FIRST DIVISION
COMMISSIONER
OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
Petitioner, - versus - |
G.R. No. 188497 Present: CORONA,
C.J., Chairperson, LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, BERSAMIN,
DEL
CASTILLO, and VILLARAMA,
JR., JJ. |
PILIPINAS SHELL PETROLEUM
CORPORATION, Respondent. |
Promulgated: April 25, 2012 |
x- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - x
DECISION
VILLARAMA, JR., J.:
Petitioner Commissioner of
Internal Revenue appeals the Decision[1]
dated March 25, 2009 and Resolution[2]
dated June 24, 2009 of the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) En Banc in CTA EB No. 415.
The CTA dismissed the petition for review filed by petitioner assailing
the CTA First Divisions Decision[3]
dated April 25, 2008 and Resolution[4]
dated July 10, 2008 which ordered petitioner to refund the excise taxes paid by
respondent Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation on petroleum products it sold
to international carriers.
The facts are not disputed.
Respondent is engaged in the business of processing,
treating and refining petroleum for the purpose of producing marketable
products and the subsequent sale thereof.[5]
On July 18, 2002, respondent filed with the Large Taxpayers
Audit & Investigation Division II of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) a
formal claim for refund or tax credit in the total amount of P28,064,925.15,
representing excise taxes it allegedly paid on sales and deliveries of gas and
fuel oils to various international carriers during the period October to
December 2001. Subsequently, on October
21, P41,614,827.99. Again, on July 3, 2003, respondent filed
another formal claim for refund or tax credit in the amount of P30,652,890.55
covering deliveries from April to June 2002.[6]
Since no action was taken by the petitioner on its claims,
respondent filed petitions for review before the CTA on September 19, 2003 and
December 23, 2003, docketed as CTA Case Nos. 6775 and 6839, respectively.
In its decision on the consolidated cases, the CTAs First
Division ruled that respondent is entitled to the refund of excise taxes in the
reduced amount of P95,014,283.00.
The CTA First Division relied on a previous ruling rendered by the CTA En Banc in the case of Pilipinas
Shell Petroleum Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue[7]
where the CTA also granted respondents claim for refund on the basis of excise
tax exemption for petroleum products sold to international carriers of foreign
registry for their use or consumption outside the Philippines. Petitioners motion for reconsideration was
denied by the CTA First Division.
Petitioner
elevated the case to the CTA En Banc which
upheld the ruling of the First Division.
The CTA pointed out the specific exemption mentioned under Section 135
of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997 (NIRC) of petroleum
products sold to international carriers such as respondents clients. It said that this Courts ruling in Maceda v. Macaraig, Jr.[8] is inapplicable because said case only
put to rest the issue of whether or not the National Power Corporation (NPC) is
subject to tax considering that NPC is a tax-exempt entity mentioned in Sec.
135 (c) of the NIRC (1997), whereas the present case involves the tax exemption
of the sale of petroleum under Sec. 135 (a) of the same Code. Further, the CTA said that the ruling in Philippine Acetylene Co., Inc. v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue[9]
likewise finds no application because the party asking for the refund in said
case was the seller-producer based on the exemption granted under the law to
the tax-exempt buyers, NPC and Voice of America (VOA), whereas in this case it
is the article or product which is exempt from tax and not the international
carrier.
Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration which the CTA
likewise denied.
Hence, this petition anchored on the following grounds:
I
SECTION 148 OF THE NATIONAL
INTERNAL REVENUE CODE EXPRESSLY SUBJECTS THE PETROLEUM PRODUCTS TO AN EXCISE
TAX BEFORE THEY ARE REMOVED FROM THE PLACE OF PRODUCTION.
II
THE ONLY SPECIFIC PROVISION OF THE
LAW WHICH GRANTS TAX CREDIT OR TAX REFUND OF THE EXCISE TAXES PAID REFERS TO
THOSE CASES WHERE GOODS LOCALLY PRODUCED OR MANUFACTURED ARE ACTUALLY EXPORTED
WHICH IS NOT SO IN THIS CASE.
