Republic
of the Philippines
Supreme
Court
Manila
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Petitioner, - versus
- MANILA BANKERS’ LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION, Respondent. |
G.R.
No. 169103
Present:
CORONA, C.J.,
Chairperson, VELASCO,
JR., LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, DEL
CASTILLO, and PEREZ, JJ.
Promulgated: March 16, 2011 |
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D
E C I S I O N
LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, J.:
This is a
Petition for Review on Certiorari[1]
filed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) of the April 29, 2005
Decision[2]
and July 27, 2005 Resolution[3]
of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP
No. 70600, which upheld the April 4, 2002 Decision[4]
of the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) in CTA Case No. 6189.
The facts as
found by the CTA and Court of Appeals are undisputed.
Respondent Manila
Bankers’ Life Insurance Corporation is a duly organized domestic corporation
primarily engaged in the life insurance business.[5]
On May 28, 1999,
petitioner Commissioner of Internal Revenue issued Letter of Authority No.
000020705[6]
authorizing a special team of Revenue Officers to examine the books of accounts
and other accounting records of respondent for taxable
year “1997 & unverified prior years.”[7]
On December 14, 1999, based on the
findings of the Revenue Officers, the petitioner issued a Preliminary
Assessment Notice[8] against
the respondent for its deficiency internal revenue taxes for the year
1997. The respondent agreed to all the
assessments issued against it except to the amount of P2,351,680.90
representing deficiency documentary stamp taxes on its policy premiums and
penalties. [9]
Thus, on January 4, 2000, the
petitioner issued against the respondent a Formal Letter of Demand[10]
with the corresponding Assessment Notices attached,[11]
one of which was Assessment Notice No.
ST-DST2-97-0054-2000[12]
pertaining to the documentary stamp taxes due on respondent’s policy
premiums:
Documentary Stamp Tax on Policy
Premiums
Assessment No. ST-DST2-97-0054-2000
Tax
Due 3,954,955.00
Less: Tax
Paid 2,308,505.74
Tax
Deficiency 1,646,449.26
Add:
20% Int./a 680,231.64
Recommended Compromise
Penalty-
Late Payment _____ 25,000.00
Total
Amount Due 2,351,680.90[13]
The tax deficiency was computed by
including the increases in the life insurance coverage or the sum assured by
some of respondent’s life insurance plans[14]:
ISSUED INCREASED
ORDINARY P648,127,000.00 P 74,755,000.00
GROUP
114,936,000.00
744,164,000.00
TOTAL P763,063,000.00 P 818,919,000.00
GRAND TOTAL/TAX BASE P1,581,982,000.00
TAX RATE P0.50/200.00
TAX DUE P 3,954,955.00
LESS: TAX PAID P 2,308,505.74
DEFICIENCY DST -
BASIC P 1,646,499.26
- 20% INTEREST 680,231.64
- SURCHARGE 25,000.00
TOTAL ASSESSMENT P 2,351,680.90[15]
The amount of P818,919,000.00
comprises the increases in the sum assured for the respondent’s ordinary
insurance – the “Money Plus Plan” (P74,755,000.00), and group insurance
(P744,164,000.00).[16]
On February 3,
2000, the respondent filed its Letter of Protest[17]
with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) contesting the assessment for
deficiency documentary stamp tax on its insurance policy premiums. Despite submission of documents on April 3,
2000,[18]
as required by the BIR in its March 20, 2000[19]
letter, the respondent’s Protest was not acted upon by the BIR within the
180-day period given to it by Section 228 of the 1997 National Internal Revenue
Code (NIRC) within which to rule on the protest. Hence, on October 26, 2000, the respondent
filed a Petition for Review with the CTA for the cancellation of Assessment
Notice No. ST-DST2-97-0054-2000. The
respondent invoked the CTA’s March 30, 1993 ruling in the similar case of Lincoln Philippine Life Insurance Company,
Inc. (now Jardine-CMA Life Insurance Company, Inc.) v. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue,[20] wherein
the CTA held that the tax base to be used in computing the documentary stamp tax is the value at
the time the instrument is issued because the documentary
stamp tax is levied and paid only once, which is at the time
the taxable document is issued.
