THIRD DIVISION
[G.R. No. 119122. August 8, 2000]
PHILIPPINE
BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS, COURT OF TAX
APPEALS, AND COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
PURISIMA, J.:
At bar is a
petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court
seeking a review of the decision[1] of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 34095
which affirmed the decision of the Court of Tax Appeals in C.T.A. Case No.
4419.
The facts that
matter are as follows:
On June 21, 1989,
the petitioner received an assessment letter from the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue (respondent Commissioner) for the payment of deficiency amusement tax
computed thus:
Deficiency Amusement Tax
Total gross
receipts 1987 |
|
15% tax due
thereon |
2,995,639.20 |
Less: Tax paid |
602,063.35 |
Deficiency
amusement tax |
|
Add:....75% surcharge |
1,795,181.89 |
20% interest (2
years) |
__1,675,503.10 |
Total Amount Due
& Collectible |
|
On July 18, 1989,
petitioner contested the assessment by filing a protest with respondent
Commissioner who denied the same on November 6, 1989.
On January 8, 1990,
petitioner filed a petition for review[2] with the Court of Tax Appeals (respondent CTA) questioning
the denial by respondent Commissioner of its tax protest.
On December 24,
1993, respondent CTA dismissed petitioner’s petition, holding:
"WHEREFORE,
in all the foregoing, herein petition for review is hereby DISMISSED for
lack of merit and the Petitioner is hereby ORDERED to PAY to the
Respondent the amount of P5,864,260.84 as deficiency amusement tax for the year
1987 plus 20% annual delinquency interest from July 22, 1989 which is the due
date appearing on the notice and demand of the Commissioner (i.e. 30 days from
receipt of the assessment) until fully paid pursuant to the provisions of
Sections 248 and 249 (c) (3) of the Tax Code, as amended."[3]
Petitioner
presented a motion for reconsideration[4] of the said decision but the same was denied by respondent
CTA in a resolution[5] dated April 8, 1994. Thereafter and within the
reglementary period for interposing appeals, petitioner appealed the CTA
decision to the Court of Appeals.
On November 21,
1994, the Court of Appeals rendered its questioned Decision,[6] affirming the decision of the CTA and dismissing
petitioner’s appeal. Petitioner filed a Motion for Reconsideration of said
decision but to no avail. The same was denied by the Court of Appeals in a
Resolution[7] dated January 31, 1995. Hence, this petition.
Undaunted,
petitioner found its way to this Court via the present petition, contending
that:
"1. Respondent
Court of Appeals erred in holding that the jurisdiction to collect amusement
taxes of PBA games is vested in the national government to the exclusion of the
local governments.
"2. Respondent
Court of Appeals erred in holding that Section 13 of the Local Tax Code of 1973
limits local government units to theaters, cinematographs, concert halls,
circuses and other places of amusement in the collection of the amusement tax.
"3. Respondent
Court of Appeals erred in holding that Revenue Regulations No. 8-88 dated
February 19, 1988 is an erroneous interpretation of law.
"4. Respondent
Court of Appeals erred in giving retroactive effect to the revocation of
Revenue Regulations 8-88.
"5. Respondent
Court of Appeals erred when it failed to consider the provisions of P.D. 851
the franchise of Petitioner, Section 8 of which provides that amusement tax on
admission receipts of Petitioner is 5%.
"6. Respondent
Court of Appeals erred in holding that the cession of advertising and streamer
spaces in the venue to a third person is subject to amusement taxes.
"7. Respondent
Court of Appeals erred in holding that the cession of advertising and streamer spaces
inside the venue is embraced within the term ‘gross receipts’ as defined in
Section 123 (6) of the Tax Code.
"8. Respondent
Court of Appeals erred in holding that the amusement tax liability of
Petitioner is subject to a 75% surcharge."
The issues for
resolution in this case may be simplified as follows:
1. Is the amusement
tax on admission tickets to PBA games a national or local tax? Otherwise put,
who between the national government and local government should petitioner pay
amusement taxes?
2. Is the cession
of advertising and streamer spaces to Vintage Enterprises, Inc. (VEI) subject
to the payment of amusement tax?
3. If ever
petitioner is liable for the payment of deficiency amusement tax, is it liable
to pay a seventy-five percent (75%) surcharge on the deficiency amount due?