III
THE PRINCIPLES LAID DOWN IN MACEDA VS. MACARAIG, JR. AND PHILIPPINE ACETYLENE CO. VS. CIR ARE
APPLICABLE TO THIS CASE.[10]
The Solicitor General argues that the
obvious intent of the law is to grant excise tax exemption to international
carriers and exempt entities as buyers of petroleum products and not to the
manufacturers or producers of said goods.
Since the excise taxes are collected from manufacturers or producers before
removal of the domestic products from the place of production, respondent paid
the subject excise taxes as manufacturer or producer of the petroleum products
pursuant to Sec. 148 of the NIRC. Thus,
regardless of who the buyer/purchaser is, the excise tax on petroleum products
attached to the said goods before their sale or delivery to international
carriers, as in fact respondent averred that it paid the excise tax on its
petroleum products when it withdrew petroleum products from its place of production
for eventual sale and delivery to various international carriers as well as to
other customers.[11] Sec. 135 (a) and (c) granting exemption from
the payment of excise tax on petroleum products can only be interpreted to mean
that the respondent cannot pass on to international carriers and exempt
agencies the excise taxes it paid as a manufacturer or producer.
As to whether respondent has the right to file a claim for
refund or tax credit for the excise taxes it paid for the petroleum products
sold to international carriers, the Solicitor General contends that Sec. 130
(D) is explicit on the circumstances under which a taxpayer may claim for a
refund of excise taxes paid on manufactured products, which express enumeration
did not include those excise taxes paid on petroleum products which were
eventually sold to international carriers (expressio
unius est exclusio alterius). Further, the Solicitor General asserts that
contrary to the conclusion made by the CTA, the principles laid down by this
Court in Maceda v. Macaraig, Jr.[12]
and Philippine Acetylene Co. v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue[13]
are applicable to this case. Respondent
must shoulder the excise taxes it previously paid on petroleum products which
it later sold to international carriers because it cannot pass on the tax
burden to the said international carriers which have been granted exemption
under Sec. 135 (a) of the NIRC.
Considering that respondent failed to prove an express grant of a right
to a tax refund, such claim cannot be implied; hence, it must be denied.
On the other hand, respondent maintains that since
petroleum products sold to qualified international carriers are exempt from
excise tax, no taxes should be imposed on the article, to which goods the tax
attaches, whether in the hands of the said international carriers or the
petroleum manufacturer or producer. As
these excise taxes have been erroneously paid taxes, they can be recovered
under Sec. 229 of the NIRC. Respondent
contends that contrary to petitioners assertion, Sections 204 and 229
authorizes respondent to maintain a suit or proceeding to recover such
erroneously paid taxes on the petroleum products sold to tax-exempt
international carriers.
As to the jurisprudence cited by the petitioner, respondent
argues that they are not applicable to the case at bar. It points out that Maceda v. Macaraig, Jr. is an adjudication on the issue of tax
exemption of NPC from direct and indirect taxes given the passage of various
laws relating thereto. What was put in
issue in said case was NPCs right to claim for refund of indirect taxes. Here, respondents claim for refund is not
anchored on the exemption of the buyer from direct and indirect taxes but on
the tax exemption of the goods themselves under Sec. 135. Respondent further stressed that in Maceda v. Macaraig, Jr., this Court
recognized that if NPC purchases oil from oil companies, NPC is entitled to
claim reimbursement from the BIR for that part of the purchase price that
represents excise taxes paid by the oil company to the BIR. Philippine
Acetylene Co. v. CIR, on the other hand, involved sales tax, which is a tax
on the transaction, which this Court held as due from the seller even if such
tax cannot be passed on to the buyers who are tax-exempt entities. In this case, the excise tax is a tax on the
goods themselves. While indeed it is the
manufacturer who has the duty to pay the said tax, by specific provision of
law, Sec. 135, the goods are stripped of such tax under the circumstances
provided therein. Philippine Acetylene Co., Inc. v. CIR was thus not anchored on an
exempting provision of law but merely on the argument that the tax burden
cannot be passed on to someone.