On April 4, 2002, the CTA granted
the respondents’ Petition with the dispositive portion as follows:
WHEREFORE, in the light of all the
foregoing, respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue is hereby ORDERED to CANCEL and WITHDRAW
Assessment Notice No. ST-DST2-97-0054-2000 dated January 4, 2000 in the
amount of P2,351,680.90 representing deficiency documentary stamp taxes
for the taxable year 1997.[21]
The CTA, applying the Tax Code
Provisions then in force, held that:
[T]he documentary stamp tax on
life insurance policies is imposed only once based on the amount insured at the
time of actual issuance of such policies.
The documentary stamp tax which is in the nature of an excise tax is
imposed on the document as originally issued.
Therefore, any subsequent increase in the insurance coverage resulting
from policies which have been subjected to the documentary stamp tax at the
time of their issuance, is no longer subject to the documentary stamp tax.[22]
Aggrieved by the
decision, the petitioner went to the Court of Appeals on a Petition for Review[23]
docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 70600 on the ground that:
THE TAX COURT ERRED IN RULING
THAT INCREASES IN THE COVERAGE OR THE SUM ASSURED BY AN EXISTING INSURANCE
POLICY IS NOT SUBJECT TO THE DOCUMENTARY STAMP TAX. (DST).[24]
On April 29, 2005, the
Court of Appeals sustained the cancellation of Assessment Notice No.
ST-DST2-97-0054-2000 in its Decision, the decretal portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, all considered and finding no
merit in the herein appeal, judgment is hereby rendered upholding the April 4,
2002, CTA Decision in CTA Case No. 6189 entitled “Manila Bankers’ Life
Insurance Corporation, Petitioner, versus Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
Respondent.[25]
The Court of Appeals, in upholding
the decision of the CTA, said that the subject of the documentary stamp tax is the issuance
of the instrument representing the creation, change or cessation of a legal
relationship.[26] It further held that because the legal status
or nature of the relationship embodied in the document has no bearing at all on
the tax, the fulfillment of suspensive conditions incorporated in the
respondent’s policies, as claimed by the petitioner, would still not give rise
to new documentary stamp tax
payments.[27]
The petitioner asked for
reconsideration of the above Decision and cited this Court’s March 19, 2002
Decision in Commissioner of Internal
Revenue v. Lincoln Philippine Life Insurance Company, Inc.,[28]
the very same case the respondent invoked before the CTA. The petitioner argued that in Lincoln, this Court reversed both the
CTA and the Court of Appeals and sustained the validity of the deficiency documentary stamp tax imposed on the
increase in the sum insured even though no new policy was issued because the
increase, by reason of the “Automatic Increase Clause,” was already definite at
the time the policy was issued.
On July 27, 2005, the Court of
Appeals sustained its ruling, and stated that the Lincoln Case was not applicable because the increase in the sum
assured in Lincoln’s insurance policy was definite and determinable at the time
such policy was issued as the automatic increase clause, which allowed for the
increase, formed an integral part of the policy; whereas in the respondent’s
case, “the tax base of the disputed deficiency assessment was not [a] definite
or determinable increase in the sum assured.”[29]
The petitioner is now before us
praying for the nullification of the Court of Appeals’ April 29, 2005 Decision
and July 27, 2005 Resolution and to have the assessment for deficiency
documentary stamp tax on respondent’s policy premiums, plus 25% surcharge for
late payment and 20% annual interest, sustained[30]
on the following arguments:
A.
THE
APPLICABLE PROVISIONS OF THE NIRC AT THE TIME THE ASSESSMENT FOR DEFICIENCY
DOCUMENTARY STAMP TAX WAS ISSUED PROVIDE THAT DOCUMENTARY STAMP TAX IS
COLLECTIBLE NOT ONLY ON THE ORIGINAL POLICY BUT ALSO UPON RENEWAL OR
CONTINUANCE THEREOF.
