TOSHIBA INFORMATION
EQUIPMENT (PHILS.), INC., Petitioner, - versus - COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent. |
|
G.R.
No. 157594
Present: PUNO,
C.J., Chairperson, CARPIO MORALES, LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, BERSAMIN,
and VILLARAMA,
JR., JJ. Promulgated: March
9, 2010 |
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LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, J.:
In this Petition for
Review on Certiorari[1]
under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, petitioner Toshiba Information Equipment
(Philippines), Inc. (Toshiba) seeks the reversal and setting aside of (1) the
Decision[2]
dated August 29, 2002 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 63047, which
found that Toshiba was not entitled to the credit/refund of its unutilized
input Value-Added Tax (VAT) payments attributable to its export sales, because
it was a tax-exempt entity and its export sales were VAT-exempt transactions;
and (2) the Resolution[3]
dated February 19, 2003 of the appellate court in the same case, which denied
the Motion for Reconsideration of Toshiba.
The herein assailed judgment of the Court of Appeals reversed and set
aside the Decision[4]
dated October 16, 2000 of the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) in CTA Case No. 5762
granting the claim for credit/refund of Toshiba in the amount of P1,385,282.08.
Toshiba
is a domestic corporation principally engaged in the business of manufacturing
and exporting of electric machinery, equipment systems, accessories, parts,
components, materials and goods of all kinds, including those relating to
office automation and information technology and all types of computer hardware
and software, such as but not limited to HDD-CD-ROM and personal computer
printed circuit board.[5] It is registered with the Philippine Economic
Zone Authority (PEZA) as an Economic Zone (ECOZONE) export enterprise in the
Laguna Technopark, Inc., as evidenced by Certificate of Registration No. 95-99
dated September 27, 1995.[6] It is also registered with Regional District
Office No. 57 of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) in San Pedro, Laguna, as
a VAT-taxpayer with Taxpayer Identification No. (TIN) 004-739-137.[7]
In its VAT returns for the first and second
quarters of 1997,[8]
filed on April 14, 1997 and July 21, 1997, respectively, Toshiba declared input
VAT payments on its domestic purchases of taxable goods and services in the
aggregate sum of P3,875,139.65,[9]
with no zero-rated sales. Toshiba
subsequently submitted to the BIR on July 23, 1997 its amended VAT returns for
the first and second quarters of 1997,[10]
reporting the same amount of input VAT payments but, this time, with zero-rated
sales totaling P7,494,677,000.00.[11]
On March 30, 1999, Toshiba filed with the One-Stop
Shop Inter-Agency Tax Credit and Duty Drawback Center of the Department of
Finance (DOF One-Stop Shop) two separate applications for tax credit/refund[12]
of its unutilized input VAT payments for the first half of 1997 in the total
amount of P3,685,446.73.[13]
The next day, on March 31, 1999, Toshiba likewise
filed with the CTA a Petition for Review[14]
to toll the running of the two-year prescriptive period under Section 230 of
the Tax Code of 1977,[15]
as amended.[16] In said Petition, docketed as CTA Case No.
5762, Toshiba prayed that –
[A]fter
due hearing, judgment be rendered ordering [herein respondent Commissioner of
Internal Revenue (CIR)] to refund or issue to [Toshiba] a tax refund/tax credit
certificate in the amount of P3,875,139.65 representing unutilized input taxes
paid on its purchase of taxable goods and services for the period January 1 to
June 30, 1997.[17]
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) opposed the claim for tax
refund/credit of Toshiba, setting up the following special and affirmative
defenses in his Answer[18]
–
5. [Toshiba’s] alleged claim for
refund/tax credit is subject to administrative routinary
investigation/examination by [CIR’s] Bureau;
6. [Toshiba] failed miserably to show that
the total amount of P3,875,139.65 claimed as VAT input taxes, were erroneously
or illegally collected, or that the same are properly documented;
7. Taxes paid and collected are presumed
to have been made in accordance with law; hence, not refundable;
8. In an action for tax refund, the burden
is on the taxpayer to establish its right to refund, and failure to sustain the
burden is fatal to the claim for refund;
9. It is incumbent upon [Toshiba] to show
that it has complied with the provisions of Section 204 in relation to Section
229 of the Tax Code;
10. Well-established is the rule that claims
for refund/tax credit are construed in strictissimi juris against the
taxpayer as it partakes the nature of exemption from tax.[19]
Upon being advised by the CTA,[20]
Toshiba and the CIR filed a Joint Stipulation of Facts and Issues,[21]
wherein the opposing parties “agreed and admitted” that –
1. [Toshiba] is a duly registered
value-added tax entity in accordance with Section 107 of the Tax Code, as
amended.
2. [Toshiba] is subject to zero percent
(0%) value-added tax on its export sales in accordance with then Section
100(a)(2)(A) of the Tax Code, as amended.
3. [Toshiba] filed its quarterly VAT
returns for the first two quarters of 1997 within the legally prescribed
period.
x x x
x
7. [Toshiba] is subject to zero percent
(0%) value-added tax on its export sales.
8. [Toshiba] has duly filed the instant
Petition for Review within the two-year prescriptive period prescribed by then
Section 230 of the Tax Code.[22]
In the same pleading, Toshiba and the CIR jointly
submitted the following issues for determination by the CTA –
Whether
or not [Toshiba] has incurred input taxes in the amount of P3,875,139.65
for the period January 1 to June 30, 1997 which are directly attributable to
its export sales[.]
Whether
or not the input taxes incurred by [Toshiba] for the period January 1 to June
30, 1997 have not been carried over to the succeeding quarters[.]
Whether
or not input taxes incurred by [Toshiba] for the first two quarters of 1997
have not been offset against any output tax[.]
Whether
or not input taxes incurred by [Toshiba] for the first two quarters of 1997 are
properly substantiated by official receipts and invoices.[23]
During the trial before the CTA, Toshiba presented
documentary evidence in support of its claim for tax credit/refund, while the
CIR did not present any evidence at all.
With both parties waiving the right to submit their
respective memoranda, the CTA rendered its Decision in CTA Case No. 5762 on
October 16, 2000 favoring Toshiba.
According to the CTA, the CIR himself admitted that the export sales of
Toshiba were subject to zero percent (0%) VAT based on Section 100(a)(2)(A)(i)
of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended.
Toshiba could then claim tax credit or refund of input VAT paid on its
purchases of goods, properties, or services, directly attributable to such
zero-rated sales, in accordance with Section 4.102-2 of Revenue Regulations No.
7-95. The CTA, though, reduced the
amount to be credited or refunded to Toshiba to P1,385,292.02.
The dispositive portion of the October 16, 2000
Decision of the CTA fully reads –
WHEREFORE, [Toshiba’s] claim for refund of unutilized input
VAT payments is hereby GRANTED but
in a reduced amount of P1,385,282.08 computed as follows:
1st
Quarter 2nd
Quarter Total
Amount of claimed input taxes filed
with the DOF One Stop Shop Center P3,268,682.34 P416,764.39 P3,685,446.73
Less: 1) Input taxes not properly
supported
by VAT invoices
and
official receipts
a. Per SGV’s verification
(Exh. I) P 242,491.45
P154,391.13 P 396,882.58
b. Per this court’s further
verification (Annex A)
P1,852,437.65 P
35,108.00 P1,887,545.65
P189,499.13 P2,300,164.65
Amount Refundable P1,158,016.82 P227,265.26 P1,385,282.08
Respondent
Commissioner of Internal Revenue is ORDERED
to REFUND to [Toshiba] or in the
alternative, ISSUE a TAX CREDIT CERTIFICATE in the amount of P1,385,282.08
representing unutilized input taxes paid by [Toshiba] on its purchases of
taxable goods and services for the period January 1 to June 30, 1997.[24]
Both Toshiba and the CIR sought reconsideration of
the foregoing CTA Decision.
