalties.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the public respondent erred in holding that private respondents are exempted from paying
Philippine income tax.

RULING:
The law and the facts of the case are so clear that there is no room left for Us to doubt the validity of private
respondents' defense. In order to avail oneself of the tax exemption under the RP-US Military Bases Agreement: he must
be a national of the United States employed in connection with the construction, maintenance, operation or defense, of
the bases, residing in the Philippines by reason of such employment, and the income derived is from the U.S.
Government (Art. XII par. 2 of PI-US Military Bases Agreement of 1947). Said circumstances are all present in the case at
bar. Likewise, We find no justifiable reason to disturb the findings and rulings of the lower court in its decision.

Basco vs PAGCOR
G.R. No. 91649. May 14, 1991

FACTS:
On July 11, 1983, PAGCOR was created under P.D. 1869 to enable the Government to regulate and centralize all
games of chance authorized by existing franchise or permitted by law. To attain these objectives PAGCOR is given
territorial jurisdiction all over the Philippines. Under its Charter's repealing clause, all laws, decrees, executive orders,
rules and regulations, inconsistent therewith, are accordingly repealed, amended or modified.
But petitioners contend that P.D. 1869 constitutes a waiver of the right of the City of Manila to impose taxes and
legal fees; that the exemption clause in P.D. 1869 is violative of the principle of local autonomy. They must be referring to
Section 13 par. (2) of P.D. 1869 which exempts PAGCOR, as the franchise holder from paying any "tax of any kind or
form, income or otherwise, as well as fees, charges or levies of whatever nature, whether National or Local."

ISSUE:
Whether or not P.D. 1869 constitutes a waiver of the right of the city of Manila to impose taxes and legal fees to
PAGCOR.

RULING:
The City of Manila, being a mere Municipal corporation has no inherent right to impose taxes. Thus, "the Charter
or statute must plainly show an intent to confer that power or the municipality cannot assume it". Its "power to tax"
therefore must always yield to a legislative act which is superior having been passed upon by the state itself which has the
"inherent power to tax". The Charter of the City of Manila is subject to control by Congress.

Republic vs IAC
G.R. No. L-69344. April 26, 1991
45
FACTS:
On April 15, 1980, the Republic of the Philippines, through the Bureau of Internal Revenue, commenced an action
to collect from the spouses Antonio Pastor and Clara Reyes-Pastor deficiency income taxes for the years 1955 to 1959.
The Pastors filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, but the motion was denied. On August 2, 1975, they filed an answer
admitting there was an assessment against them of P17,117.08 for income tax deficiency but denying liability therefor.
They contended that they had availed of the tax amnesty under P.D.'s Nos. 23, 213 and 370 and had paid the
corresponding amnesty taxes amounting to P10,400 or 10% of their reported untaxed income under P.D. 23, P2,951.20 or
20% of the reported untaxed income under P.D. 213, and a final payment on October 26, 1973 under P.D. 370 evidenced
by the Government's Official Receipt No. 1052388. Consequently, the Government is in estoppel to demand and compel
further payment of income taxes by them.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the payment of deficiency income tax under the tax amnesty and its acceptance by the
Government operated to divest the Government of the right to further recover from the taxpayer, even if there was an
existing assessment against the latter at the time he paid the amnesty tax.

RULING:
Even assuming that the deficiency tax assessment of P17,117.08 against the Pastor spouses were correct, since
the latter have already paid almost the equivalent amount to the Government by way of amnesty taxes under P.D. No.
213, and were granted not merely an exemption, but an amnesty, for their past tax failings, the Government is estopped
from collecting the difference between the deficiency tax assessment and the amount already paid by them as amnesty
tax.
A tax amnesty, being a general pardon or intentional overlooking by the State of its authority to impose penalties
on persons otherwise guilty of evasion or violation of a revenue or tax law, partakes of an absolute forgiveness or waiver
by the Government of its right to collect what otherwise would be due it, and in this sense, prejudicial thereto, particularly
to give tax evaders, who wish to relent and are willing to reform a chance to do so and thereby become a part of the new
society with a clean slate.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs CA


G.R. No. 108358. January 20, 1995

FACTS:
On 22 August 1986, E.O. 41 was promulgated declaring a one-time tax amnesty on unpaid income taxes, later
amended to include estate and donor's taxes and taxes on business, for the taxable years 1981 to 1985.
Availing itself of the amnesty, respondent R.O.H. Auto Products Philippines, Inc., filed, in October 1986 and
November 1986, its Tax Amnesty Return and Supplemental Tax Amnesty Return, respectively, and paid the
corresponding amnesty taxes due. Prior to this availment, petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue, in a
communication received by private respondent on 13 August 1986, assessed the latter deficiency income and business
taxes for its fiscal years ended 30 September 1981 and 30 September 1982 in an aggregate amount of P1,410,157.71.
The taxpayer wrote back to state that since it had been able to avail itself of the tax amnesty, the deficiency tax notice
should forthwith be cancelled and withdrawn. The request was denied by the Commissioner, on the ground that Revenue
Memorandum Order 4-87, implementing E.O. 41, had construed the amnesty coverage to include only assessments
issued by the Bureau of Internal Revenue after the promulgation of the executive order on 22 August 1986 and not to
assessments theretofore made.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the position taken by the Commissioner coincides with the meaning and intent of E.O. 41.