B.
THE
AMOUNT INSURED BY THE POLICY AT THE TIME OF ITS ISSUANCE NECESSARILY INCLUDED
THE ADDITIONAL SUM AS A RESULT OF THE EXERCISE OF THE OPTION UNDER THE
“GUARANTEED CONTINUITY” CLAUSE IN RESPONDENT’S INSURANCE POLICIES.
C.
THE
“GUARANTEED CONTINUITY” CLAUSE OFFERS TO THE INSURED AN OPTION TO AVAIL OF THE
RIGHT TO RENEW OR CONTINUE THE POLICY.
IF AND WHEN THE INSURED AVAILS OF SUCH OPTION AND SUCH GUARANTEED
CONTINUITY CLAUSE TAKES EFFECT, THE INSURER IS LIABLE FOR DEFICIENCY
DOCUMENTARY STAMP TAX CORRESPONDING TO THE INCREASE OF THE INSURANCE COVERAGE.
D.
SECTION
198 OF THE 1997 NIRC CLEARLY STATES THAT THE DOCUMENTARY STAMP TAX IS IMPOSABLE
UPON RENEWAL OR CONTINUANCE OF ANY POLICY OF INSURANCE OR THE RENEWAL OR
CONTINUANCE OF ANY CONTRACT BY ALTERING OR OTHERWISE, AT THE SAME RATE AS THAT
IMPOSED ON THE ORIGINAL INSTRUMENT.[31]
As can be gleaned from the facts,
the deficiency documentary stamp tax
was assessed on the increases in the life insurance coverage of
two kinds of policies: the “Money Plus Plan,” which is an ordinary term life
insurance policy; and the group life insurance policy. The increases in the coverage of the life
insurance policies were brought about by the premium payments made subsequent
to the issuance of the policies. The
Money Plus Plan is a 20-year term ordinary life insurance plan with a
“Guaranteed Continuity Clause” which allowed the policy holder to continue the
policy after the 20-year term subject to certain conditions. Under the plan, the policy holders paid their
premiums in five separate periods, with the premium payments, after the first
period premiums, to be made only upon reaching a certain age. The succeeding premium payments translated to
increases in the sum assured. Thus, the
petitioner believed that since the documentary
stamp tax was affixed on the policy based only on the first
period premiums, then the succeeding premium payments should likewise be
subject to documentary stamp tax. In the case of respondent’s group insurance,
the deficiency documentary stamp tax
was imposed on the premiums for the additional members to already existing and
effective master policies. The
petitioner concluded that any additional member to the group of employees, who
were already insured under the existing mother policy, should similarly be
subjected to documentary stamp tax.[32]
The resolution of this case hinges
on the validity of the imposition of documentary
stamp tax on increases in the coverage or sum assured by
existing life insurance policies, even without the issuance of new policies.
In view of the fact that the
assessment for deficiency documentary stamp tax covered the taxable year 1997,
the relevant and applicable legal provisions are those found in the 1977
National Internal Revenue Code (Tax Code) as amended,[33]
to wit:
Section 173. Stamp Taxes Upon Documents,
Loan Agreements, Instruments and Papers. — Upon documents, instruments, loan agreements and papers, and
upon acceptances, assignments, sales and transfers of the obligation, right or
property incident thereto, there shall be levied, collected and paid for, and
in respect of the transaction so had or accomplished, the corresponding
documentary stamp taxes prescribed in the following sections of this Title, by
the person making, signing, issuing, accepting, or transferring the same wherever the document is made, signed,
issued, accepted, or transferred when the obligation or right arises from
Philippine sources or the property is situated in the Philippines, and the same time such act is done or
transaction had: Provided, That
whenever one party to the taxable document enjoys exemption from the tax herein
imposed, the other party who is not exempt shall be the one directly liable for
the tax. [34]
Section 183. Stamp Tax on Life Insurance Policies. — On all policies of insurance or
other instruments by whatever name the same may be called, whereby any
insurance shall be made or renewed upon any life or lives, there shall be
collected a documentary stamp tax of fifty centavos on each two hundred pesos
or fractional part thereof, of the
amount insured by any such policy.[35]
(Emphases ours.)