Toshiba asserted in its Motion for Reconsideration[25]
that it had presented proper substantiation for the P1,887,545.65 input
VAT disallowed by the CTA.
The CIR, on the other hand, argued in his Motion
for Reconsideration[26]
that Toshiba was not entitled to the credit/refund of its input VAT payments
because as a PEZA-registered ECOZONE export enterprise, Toshiba was not subject
to VAT. The CIR invoked the following
statutory and regulatory provisions –
Section 24 of Republic Act No. 7916[27]
SECTION 24. Exemption
from Taxes Under the National Internal Revenue Code. – Any provision of
existing laws, rules and regulations to the contrary notwithstanding, no taxes,
local and national, shall be imposed on business establishments operating
within the ECOZONE. In lieu of paying
taxes, five percent (5%) of the gross income earned by all businesses and
enterprises within the ECOZONE shall be remitted to the national government. x
x x.
Section 103(q) of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended
Sec. 103. Exempt
transactions. – The following shall be exempt from the value-added tax:
x x x
x
(q) Transactions which are exempt under special
laws, except those granted under Presidential Decree Nos. 66, 529, 972, 1491,
and 1950, and non-electric cooperatives under Republic Act No. 6938, or
international agreements to which the Philippines is a signatory.
Section 4.103-1 of Revenue Regulations No. 7-95
SEC. 4.103-1. Exemptions. – (A) In
general. – An exemption means that the sale of goods or properties and/or
services and the use or lease of properties is not subject to VAT (output tax)
and the seller is not allowed any tax credit on VAT (input tax) previously
paid.
The
person making the exempt sale of goods, properties or services shall not bill
any output tax to his customers because the said transaction is not subject to
VAT. On the other hand, a VAT-registered
purchaser of VAT-exempt goods, properties or services which are exempt from VAT
is not entitled to any input tax on such purchase despite the issuance of a VAT
invoice or receipt.
The CIR contended that under Section 24 of Republic
Act No. 7916, a special law, all businesses and establishments within the
ECOZONE were to remit to the government five percent (5%) of their gross income
earned within the zone, in lieu of all taxes, including VAT. This placed Toshiba within the ambit of
Section 103(q) of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended, which exempted from VAT the
transactions that were exempted under special laws. Following Section 4.103-1(A) of Revenue
Regulations No. 7-95, the VAT-exemption of Toshiba meant
that its sale of goods was not subject to output VAT and Toshiba as seller was
not allowed any tax credit on the input VAT it had previously paid.
On January 17, 2001, the CTA issued a Resolution[28]
denying both Motions for Reconsideration of Toshiba and the CIR.
The CTA took note that the pieces of evidence
referred to by Toshiba in its Motion for Reconsideration were insufficient substantiation,
being mere schedules of input VAT payments it had purportedly paid for the
first and second quarters of 1997. While
the CTA gives credence to the report of its commissioned certified public
accountant (CPA), it does not render its decision based on the findings of the
said CPA alone. The CTA has its own CPA
and the tax court itself conducts an investigation/examination of the documents
presented. The CTA stood by its earlier
disallowance of the amount of P1,887,545.65 as tax credit/refund because
it was not supported by VAT invoices and/or official receipts.
The CTA refused to consider the argument that
Toshiba was not entitled to a tax credit/refund under Section 24 of Republic
Act No. 7916 because it was only raised by the CIR for
the first time in his Motion for Reconsideration. Also, contrary to the assertions of the CIR,
the CTA held that Section 23, and not Section 24, of Republic Act No. 7916,
applied to Toshiba. According to Section
23 of Republic Act No. 7916 –
SECTION 23. Fiscal
Incentives. – Business
establishments operating within the ECOZONES shall be entitled to the fiscal
incentives as provided for under Presidential Decree No. 66, the law creating
the Export Processing Zone Authority, or those provided under Book VI of
Executive Order No. 226, otherwise known as the Omnibus Investment Code of
1987.
Furthermore, tax credits for
exporters using local materials as inputs shall enjoy the benefits provided for
in the Export Development Act of 1994.
Among the fiscal incentives granted to PEZA-registered enterprises by the Omnibus Investments Code of 1987 was the income tax holiday, to wit –
Art. 39. Incentives to Registered Enterprises. –
All registered enterprises shall be granted the following incentives to the
extent engaged in a preferred area of investment:
(a) Income Tax Holiday. —
(1) For six (6) years from commercial operation
for pioneer firms and four (4) years for non-pioneer firms, new registered
firms shall be fully exempt from income taxes levied by the national
government. Subject to such guidelines
as may be prescribed by the Board, the income tax exemption will be extended
for another year in each of the following cases:
(i) The project meets the prescribed ratio of
capital equipment to number of workers set by the Board;
(ii) Utilization of indigenous raw materials at
rates set by the Board;
(iii) The net foreign exchange savings or
earnings amount to at least US$500,000.00 annually during the first three (3)
years of operation.
The preceding paragraph notwithstanding, no
registered pioneer firm may avail of this incentive for a period exceeding
eight (8) years.
(2) For a period of three (3) years from
commercial operation, registered expanding firms shall be entitled to an
exemption from income taxes levied by the National Government proportionate to
their expansion under such terms and conditions as the Board may determine: Provided,
however, That during the period within which this incentive is availed
of by the expanding firm it shall not be entitled to additional deduction for
incremental labor expense.
(3) The provision of
Article 7(14) notwithstanding, registered firms shall not be entitled to any
extension of this incentive.
The CTA pointed out that Toshiba availed itself of
the income tax holiday under the Omnibus Investments Code of
1987, so Toshiba was exempt only from income tax but not from other taxes such
as VAT. As a
result, Toshiba
was liable for output VAT on its export sales, but at zero percent (0%) rate,
and entitled to the credit/refund of the input VAT paid on its purchases of
goods and services relative to such zero-rated export sales.
Unsatisfied, the CIR filed a Petition for Review[29]
with the Court of Appeals, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 63047.
In its Decision dated August 29, 2002, the Court of
Appeals granted the appeal of the CIR, and reversed and set aside the Decision
dated October 16, 2000 and the Resolution dated January 17, 2001 of the
CTA. The appellate court ruled that Toshiba
was not entitled to the refund of its alleged unused input VAT payments because
it was a tax-exempt entity under Section 24 of Republic Act No. 7916. As a PEZA-registered corporation, Toshiba was
liable for remitting to the national government the five percent (5%)
preferential rate on its gross income earned within the ECOZONE, in lieu of all
other national and local taxes, including VAT.
The
Court of Appeals further adjudged that the export sales of Toshiba were
VAT-exempt, not zero-rated, transactions.
The appellate court found that the Answer filed by the CIR in CTA Case
No. 5762 did not contain any admission that the export sales of Toshiba were
zero-rated transactions under Section 100(a)(2)(A) of the Tax Code of 1977, as
amended. At the least, what was admitted
by the CIR in said Answer was that the Tax Code provisions cited in the
Petition for Review of Toshiba in CTA Case No. 5762 were correct. As to the Joint Stipulation of Facts and
Issues filed by the parties in CTA Case No. 5762, which stated that Toshiba was
subject to zero percent (0%) VAT on its export sales, the appellate court
declared that the CIR signed the said pleading through palpable mistake. This palpable mistake in the stipulation of
facts should not be taken against the CIR, for to do otherwise would result in
suppressing the truth through falsehood.
In addition, the State could not be put in estoppel by the mistakes or
errors of its officials or agents.