RULING:
The period of the amnesty was later extended to 05 December 1986 from 31 October 1986 by E.O. 54, dated 04
November 1986, and, its coverage expanded, under E.O. 64, dated 17 November 1986, to include estate and honors
taxes and taxes on business.
If, as the Commissioner argues, E.O. 41 had not been intended to include 1981-1985 tax liabilities already
assessed (administratively) prior to 22 August 1986, the law could have simply so provided in its exclusionary clauses. It
did not. The conclusion is unavoidable, and it is that the executive order has been designed to be in the nature of a
general grant of tax amnesty subject only to the cases specifically excepted by it.
46
Hilado vs Collector of Internal Revenue
GR L-9408. October 31, 1956

FACTS:
Emilio Hilado filed his income tax return for 1951 with the treasurer of Bacolod City. He is claiming a deductible
item of P12,837.65 from his gross income under the General Circular V-123 issued by the Collector of Internal Revenue.
Subsequently, the Secretary of Finance, through the Collector, issued General Circular V-139 which revoked and
declared void Circular V-123. It provided that losses of property which occurred in World War II from fires, storms,
shipwreck or other casualty, or from robbery, theft, or embezzlement are deductible in the year of actual loss or
destruction of said property. Thereafter, the deductions were disallowed.

ISSUE:
Whether or not Hilado can claim compensation for destruction of his property during the war under the laws in
effect at that time.

RULING:
Philippines Internal Revenue Laws are not political in nature and as such were continued in force during the
period of enemy occupation and in effect were actually enforced by the occupation government. Such tax laws are
deemed to be laws of the occupied territory and not of the occupying enemy. As of the end of 1945, there was no law
which Hilado could claim for the destruction of his properties during the battle for the liberation of the Philippines. Under
the Philippine Rehabilitation Act of 1948, the payment of claims by the War Damage Commission depended upon its
discretions non-payment of which does not give rise to any enforceable right. Assuming that the loss (deductible item)
represents a portion of the 75% of his war damage claim, the amount would be at most a proper deduction of his 1950
gross income (not on his 1951 gross income) as the last installment and notice of discontinuation of payment by the War
Damage Commission was made in 1950.

Misamis Oriental Association of Coco Traders, inc. vs. Department of Finance Secretary
G.R. No. 108524. November 10, 1994

FACTS:
Petitioner Misamis Oriental Association of Coco Traders, Inc. is a domestic corporation whose members,
individually or collectively, are engaged in the buying and selling of copra in Misamis Oriental. The petitioner alleges that
prior to the issuance of Revenue Memorandum Circular 47-91 on June 11, 1991, which implemented VAT Ruling 190-90,
copra was classified as agricultural food product under $ 103(b) of the National Internal Revenue Code and, therefore,
exempt from VAT at all stages of production or distribution. Under Sec. 103(b) of the NIRC, the sale of agricultural food
products in their original state is exempt from VAT at all stages of production or distribution. The reclassification had the
effect of denying to the petitioner the exemption it previously enjoyed when copra was classified as an agricultural food
product under §103(b) of the NIRC. Petitioner challenges RMC No. 47-91 on various grounds.

ISSUE:
Whether RMC No. 47-91 is discriminatory and violative of the equal protection clause of the Constitution.

RULING:
The court ruled in the negative. Petitioner claims that RMC No. 47-91 is violative of the equal protection clause
because while coconut farmers and copra producers are exempt, traders and dealers are not, although both sell copra in
its original state. Petitioners add that oil millers do not enjoy tax credit out of the VAT payment of traders and dealers. The
argument has no merit. There is a material or substantial difference between coconut farmers and copra producers, on
the one hand, and copra traders and dealers, on the other. The former produce and sell copra, the latter merely sell
copra. The Constitution does not forbid the differential treatment of persons so long as there is a reasonable basis for
classifying them differently. It is not true that oil millers are exempt from VAT. Pursuant to § 102 of the NIRC, they are
subject to 10% VAT on the sale of services.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Court of Appeals and Alhambra Industries, Inc.
G.R. No. 117982. February 6, 1997