Documentary
stamp tax is a tax on documents, instruments, loan
agreements, and papers evidencing the acceptance, assignment, sale or transfer
of an obligation, right or property incident thereto.[36] It is in the nature of an excise tax because
it is imposed upon the privilege, opportunity or facility offered at exchanges
for the transaction of the business. It
is an excise upon the facilities used in the transaction of the business
distinct and separate from the business itself.[37]
To elucidate, documentary stamp tax is levied on
the exercise of certain privileges granted by law for the creation, revision,
or termination of specific legal relationships through the execution of
specific instruments. Examples of these
privileges, the exercise of which are subject to documentary
stamp tax, are leases of lands, mortgages, pledges, trusts
and conveyances of real property. Documentary
stamp tax is thus imposed on the exercise of these privileges
through the execution of specific instruments, independently of the legal
status of the transactions giving rise thereto.
The documentary stamp tax
must be paid upon the issuance of these instruments, without regard to whether
the contracts which gave rise to them are rescissible, void, voidable, or
unenforceable. [38]
Accordingly, the documentary stamp tax on insurance
policies, though imposed on the document itself, is actually levied on the
privilege to conduct insurance business.
Under Section 173, the documentary
stamp tax becomes due and payable at the time the insurance
policy is issued, with the tax based on the amount insured by the policy as
provided for in Section 183.
Documentary
Stamp Tax
on the “Money
Plus Plan”
The petitioner would have us
reverse both the CTA and the Court of Appeals based on our decision in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Lincoln
Philippine Life Insurance Company, Inc.[39]
The Lincoln case has been invoked by both parties in different stages
of this case. The respondent relied on
the CTA’s ruling in the Lincoln case
when it elevated its protest there; and when we reversed the CTA’s ruling
therein, the petitioner called the Court of Appeals’ attention to it, and
prayed for a decision upholding the assessment for deficiency documentary stamp tax just like in
the Lincoln case.
It is therefore necessary to
briefly discuss the Lincoln case to
determine its applicability, if any, to the case now before us. Prior to 1984, Lincoln Philippine Life
Insurance Company, Inc. (Lincoln) had been issuing its “Junior Estate
Builder Policy,” a special kind of life insurance policy because of a clause
which provided for an automatic increase in the amount of life insurance
coverage upon attainment of a certain age by the insured without the need of a
new policy. As Lincoln paid documentary stamp taxes
only on the initial sum assured, the CIR issued a deficiency documentary stamp tax assessment for
the year 1984, the year the clause took effect.
Both the CTA and the Court of Appeals found no basis for the deficiency
assessment. As discussed above, however,
this Court reversed both lower courts and sustained the CIR’s assessment.
This Court ruled that the increase
in the sum assured brought about by the “automatic increase” clause
incorporated in Lincoln’s Junior Estate Builder Policy was still subject
to documentary stamp tax,
notwithstanding that no new policy was issued, because the date of the
effectivity of the increase, as well as its amount, were already definite and
determinable at the time the policy was issued.