Given
that Toshiba was a tax-exempt entity under Republic Act No. 7916, a special
law, the Court of Appeals concluded that the export sales of Toshiba were
VAT-exempt transactions under Section 109(q) of the Tax Code of 1997, formerly
Section 103(q) of the Tax Code of 1977.
Therefore, Toshiba could not claim refund of its input VAT payments on
its domestic purchases of goods and services.
The
Court of Appeals decreed at the end of its August 29, 2002 Decision –
WHEREFORE, premises considered,
the appealed decision of the Court of Tax Appeals in CTA Case No. 5762, is
hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE, and a new one is hereby rendered finding
[Toshiba], being a tax exempt entity under R.A. No. 7916, not entitled to
refund the VAT payments made in its domestic purchases of goods and services.[30]
Toshiba filed a Motion for Reconsideration[31]
of the aforementioned Decision, anchored on the following arguments: (a) the
CIR never raised as an issue before the CTA that Toshiba was tax-exempt under
Section 24 of Republic Act No. 7916; (b) Section 24 of Republic Act No. 7916,
subjecting the gross income earned by a PEZA-registered enterprise within the
ECOZONE to a preferential rate of five percent (5%), in lieu of all taxes, did
not apply to Toshiba, which availed itself of the income tax holiday under
Section 23 of the same statute; (c) the conclusion of the CTA that the export
sales of Toshiba were zero-rated was supported by substantial evidence, other
than the admission of the CIR in the Joint Stipulation of Facts and Issues; and
(d) the judgment of the CTA granting the refund of the input VAT payments was supported
by substantial evidence and should not have been set aside by the Court of
Appeals.
In a Resolution dated February 19, 2003, the Court
of Appeals denied the Motion for Reconsideration of Toshiba since the arguments
presented therein were mere reiterations of those already passed upon and found
to be without merit by the appellate court in its earlier Decision. The Court of Appeals, however, mentioned that
it was incorrect for Toshiba to say that the issue of the applicability of
Section 24 of Republic Act No. 7916 was only raised for the first time on
appeal before the appellate court. The
said issue was adequately raised by the CIR in his Motion for Reconsideration
before the CTA, and was even ruled upon by the tax court.
Hence, Toshiba filed the instant Petition for
Review with the following assignment of errors –
5.1 THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED WHEN
IT RULED THAT [TOSHIBA], BEING A PEZA-REGISTERED ENTERPRISE, IS EXEMPT FROM VAT
UNDER SECTION 24 OF R.A. 7916, AND FURTHER HOLDING THAT [TOSHIBA’S] EXPORT
SALES ARE EXEMPT TRANSACTIONS UNDER SECTION 109 OF THE TAX CODE.
5.2 THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED WHEN
IT FAILED TO DISMISS OUTRIGHT AND GAVE DUE COURSE TO [CIR’S] PETITION
NOTWITHSTANDING [CIR’S] FAILURE TO ADEQUATELY RAISE IN ISSUE DURING THE TRIAL
IN THE COURT OF TAX APPEALS THE APPLICABILITY OF SECTION 24 OF R.A. 7916 TO
[TOSHIBA’S] CLAIM FOR REFUND.
5.3 THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED WHEN
[IT] RULED THAT THE COURT OF TAX APPEALS’ FINDINGS, WITH REGARD [TOSHIBA’S]
EXPORT SALES BEING ZERO RATED SALES FOR VAT PURPOSES, WERE BASED MERELY ON THE
ADMISSIONS MADE BY [CIR’S] COUNSEL AND NOT SUPPORTED BY SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE.
5.4 THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED WHEN
IT REVERSED THE DECISION OF THE COURT OF TAX APPEALS GRANTING [TOSHIBA’S] CLAIM
FOR REFUND[;][32]
and the following prayer –
WHEREFORE,
premises considered, Petitioner TOSHIBA INFORMATION EQUIPMENT (PHILS.), INC.
most respectfully prays that the decision and resolution of the Honorable Court
of Appeals, reversing the decision of the CTA in CTA Case No. 5762, be set
aside and further prays that a new one be rendered AFFIRMING AND UPHOLDING the
Decision of the CTA promulgated on October 16, 2000 in CTA Case No. 5762.
Other
reliefs, which the Honorable Court may deem just and equitable under the
circumstances, are likewise prayed for.[33]
The Petition is impressed with merit.
The CIR did not timely raise before the CTA the issues on the
VAT-exemptions of Toshiba and its export sales.
Upon the failure of the CIR to timely plead and
prove before the CTA the defenses or objections that Toshiba was VAT-exempt
under Section 24 of Republic Act No. 7916, and that its export sales were
VAT-exempt transactions under Section 103(q) of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended,
the CIR is deemed to have waived the same.
During the pendency of CTA Case No. 5762, the
proceedings before the CTA were governed by the Rules of the Court of Tax
Appeals,[34]
while the Rules of Court were applied suppletorily.[35]
Rule 9, Section 1 of the Rules of Court provides:
SECTION
1. Defenses
and objections not pleaded. – Defenses and objections not pleaded either in
a motion to dismiss or in the answer are deemed waived. However, when it appears from the pleadings
or the evidence on record that the court has no jurisdiction over the subject
matter, that there is another action pending between the same parties for the
same cause, or that the action is barred by a prior judgment or by statute of
limitations, the court shall dismiss the claim.
The CIR did not argue straight away in his Answer in
CTA Case No. 5762 that Toshiba had no right to the credit/refund of its input
VAT payments because the latter was VAT-exempt and its export sales were
VAT-exempt transactions. The Pre-Trial
Brief[36]
of the CIR was equally bereft of such allegations or arguments. The CIR passed up the opportunity to prove
the supposed VAT-exemptions of Toshiba and its export sales when the CIR chose
not to present any evidence at all during the trial before the CTA.[37] He missed another opportunity to present the
said issues before the CTA when he waived the submission of a Memorandum.[38] The CIR had waited until the CTA already
rendered its Decision dated October 16, 2000 in CTA Case No. 5762, which
granted the claim for credit/refund of Toshiba, before asserting in his Motion
for Reconsideration that Toshiba was VAT-exempt and its export sales were
VAT-exempt transactions.
The
CIR did not offer any explanation as to why he did not argue the VAT-exemptions
of Toshiba and its export sales before and during the trial held by the CTA,
only doing so in his Motion for Reconsideration of the adverse CTA
judgment. Surely, said defenses or
objections were already available to the CIR when the CIR filed his Answer to
the Petition for Review of Toshiba in CTA Case No. 5762.
It
is axiomatic in pleadings and practice that no new issue in a case can be
raised in a pleading which by due diligence could have been raised in previous
pleadings.[39] The Court cannot simply grant the plea of the
CIR that the procedural rules be relaxed based on the general averment of the
interest of substantive justice. It
should not be forgotten that the first and fundamental concern of the rules of
procedure is to secure a just determination of every action.[40] Procedural rules are designed to facilitate
the adjudication of cases. Courts and litigants alike are enjoined to
abide strictly by the rules. While in
certain instances, the Court allows a relaxation in the application of the
rules, it never intends to forge a weapon for erring litigants to violate the
rules with impunity. The liberal
interpretation and application of rules apply only in proper cases of
demonstrable merit and under justifiable causes and circumstances. While it is true that litigation is not a
game of technicalities, it is equally true that every case must be prosecuted
in accordance with the prescribed procedure to ensure an orderly and speedy
administration of justice. Party
litigants and their counsel are well advised to abide by, rather than flaunt,
procedural rules for these rules illumine the path of the law and rationalize
the pursuit of justice.[41]
The CIR judicially admitted that Toshiba was VAT-registered and its
export sales were subject to VAT at zero percent (0%) rate.