Respondent
further contends that requiring it to shoulder the burden of excise taxes on petroleum
products sold to international carriers would effectively defeat the principle
of international comity upon which the grant of tax exemption on aviation fuel
used in international flights was founded.
If the excise taxes paid by respondent are not allowed to be refunded or
credited based on the exemption provided in Sec. 135 (a), respondent avers that
the manufacturers or oil companies would then be constrained to shift the tax
burden to international carriers in the form of addition to the selling
price.
Respondent
cites as an analogous case Commissioner
of International Revenue v. Tours Specialists, Inc.[14]
which involved the inclusion of hotel room charges remitted by partner foreign
tour agents in respondent TSIs gross receipts for purposes of computing the 3%
contractors tax. TSI opposed the
deficiency assessment invoking, among others, Presidential Decree No. 31, which
exempts foreign tourists from paying hotel room tax. This Court upheld the CTA in ruling that
while CIR may claim that the 3% contractors tax is imposed upon a different
incidence, i.e., the gross receipts
of the tourist agency which he asserts includes the hotel room charges
entrusted to it, the effect would be to impose a tax, and though different, it
nonetheless imposes a tax actually on room charges. One way or the other, said the CTA, it would
not have the effect of promoting tourism in the Philippines as that would
increase the costs or expenses by the addition of a hotel room tax in the
overall expenses of said tourists.
The
instant petition squarely raised the issue of whether respondent as
manufacturer or producer of petroleum products is exempt from the payment of
excise tax on such petroleum products it sold to international carriers.
In
the previous cases[15] decided by this Court involving excise taxes
on petroleum products sold to international carriers, what was only resolved is
the question of who is the proper party to claim the refund of excise taxes
paid on petroleum products if such tax was either paid by the international
carriers themselves or incorporated into the selling price of the petroleum
products sold to them. We have ruled in
the said cases that the statutory taxpayer, the local manufacturer of the
petroleum products who is directly liable for the payment of excise tax on the
said goods, is the proper party to seek a tax refund. Thus, a foreign airline
company who purchased locally manufactured petroleum products for use in its
international flights, as well as a foreign oil company who likewise bought
petroleum products from local manufacturers and later sold these to
international carriers, have no legal personality to file a claim for tax
refund or credit of excise taxes previously paid by the local manufacturers
even if the latter passed on to the said buyers the tax burden in the form of
additional amount in the price.
Excise
taxes, as the term is used in the NIRC, refer to taxes applicable to certain
specified goods or articles manufactured or produced in the Philippines for
domestic sales or consumption or for any other disposition and to things
imported into the Philippines. These taxes are imposed in addition to the
value-added tax (VAT).[16]
As
to petroleum products, Sec. 148 provides that excise taxes attach to the
following refined and manufactured mineral oils and motor fuels as soon as they are in existence as such:
(a) Lubricating oils and greases;
(b) Processed gas;
(c) Waxes and petrolatum;
(d) Denatured alcohol to be used for motive power;
(e) Naphtha, regular gasoline and other similar products of
distillation;
(f) Leaded premium gasoline;
(g) Aviation turbo jet fuel;
(h) Kerosene;
(i) Diesel fuel oil, and similar fuel oils having more or less the
same generating power;
(j) Liquefied petroleum gas;
(k) Asphalts; and
(l) Bunker fuel oil and similar fuel oils having more or less the
same generating capacity.
Beginning
SEC. 135. Petroleum Products Sold to International
Carriers and Exempt Entities or Agencies. Petroleum products sold to the following are exempt from excise
tax:
(a) International carriers of
Philippine or foreign registry on their use or consumption outside the
Philippines: Provided, That the
petroleum products sold to these international carriers shall be stored in a
bonded storage tank and may be disposed of only in accordance with the rules
and regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of Finance, upon
recommendation of the Commissioner;
(b) Exempt entities or agencies
covered by tax treaties, conventions and other international agreements for
their use or consumption: Provided,
however, That the country of said foreign international carrier or exempt
entities or agencies exempts from similar taxes petroleum products sold to
Philippine carriers, entities or agencies; and
(c) Entities which are by law exempt from direct
and indirect taxes.