Petitioner contends
that PD 231, otherwise known as the Local Tax Code of 1973, transferred the
power and authority to levy and collect amusement taxes from the sale of
admission tickets to places of amusement from the national government to the
local governments. Petitioner cited BIR Memorandum Circular No. 49-73 providing
that the power to levy and collect amusement tax on admission tickets was
transferred to the local governments by virtue of the Local Tax Code; and BIR Ruling
No. 231-86 which held that "the jurisdiction to levy amusement tax on
gross receipts from admission tickets to places of amusement was transferred to
local governments under P.D. No. 231, as amended."[8] Further, petitioner opined that even assuming arguendo
that respondent Commissioner revoked BIR Ruling No. 231-86, the reversal,
modification or revocation cannot be given retroactive effect since even as
late as 1988 (BIR Memorandum Circular No. 8-88), respondent Commissioner still
recognized the jurisdiction of local governments to collect amusement taxes.
The Court is not
persuaded by petitioner’s asseverations.
The laws on the
matter are succinct and clear and need no elaborate disquisition. Section 13 of
the Local Tax Code provides:
"Sec. 13.
Amusement tax on admission. -The province shall impose a tax on admission to be
collected from the proprietors, lessees, or operators of theaters,
cinematographs, concert halls, circuses and other places of amusement
xxx."
The foregoing
provision of law in point indicates that the province can only impose a tax on
admission from the proprietors, lessees, or operators of theaters,
cinematographs, concert halls, circuses and other places of amusement. The
authority to tax professional basketball games is not therein included, as the
same is expressly embraced in PD 1959, which amended PD 1456 thus:
"SEC. 44.
Section 268 of this Code, as amended, is hereby further amended to read as
follows:
‘Sec. 268. Amusement
taxes. -- There shall be collected from the proprietor, lessee or operator
of cockpits, cabarets, night or day clubs, boxing exhibitions, professional
basketball games, Jai-Alai, race tracks and bowling alleys, a tax
equivalent to:
‘1. Eighteen per
centum in the case of cockpits;
‘2. Eighteen per
centum in the case of cabarets, night or day clubs;
‘3. Fifteen per
centum in the case of boxing exhibitions;
‘4. Fifteen per
centum in the case of professional basketball games as envisioned in
Presidential Decree No. 871. Provided, however, That the tax herein shall be in
lieu of all other percentage taxes of whatever nature and description;
‘5. Thirty per
centum in the case of Jai-Alai and race tracks; and
‘6. Fifteen per
centum in the case of bowling alleys of their gross receipts, irrespective
of whether or not any amount is charged or paid for admission. For the purpose
of the amusement tax, the term gross receipts’ embraces all the receipts of the
proprietor, lessee or operator of the amusement place. Said gross receipts also
include income from television, radio and motion picture rights, if any. (A
person or entity or association conducting any activity subject to the tax
herein imposed shall be similarly liable for said tax with respect to such
portion of the receipts derived by him or it.)
‘The taxes imposed
herein shall be payable at the end of each quarter and it shall be the duty of
the proprietor, lessee, or operator concerned, as well as any party liable,
within twenty days after the end of each quarter, to make a true and complete
return of the amount of the gross receipts derived during the preceding quarter
and pay the tax due thereon. If the tax is not paid within the time prescribed
above, the amount of the tax shall be increased by twenty-five per centum,
the increment to be part of the tax.
‘In case of
willful neglect to file the return within the period prescribed herein, or in
case a false or fraudulent return is willfully made, there shall be added to
the tax or to the deficiency tax, in case any payment has been made on the
basis of the return before the discovery of the falsity or fraud, a surcharge
of fifty per centum of its amount. The amount so added to any tax shall
be collected at the same time and in the same manner and as part of the tax
unless the tax has been paid before the discovery of the falsity or fraud, in
which case, the amount so assessed shall be collected in the same manner as the
tax." (underscoring ours)
From the foregoing
it is clear that the "proprietor, lessee or operator of xxx professional
basketball games" is required to pay an amusement tax equivalent to
fifteen per centum (15%) of their gross receipts to the Bureau of Internal
Revenue, which payment is a national tax. The said payment of amusement tax is
in lieu of all other percentage taxes of whatever nature and description.
While Section 13 of
the Local Tax Code mentions "other places of amusement", professional
basketball games are definitely not within its scope. Under the principle of ejusdem
generis, where general words follow an enumeration of persons or things, by
words of a particular and specific meaning, such general words are not to be
construed in their widest extent, but are to be held as applying only to
persons or things of the same kind or class as those specifically mentioned.[9] Thus, in determining the meaning of the phrase
"other places of amusement", one must refer to the prior enumeration
of theaters, cinematographs, concert halls and circuses with artistic
expression as their common characteristic. Professional basketball games do not
fall under the same category as theaters, cinematographs, concert halls and
circuses as the latter basically belong to artistic forms of entertainment
while the former caters to sports and gaming.