More importantly, the arguments of the CIR that
Toshiba was VAT-exempt and the latter’s export sales were VAT-exempt
transactions are inconsistent with the explicit admissions of the CIR in the
Joint Stipulation of Facts and Issues (Joint Stipulation) that Toshiba was a
registered VAT entity and that it was subject to zero percent (0%) VAT on its
export sales.
The Joint Stipulation was executed and submitted by
Toshiba and the CIR upon being advised to do so by the CTA at the end of the
pre-trial conference held on June 23, 1999.[42] The approval of the Joint Stipulation by the
CTA, in its Resolution[43]
dated July 12, 1999, marked the culmination of the pre-trial process in CTA
Case No. 5762.
Pre-trial is an answer to the clarion call for the
speedy disposition of cases. Although it
was discretionary under the 1940 Rules of Court, it was made mandatory under
the 1964 Rules and the subsequent amendments in 1997. It has been hailed as “the most important
procedural innovation in Anglo-Saxon justice in the nineteenth century.”[44]
The nature and purpose of a pre-trial have been
laid down in Rule 18, Section 2 of the Rules of Court:
SECTION
2. Nature
and purpose. – The pre-trial is mandatory.
The court shall consider:
(a) The possibility of an amicable settlement
or of a submission to alternative modes of dispute resolution;
(b) The
simplification of the issues;
(c) The necessity or desirability of
amendments to the pleadings;
(d) The
possibility of obtaining stipulations or admissions of facts and of documents
to avoid unnecessary proof;
(e) The limitation of the number of
witnesses;
(f) The advisability of a preliminary
reference of issues to a commissioner;
(g) The propriety of rendering judgment on
the pleadings, or summary judgment, or of dismissing the action should a valid
ground therefor be found to exist;
(h) The advisability or necessity of
suspending the proceedings; and
(i) Such other matters as may aid in the
prompt disposition of the action. (Emphasis ours.)
The admission having been made in a stipulation of
facts at pre-trial by the parties, it must be treated as a judicial admission.[45] Under Section 4, Rule 129 of the Rules of
Court, a judicial admission requires no proof.
The admission may be contradicted only by a showing that it was made
through palpable mistake or that no such admission was made. The Court cannot lightly set aside a judicial
admission especially when the opposing party relied upon the same and
accordingly dispensed with further proof of the fact already admitted. An admission made by a party in the course of
the proceedings does not require proof.[46]
In the instant case, among the facts expressly
admitted by the CIR and Toshiba in their CTA-approved Joint Stipulation are
that Toshiba “is a duly registered value-added tax entity in accordance with
Section 107 of the Tax Code, as amended[,]”[47]
that “is subject to zero percent (0%) value-added tax on its export sales in
accordance with then Section 100(a)(2)(A) of the Tax Code, as amended.”[48] The CIR was bound by these admissions, which
he could not eventually contradict in his Motion for Reconsideration of the CTA
Decision dated October 16, 2000, by arguing that Toshiba was actually a
VAT-exempt entity and its export sales were VAT-exempt transactions. Obviously, Toshiba could not have been subject to VAT and exempt from VAT at the same time.
Similarly, the export sales of Toshiba could not have been subject to zero percent (0%) VAT and exempt from VAT as well.
The CIR cannot escape the binding effect of his judicial admissions.
The Court disagrees with the Court of Appeals when
it ruled in its Decision dated August 29, 2002 that the CIR could not be bound
by his admissions in the Joint Stipulation because (1) the said admissions were
“made through palpable mistake”[49]
which, if countenanced, “would result in falsehood, unfairness and injustice”;[50]
and (2) the State could not be put in estoppel by the mistakes of its officials
or agents. This ruling of the Court of
Appeals is rooted in its conclusion that a “palpable mistake” had been
committed by the CIR in the signing of the Joint Stipulation. However, this Court finds no evidence of the
commission of a mistake, much more, of a palpable one.
The CIR does not deny that his counsel, Atty.
Joselito F. Biazon, Revenue Attorney II of the BIR, signed the Joint
Stipulation, together with the counsel of Toshiba, Atty. Patricia B.
Bisda. Considering the presumption of
regularity in the performance of official duty,[51]
Atty. Biazon is presumed to have read, studied, and understood the contents of
the Joint Stipulation before he signed the same. It rests on the CIR to present evidence to
the contrary.
Yet, the Court observes that the CIR himself never
alleged in his Motion for Reconsideration of the CTA Decision dated October 16,
2000, nor in his Petition for Review before the Court of Appeals, that Atty.
Biazon committed a mistake in signing the Joint Stipulation. Since the CIR did not make such an
allegation, neither did he present any proof in support thereof. The CIR began to aver the existence of a
palpable mistake only after the Court of Appeals made such a declaration in its
Decision dated August 29, 2002.
Despite
the absence of allegation and evidence by the CIR, the Court of Appeals, on its
own, concluded that the admissions of the CIR in the Joint Stipulation were due
to a palpable mistake based on the following deduction –
Scrutinizing
the Answer filed by [the CIR], we rule that the Joint Stipulation of Facts and
Issues signed by [the CIR] was made through palpable mistake. Quoting paragraph 4 of its Answer, [the CIR]
states:
“4. He ADMITS the allegations
contained in paragraph 5 of the petition only insofar as the cited provisions
of Tax Code is concerned, but SPECIFICALLY DENIES the rest of the allegations
therein for being mere opinions, arguments or gratuitous assertions on the part
of [Toshiba] and/or because they are mere erroneous conclusions or
interpretations of the quoted law involved, the truth of the matter being those
stated hereunder
x x x x”
And paragraph 5 of the petition for review filed by [Toshiba] before the
CTA states:
“5. Petitioner is subject to zero
percent (0%) value-added tax on its export sales in accordance with then
Section 100(a)(2)(A) of the Tax Code x x x.
x x x x”
As we see it, nothing in said Answer did [the CIR] admit that the export
sales of [Toshiba] were indeed zero-rated transactions. At the least, what was admitted only by [the
CIR] concerning paragraph 4 of his Answer, is the fact that the provisions of
the Tax Code, as cited by [Toshiba] in its petition for review filed before the
CTA were correct.[52]
The Court of Appeals provided no explanation as to
why the admissions of the CIR in his Answer in CTA Case No. 5762 deserved more
weight and credence than those he made in the Joint Stipulation. The appellate court failed to appreciate that
the CIR, through counsel, Atty. Biazon, also signed the Joint Stipulation; and
that absent evidence to the contrary, Atty. Biazon is presumed to have signed
the Joint Stipulation willingly and knowingly, in the regular performance of
his official duties. Additionally, the
Joint Stipulation[53]
of Toshiba and the CIR was a more recent pleading than the Answer[54]
of the CIR. It was submitted by the
parties after the pre-trial conference held by the CTA, and subsequently
approved by the tax court. If there was
any discrepancy between the admissions of the CIR in his Answer and in the
Joint Stipulation, the more logical and reasonable explanation would be that
the CIR changed his mind or conceded some points to Toshiba during the
pre-trial conference which immediately preceded the execution of the Joint
Stipulation. To automatically construe
that the discrepancy was the result of a palpable mistake is a wide leap which
this Court is not prepared to take without substantial basis.
The judicial admissions of the CIR in the Joint Stipulation are not
intrinsically false, wrong, or illegal, and are consistent with the ruling on
the VAT treatment of PEZA-registered enterprises in the previous Toshiba case.
There is no basis for believing that to bind the
CIR to his judicial admissions in the Joint Stipulation – that Toshiba was a
VAT-registered entity and its export sales were zero-rated VAT transactions –
would result in “falsehood, unfairness and injustice.” The judicial admissions of the CIR are not
intrinsically false, wrong, or illegal.