Respondent claims it is entitled to a
tax refund because those petroleum products it sold to international carriers
are not subject to excise tax, hence the excise taxes it paid upon withdrawal
of those products were erroneously or illegally collected and should not have been
paid in the first place. Since the
excise tax exemption attached to the petroleum products themselves, the
manufacturer or producer is under no duty to pay the excise tax thereon.
We disagree.
Under Chapter II Exemption or Conditional Tax-Free Removal
of Certain Goods of Title VI, Sections 133, 137, 138, 139 and 140 cover
conditional tax-free removal of specified goods or articles, whereas Sections
134 and 135 provide for tax exemptions.
While the exemption found in Sec. 134 makes reference to the nature and
quality of the goods manufactured (domestic denatured alcohol) without regard
to the tax status of the buyer of the said goods, Sec. 135 deals with the tax
treatment of a specified article (petroleum products) in relation to its buyer
or consumer. Respondents failure to
make this important distinction apparently led it to mistakenly assume that the
tax exemption under Sec. 135 (a) attaches to the goods themselves such that
the excise tax should not have been paid in the first place.
On
SEC. 4. Time and Manner of Payment of Excise Tax on Petroleum Products,
Non-Metallic Minerals and Indigenous Petroleum
I. Petroleum Products
x
x x x
a) On locally manufactured petroleum products
The specific tax on petroleum products locally manufactured or produced
in the
Thus, if an airline company purchased jet fuel from an unregistered
supplier who could not present proof of payment of specific tax, the company is
liable to pay the specific tax on the date of purchase.[19] Since the excise tax must be paid upon
withdrawal from the place of production, respondent cannot anchor its claim for
refund on the theory that the excise taxes due thereon should not have been
collected or paid in the first place.
Sec. 229 of the NIRC allows the recovery of taxes
erroneously or illegally collected. An
erroneous or illegal tax is defined as one levied without statutory
authority, or upon property not subject
to taxation or by some officer having no authority to levy the tax, or one
which is some other similar respect is illegal.[20]
Respondents locally manufactured petroleum products are
clearly subject to excise tax under Sec. 148.
Hence, its claim for tax refund may not be predicated on Sec. 229 of the
NIRC allowing a refund of erroneous or excess payment of tax. Respondents
claim is premised on what it determined as a tax exemption attaching to the
goods themselves, which must be based on a statute granting tax exemption, or
the result of legislative grace. Such a claim is to be construed strictissimi juris against the taxpayer,
meaning that the claim cannot be made to rest on vague inference. Where the
rule of strict interpretation against the taxpayer is applicable as the claim
for refund partakes of the nature of an exemption, the claimant must show that
he clearly falls under the exempting statute.[21]
The
exemption from excise tax payment on petroleum products under Sec. 135 (a) is
conferred on international carriers who purchased the same for their use or
consumption outside the
On January 22, 2008, or five years after the sale by
respondent of the subject petroleum products, then Secretary of Finance
Margarito B. Teves issued Revenue
Regulations No. 3-2008 Amending Certain
Provisions of Existing Revenue Regulations on the Granting of Outright Excise
Tax Exemption on Removal of Excisable Articles Intended for Export or
Sale/Delivery to International Carriers or to Tax-Exempt Entities/Agencies and Prescribing
the Provisions for Availing Claims for Product Replenishment. Said issuance recognized the tax relief to
which the taxpayers are entitled by availing of the following remedies: (a) a claim for
excise tax exemption pursuant to Sections 204 and 229 of the NIRC; or (2) a
product replenishment.
SEC. 2. IMPOSITION OF EXCISE TAX
ON REMOVAL OF EXCISABLE ARTICLES FOR EXPORT OR SALE/DELIVERY TO INTERNATIONAL
CARRIERS AND OTHER TAX-EXEMPT ENTITIES/AGENCIES. Subject to the subsequent filing of a claim for excise tax
credit/refund or product replenishment, all manufacturers of articles
subject to excise tax under Title VI of the NIRC of 1997, as amended, shall pay
the excise tax that is otherwise due on every removal thereof from the place of
production that is intended for exportation or sale/delivery to international
carriers or to tax-exempt entities/agencies: Provided, That in case the said
articles are likewise being sold in the domestic market, the applicable excise
tax rate shall be the same as the excise tax rate imposed on the domestically
sold articles.