A historical
analysis of pertinent laws does reveal the legislative intent to place
professional basketball games within the ambit of a national tax. The Local Tax
Code, which became effective on June 28, 1973, allowed the province to collect
a tax on admission from the proprietors, lessees, or operators of theaters,
cinematographs, concert halls, circuses and other places of amusement. On
January 6, 1976, the operation of petitioner was placed under the supervision
and regulation of the Games and Amusement Board by virtue of PD 871, with the
proviso (Section 8) that "xxx all professional basketball games conducted
by the Philippine Basketball Association shall only be subject to amusement tax
of five per cent of the gross receipts from the sale of admission
tickets." Then, on June 11, 1978, PD 1456 came into effect, increasing the
amusement tax to ten per cent, with a categorical referral to PD 871, to wit,
"[t]en per centum in the case of professional basketball games as
envisioned in Presidential Decree No. 871 xxx." Later in 1984, PD 1959
increased the rate of amusement tax to fifteen percent by making reference also
to PD 871. With the reference to PD 871 by PD 1456 and PD 1959, there is a
recognition under the laws of this country that the amusement tax on
professional basketball games is a national, and not a local, tax. Even up to
the present, the category of amusement taxes on professional basketball games
as a national tax remains the same. This is so provided under Section 125[10] of the 1997 National Internal Revenue Code. Section
140[11] of the Local Government Code of 1992 (Republic Act
7160), meanwhile, retained the areas (theaters, cinematographs, concert halls,
circuses and other places of amusement) where the province may levy an
amusement tax without including therein professional basketball games.
Likewise erroneous
is the stance of petitioner that respondent Commissioner’s issuance of BIR
Ruling No. 231-86[12] and BIR Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 8-88[13] -- both upholding the authority of the local
government to collect amusement taxes -- should bind the government or that, if
there is any revocation or modification of said rule, the same should operate
prospectively.
It bears stressing
that the government can never be in estoppel, particularly in matters involving
taxes. It is a well-known rule that erroneous application and enforcement of
the law by public officers do not preclude subsequent correct application of
the statute, and that the Government is never estopped by mistake or error on
the part of its agents.[14]
Untenable is the
contention that income from the cession of streamer and advertising spaces to
VEI is not subject to amusement tax. The questioned proviso may be found in
Section 1 of PD 1456 which states:
"SECTION 1.
Section 268 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1977, as amended, is
hereby further amended to read as follows:
‘Sec. 268. Amusement
taxes. -- There shall be collected from the proprietor, lessee or operator
of cockpits, cabarets, night or day clubs, boxing exhibitions, professional
basketball games, Jai-Alai, race tracks and bowling alleys, a tax equivalent
to:
xxx.....xxx.....xxx
of their gross
receipts, irrespective of whether or not any amount is charged or paid for
admission. For the purpose of the amusement tax, the term gross receipts’
embraces all the receipts of the proprietor, lessee or operator of the
amusement place. Said gross receipts also include income from television,
radio and motion picture rights, if any. (A person, or entity or association
conducting any activity subject to the tax herein imposed shall be similarly
liable for said tax with respect to such portion of the receipts derived by him
or it.)" (underscoring ours)
The foregoing
definition of gross receipts is broad enough to embrace the cession of
advertising and streamer spaces as the same embraces all the receipts of
the proprietor, lessee or operator of the amusement place. The law being clear,
there is no need for an extended interpretation.[15]
The last issue for
resolution concerns the liability of petitioner for the payment of surcharge
and interest on the deficiency amount due. Petitioner contends that it is not
liable, as it acted in good faith, having relied upon the issuances of the
respondent Commissioner. This issue must necessarily fail as the same has never
been posed as an issue before the respondent court. Issues not raised in the
court a quo cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.[16]
All things
studiedly considered, the Court rules that the petitioner is liable to pay
amusement tax to the national government, and not to the local government, in
accordance with the rates prescribed by PD 1959.
WHEREFORE, the Petition is DENIED, and the Decisions of the
Court of Appeals and Court of Tax Appeals dated November 21, 1994 and December
24, 1993, respectively AFFIRMED. No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
Panganiban, and Gonzaga-Reyes, JJ., concur.
Melo,
(Chairman), and Vitug, JJ., in
the result.
[1] Penned by Associate Justice Pedro A. Ramirez and
concurred by Associate Justices Quirino D. Abad Santos, Jr. and Eugenio S.