On the contrary, they are consistent with the ruling of this Court in a
previous case involving the same parties, Commissioner
of Internal Revenue v.
Toshiba Information Equipment (Phils.) Inc.[55] (Toshiba case), explaining the VAT
treatment of PEZA-registered enterprises.
In
the Toshiba case, Toshiba sought the
refund of its unutilized input VAT on
its purchase of capital goods and services for the first and second
quarters of 1996, based on Section 106(b) of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended.[56] In the Petition at bar, Toshiba is claiming
refund of its unutilized input VAT on
its local purchase of goods and services which are attributable to its export
sales for the first and second quarters of 1997, pursuant to Section
106(a), in relation to Section 100(a)(1)(A)(i) of the Tax Code of 1977, as
amended, which read –
SEC. 106. Refunds
or tax credits of creditable input tax.
– (a) Any VAT-registered person,
whose sales are zero-rated or effectively zero-rated, may, within two (2) years
after the close of the taxable quarter when the sales were made, apply for the
issuance of a tax credit certificate or refund of creditable input tax due or
paid attributable to such sales, except transitional input tax, to the extent
that such input tax has not been applied against output tax: Provided,
however, That in the case of zero-rated sales under Section
100(a)(2)(A)(i),(ii) and (b) and Section 102(b)(1) and (2), the acceptable
foreign currency exchange proceeds thereof has been duly accounted for in
accordance with the regulations of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP): Provided, further, That where the
taxpayer is engaged in zero-rated or effectively zero-rated sale and also in
taxable or exempt sale of goods or properties of services, and the amount of
creditable input tax due or paid cannot be directly and entirely attributed to
any one of the transactions, it shall be allocated proportionately on the basis
of the volume sales.
SEC. 100. Value-added
tax on sale of goods or properties. –
(a) Rate and base of tax. – x
x x
x x x x
(2) The following sales by VAT-registered persons
shall be subject to 0%:
(A) Export sales. – The term “export
sales” means:
(i) The sale and actual shipment of goods from
the Philippines to a foreign country, irrespective of any shipping arrangement
that may be agreed upon which may influence or determine the transfer of
ownership of the goods so exported and paid for in acceptable foreign currency
or its equivalent in goods or services, and accounted for in accordance with
the rules and regulations of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipnas (BSP).
Despite
the difference in the legal bases for the claims for credit/refund in the Toshiba case and the case at bar, the
CIR raised the very same defense or objection in both – that Toshiba and its
transactions were VAT-exempt. Hence, the
ruling of the Court in the former case is relevant to the present case.
At
the outset, the Court establishes that there is a basic distinction in the
VAT-exemption of a person and the VAT-exemption of a transaction –
It would seem that petitioner CIR
failed to differentiate between VAT-exempt transactions from VAT-exempt
entities. In the case of Commissioner
of Internal Revenue v. Seagate Technology (Philippines), this Court already
made such distinction –
An exempt transaction, on the one
hand, involves goods or services which, by their nature, are specifically
listed in and expressly exempted from the VAT under the Tax Code, without
regard to the tax status – VAT-exempt or not – of the party to the transaction…
An exempt party, on the other
hand, is a person or entity granted VAT exemption under the Tax Code, a special
law or an international agreement to which the Philippines is a signatory, and
by virtue of which its taxable transactions become exempt from VAT x x x.[57]
In
effect, the CIR is opposing the claim for credit/refund of input VAT of Toshiba
on two grounds: (1) that Toshiba was a VAT-exempt entity; and (2) that its
export sales were VAT-exempt transactions.
It
is now a settled rule that based on the Cross Border Doctrine, PEZA-registered
enterprises, such as Toshiba, are VAT-exempt and no VAT can be passed on to
them. The Court explained in the Toshiba case that –
PEZA-registered
enterprise, which would necessarily be located within ECOZONES, are VAT-exempt
entities, not because of Section 24 of Rep. Act No. 7916, as amended, which
imposes the five percent (5%) preferential tax rate on gross income of
PEZA-registered enterprises, in lieu of all taxes; but, rather, because of
Section 8 of the same statute which establishes the fiction that ECOZONES are
foreign territory.
x x x
x
The
Philippine VAT system adheres to the Cross Border Doctrine, according to which,
no VAT shall be imposed to form part of the cost of goods destined for
consumption outside of the territorial border of the taxing authority. Hence, actual export of goods and services
from the Philippines to a foreign country must be free of VAT; while, those
destined for use or consumption within the Philippines shall be imposed with
ten percent (10%) VAT.
Applying
said doctrine to the sale of goods, properties, and services to and from the
ECOZONES, the BIR issued Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 74-99, on 15
October 1999. Of particular interest to
the present Petition is Section 3 thereof, which reads –
SECTION
3. Tax
Treatment of Sales Made by a VAT Registered Supplier from the Customs
Territory, to a PEZA Registered Enterprise. –
(1) If
the Buyer is a PEZA registered enterprise which is subject to the 5% special
tax regime, in lieu of all taxes, except real property tax, pursuant to R.A.
No. 7916, as amended:
(a) Sale
of goods (i.e., merchandise). –
This shall be treated as indirect export hence, considered subject to zero
percent (0%) VAT, pursuant to Sec. 106(A)(2)(a)(5), NIRC and Sec. 23 of R.A.
No. 7916, in relation to ART. 77(2) of the Omnibus Investments Code.
(b) Sale
of service. – This shall be treated subject to zero percent (0%) VAT under
the “cross border doctrine” of the VAT System, pursuant to VAT Ruling No.
032-98 dated Nov. 5, 1998.
(2) If Buyer is a PEZA registered enterprise
which is not embraced by the 5% special tax regime, hence, subject to taxes
under the NIRC, e.g., Service
Establishments which are subject to taxes under the NIRC rather than the 5%
special tax regime:
(a) Sale
of goods (i.e., merchandise). –
This shall be treated as indirect export hence, considered subject to zero
percent (0%) VAT, pursuant to Sec. 106(A)(2)(a)(5), NIRC and Sec. 23 of R.A.
No. 7916 in relation to ART. 77(2) of the Omnibus Investments Code.
(b) Sale
of Service. – This shall be treated subject to zero percent (0%) VAT under
the “cross border doctrine” of the VAT System, pursuant to VAT Ruling No.
032-98 dated Nov. 5, 1998.
(3) In the final analysis, any sale of goods,
property or services made by a VAT registered supplier from the Customs
Territory to any registered enterprise operating in the ecozone, regardless of
the class or type of the latter’s PEZA registration, is actually qualified and
thus legally entitled to the zero percent (0%) VAT. Accordingly, all
sales of goods or property to such enterprise made by a VAT registered supplier
from the Customs Territory shall be treated subject to 0% VAT, pursuant to Sec.
106(A)(2)(a)(5), NIRC, in relation to ART. 77(2) of the Omnibus Investments
Code, while all sales of services to the said enterprises, made by VAT
registered suppliers from the Customs Territory, shall be treated effectively
subject to the 0% VAT, pursuant to Section 108(B)(3), NIRC, in relation to the
provisions of R.A. No. 7916 and the “Cross Border Doctrine” of the VAT system.
This
Circular shall serve as a sufficient basis to entitle such supplier of goods,
property or services to the benefit of the zero percent (0%) VAT for sales made
to the aforementioned ECOZONE enterprises and shall serve as sufficient
compliance to the requirement for prior approval of zero-rating imposed by
Revenue Regulations No. 7-95 effective as of the date of the issuance of this
Circular.