In the absence of a similar
article that is being sold in the domestic market, the applicable excise tax shall be computed based
on the value appearing in the manufacturers sworn statement converted to
Philippine currency, as may be applicable.
x x x x (Emphasis supplied.)
In this case, however, the Solicitor
General has adopted a position contrary to existing BIR regulations and rulings
recognizing the right of oil companies to seek a refund of excise taxes paid on
petroleum products they sold to international carriers. It is argued that there is nothing in Sec.
135 (a) which explicitly grants exemption from the payment of excise tax in
favor of oil companies selling their petroleum products to international
carriers and that the only claim for refund of excise taxes authorized by the
NIRC is the payment of excise tax on exported goods, as explicitly provided in
Sec. 130 (D), Chapter I under the same Title VI:
(D) Credit
for Excise Tax on Goods Actually Exported.
-- When goods locally produced or
manufactured are removed and actually exported without returning to the
Philippines, whether so exported in their original state or as ingredients or
parts of any manufactured goods or products, any excise tax paid thereon shall be credited or
refunded upon submission of the proof of actual exportation and upon receipt of
the corresponding foreign exchange payment: Provided,
That the excise tax on mineral products, except coal and coke, imposed under
Section 151 shall not be creditable or refundable even if the mineral products
are actually exported.
According to the Solicitor General, Sec. 135 (a) in
relation to the other provisions on excise tax and from the nature of indirect
taxation, may only be construed as prohibiting the manufacturers-sellers of
petroleum products from passing on the tax to international carriers by
incorporating previously paid excise taxes into the selling price. In other words, respondent cannot shift the
tax burden to international carriers who are allowed to purchase its petroleum
products without having to pay the added cost of the excise tax.
We agree with the Solicitor General.
In Philippine
Acetylene Co., Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue[22]
this Court held that petitioner manufacturer who sold its oxygen and acetylene
gases to NPC, a tax-exempt entity, cannot claim exemption from the payment of
sales tax simply because its buyer NPC is exempt from taxation. The Court explained that the percentage tax
on sales of merchandise imposed by the Tax Code is due from the manufacturer
and not from the buyer.
Respondent attempts to distinguish this case from Philippine Acetylene Co., Inc. on
grounds that what was involved in the latter is a tax on the transaction
(sales) and not excise tax which is a tax on the goods themselves, and that the
exemption sought therein was anchored merely on the tax-exempt status of the
buyer and not a specific provision of law exempting the goods sold from the
excise tax. But as already stated, the
language of Sec. 135 indicates that the tax exemption mentioned therein is
conferred on specified buyers or consumers of the excisable articles or
goods (petroleum products). Unlike Sec.
134 which explicitly exempted the article or goods itself (domestic denatured alcohol) without due
regard to the tax status of the buyer or purchaser, Sec. 135 exempts from
excise tax petroleum products which were sold to international carriers and
other tax-exempt agencies and entities.
Considering
that the excise taxes attaches to petroleum products as soon as they are in
existence as such,[23] there can be no outright exemption from the
payment of excise tax on petroleum products sold to international carriers. The
sole basis then of respondents claim for refund is the express grant of excise
tax exemption in favor of international carriers under Sec. 135 (a) for their
purchases of locally manufactured petroleum products. Pursuant to our ruling in Philippine Acetylene, a tax exemption
being enjoyed by the buyer cannot be the basis of a claim for tax exemption by
the manufacturer or seller of the goods for any tax due to it as the manufacturer or seller. The excise tax imposed on petroleum products
under Sec. 148 is the direct liability of the manufacturer who cannot thus
invoke the excise tax exemption granted to its buyers who are international
carriers.