FACTS:
47
Alhambra Industries, Inc. is a domestic corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of cigar and cigarette
products. On 7 May 1991 private respondent received a letter dated 26 April 1991 from the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue assessing it deficiency Ad Valorem Tax (AVT) in the amount P 488,396.62. Private respondent filed a protest
against the proposed assessment with a request that the same be withdrawn and cancelled. Petitioner denied such
protest. The dispute arose from the discrepancy in the taxable base on which the excise tax is to apply on account of
two incongruous BIR Rulings: (1) BIR Ruling 473-88 dated 4 October 1988 which excluded the VAT from the tax base in
computing the fifteen percent (15%) excise tax due; and, (2) BIR Ruling 017-91 dated 11 February 1991 which included
back the VAT in computing the tax base for purposes of the fifteen percent (15%) ad valorem tax.

ISSUE:
Whether Sec. 142 (d) of the Tax Code, which provides for the inclusion of the VAT in the tax base for purposes of
computing the 15% ad valorem tax, is the applicable law in the instant case as it specifically applies to the manufacturer's
wholesale price of cigar and cigarette products and not Sec. 127 (b) of the Tax Code which applies in general to the
wholesale of goods or domestic products.

RULING:
Sec. 142 being a specific provision applicable to cigar and cigarettes must prevail over Sec. 127 (b), a general
provision of law insofar as the imposition of the ad valorem tax on cigar and cigarettes is concerned.
Consequently, the application of Sec. 127 (b) to the wholesale price of cigar and cigarette products for purposes of
computing the ad valorem tax is patently erroneous. Accordingly, BIR Ruling 473-88 is void ab initio as it contravenes
the express provisions of Sec. 142 (d) of the Tax Code.
However, well-entrenched is the rule that rulings and circulars, rules and regulations promulgated by the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue would have no retroactive application if to so apply them would be prejudicial to the
taxpayers. The BIR is now ordered to refund private respondent of the collected taxes form the latter.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Lingayen Gulf Electric Power Co., Inc
G.R. No. L-23771. August 4, 1988

FACTS:
The respondent taxpayer, Lingayen Gulf Electric Power Co., Inc., operates an electric power plant serving the
adjoining municipalities of Lingayen and Binmaley, both in the province of Pangasinan, pursuant to the municipal
franchise granted it by their respective municipal councils.
On November 21, 1955, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) assessed against and demanded from the private
respondent the total amount of P19,293.41 representing deficiency franchise taxes and surcharges for the years 1946 to
1954 applying the franchise tax rate of 5% on gross receipts. The private respondent requested for a reinvestigation of the
case on the ground that instead of incurring a deficiency liability, it made an overpayment of the franchise tax. In its letters
dated July 2, and August 9, 1958 to the petitioner Commissioner, the private respondent protested the said assessment
and requested for a conference with a view to settling the liability amicably. In his letters dated July 25 and August 28,
1958, the Commissioner denied the request of the private respondent. Thus, the appeal to the respondent Court of Tax
Appeals. Pending the hearing of the said cases, Republic Act (R.A.) No. 3843 was passed on June 22, 1 963, granting to
the private respondent a legislative franchise for the operation of the electric light, heat, and power system in the same
municipalities of Pangasinan and comes with it a tax equal to two per centum of the gross receipts from electric current
sold or supplied under this franchise.

ISSUES:
(1) Whether or not the 5% franchise tax prescribed in Section 259 of the National Internal Revenue Code
assessed against the private respondent on its gross receipts realized before the effectivity of R.A- No. 3843 is collectible.
(2) Whether or not the respondent taxpayer is liable for the fixed and deficiency percentage taxes in the amount of
P3,025.96 for the period before the approval of its municipal franchises.

RULING:
R.A. No. 3843 provided that the private respondent should pay only a 2% franchise tax on its gross receipts, "in
lieu of any and all taxes and/or licenses of any kind, nature or description levied, established, or collected by any authority
whatsoever, municipal, provincial, or national, now or in the future ... and effective further upon the date the original
franchise was granted, no other tax and/or licenses other than the franchise tax of two per centum on the gross receipts ...
shall be collected, any provision of law to the contrary notwithstanding." Thus, by virtue of R.A- No. 3843, the private
respondent was liable to pay only the 2% franchise tax, effective from the date the original municipal franchise was
granted. As to the second issue, the legislative franchise (R.A. No. 3843) exempted the grantee from all kinds of taxes
48
other than the 2% tax from the date the original franchise was granted. The exemption, therefore, did not cover the
period before the franchise was granted, i.e. before February 24, 1948. However, as pointed out by the respondent court
in its findings, during the period covered by the instant case, that is from January 1, 1946 to December 31, 1961, the
private respondent paid the amount of P34,184.36, which was very much more than the amount rightfully due from it.
Hence, the private respondent should no longer be made to pay for the deficiency tax in the amount of P3,025.98 for the
period from January 1, 1946 to February 29, 1948.

ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corp. vs. Court of Tax Appeals


G.R. No. L-52306. October 12, 1981

FACTS:
During the period pertinent to this case, petitioner corporation was engaged in the business of telecasting local as
well as foreign films acquired from foreign corporations not engaged in trade or business within the Philippines for which
petitioner paid rentals after withholding income tax of 30%of one-half of the film rentals. In implementing Section 4(b) of
the Tax Code, the Commissioner issued General Circular V-334. Pursuant thereto, ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corp.
dutifully withheld and turned over to the BIR 30% of ½ of the film rentals paid by it to foreign corporations not engaged in
trade or business in the Philippines. The last year that the company withheld taxes pursuant to the Circular was in 1968.
On 27 June 1908, RA 5431 amended Section 24 (b) of the Tax Code increasing the tax rate from 30% to 35% and
revising the tax basis from “such amount” referring to rents, etc. to “gross income.” In 1971, the Commissioner issued a
letter of assessment and demand for deficiency withholding income tax for years 1965 to 1968. The company requested
for reconsideration; where the Commissioner did not act upon.

ISSUES:
Whether Revenue Memorandum Circular 4-71, revoking General Circular V-334, may be retroactively applied.

RULING:
Rulings or circulars promulgated by the Commissioner have no retroactive application where to so apply them
would be prejudicial to taxpayers. Herein ,the prejudice the company of the retroactive application of Memorandum
Circular 4-71 is beyond question. It was issued only in 1971, or three years after 1968, the last year that petitioner had
withheld taxes under General Circular No. V-334. The assessment and demand on petitioner to pay deficiency
withholding income tax was also made three years after 1968 for a period of time commencing in 1965. The company was
no longer in a position to withhold taxes due from foreign corporations because it had already remitted all film rentals and
had no longer control over them when the new circular was issued. Insofar as the enumerated exceptions are concerned,
the company does not fall under any of them.

Philippine Bank of Commerce (PBcom) v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR)


G.R. No. 112024. January 28, 1999

FACTS:
Petitioner PBcom paid its quarterly income tax for the first and second quarters of 1985 totalling to Php5,
016,954.00. Subsequently, PBcom suffered losses so that when it filed its Annual Income Tax for the year- ended
December 31, 1986, it reported a net loss and declared no tax payable for the year. Petitioner also earned rental income
for both 1985 and 1986 and the corresponding tax thereof was with held and remitted by the lessees to the BIR.
On August 7, 1987 or after more than two years from payment of taxes, PBcom filed for a tax refund. Pending
investigation of the BIR, petitioner filed a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals. The CTA denied the tax refund
on the ground that application for refund must be made within two years from the payment of tax as provided by the
National Internal Revenue Code. Petitioner contended that the two year period has been changed to ten years upon a
memorandum issued by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The Court of Appeal affirmed in toto the ruling of the
CTA.

ISSUE:
Did the CTA erred in denying the plea for tax refund on the ground of prescription?

RULING:
No. The relaxation of revenue regulation by a memorandum issued by the BIR is not warranted as it disregards
the two year period set by law. Section 230 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1977 provides for the two year
period for filing a claim for refund or credit. When the Acting Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued a memorandum
changing the prescriptive period of two years to ten years, such circular created a clear inconsistency with the provision of
49
Section 230 of NIRC. In so doing, the BIR did not simply interpret the law, rather it legislated guidelines contrary to the
statute passed by the congress.

Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Tokyo Shipping Co.LTD


G.R. No. L-68252. May 26, 1995

FACTS:
Private Respondent is a foreign corporation represented in the Philippines by Soriamont Steamship Agencies,
Incorporated. It owns and operates tramper vessel M/V Gardenia. Nasutra chartered M/V Gardenia to load raw sugar in
the Philippines. Soriamont Agency paid the required income and common carrier taxes for its transaction with Nasutra.
However, upon arrival, the vessel found no sugar for loading. Private respondent, therefore, filed a claim for tax credit
before the petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue for erroneous payment. Due to the failure of petitioner to act
promptly on the matter, private respondent filed a petition for review before the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) which
favoured the tax credit.
Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration, but it was denied by the CTA, hence this petition contending that
private respondent has the burden of proof to support its claim of refund, that it failed to prove that it did not realize any
receipt from its charter agreement and it suppressed evidence when it did not present its charter agreement.