Indubitably,
no output VAT may be passed on to an ECOZONE enterprise since it is a
VAT-exempt entity. x x x.[58]
The Court, nevertheless, noted in the Toshiba case that the rule which
considers any sale by a supplier from the Customs Territory to a
PEZA-registered enterprise as export sale, which should not be burdened by
output VAT, was only clearly established on October 15, 1999, upon the issuance by the BIR of RMC No. 74-99. Prior to October 15, 1999, whether a
PEZA-registered enterprise was exempt or subject to VAT depended on the type of
fiscal incentives availed of by the said enterprise.[59] The old rule, then followed by the BIR, and
recognized and affirmed by the CTA, the Court of Appeals, and this Court, was
described as follows –
According
to the old rule, Section 23 of Rep. Act No. 7916, as amended, gives the
PEZA-registered enterprise the option to choose between two sets of fiscal
incentives: (a) The five percent (5%) preferential tax rate on its gross income
under Rep. Act No. 7916, as amended; and (b) the income tax holiday provided
under Executive Order No. 226, otherwise known as the Omnibus Investment Code
of 1987, as amended.
The
five percent (5%) preferential tax rate on gross income under Rep. Act No.
7916, as amended, is in lieu of all taxes. Except for real property
taxes, no other national or local tax may be imposed on a PEZA-registered
enterprise availing of this particular fiscal incentive, not even an indirect
tax like VAT.
Alternatively,
Book VI of Exec. Order No. 226, as amended, grants income tax holiday to
registered pioneer and non-pioneer enterprises for six-year and four-year
periods, respectively. Those availing of
this incentive are exempt only from income tax, but shall be subject to all
other taxes, including the ten percent (10%) VAT.
This
old rule clearly did not take into consideration the Cross Border Doctrine
essential to the VAT system or the fiction of the ECOZONE as a foreign
territory. It relied totally on the choice of fiscal incentives of the
PEZA-registered enterprise. Again, for emphasis, the old VAT rule for
PEZA-registered enterprises was based on their choice of fiscal incentives: (1)
If the PEZA-registered enterprise chose the five percent (5%) preferential tax
on its gross income, in lieu of all taxes, as provided by Rep. Act No. 7916, as
amended, then it would be VAT-exempt; (2) If the PEZA-registered enterprise
availed of the income tax holiday under Exec. Order No. 226, as amended, it
shall be subject to VAT at ten percent (10%). Such distinction was
abolished by RMC No. 74-99, which categorically declared that all sales of
goods, properties, and services made by a VAT-registered supplier from the
Customs Territory to an ECOZONE enterprise shall be subject to VAT, at zero
percent (0%) rate, regardless of the latter’s type or class of PEZA
registration; and, thus, affirming the nature of a PEZA-registered or an
ECOZONE enterprise as a VAT-exempt entity.[60]
To recall, Toshiba is herein claiming the refund of
unutilized input VAT payments on its local purchases of goods and services
attributable to its export sales for the first
and second quarters of 1997. Such
export sales took place before October
15, 1999, when the old rule on the VAT treatment of PEZA-registered
enterprises still applied. Under this
old rule, it was not only possible, but even acceptable, for Toshiba, availing
itself of the income tax holiday option under Section 23 of Republic Act No.
7916, in relation to Section 39 of the Omnibus Investments Code of 1987, to be
subject to VAT, both indirectly (as purchaser to whom the seller shifts the VAT
burden) and directly (as seller whose sales were subject to VAT, either at ten
percent [10%] or zero percent [0%]).
A
VAT-registered seller of goods and/or services who made zero-rated sales can
claim tax credit or refund of the input VAT paid on its purchases of goods,
properties, or services relative to such zero-rated sales, in accordance with
Section 4.102-2 of Revenue Regulations No. 7-95, which provides –
Sec. 4.102-2. Zero-rating.
– (a) In general. - A zero-rated sale
by a VAT-registered person, which is a taxable transaction for VAT purposes,
shall not result in any output tax.
However, the input tax on his purchases of goods, properties or services
related to such zero-rated sale shall be available as tax credit or refund in
accordance with these regulations.
The
BIR, as late as July 15, 2003, when it issued RMC No. 42-2003, accepted
applications for credit/refund of input VAT on purchases prior to RMC No.
74-99, filed by PEZA-registered enterprises which availed themselves of the
income tax holiday. The BIR answered
Question Q-5(1) of RMC No. 42-2003 in this wise –
Q-5: Under
Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 74-99, purchases by PEZA-registered firms
automatically qualify as zero-rated without seeking prior approval from the BIR
effective October 1999.
1) Will the OSS-DOF Center still
accept applications from PEZA-registered claimants who were allegedly
billed VAT by their suppliers before and during the effectivity of the RMC by
issuing VAT invoices/receipts?
x
x x x
A-5(1): If the PEZA-registered
enterprise is paying the 5% preferential tax in lieu of all other taxes, the
said PEZA-registered taxpayer cannot claim TCC or refund for the VAT paid on
purchases. However, if the
taxpayer is availing of the income tax holiday, it can claim VAT credit
provided:
a. The
taxpayer-claimant is VAT-registered;
b. Purchases are evidenced by VAT
invoices or receipts, whichever is applicable, with shifted VAT to the
purchaser prior to the implementation of
RMC No. 74-99; and
c. The supplier issues a
sworn statement under penalties of perjury that it shifted the VAT and
declared the sales to the PEZA-registered purchaser as taxable sales in its VAT
returns.
For invoices/receipts issued upon the effectivity of
RMC No. 74-99, the claims for input VAT by PEZA-registered companies,
regardless of the type or class of PEZA-registration, should be denied.
(Emphases ours.)
Consequently,
the CIR cannot herein insist that all PEZA-registered enterprises are
VAT-exempt in every instance. RMC No.
42-2003 contains an express acknowledgement by the BIR that prior to RMC No.
74-99, there were PEZA-registered enterprises liable for VAT and entitled to
credit/refund of input VAT paid under certain conditions.
This
Court already rejected in the Toshiba
case the argument that sale transactions of a PEZA-registered enterprise
were VAT-exempt under Section 103(q) of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended,
ratiocinating that –
Section 103(q) of the Tax Code of
1977, as amended, relied upon by petitioner CIR, relates to VAT-exempt
transactions. These are transactions exempted from VAT by special laws or
international agreements to which the Philippines is a signatory. Since
such transactions are not subject to VAT, the sellers cannot pass on any output
VAT to the purchasers of goods, properties, or services, and they may not claim
tax credit/refund of the input VAT they had paid thereon.
Section 103(q) of the Tax Code of
1977, as amended, cannot apply to transactions of respondent Toshiba because
although the said section recognizes that transactions covered by special laws
may be exempt from VAT, the very same section provides that those falling under
Presidential Decree No. 66 are not. Presidential
Decree No. 66, creating the Export Processing Zone Authority (EPZA), is the
precursor of Rep. Act No. 7916, as amended, under which the EPZA evolved into
the PEZA. Consequently, the exception of Presidential Decree No. 66 from
Section 103(q) of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended, extends likewise to Rep.
Act No. 7916, as amended.[61]
(Emphasis ours.)
In light of the judicial admissions of Toshiba, the CTA correctly
confined itself to the other factual issues submitted for resolution by the
parties.
In accord with the admitted facts – that Toshiba
was a VAT-registered entity and that its export sales were zero-rated
transactions – the stated issues in the Joint Stipulation were limited to other
factual matters, particularly, on the compliance by Toshiba with the rest of
the requirements for credit/refund of input VAT on zero-rated
transactions. Thus, during trial,
Toshiba concentrated on presenting evidence to establish that it incurred P3,875,139.65
of input VAT for the first and second quarters of 1997 which were directly
attributable to its export sales; that said amount of input VAT were not
carried over to the succeeding quarters; that said amount of input VAT has not
been applied or offset against any output VAT liability; and that said amount
of input VAT was properly substantiated by official receipts and invoices.