In Maceda v. Macaraig, Jr.,[24]
the Court specifically mentioned excise tax as an example of an indirect
tax where the tax burden can be shifted to the buyer:
On the other hand,
indirect taxes are taxes primarily paid by persons who can shift the burden
upon someone else. For example, the excise and ad valorem taxes that
the oil companies pay to the Bureau of Internal Revenue upon removal of
petroleum products from its refinery can be shifted to its buyer, like the NPC,
by adding them to the cash and/or selling price.
An excise tax is basically an
indirect tax. Indirect taxes are those that
are demanded, in the first instance, from, or are paid by, one person in the
expectation and intention that he can shift the burden to someone else. Stated elsewise, indirect taxes are taxes
wherein the liability for the payment of the tax falls on one person but the
burden thereof can be shifted or passed on to another person, such as when the
tax is imposed upon goods before reaching the consumer who ultimately pays for
it. When the seller passes on the tax to
his buyer, he, in effect, shifts the tax burden, not the liability to pay it,
to the purchaser as part of the price of goods sold or services rendered.[25]
Further,
in Maceda v. Macaraig, Jr., the Court ruled that because of the
tax exemptions privileges being enjoyed by NPC under existing laws, the tax
burden may not be shifted to it by the oil companies who shall pay for fuel oil
taxes on oil they supplied to NPC. Thus:
In view of all the foregoing, the Court rules
and declares that the oil companies which supply bunker fuel oil to NPC have to
pay the taxes imposed upon said bunker fuel oil sold to NPC. By the very nature of indirect taxation, the
economic burden of such taxation is expected to be passed on through the
channels of commerce to the user or consumer of the goods sold. Because,
however, the NPC has been exempted from both direct and indirect taxation, the
NPC must be held exempted from absorbing the economic burden of indirect
taxation. This means, on the one hand,
that the oil companies which wish to sell to NPC absorb all or part of the
economic burden of the taxes previously paid to BIR, which they could shift to
NPC if NPC did not enjoy exemption from indirect taxes. This means also, on the other hand, that the
NPC may refuse to pay that part of the normal purchase price of bunker fuel
oil which represents all or part of the taxes previously paid by the oil
companies to BIR. If NPC nonetheless
purchases such oil from the oil companies because to do so may be more
convenient and ultimately less costly
for NPC than NPC itself importing and hauling and storing the oil from overseas
NPC is entitled to be reimbursed by the BIR for that part of the buying price
of NPC which verifiably represents the tax already paid by the oil
company-vendor to the BIR.[26]
(Emphasis supplied.)
In the case of international air carriers, the tax
exemption granted under Sec. 135 (a) is based on a long-standing international
consensus that fuel used for international air services should be
tax-exempt. The provisions of the 1944
Convention of International Civil Aviation or the Chicago Convention, which form binding international law,
requires the contracting parties not to charge duty on aviation fuel already on
board any aircraft that has arrived in their territory from another contracting
state. Between individual countries, the
exemption of airlines from national taxes and customs duties on a range of
aviation-related goods, including parts, stores and fuel is a standard element
of the network of bilateral Air Service Agreements.[27]
Later, a Resolution issued by the International Civil Aviation Organization
(ICAO) expanded the provision as to similarly exempt from taxes all kinds of
fuel taken on board for consumption by an aircraft from a contracting state in
the territory of another contracting State departing for the territory of any
other State.[28] Though initially aimed at establishing
uniformity of taxation among parties to the treaty to prevent double taxation,
the tax exemption now generally applies to fuel used in international travel by
both domestic and foreign carriers.
On
PRESIDENTIAL
DECREE No. 1359
AMENDING
SECTION 134 OF THE NATIONAL INTERNAL REVENUE CODE OF 1977.
WHEREAS, under the present law oil
products sold to international carriers are subject to the specific tax;
WHEREAS, some countries allow the sale of petroleum products to Philippine
Carriers without payment of taxes thereon;
WHEREAS, to foster goodwill and better relationship with foreign countries, there
is a need to grant similar tax exemption in favor of foreign international
carriers;
NOW, THEREFORE, I, FERDINAND E.