ISSUE:
Whether or not private respondent failed to prove that it derived no receipt from its charter agreement, hence, not
entitled to a refund.

RULING:
We find no merit in the petition.
The respondent Court of Tax Appeals held that sufficient evidence has been adduced by private respondent
proving that it derived no receipt from its charter agreement with Nasutra. The Clearance Vessel to a Foreign Port issued
by the District Collector of Customs support such finding. Moreover, the BIR examiner and its appellate division both
recommended the approval of private respondent’s claim of tax refund.

Reyes v. Almonzor
G.R. Nos. L-49839 – 46. April 26, 1991

FACTS:
The National legislature enacted R.A. 6359 which prohibits an increase in monthly rentals of dwelling unit or land
on which another’s dwelling is located, where the rental does not exceed Php300.00. The act also suspended article
1673 of the Civil Code thereby disallowing ejectment of lessees. These prohibitions were made absolute by the filing of
Presidential Decree 20. Consequently, petitioners herein are precluded from increasing monthly rentals and in ejecting the
lessees.
The respondent city assessor of Manila reassessed the value of the petitioners’ properties based on the
scheduled market value thereof. This entailed an increase in the tax rates prompting petitioners to file a Memorandum of
Disagreement with the Board of Tax Assessment Appeals averring that the reassessment was excessive, unwarranted,
inequitable, confiscatory and unconstitutional considering that the tax imposed upon them is greater than the annual
income derived from the property. They also argued that the income approach should have been used in determining the
land values instead of the comparable sales approach. The Board of tax Assessment Appeals considered the assessment
valid and the same was affirmed by the Central Board of Assessment appeals, hence this petition.

ISSUE:
Did the board err in adopting the comparable sales approach in fixing the assessed value of the properties?

RULING:
The petition is impressed with merit.
It is unquestionable that both the Comparable Sales Approach and the Income Approach are generally
acceptable methods of appraisal for taxation purposes. However, it is conceded that the proprietary of one, as against the
other would depend on several factors. Hence, as early as 1923, it has been stressed that the assessors , in finding the
value of the property, have to consider all the circumstances and elements of value and must exercise a prudent
discretion in reaching conclusions.
50

Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Algue, Inc., and the Court of Tax Appeals
G.R. No. L – 28896. February 17, 1988

FACTS:
On January 14, 1965, the private respondent, a domestic corporation engaged in engineering, construction and
other allied activities, received a letter from the petitioner assessing it a delinquency income tax for the year 1958 and
1959. After four days from its receipt, Algue filed a letter of protest which was stamped and received by the petitioner.
Despite the protest, private respondent received a warrant of distraint and levy. Algue refused to receive it on the ground
of pending protest until it was finally informed that the BIR was not taking any action on the protest. It therefore filed a
petition for review of the decision of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) with the Court of Tax Appeals. The CTA
ruled in favour of Algue holding that the Php75, 000.00 in dispute shall be considered as deductible from income it being
in the form of promotional expense and contrary to petitioner’s contention that it was not an ordinary and reasonable
business expense.

ISSUE:
Did the Collector of Internal Revenue correctly disallow the deduction claimed by private respondent Algue as
legitimate business expense in its Income Tax Return?

RULING:
We agree with respondent court that the amount of promotional fee was not excessive and was reasonable,
hence, allowing the deduction of the disputed amount in the Income Tax Return of private respondent. The finding of
respondent court is in accordance with the provision of the Tax Code on deductions from gross income.
The solicitor general is correct in saying that the burden to prove the validity of claimed deduction is on the tax
payer. The private respondent has proved this. The amount in dispute was necessary and reasonable in the light of the
efforts of the respondent corporation to induce investors.

ENGRACIO FRANCIA vs. INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT


G.R. No. L-67649, June 28, 1988

FACTS:
Engracio Francia is the registered owner of a residential lot and a two-story house located in Pasay City. On
October 15, 1977, a 125 square meter portion of Francia's property was expropriated by the Republic for the sum of
P4,116.00. Since 1963 up to 1977 inclusive, Francia failed to pay his real estate taxes. Thus, on December 5, 1977, his
property was sold at public auction pursuant the Real Property Tax Code in order to satisfy a tax delinquency of
P2,400.00. Ho Fernandez was the highest bidder for the property. Francia was not present during the auction sale since
he was in Iligan City at that time helping his uncle ship bananas. On March 3, 1979, Francia received a notice of hearing
“In re: Petition for Entry of New Certificate of Title" filed by Ho Fernandez, seeking the cancellation of TCT and the
issuance in his name of a new certificate of title. Upon verification through his lawyer, Francia discovered that a Final Bill
of Sale had been issued in favor of Ho Fernandez by the City Treasurer on December 11, 1978. The auction sale and the
final bill of sale were both annotated at the back of TCT No. 4739 (37795) by the Register of Deeds. On March 20, 1979,
Francia filed a complaint to annul the auction sale. Thelower court rendered a decision against his favor. The Intermediate
Appellate Court affirmed the decision of the lower court in toto. Hence, this petition for review.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the contention of Francia that his tax delinquency of P2,400.00 has been extinguished by legal
compensation is correct claiming that the government owed him P4,116.00 when a portion of his land was expropriated
on October 15, 1977.