As such, the tax base under Section 183, which is “the amount fixed in
the policy,” is “the figure written on its face and whatever increases will
take effect in the future by reason of the ‘automatic increase clause.’” [40] This Court added that the automatic increase
clause was “in the nature of a conditional obligation under Article 1181,[41]
by which the increase of the insurance coverage shall depend upon the happening
of the event which constitutes the obligation.” [42]
Since the Lincoln case,
wherein the then CIR’s arguments for the BIR are very similar to the
petitioner’s arguments herein, was decided in favor of the BIR, the petitioner
is now relying on our ruling therein to support his position in this case. Although the two cases are similar in many
ways, they must be distinguished by the nature of the respective “clauses” in
the life insurance policies involved, where we note a major difference. In Lincoln,
the relevant clause is the “Automatic Increase Clause” which provided for the
automatic increase in the amount of life insurance coverage upon the attainment
of a certain age by the insured, without any need for another contract. In the case at bar, the clause in contention
is the “Guaranteed Continuity Clause” in respondent’s Money Plus Plan, which
reads:
GUARANTEED CONTINUITY
We guarantee the continuity of
this Policy until the Expiry Date stated in the Schedule provided that the effective
premium is consecutively paid when due or within the 31-day Grace Period.
We shall not have the right to
change premiums on your Policy during the 20-year Policy term.
At the end of each twenty-year
period, and provided that you have not attained age 55, you may renew your
Policy for a further twenty-year period.
To renew, you must submit proof of insurability acceptable to MBLIC and
pay the premium due based on attained age according to the rates prevailing at
the time of renewal.[43]
A simple reading of respondent’s
guaranteed continuity clause will show that it is significantly different from
the “automatic increase clause” in Lincoln. The only things guaranteed in the
respondent’s continuity clause were: the continuity of the policy until the stated
expiry date as long as the premiums were paid within the allowed time; the
non-change in premiums for the duration of the 20-year policy term; and the
option to continue such policy after the 20-year period, subject to certain
requirements. In fact, even the
continuity of the policy after its term was not guaranteed as the decision to
renew it belonged to the insured, subject to certain conditions. Any increase in the sum assured, as a result
of the clause, had to survive a new agreement between the respondent and the
insured. The increase in the life
insurance coverage was only corollary to the new premium rate imposed based
upon the insured’s age at the time the continuity clause was availed of. It was not automatic, was never guaranteed,
and was certainly neither definite nor determinable at the time the policy was
issued.
Therefore, the increases in the sum
assured brought about by the guaranteed continuity clause cannot be subject to documentary stamp tax under Section
183 as insurance made upon the
lives of the insured.
However, it is clear from the text
of the guaranteed continuity clause that what the respondent was actually
offering in its Money Plus Plan was the option to renew the policy, after the expiration of its original term. Consequently, the acceptance of this offer
would give rise to the renewal of the original policy.
The petitioner avers that these
life insurance policy renewals make the respondent liable for deficiency
documentary stamp tax under Section 198.
Section 198 of the old Tax Code
reads:
Section
198. Stamp Tax on Assignments and
Renewals of Certain Instruments. – Upon each and every assignment or transfer of any
mortgage, lease or policy of insurance, or the renewal or continuance of any
agreement, contract, charter, or any evidence of obligation or indebtedness by
altering or otherwise, there shall be levied, collected and paid a documentary
stamp tax, at the same rate as that imposed on the original instrument.[44]
Section 198 speaks of assignments
and renewals. In the case of insurance
policies, this section applies only when such policy was assigned or
transferred. The provision which
specifically applies to renewals of life insurance policies is Section 183:
Section 183. Stamp Tax on Life Insurance Policies. — On all policies of insurance or
other instruments by whatever name the same may be called, whereby any
insurance shall be made or renewed
upon any life or lives, there shall be collected a documentary stamp tax of
fifty centavos on each two hundred pesos or fractional part thereof, of the
amount insured by any such policy. (Emphasis ours.)
Section 183 is a substantial
reproduction of the earlier documentary stamp tax provision, Section 1449(j) of
the Administrative Code of 1917.
Regulations No. 26, or The Revised Documentary Stamp Tax Regulations,[45]
provided the implementing rules to the provisions on documentary stamp tax
under the Administrative Code of 1917.
Section 54 of the Regulations, in reference to what is now Section 183,
explicitly stated that the documentary stamp tax imposed under that section is
also collectible upon renewals of life insurance policies, viz:
Section
54. Tax also due on renewals. – The tax under this section is collectible not
only on the original policy or contract of insurance but also upon the renewal
of the policy or contract of insurance.