After what truly appears to be an exhaustive review
of the evidence presented by Toshiba, the CTA made the following findings
–
(1) The
amended quarterly VAT returns of Toshiba for 1997 showed that it made no other
sales, except zero-rated export sales, for the entire year, in the sum of P2,083,305,000.00
for the first quarter and P5,411,372,000.00 for the second quarter. That being the case, all input VAT allegedly
incurred by Toshiba for the first two quarters of 1997, in the amount of P3,875,139.65,
was directly attributable to its zero-rated sales for the same period.
(2) Toshiba
did carry-over the P3,875,139.65 input VAT it reportedly incurred during
the first two quarters of 1997 to succeeding quarters, until the first quarter
of 1999. Despite the carry-over of the
subject input VAT of P3,875,139.65, the claim of Toshiba was not
affected because it later on deducted the said amount as “VAT Refund/TCC
Claimed” from its total available input VAT of P6,841,468.17 for the
first quarter of 1999.
(3) Still,
the CTA could not allow the credit/refund of the total input VAT of P3,875,139.65
being claimed by Toshiba because not all of said amount was actually incurred
by the company and duly substantiated by invoices and official receipts. From the P3,875,139.65
claim, the CTA deducted the amounts
of (a) P189,692.92, which was
in excess of the P3,685,446.23 input VAT Toshiba originally claimed in
its application for credit/refund filed with the DOF One-Stop Shop; (b) P396,882.58, which SGV &
Co., the commissioned CPA, disallowed for being improperly substantiated, i.e., supported only by provisional
acknowledgement receipts, or by documents other than official receipts, or not
supported by TIN or TIN VAT or by any document at all; (c) P1,887,545.65, which the CTA itself verified as not being
substantiated in accordance with Section 4.104-5[62]
of Revenue Regulations No. 7-95, in relation to Sections 108[63]
and 238[64]
of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended; and (d) P15,736.42, which Toshiba already applied to its output VAT
liability for the fourth quarter of 1998.
(4) Ultimately,
Toshiba was entitled to the credit/refund of unutilized input VAT payments
attributable to its zero-rated sales in the amounts of P1,158,016.82 and
P227,265.26, for the first and second quarters of 1997, respectively, or
in the total amount of P1,385,282.08.
Since the aforementioned findings of fact of the
CTA are borne by substantial evidence on record, unrefuted by the CIR, and
untouched by the Court of Appeals, they are given utmost respect by this
Court.
The
Court will not lightly set aside the conclusions reached by the CTA which, by
the very nature of its functions, is dedicated exclusively to the resolution of
tax problems and has accordingly developed an expertise on the subject unless
there has been an abuse or improvident exercise of authority.[65] In Barcelon,
Roxas Securities, Inc. (now known as UBP Securities, Inc.) v. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue,[66]
this Court more explicitly pronounced –
Jurisprudence has consistently
shown that this Court accords the findings of fact by the CTA with the highest
respect. In Sea-Land Service Inc. v. Court of Appeals [G.R. No.
122605, 30 April 2001, 357 SCRA 441, 445-446], this Court recognizes
that the Court of Tax Appeals, which by the very nature of its function is
dedicated exclusively to the consideration of tax problems, has necessarily
developed an expertise on the subject, and its conclusions will not be
overturned unless there has been an abuse or improvident exercise of
authority. Such findings can only be disturbed on appeal if they are not
supported by substantial evidence or there is a showing of gross error or abuse
on the part of the Tax Court. In the absence
of any clear and convincing proof to the contrary, this Court must presume that
the CTA rendered a decision which is valid in every respect.
WHEREFORE,
the assailed Decision dated August 29, 2002 and the Resolution dated February
19, 2003 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
SP No. 63047 are REVERSED and
SET ASIDE, and the Decision dated
October 16, 2000 of the Court of Tax Appeals in CTA Case No. 5762 is REINSTATED. Respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue
is ORDERED to REFUND or, in the alternative, to ISSUE a TAX CREDIT
CERTIFICATE in favor of petitioner Toshiba Information Equipment (Phils.),
Inc. in the amount of P1,385,282.08, representing the latter’s
unutilized input VAT payments for the first and second quarters of 1997. No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO
Associate
Justice
WE CONCUR:
REYNATO
S. PUNO
Chief Justice
Chairperson
CONCHITA
CARPIO MORALES Associate Justice |
LUCAS
P. BERSAMIN Associate Justice |
MARTIN
S. VILLARAMA, JR.
Associate Justice
C E R T I F I C
A T I O N
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII
of the Constitution, I certify that the conclusions in the above Decision had
been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the
opinion of the Court’s Division.
REYNATO
S. PUNO
Chief Justice
[1] Rollo, pp. 11-32.
[2] Penned by Associate Justice Rodrigo V. Cosico with Associate Justices Buenaventura J. Guerrero and Perlita J. Tria Tirona, concurring; rollo, pp. 35- 52.
[3] Id. at 54-55.
[4] Penned by Associate Judge Amancio Q. Saga with Presiding Judge Ernesto D. Acosta and Associate Judge Ramon O. De Veyra, concurring; rollo, pp. 83-92.
[5] Rollo, p. 12.
[6] Exhibit “A,” Folder of Exhibits “A-I” of Toshiba.
[7] Records, p. 7.
[8] Exhibits “B” and “C,” Folder of Exhibits “A-I” of Toshiba.
[9] Toshiba declared P3,320,034.44
and P555,105.21 of input VAT payments for the first and second quarters
or 1997, respectively.
[10] Exhibits “B-1” and “C-1,” Folder of Exhibits “A-I” of Toshiba.
[11] Toshiba reported P2,083,305,000.00
and P5,411,372,000.00 of zero-rated sales for the first and second
quarters of 1997, respectively.
[12] Records, pp. 10-13.
[13] Toshiba claimed in its applications
for refund/credit P3,268,682.34 and P416,764.39 of local input
VAT for the first and second quarters of 1997, respectively.
[14] Records, pp. 1-5.
[15] Republic Act No. 8424, otherwise known as the Tax Code of 1997, took effect only on January 1, 1998. Prior to said date, Presidential Decree No. 1158, otherwise known as the Tax Code of 1977, as amended, was in effect. According to Section 230 of the Tax Code of 1977, as amended:
Sec. 230. Recovery of tax erroneously or illegally collected. - No suit or proceeding shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any national internal revenue tax hereafter alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed or collected, or of any penalty claimed to have been collected without authority, or of any sum alleged to have been excessive or in any manner wrongfully collected, until a claim for refund or credit has been duly filed with the Commissioner; but such suit or proceeding may be maintained, whether or not such tax, penalty, or sum has been paid under protest or duress.
In any case, no such suit or proceeding shall be begun after the expiration of two years from the date of payment of the tax or penalty regardless of any supervening cause that may arise after payment: Provided, however, That the Commissioner may, even without a written claim therefor, refund or credit any tax, where on the face of the return upon which payment was made, such payment appears clearly to have been erroneously paid. (Emphasis ours.)
[16] As amended by Republic Act No. 7716, bearing the title “An Act Restructuring the Value Added Tax (VAT) System, Widening its Tax Base and Enhancing its Administration and for These Purposes Amending and Repealing the Relevant Provisions of the National Internal Revenue Code, As Amended, and For Other Purposes.”
[17] Records, p. 5.
[18] Id. at 20-22.
[19] Id. at 21.
[20] Id. at 33.
[21] Id. at 34-35.
[22] Id.
[23] Id. at 35.
[24] Id. at 91-92.