RULING:
This principal contention of the petitioner has no merit. We have consistently ruled that there can be no off-setting
of taxes against the claims that the taxpayer may have against the government. A person cannot refuse to pay a tax on
the ground that the government owes him an amount equal to or greater than the tax being collected. The collection of a
tax cannot await the results of a lawsuit against the government. A claim for taxes is not such a debt, demand, contract or
judgment as is allowed to be set-off under the statutes of set-off, which are construed uniformly, in the light of public
policy, to exclude the remedy in an action or any indebtedness of the state or municipality to one who is liable to the state
51
or municipality for taxes. Neither are they a proper subject of recoupment since they do not arise out of the contract or
transaction sued on.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE vs. ITOGON-SUYOC MINES, INC.


G.R. No. L-25299, July 29, 1969

FACTS:
Respondent Itogon-Suyoc Mines, Inc. filed on January 13, 1961, its income tax return for the fiscal year 1959-
1960. It declared a taxable income of P114,368.04 and a tax due thereon amounting to P26,310.41, for which it paid on
the same day, the amount of P13,155.20 as the first installment of the income tax due. On May 17, 1961, petitioner filed
an amended income tax return, reporting therein a net loss of P331,707.33. It thus sought a refund from the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, now the petitioner. On February 14, 1962, respondent Itogon-Suyoc Mines, Inc. filed
its income tax return for the fiscal year 1960-1961, setting forth its income tax liability to the tune of P97,345.00, but
deducting the amount of P13,155.20 representing alleged tax credit for overpayment of the preceding fiscal year 1959-
1960. 0n December 18, 1962, petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue assessed against the respondent the amount
of P1,512.83 as 1% monthly interest on the aforesaid amount of P13,155.20 from January 16, 1962 to December 31,
1962. The basis for such an assessment was the absence of legal right to deduct said amount before the refund or tax
credit thereof was approved by petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Such an assessment was contested by
respondent before the Court of Tax Appeals which ruled in its favor. Hence this petition for review.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the Court of Tax Appeals erred when it absolved respondent corporation "from liability to pay the
sum of P1,512.83 as 1% monthly interest for delinquency in the payment of income tax for the fiscal year 1960-1961.”

RULING:
It could not be error for the Court of Tax Appeals, considering the admitted fact of overpayment, entitling
respondent to refund, to hold that petitioner should not repose an interest on the aforesaid sum of P13,155.20 "which after
all was paid to and received by the government even before the incidence of the tax in question." It would be, according to
the Court of Tax Appeals, "unfair and unjust" to do so. The National Internal Revenue Code provides that interest upon
the amount determined as a deficiency shall be assessed and shall be paid upon notice and demand from the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue at the specified. It is made clear, however, in an earlier provision found in the same
section that if in any preceding year, the taxpayer was entitled to a refund of any amount due as tax, such amount, if not
yet refunded, may be deducted from the tax to be paid. There is no question respondent was entitled to a refund. Instead
of waiting for the sum involved to be delivered to it, it deducted the said amount from the tax that it had to pay. That it had
a right to do according to the law.

MELECIO R. DOMINGO vs. HON. LORENZO C. GARLITOS


G.R. No. L-18994, June 29, 1963

FACTS:
This is a petition for certiorari and mandamus against respondent judge seeking to annul certain orders of the
court and for an order in this Court to direct respondent to execute the judgment in favor of the Government against the
estate of Walter Scott Price for internal revenue taxes. It appears that in Melecio R. Domingo vs. Hon. Judge S. C.
Moscoso, G.R. No. L-14674, January 30, 1960, this Court declared as final and executory the order for the payment by
the estate of the estate and inheritance taxes, charges and penalties, amounting to P40,058.55, issued by the Court of
First Instance of Leyte in, special proceedings No. 14 entitled "In the matter of the Intestate Estate of the Late Walter Scott
Price." In order to enforce the claims against the estate the fiscal presented a petition dated June 21, 1961, to the court
below for the execution of the judgment. The petition was, however, denied by the court which held that the execution is
not justifiable

ISSUE:
Whether or not the petitioner has the clear right to execute the judgment for taxes against the estate of the
deceased Walter Scott Price.