To argue that
there was no new legal relationship created by the availment of the guaranteed
continuity clause would mean that any option to renew, integrated in the
original agreement or contract, would not in reality be a renewal but only a
discharge of a pre-existing obligation.
The truth of the matter is that the guaranteed continuity clause only
gave the insured the right to renew his life insurance policy which had a fixed
term of twenty years. And although the
policy would still continue with essentially the same terms and conditions, the
fact is, its maturity date, coverage, and premium rate would have changed. We cannot agree with the CTA in its holding
that “the renewal, is in effect treated as an increase in the sum assured since
no new insurance policy was issued.”[46] The renewal was not meant to restore the
original terms of an old agreement, but instead it was meant to extend the life
of an existing agreement, with some of the contract’s terms modified. This renewal was still subject to the
acceptance and to the conditions of both the insured and the respondent. This is entirely different from a simple
mutual agreement between the insurer and the insured, to increase the coverage
of an existing and effective life insurance policy.
It is clear that
the availment of the option in the guaranteed continuity clause will
effectively renew the Money Plus Plan policy, which is indisputably subject to
the imposition of documentary stamp tax under Section 183 as an insurance renewed upon the life of the insured.
Documentary
Stamp Tax
on Group Life Insurance
The petitioner is also asking this Court to sustain his
deficiency documentary stamp tax assessment on the additional premiums earned
by the respondent in its group life insurance policies.
This Court, in Pineda
v. Court of Appeals[47]
has had the chance to discuss the concept of “group insurance,” to wit:
In its original and most common form, group insurance provides life or health insurance coverage for the employees of one employer.
The
coverage terms for group insurance are usually stated in a master agreement or
policy that is issued by the insurer to a representative of the group or to an
administrator of the insurance program, such as an employer. The employer acts
as a functionary in the collection and payment of premiums and in
performing related duties. Likewise
falling within the ambit of administration of a group policy is the
disbursement of insurance payments by the employer to the employees. Most policies, such as the one in this case,
require an employee to pay a portion of the premium, which the employer deducts
from wages while the remainder is paid by the employer. This is known as a contributory plan as
compared to a non-contributory plan where the premiums are solely paid by the
employer.
Although
the employer may be the titular or named insured, the insurance is actually
related to the life and health of the employee. Indeed, the employee is in the position of a
real party to the master policy, and even in a non-contributory plan, the
payment by the employer of the entire premium is a part of the total
compensation paid for the services of the employee. Put differently, the labor of the employees
is the true source of the benefits, which are a form of additional compensation
to them.[48]
(Emphasis ours.)
When a group insurance plan is
taken out, a group master policy is issued with the coverage and premium rate
based on the number of the members covered at that time. In the case of a company group insurance
plan, the premiums paid on the issuance of the master policy cover only those
employees enrolled at the time such master policy was issued. When the employer hires additional employees
during the life of the policy, the additional employees may be covered by the
same group insurance already taken out without any need for the issuance of a
new policy.
The respondent
claims that since the additional premiums represented the additional members of
the same existing group insurance policy, then under our tax laws, no
additional documentary stamp tax should be imposed since the appropriate
documentary stamp tax had already been paid upon the issuance of the master
policy. The respondent asserts that
since the documentary stamp tax, by its nature, is paid at the time of the
issuance of the policy, “then there can be no other imposition on the same,
regardless of any change in the number of employees covered by the existing
group insurance.”[49]
To resolve this
issue, it would be instructive to take another look at Section 183: On
all policies of insurance or other
instruments by whatever name the same may be called, whereby any insurance
shall be made or renewed upon any life or lives.