[25] Id. at 99-100.
[26] Id. at 89-95.
[27] Otherwise known as The Special Economic Zone Act of 1995, as amended by Republic Act No. 8748.
[28] Signed by Presiding Judge Ernesto D. Acosta and Associate Judges Amancio Q. Saga and Ramon O. de Veyra. Rollo, pp. 103-106.
[29] Rollo, pp. 107-118.
[30] Id. at 52.
[31] Id. at 147-163.
[32] Id. at 17-18.
[33] Id. at 30.
[34] The RCTA was promulgated on September 10, 1955, following the enactment on June 16, 1954 of Republic Act No. 1125, otherwise known as An Act Creating the Court of Appeals. Republic Act No. 9282, which was enacted on March 30, 2004, amended Republic Act No. 1125 by expanding the jurisdiction of the CTA, elevating the same to the level of a collegiate court with special jurisdiction, and enlarging its membership. Accordingly, the Court approved on November 25, 2005 the Revised Rules of the Court of Tax Appeals (RRCTA). Thereafter, Republic Act No. 9503, which was enacted on June 12, 2008, further amended Republic Act No. 1125 by enlarging the organization structure of the CTA. As a result, the Court approved on September 16, 2008 the amendments to the 2005 RRCTA.
[35] Rule 16 of the RCTA is reproduced in full below:
RULE 16
APPLICABILITY OF THE RULES OF THE COURT OF FIRST INSTANCE
SECTION 1. The provisions of the Rules of Court applicable to proceedings before the Courts of First Instance shall, insofar as they may not be inconsistent with the provisions of Republic Act No. 1125 and of these rules, be applicable to cases pending before this Court, except that, in any case pending before it, the Court may, in the exercise of its discretion, fix a shorter period for the filing of pleadings and papers.
Under Batas Pambansa Blg. 129, otherwise known as The Judiciary Reorganization Act of 1980, the Court of First Instance became the Regional Trial Court.
[36] Records, pp. 29-32.
[37] Resolution dated May 10, 2000, signed by Presiding Judge Ernesto D. Acosta and Associate Judges Amancio Q. Saga and Ramon O. de Veyra; id. at 72.
[38] Rollo, p. 85.
[39] Director of Lands v. Court of Appeals, 363 Phil. 117, 128 (1999).
[40] Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. A. Soriano Corporation, 334 Phil. 965, 972 (1997).
[41] Land Bank of the Philippines v. Natividad, 497 Phil. 738, 744-745 (2005).
[42] Records, p. 33.
[43] Signed by Presiding Judge Ernesto D. Acosta and Associate Judges Amancio Q. Saga and Ramon O. De Veyra, id. at 36.
[44] Tiu v. Middleton, 369 Phil. 829, 835 (1999).
[45] SCC Chemicals Corporation v. Court of Appeals, 405 Phil. 514, 522-523 (2001).
[46] Garcia v. Court of Appeals, 327 Phil. 1097, 1113 (1996).
[47] Records, p. 34.
[48] Id.
[49] Rollo, p. 49.
[50] Id. at 51.
[51] Rule 131, Section 3(m) of the Rules of Court.
[52] Rollo, pp. 49-50.
[53] Filed by the parties on July 7, 1999.
[54] Filed by the CIR on May 11, 1999.
[55] G.R. No. 150154, August 9, 2005, 466 SCRA 211, 230-231.
[56] SEC. 106. Refunds or tax credits of creditable input tax. –
x x x x
(b) Capital goods. – A VAT-registered person may apply for the issuance of a tax credit certificate or refund of input taxes paid on capital goods imported or locally purchased, to the extent that such input taxes have not been applied against output taxes. The application may be made only within two (2) years after the close of the taxable quarter when the importation or purchase was made.
[57] Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Toshiba Information Equipment (Phils.) Inc., supra note 55 at 222-223, citing Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Seagate Technology (Philippines), 491 Phil. 317, 335 (2005).
[58] Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Toshiba Information Equipment (Phils.) Inc., id. at 223-226.
[59] Id. at 229-230.
[60] Id. at 230-231.
[61] Id. at 223.
[62] SECTION 4.104-5. Substantiation of claims for input tax credit. – (a) Input taxes shall be allowed only if the domestic purchase of goods, properties or services is made in the course of trade or business. The input tax should be supported by an invoice or receipt showing the information as required under Sections 108(a) and 237 of the Code. Input tax on purchases of real property should be supported by a copy of the public instrument, i.e., deed of absolute sale, deed of conditional sale, contract/agreement to sell, etc., together with the VAT receipt issued by the seller.
A cash register machine tape issued to a VAT-registered buyer by a VAT-registered seller from a machine duly registered with the BIR in lieu of the regular sales invoice, shall constitute valid proof of substantiation of tax credit only if the name and TIN of the purchaser is indicated in the receipt and authenticated by a duly authorized representative of the seller.
(b) Input tax on importations shall be supported with the import entry or other equivalent document showing actual payment of VAT on the imported goods.
(c) Presumptive input tax shall be supported by an inventory of goods as shown in a detailed list to be submitted to the BIR.
(d) Input tax on “deemed sale” transactions shall be substantiated with the required invoices.
(e) Input tax from payments made to non-residents shall be supported by a copy of the VAT declaration/return filed by the resident licensee/lessee in behalf of the non-resident licensor/lessor evidencing remittance of the VAT due.
[63] SEC. 108. Invoicing and accounting requirements for VAT-registered persons. – (a) Invoicing requirements. – A VAT-registered person shall, for every sale, issue an invoice or receipt. In addition to the information required under Section 238, the following information shall be indicated in the invoice or receipt:
(1) A statement that the seller is a VAT-registered person, followed by his taxpayer’s identification number (TIN); and
(2) The total amount which the purchaser pays or is obligated to pay to the seller with the indication that such amount includes the value-added tax.
(b) Accounting requirements. – Notwithstanding the provision of Section 223, all persons subject to the value-added tax under Sections 100 and 102 shall, in addition to the regular accounting records required, maintain a subsidiary sales journal and subsidiary purchase journal on which the daily sales and purchases are recorded. The subsidiary journals shall contain such information as may be required by the Secretary of Finance.
[64] SEC. 238. Issuance
of receipts or sales or commercial invoices. – All persons subject to an
internal revenue tax shall, for each sale or transfer of merchandise or for
services rendered valued at P25.00 or more, issue duly registered
receipts or sales or commercial invoices, prepared at least in duplicate,
showing the date of transaction, quantity, unit cost and description of
merchandise or nature of service: Provided, however, That in the case of
sales, receipts or transfers in the amount of P100.00 or more, or,
regardless of amount, where the sale or transfer is made by a person liable to
value-added tax to another person also liable to value-added tax; or where the
receipt is issued to cover payment made as rentals, commissions, compensations
or fees, receipts or invoices shall be issued which shall show the name,
business style, if any, and address of the purchaser, customer, or client: Provided,
further, That where the purchaser is a VAT-registered person, in addition
to the information herein required the invoice or receipt shall further show
the taxpayer’s identification number of the purchaser.
The original of each receipt or invoice shall be issued to the purchaser, customer or client at the time the transaction is effected, who, if engaged in business or in the exercise of profession, shall keep and preserve the same in his place of business for a period of 3 years from the close of the taxable year in which such invoice or receipt was issued while the duplicate shall be kept and preserved by the issuer, also in his place of business for a like period.
The Commissioner may, in meritorious cases exempt any person subject to an internal revenue tax from compliance with the provisions of this section.
[65] Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Cebu Toyo Corporation, 491 Phil. 625, 640 (2005).
[66] G.R. No. 150764, August 7, 2006, 498
SCRA 126, 135-136.