RULING:
The petition to set aside the above orders of the court below and for the execution of the claim of the Government
against the estate must be denied for lack of merit. The ordinary procedure by which to settle claims of indebtedness
against the estate of a deceased person, as an inheritance tax, is for the claimant to present a claim before the probate
52
court so that said court may order the administrator to pay the amount thereof. Another ground for denying the petition
is the fact that the court having jurisdiction of the estate had found that the claim of the estate against the Government has
been recognized and an amount of P262,200 has already been appropriated for the purpose by a corresponding law
(Rep. Act No. 2700). Under the above circumstances, both the claim of the Government for inheritance taxes and the
claim of the intestate for services rendered have already become overdue and demandable is well as fully liquidated.
Compensation, therefore, takes place by operation of law, in accordance with the provisions of Articles 1279 and 1290 of
the Civil Code, and both debts are extinguished to the concurrent amount. It is clear, therefore, that the petitioner has no
clear right to execute the judgment for taxes against the estate of the deceased Walter Scott Price.

REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES vs. MAMBULAO LUMBER COMPANY, ET AL.


G.R. No. L-17725, February 28, 1962

FACTS:
There are three causes of action in this case in which the defendants admitted all these three liabilities with an
aggregate amount of P4, 802.37. Though such liabilities are admitted it interposed the defense though exhibits that from
July 31, 1948 to December 29, 1956, defendant Mambulao Lumber Company paid to the Republic of the Philippines
P8,200.52 for 'reforestation charges' and for the period commencing from April 30, 1947 to June 24, 1948, said defendant
paid P927.08 to the Republic of the Philippines for 'reforestation charges'. These reforestation were paid to the plaintiff in
pursuance of Section 1 of Republic Act 115 which provides that there shall be collected, in addition to the regular forest
charges provided under Section 264 of Commonwealth Act 466 known as the National Internal Revenue Code, the
amount of P0.50 on each cubic meter of timber... cut out and removed from any public forest for commercial purposes.
The total amount of the reforestation charges paid by Mambulao Lumber Company is P9,127.50, and it is the contention
of the defendant that since the Republic of the Philippines has not made use of those reforestation charges collected from
it for reforesting the denuded area of the land covered by its license, the Republic of the Philippines should refund said
amount, or, if it cannot be refunded, at least it should be compensated with what Mambulao Lumber Company owed the
Republic of the Philippines for reforestation charges.

ISSUE:
Whether or not the sum of P9,127.50 paid by defendant company to plaintiff as reforestation charges from 1947 to
1956 may be set off or applied to the payment of the sum of P4,802.37 as forest charges due and owing from defendant
to plaintiff.

RULING:
The court find defendants claim devoid of any merit. Note that there is nothing in the law which requires that the
amount collected as reforestation charges should be used exclusively for the reforestation of the area covered by the
license of a licensee or concessionaire, and that if not so used, the same should be refunded to him. The general rule,
based on grounds of public policy is well-settled that no set-off is admissible against demands for taxes levied for general
or local governmental purposes. The reason on which the general rule is based, is that taxes are not in the nature of
contracts between the party and party but grow out of a duty to, and are the positive acts of the government, to the
making and enforcing of which, the personal consent of individual taxpayers is not required.

The Anti-Graft League of the Philippines, Inc v. San Juan


G.R. No. 97787. August 1, 1996

FACTS:
Acting upon an authority granted by the Office of the President, the Province was able to negotiate with
respondent Ortigas & Co., Ltd. (Ortigas) for the acquisition of four parcels of land located in Ugong Norte, Pasig. Three
deeds of absolute sale were executed on April 22 and May 9, 1975, whereby Ortigas transferred its ownership over a total
of 192,177 square meters of land to the Province at P110.00 per square meter. The projected construction, however,
never materialized because of the decimation of the Province’s resources brought about by the creation of the Metro
Manila Commission (MMC) in 1976. The said property was eventually sold to Valley View Realty Development
Corporation (Valley View) for P700.00 per square meters. The said property was eventually sold to Valley View Realty
Development Corporation (Valley View) for P700.00 per square meter or a total of P134,523,900.00, of which 30 million
was given as downpayment. On May 10, 1988, after learning about the sale, Ortigas filed before Branch 151 of the
Regional Trial Court of Pasig an action for rescission of contract plus damages with preliminary injunction against the
Province. Docketed as Civil No. 55904, the complaint alleged that the Province violated one of the terms of its contracts
53
with Ortigas by selling the subject lots which were intended to be utilized solely as a site for the construction of the
Rizal Technological Colleges and the Rizal Provincial Hospital.