The phrase “other instruments” as also found in the earlier version of Section 183, i.e., Section 1449(j) of the Administrative Code of 1917, was explained in Regulations No. 26, to wit:
Section
52. “Other instruments” defined. – The term “other instruments” includes any instrument by whatever name the same is
called whereby insurance is made or renewed, i.e., by which the relationship of insurer and insured is created or evidenced, whether it be a letter of
acceptance, cablegrams, letters, binders, covering notes, or memoranda.
(Emphasis ours.)
Whenever a
master policy admits of another member, another life is insured and
covered. This means that the respondent,
by approving the addition of another member to its existing master policy, is
once more exercising its privilege to conduct the business of insurance,
because it is yet again insuring a life.
It does not matter that it did not issue another policy to effect this
change, the fact remains that insurance on another life is made and the
relationship of insurer and insured is created between the respondent and the
additional member of that master policy.
In
the respondent’s case, its group insurance plan is embodied in a contract which
includes not only the master policy, but all documents subsequently attached to
the master policy.[50] Among these documents are the Enrollment
Cards accomplished by the employees when they applied for membership in the
group insurance plan. The Enrollment
Card of a new employee, once registered in the Schedule of Benefits and attached
to the master policy, becomes evidence of such employee’s membership in the
group insurance plan, and his right to receive the benefits therein. Everytime the respondent registers and
attaches an Enrollment Card to an existing master policy, it exercises its
privilege to conduct its business of insurance and this is patently subject to documentary stamp tax as insurance made upon a life under
Section 183.
The respondent
would like this Court to ignore the petitioner’s argument that renewals of insurance
policies are also subject to documentary stamp tax for being raised for the
first time. This Court was faced with
the same dilemma in Commissioner
of Internal Revenue v. Procter & Gamble Philippine Manufacturing
Corporation,[51] when the petitioner also raised an issue therein
for the first time in the Supreme Court.
In addressing the procedural lapse, we said:
As clearly ruled by Us "To
allow a litigant to assume a different posture when he comes before the court
and challenges the position he had accepted at the administrative level,"
would be to sanction a procedure whereby the Court - which is supposed to
review administrative determinations - would not review, but determine and
decide for the first time, a question not raised at the administrative
forum. Thus it is well settled that
under the same underlying principle of prior exhaustion of administrative
remedies, on the judicial level, issues not raised in the lower court cannot
generally be raised for the first time on appeal. x x x.[52]
However, in the
same case, we also held that:
Nonetheless
it is axiomatic that the State can never be in estoppel, and this is
particularly true in matters involving taxation. The errors of certain administrative officers should never be allowed
to jeopardize the government's financial position.[53] (Emphasis ours.)
Along with police power
and eminent domain, taxation is one of the three basic and necessary attributes
of sovereignty.[54] Taxes
are the lifeblood of the government and their prompt and certain availability
is an imperious need. It is through
taxes that government agencies are able to operate and with which the State
executes its functions for the welfare of its constituents.[55] It is for this reason that we cannot let the
petitioner’s oversight bar the government’s rightful claim.
This Court would
like to make it clear that the assessment for deficiency documentary stamp tax
is being upheld not because the additional premium payments or an agreement to
change the sum assured during the effectivity of an insurance plan are subject
to documentary stamp tax, but because documentary stamp tax is levied on every
document which establishes that insurance was made or renewed upon a life.
WHEREFORE,
the petition is GRANTED. The April 29, 2005 Decision and the July 27,
2005 Resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 70600 are hereby SET ASIDE. Respondent Manila
Bankers’ Life Insurance Corp. is hereby ordered to pay petitioner Commissioner
of Internal Revenue the deficiency documentary stamp tax in the amount of P1,646,449.26,
plus the delinquency penalties of 25% surcharge on the amount due and 20%
annual interest from January 5, 2000 until fully paid.
SO ORDERED.
Associate
Justice
WE CONCUR:
Chief Justice
Chairperson
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR. Associate Justice
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MARIANO C. DEL CASTILLO Associate Justice
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JOSE PORTUGAL PEREZ Associate Justice |
[1] Under Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.