Labitoria.
[2] Rollo, pp. 44-62.
[3] CTA Decision penned by Associate Judge Ramon O. de
Veyra and concurred by Presiding Judge Ernesto D. Acosta and Associate Judge
Manuel K. Gruba; Rollo, pp. 70-78.
[4] Rollo, pp. 79-89.
[5] Ibid., p. 90.
[6] Ibid., pp. 33-40.
[7] Ibid., p. 43.
[8] See also BIR Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 8-88.
[9] PNOC Shipping and Transport Corporation vs. Court of
Appeals, 297 SCRA 402, 422 citing: Republic vs. Migriño, 189 SCRA
289, 296-297.
[10] SEC.
125. Amusement taxes. - There shall be collected from the proprietor, lessee or
operator of cockpits, cabarets, night or day clubs, boxing exhibitions,
professional basketball games, Jai-Alai and race tracks, a tax equivalent to:
a)
Eighteen percent (18%) in the case of cockpits;
b)
Eighteen percent (18%) in the case of cabarets, night or day clubs;
c)
Ten percent (10%) in the case of boxing exhibitions, provided, however, that
boxing exhibitions wherein World or Oriental Championships in any division is
at stake shall be exempt from amusement tax; provided, further, that at least
one of the contenders for World or Oriental Championship is a citizen of the
Philippines and said exhibitions are promoted by a citizen/s of the Philippines
or by a corporation or association at least sixty percent (60%) of the capital
of which is owned by such citizens;
d)
Fifteen percent (15%) in the case of professional basketball games as
envisioned in Presidential Decree No. 871; provided, however, that the tax
herein shall be in lieu of all other percentage taxes of whatever nature and
description; and
e)
Thirty percent (30%) in the case of Jai-Alai and race tracks of their gross
receipts, irrespective of whether or not any amount is charged for admission.
For
the purpose of the amusement tax, the term "gross receipts" embraces
all the receipts of the proprietor, lessee or operator of the amusement place.
Said gross receipts also include income from television, radio and motion
picture rights, if any. A person or entity or association conducting any
activity subject to the tax herein imposed shall be similarly liable for said
tax with respect to such portion of the receipts derived by him or it.
The taxes imposed
herein shall be payable at the end of each quarter or month and it shall be the
duty of the proprietor, lessee or operator concerned, as well as any party
liable, within twenty (20) days after the end of each quarter, to make a true
and complete return of the amount of the gross receipts derived during the
preceding quarter and pay the tax due thereon. (Effective January 1, 1998)
[11] SEC.
140. Amusement Tax. - (a) The province may levy an amusement tax to be
collected from the proprietors, lessees, or operators of theaters, cinemas,
concert halls, circuses, boxing stadia, and other places of amusement at a rate
of not more than thirty percent (30%) of the gross receipts from admission
fees.
(b)
In the case of theaters or cinemas, the tax shall first be deducted and
withheld by their proprietors, lessees, or operators and the distributors of
the cinematographic films.
(c)
The holding of operas, concerts, dramas, recitals, painting and art
exhibitions, flower shows, musical programs, literary and oratorical
presentations, except pop, rock, or similar concerts shall be exempt from the
payment of the tax herein imposed.
(d)
The sangguniang panlalawigan may prescribe the time, manner, terms and
conditions for the payment of tax. In case of fraud or failure to pay the tax,
the sangguniang panlalawigan may impose such surcharges, interests and
penalties as it may deem appropriate.
(e) The proceeds from
the amusement tax shall be shared equally by the province and the municipality
where such amusement places are located.
[12] ["xxx.....xxx.....xxx
xxx this Office is of
the opinion and hereby holds that the jurisdiction to levy amusement tax on
gross receipts from admission tickets to places of amusement was indeed
transferred to local government under P.D. No. 231, as amended. xxx"
[13] ["xxx the sole jurisdiction for collection of
amusement tax on admission receipts in places of admission rests exclusively on
the local government to the exclusion of the national government."
[14] E. Rodriguez, Inc. vs. Collector of Internal
Revenue, 28 SCRA 1119; United Christian Missionary Society vs. Social
Security Commission, 30 SCRA 982.
[15] Domingo vs. Commission on Audit, 297 SCRA 163;
Republic vs. Court of Appeals, 299 SCRA 199.
[16] Ruby Industrial Corporation vs. Court of Appeals, 284
SCRA 445; Salao vs. Court of Appeals, 284 SCRA 493; Heirs of Pascasio
Uriarte vs. Court of Appeals, 284 SCRA 511.