ISSUE:
Is the present action a taxpayer’s suit?

RULING:
Petitioner and respondents agree that to constitute a taxpayer’s suit, two requisites must be met, namely, that
public funds are disbursed by a political subdivision or instrumentality and in doing so, a law is violated or some
irregularity is committed, and that the petitioner is directly affected by the alleged ultra vires act. In the case at bar,
disbursement of public funds was only made in 1975 when the Province bought the lands from Ortigas at P110.00 per
square meter in line with the objectives of P.D. 674.
Undeniably, as a taxpayer, petitioner would somehow be adversely affected by an illegal use of public money.
When, however, no such unlawful spending has been shown, as in the case at bar, petitioner, even as a taxpayer, cannot
question the transaction validly executed by and between the Province and Ortigas for the simple reason that it is not
privy to said contract. In other words, petitioner has absolutely no cause of action, and consequently no locus standi, in
the instant case.

Joya et.al. vs. PCGG,


G.R. No. 96541 August 24, 1993

FACTS:
All thirty-five (35) petitioners in this Special Civil Action for Prohibition and Mandamus with Prayer for Preliminary
Injunction and/or Restraining Order seek to enjoin the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) from
proceeding with the auction sale scheduled on 11 January 1991 by Christie's of New York of the Old Masters Paintings
and 18th and 19th century silverware seized from Malacañang and the Metropolitan Museum of Manila and placed in the
custody of the Central Bank.
On 9 August 1990, Mateo A.T. Caparas, then Chairman of PCGG, wrote then President Corazon C. Aquino,
requesting her for authority to sign the proposed Consignment Agreement between the Republic of the Philippines
through PCGG and Christie, Manson and Woods International, Inc. concerning the scheduled sale on 11 January 1991 of
eighty-two (82) Old Masters Paintings and antique silverware seized from Malacañang and the Metropolitan Museum of
Manila alleged to be part of the ill-gotten wealth of the late President Marcos, his relatives and cronies.
On 14 August 1990, then President Aquino, through former Executive Secretary Catalino Macaraig, Jr., authorized
Chairman Caparas to sign the Consignment Agreement allowing Christie's of New York to auction off the subject art
pieces for and in behalf of the Republic of the Philippines. On 15 August 1990, PCGG, through Chairman Caparas,
representing the Government of the Republic of the Philippines, signed the Consignment Agreement with Christie's of
New York.

ISSUE:
Can petitioners as taxpayer’s challenge the validity of the acts of the PCGG?

RULING:
No. They lack basis in fact and in law. These paintings legally belongs to the foundation or corporation or the
members thereof, although the public has been given the opportunity to view and appreciate these paintings when they
were placed on exhibit. Similarly, as alleged in the petition, the pieces of antique silverware were given to the Marcos
couple as gifts from friends and dignitaries from foreign countries on their silver wedding and anniversary, an occasion
personal to them
Not every action filed by a taxpayer can qualify to challenge the legality of official acts done by the government. A
taxpayer's suit can prosper only if the governmental acts being questioned involve disbursement of public funds upon the
theory that the expenditure of public funds by an officer of the state for the purpose of administering an unconstitutional
act constitutes a misapplication of such funds, which may be enjoined at the request of a taxpayer.

Lozada vs. COMELEC


G.R. No. L-59068 January 27, 1983

FACTS:
54
This is a petition for mandamus filed by Jose Mari Eulalio C. Lozada and Romeo B. Igot as a representative
suit for and in behalf of those who wish to participate in the election irrespective of party affiliation, to compel the
respondent COMELEC to call a special election to fill up existing vacancies numbering twelve (12) in the Interim Batasan
Pambansa.
Petitioner Lozada claims that he is a taxpayer and a bonafide elector of Cebu City and a transient voter of Quezon
City, Metro Manila, who desires to run for the position in the Batasan Pambansa; while petitioner Romeo B. Igot alleges
that, as a taxpayer, he has standing to petition by mandamus the calling of a special election as mandated by the 1973
Constitution.
The respondent COMELEC, represented by counsel, opposes the petition alleging, substantially, that petitioners
lack standing to file the instant petition for they are not the proper parties to institute the action

ISSUE:
As taxpayers, may the petitioners file the instant petition?

RULING:
As taxpayers, petitioners may not file the instant petition, for nowhere therein is it alleged that tax money is being
illegally spent. The act complained of is the inaction of the COMELEC to call a special election, as is allegedly its
ministerial duty under the constitutional provision above cited, and therefore, involves no expenditure of public funds. It is
only when an act complained of, which may include a legislative enactment or statute, involves the illegal expenditure of
public money that the so-called taxpayer suit may be allowed.

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