Silkair vs. Cir
Silkair vs. Cir
Silkair vs. Cir
, petitioner,
vs.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, respondent.
G.R. No. 173594, February 6, 2008
Fatcs:
Silkair (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. (Silkair), a corporation organized under the laws of
Singapore which has a Philippine representative office, is an online international air
carrier operating the Singapore-Cebu-Davao-Singapore, Singapore-Davao-Cebu-
Singapore, and Singapore-Cebu-Singapore routes.
Silkair filed with the BIR a written application for the refund of P4,567,450.79 excise
taxes it claimed to have paid on its purchases of jet fuel from Petron Corporation.
As the BIR had not yet acted on the application, Silkair filed a Petition for Review before
the Court of Tax Appeals.
CIR opposed the petition alleging that Silkair failed to prove that the sale of the
petroleum products was directly made from a domestic oil company to the international
carrier. The excise tax on petroleum products is the direct liability of the
manufacturer/producer, and when added to the cost of the goods sold to the buyer, it is no
longer a tax but part of the price which the buyer has to pay to obtain the article.
The CTA denied Silkairs Petition on the ground that as the excise tax was imposed on
Petron Corporation as the manufacturer of petroleum products, any claim for refund
should be filed by the latter; and where the burden of tax is shifted to the purchaser, the
amount passed on to it is no longer a tax but becomes an added cost of the goods
purchased. Petitioner cannot be considered as the taxpayer because it merely shouldered
the burden of the excise tax and not the excise tax itself.
Issue:
Whether or not Silkair is the proper party to claim for the refund or tax credit
Ruling:
Silkair bases its claim for refund or tax credit on Section 135 (b) of the NIRC that Petroleum
Products sold to International Carriers and Exempt Entities of Agencies are exempt from excise
Tax. And Article 4(2) of the Air Transport Agreement between the Philippines and the Singapore
which reads Fuel, lubricants, spare parts, regular equipment and aircraft stores introduced into,
or taken on board aircraft in the territory of one Contracting party by, or on behalf of, a
designated airline of the other Contracting Party and intended solely for use in the operation of
the agreed services shall, with the exception of charges corresponding to the service performed,
be exempt from the same customs duties, inspection fees and other duties or taxes imposed in the
territories of the first Contracting Party x x x.
The proper party to question, or seek a refund of, an indirect tax is the statutory
taxpayer, the person on whom the tax is imposed by law and who paid the same even if he
shifts the burden thereof to another.
Section 130 (A) (2) of the NIRC provides that "[u]nless otherwise specifically allowed,
the return shall be filed and the excise tax paid by the manufacturer or producer before removal
of domestic products from place of production." Thus, Petron Corporation, not Silkair, is the
statutory taxpayer which is entitled to claim a refund.
Even if Petron Corporation passed on to Silkair the burden of the tax, the additional
amount billed to Silkair for jet fuel is not a tax but part of the price which Silkair had to
pay as a purchaser.
The exemption granted under Section 135 (b) of the NIRC of 1997 and Article 4(2) of the
Air Transport Agreement between Philippines and Singapore cannot, without a clear showing of
legislative intent, be construed as including indirect taxes. Statutes granting tax exemptions must
be construed in strictissimi juris against the taxpayer and liberally in favor of the taxing
authority, and if an exemption is found to exist, it must not be enlarged by construction.