MARCOS, President of the
Section
1. Section 134 of the National
Internal Revenue Code of 1977 is hereby amended to read as follows:
Sec. 134. Articles subject to
specific tax. Specific internal revenue taxes apply to things manufactured or
produced in the Philippines for domestic sale or consumption and to things
imported, but not to anything produced or manufactured here which shall be
removed for exportation and is actually exported without returning to the
Philippines, whether so exported in its original state or as an ingredient or
part of any manufactured article or product.
HOWEVER, PETROLEUM PRODUCTS SOLD
TO AN INTERNATIONAL CARRIER FOR ITS USE OR CONSUMPTION OUTSIDE OF THE
PHILIPPINES SHALL NOT BE SUBJECT TO SPECIFIC TAX, PROVIDED, THAT THE COUNTRY OF
SAID CARRIER EXEMPTS FROM TAX PETROLEUM PRODUCTS SOLD TO PHILIPPINE CARRIERS.
In case of importations the
internal revenue tax shall be in addition to the customs duties, if any.
Section 2. This Decree shall take effect
immediately.
Contrary to
respondents assertion that the above amendment to the former provision of the 1977
Tax Code supports its position that it was not liable for excise tax on the
petroleum products sold to international carriers, we find that no such
inference can be drawn from the words used in the amended provision or its
introductory part. Founded on the
principles of international comity and reciprocity, P.D. No. 1359 granted
exemption from payment of excise tax but only to foreign international carriers
who are allowed to purchase petroleum products free of specific tax provided
the country of said carrier also grants tax exemption to Philippine carriers.
Both the earlier amendment in the 1977 Tax Code and the present
Sec. 135 of the 1997 NIRC did not exempt the oil companies from the payment of
excise tax on petroleum products manufactured and sold by them to international
carriers.
Because an excise tax is a tax on the manufacturer and not
on the purchaser, and there being no express grant under the NIRC of exemption
from payment of excise tax to local manufacturers of petroleum products sold to
international carriers, and absent any
provision in the Code authorizing the refund or crediting of such excise taxes
paid, the Court holds that Sec. 135 (a) should be construed as prohibiting the
shifting of the burden of the excise tax
to the international carriers who buys petroleum products from the local
manufacturers. Said provision thus
merely allows the international carriers to purchase petroleum products without
the excise tax component as an added cost in the price fixed by the
manufacturers or distributors/sellers.
Consequently, the oil companies which sold such petroleum products to
international carriers are not entitled to a refund of excise taxes previously
paid on the goods.
Time and again, we have held that tax refunds are in the nature of tax
exemptions which result to loss of revenue for the government. Upon the person
claiming an exemption
from tax payments rests the burden of justifying the exemption
by words too plain to be mistaken and too categorical to be misinterpreted,[29] it is never
presumed[30]
nor be allowed solely on the ground of equity.[31] These
exemptions, therefore, must not rest on vague, uncertain or indefinite
inference, but should be granted only by a clear
and unequivocal provision of law on the basis of language too plain to be
mistaken. Such exemptions must be strictly construed against the taxpayer, as
taxes are the lifeblood of the government.[32]
WHEREFORE, the petition for review
on certiorari is GRANTED. The Decision dated March 25, 2009 and
Resolution dated June 24, 2009 of the Court of Tax Appeals En Banc in CTA EB No. 415 are hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The claims for tax refund or credit filed by
respondent Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation are DENIED for lack of basis.
No
pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
|
MARTIN
S. VILLARAMA, JR. Associate Justice |
|
WE CONCUR: RENATO C. CORONA Chief Justice Chairperson |
||
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO Associate Justice |
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN Associate Justice |
|
MARIANO C. DEL CASTILLO Associate Justice |
||
C E R T I F I C A T I O N
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the 1987
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 Courts Division.
|
RENATO C. CORONA Chief Justice |
|
[1] Rollo, pp. 45-66. Penned by Associate Justice Erlinda P. Uy with Presiding Justice Ernesto D. Acosta and Associate Justices Juanito C. Castaeda, Jr., Lovell R. Bautista, Caesar A. Casanova and Olga Palanca-Enriquez concurring.
