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066 - MIAA vs. Court of Appeals

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TAXATION 2 -# 66

MANILA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT AUTHORITY v. COURT OF APPEALS (2009)



Doctrine: MIAA is not a government-owned or controlled corporation but a government instrumentality which is
exempt from any kind of tax from the local governments. Indeed, the exercise of the taxing power of local
government units is subject to the limitations enumerated in Section 133 of the Local Government Code.10 Under
Section 133(o)11 of the Local Government Code, local government units have no power to tax instrumentalities of
the national government like the MIAA

Facts:
1. Petitioner Manila International Airport Authority (MIAA) operates and administers the Ninoy Aquino
International Airport (NAIA) Complex under Executive Order No. 903.
2. Under Sections 34 and 225 of EO 903, approximately 600 hectares of land, including the runways, the
airport tower, and other airport buildings, were transferred to MIAA. The NAIA Complex is located along
the border between Pasay City and Paraaque City.
3. On 28 August 2001, MIAA received Final Notices of Real Property Tax Delinquency from the City of Pasay
for the taxable years 1992 to 2001. It amounted to almost 1 Billion pesos.
4. On 24 August 2001, the City of Pasay, through its City Treasurer, issued notices of levy and warrants of
levy for the NAIA Pasay properties. MIAA received the notices and warrants of levy on 28 August 2001.
Thereafter, the City Mayor of Pasay threatened to sell at public auction the NAIA Pasay properties if the
delinquent real property taxes remain unpaid.
5. The petition, by filing a petition in the Court of Appeals, sought to enjoin the City of Pasay from imposing
real property taxes on, levying against, and auctioning for public sale the NAIA Pasay properties.
6. On 30 October 2002, the Court of Appeals dismissed the petition and upheld the power of the City of
Pasay to impose and collect realty taxes on the NAIA Pasay properties. MIAA filed a motion for
reconsideration, which the Court of Appeals denied. Hence, this petition.

Issue:
Whether or not the NAIA Pasay properties of MIAA are exempt from real property tax? (YES)

Held: Petition is GRANTED. CA Decision is set aside. SC DECLARES the NAIA Pasay properties of the Manila
International Airport Authority EXEMPT from real property tax imposed by the City of Pasay. We declare VOID
all the real property tax assessments, including the final notices of real property tax delinquencies, issued by the
City of Pasay on the NAIA Pasay properties of the Manila International Airport Authority, except for the portions
that the Manila International Airport Authority has leased to private parties.
1. MIAA is not a government-owned or controlled corporation but a government instrumentality which is exempt
from any kind of tax from the local governments.
- In Manila International Airport Authority v. Court of Appeals (2006 MIAA case), this Court already resolved the
issue of whether the airport lands and buildings of MIAA are exempt from tax under existing laws. The only
difference between the 2006 MIAA case and this case is that the 2006 MIAA case involved airport lands and
buildings located in Paraaque City while this case involved airport lands and buildings located in Pasay City.
- The 2006 MIAA case and this case raised the same threshold issue: whether the local government can impose
real property tax on the airport lands, consisting mostly of the runways, as well as the airport buildings, of MIAA. In
the 2006 MIAA case, this Court held:
- MIAA is not a government-owned or controlled corporation under Section 2(13) of the Introductory
Provisions of the Administrative Code because it is not organized as a stock or non-stock corporation.
Neither is MIAA a government-owned or controlled corporation under Section 16, Article XII of the 1987
Constitution because MIAA is not required to meet the test of economic viability.
- MIAA is a government instrumentality vested with corporate powers and performing essential public
services pursuant to Section 2(10) of the Introductory Provisions of the Administrative Code. As a
government instrumentality, MIAA is not subject to any kind of tax by local governments under Section
133(o) of the Local Government Code. The exception to the exemption in Section 234(a) does not apply to
MIAA because MIAA is not a taxable entity under the Local Government Code. Such exception applies only
if the beneficial use of real property owned by the Republic is given to a taxable entity.
- A close scrutiny of the definition of "government-owned or controlled corporation" in Section 2(13) will show
that MIAA would not fall under such definition. MIAA is a government "instrumentality" that does not qualify as a
"government-owned or controlled corporation." As explained in the 2006 MIAA case:
- A government-owned or controlled corporation must be "organized as a stock or non-stock
corporation." MIAA is not organized as a stock or non-stock corporation. MIAA is not a stock corporation
because it has no capital stock divided into shares. MIAA has no stockholders or voting shares.
- Section 3 of the Corporation Code defines a stock corporation as one whose "capital stock is divided into
shares and authorized to distribute to the holders of such shares dividends." MIAA has capital but it is not
divided into shares of stock. MIAA has no stockholders or voting shares. Hence, MIAA is not a stock
corporation.
- MIAA is also not a non-stock corporation because it has no members. Section 87 of the Corporation
Code defines a non-stock corporation as "one where no part of its income is distributable as dividends to
its members, trustees or officers." A non-stock corporation must have members
- Since MIAA is neither a stock nor a non-stock corporation, MIAA does not qualify as a government-owned or
controlled corporation. MIAA is a government instrumentality vested with corporate powers to perform efficiently
its governmental functions. MIAA is like any other government instrumentality, the only difference is that MIAA is
vested with corporate powers.
- When the law vests in a government instrumentality corporate powers, the instrumentality does not
become a corporation. Unless the government instrumentality is organized as a stock or non-stock
corporation, it remains a government instrumentality exercising not only governmental but also corporate
powers.
- Thus, MIAA exercises the governmental powers of eminent domain, police authority and the levying of
fees and charges. At the same time, MIAA exercises "all the powers of a corporation under the
Corporation Law, insofar as these powers are not inconsistent with the provisions of this Executive Order.
- MIAA is not a government-owned or controlled corporation but a government instrumentality which is exempt
from any kind of tax from the local governments. Indeed, the exercise of the taxing power of local government
units is subject to the limitations enumerated in Section 133 of the Local Government Code.10 Under Section
133(o)11 of the Local Government Code, local government units have no power to tax instrumentalities of the
national government like the MIAA. Hence, MIAA is not liable to pay real property tax for the NAIA Pasay
properties.
2. Furthermore, the airport lands and buildings of MIAA are properties of public dominion intended for public use,
and as such are exempt from real property tax under Section 234(a) of the Local Government Code. However,
under the same provision, if MIAA leases its real property to a taxable person, the specific property leased
becomes subject to real property tax. In this case, only those portions of the NAIA Pasay properties which are
leased to taxable persons like private parties are subject to real property tax by the City of Pasay.

Digested by Loraine Saguinsin (A2015)

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