[2] Rollo, pp. 54-62; penned by Associate Justice Godardo A. Jacinto with Associate Justices Bienvenido L. Reyes and Rosalinda Asuncion-Vicente, concurring.
[3] Id. at 64-71.
[4] Id. at 96-107.
[5] Id. at 79.
[6] Id. at 72.
[7] Id.
[8] Id. at 73-74.
[9] CA rollo, p. 37.
[10] Rollo, pp. 75-76.
[11] CA rollo, pp. 54-57.
[12] Id. at 58.
[13] Rollo, p. 76.
[14] CA rollo, p. 128.
[15] Rollo, p. 82.
[16] Id. at 145.
[17] CA rollo, p. 64.
[18] Id. at 117.
[19] Id. at 65.
[20] CTA Case No. 4583; rollo, p. 84.
[21] Rollo, p. 106.
[22] Id. at 104.
[23] Id. at 108-122.
[24] Id. at 115.
[25] Id. at 61.
[26] Id. at 60.
[27] Id.
[28] 429 Phil. 154 (2002).
[29] Rollo, p. 66.
[30] Id. at 45-46.
[31] Id. at 27-29.
[32] CA rollo, pp. 128-129.
[33] Republic Act No. 8424 or the Tax Reform Act of 1997 became effective only on January 1, 1998.
[34] Presidential Decree No. 1158 as renumbered and amended by Section 32 of Presidential Decree No. 1994, November 5, 1985; Section 23 of Executive Order No. 273, July 25, 1987; and Section 1 of Republic Act No. 7660, December 23, 1993.
[35] Presidential Decree No. 1158 as amended by Section 29 of Annex of Presidential Decree No. 1457, June 11, 1978; Section 27 of Presidential Decree No. 1959, October 10, 1984; Section 45 of Presidential Decree No. 1994, November 5, 1985; and Section 23 of Executive Order No. 273, July 25, 1987.
[36] Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. First Express Pawnshop Company, Inc., G.R. Nos.
172045-46, June 16, 2009, 589 SCRA 253, 263.
[37] Lincoln
Philippine Life Insurance Company, Inc. (Now Jardine-CMG Life Insurance Co.
Inc.) v. Court of Appeals, 354 Phil. 896, 904 (1998).
[38] Philippine Home Assurance Corporation v. Court of Appeals, 361 Phil. 368, 372-373 (1999).
[39] Supra note 28.
[40] Commissioner
of Internal Revenue v. Lincoln Philippine Life Insurance Company, Inc. supra note 28.
[41] New Civil Code.
[42]
Commissioner
of Internal Revenue v. Lincoln Philippine Life Insurance Company, Inc. supra note 28 at 161-162.
[43] CA rollo, p. 68.
[44] Presidential Decree No. 1158 as renumbered by Section 45 of Presidential Decree No. 1994, November 5, 1985 and Section 23 of Executive Order No. 273, July 25, 1987.
[45] March 26, 1924. Amended by Regulations No. 77 (August 8, 1933); Revenue Regulations Nos. 4-68, (August 16, 1967); 1-72 (January 28, 1972); 3-75 (May 27, 1975); and Presidential Decree Nos. 1158 (June 3, 1977) and 1457. See also Presidential Decree No. 1959 (October 15, 1984), re omnibus amendments to the Tax Code.
[46] Rollo, p. 106.
[47] G.R. No. 105562, September 27, 1993, 226 SCRA 754.
[48] Id. at 765-766.
[49] Rollo, p. 230.
[50] CA rollo, p. 107.
[51]
243 Phil. 703 (1988).
[52] Id. at 709.
[53] Id.
[54] Compagnie Financiere Sucres Et Denrees v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. 133834, August 28, 2006, 499 SCRA 664, 667-668.
[55] Proton
Pilipinas Corporation v. Republic of the Philippines, represented by the Bureau
of Customs, G.R. No. 165027, October 12, 2006, 504 SCRA 528, 547-548.