[2] Id. at 68-71.
[3] Id. at 117-133. Penned by Associate Justice Caesar A. Casanova with Presiding Justice Ernesto D. Acosta and Lovell R. Bautista concurring.
[4] Id. at 153-156.
[5] Joint Stipulation of Facts and Issues, records (CTA Case No. 6839), p. 206.
[6] Rollo, p. 119.
[7] CTA Case No. 6554, November 28, 2006, rollo, pp. 125-126.
[8] G.R. No. 88291, June 8, 1993, 223 SCRA 217.
[9] No. L-19707, August 17, 1967, 20 SCRA 1056.
[10] Rollo, pp. 17-18.
[11] Id. at 274.
[12] Supra note 8.
[13] Supra note 9.
[14] G.R. No. 66416, March 21, 1990, 183 SCRA 402.
[15] Silkair (Sigapore) Pte. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. 166482, January 25, 2012; Exxonmobil Petroleum and Chemical Holdings, Inc.-Philippine Branch v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. 180909, January 19, 2011, 640 SCRA 203; Silkair (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. 184398, February 25, 2010, 613 SCRA 639; Silkair (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. Nos. 171383 & 172379, November 14, 2008, 571 SCRA 141; and Silkair (Singapore), Pte. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. 173594, February 6, 2008, 544 SCRA 100.
[16] Sec. 129, NIRC (1997).
[17] Sec. 130, par. (2).
[18] Revenue Regulations Implementing Republic Act No. 8184, An Act Restructuring the Excise Tax on Petroleum Products, Amending for this Purpose Pertinent Sections of the National Internal Revenue Code, As Amended.
[19] Sec. 5, id.
[20] BLACKS LAW DICTIONARY, Fifth Edition, p. 486.
[21] Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Mirant Pagbilao Corporation, G.R. No. 172129, September 12, 2008, 565 SCRA 154, 165, citing Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Fortune Tobacco Corporation, G.R. Nos. 167274-75, July 21, 2008, 559 SCRA 160, 183 and Atlas Consolidated Mining and Development Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. 159490, February 18, 2008, 546 SCRA 150, 163.
[22] Supra note 9.
[23] Sec. 148, par. 1.
[24] G.R. No. 88291, May 31, 1991, 197 SCRA 771, 791, cited in Silkair (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. Nos. 171383 & 172379, November 14, 2008, supra note 15, at 155-156.
[25] Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company, G.R. No. 140230, December 15, 2005, 478 SCRA 61, 72, citing Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Tours Specialists Inc., supra note 14, at 413.
[26] Supra note 8, at 256.
[27] Antony Seely, Taxing Aviation Fuel House of Commons Library, accessed at www.parliament.uk/briefing -papers/SN00523.pdf , citing Indirect Taxes on International Aviation, by Michael Keen & John Strand, Fiscal Studies, Vol. 28 No. 1 2007 (pp. 6-7) and HM Treasury/Dept for Transport, Aviation and the Environment: Using Economic Instruments, March 2003 (p. 10).
[28] Prohibition
Against Taxes On International Airlines, prepared by The International Air Transport
Association (IATA), globalwarming.house.gov/files/LTTR/ACES/IntlAirTransport...
[29] Michel J. Lhuillier Pawnshop, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. 166786, May 3, 2006, 489 SCRA 147, 155, citing Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company, supra note 25, at 74 and Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Mitsubishi Metal Corporation, G.R. Nos. 54908 & 80041, January 22, 1990, 181 SCRA 214, 224.
[30] Province of Abra v. Hernando, No. L-49336, August 31, 1981, 107 SCRA 104, 109, citing early cases.
[31] Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of Appeals, G.R. Nos. 122161 & 120991, February 1, 1999, 302 SCRA 442, 453, citing Davao Gulf Lumber Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. 117359, July 23, 1998, 293 SCRA 76, 91.
[32] Silkair(Singapore) PTE. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No. 184398, February 25, 2010, supra note 15, at 659, citing Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Solidbank Corporation, G.R. No. 148191, November 25, 2003, 416 SCRA 436, 461.