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Second Division: Republic of The Philippines Court of Tax Appeals Quezon City

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REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES

COURT OF TAX APPEALS


QUEZON CITY

SECOND DIVISION

SOUTH PREMIERE POWER CTA CASE NO. 9337


CORP.,
Petitioner, Members:

CASTANEDA, JR., Chairperson


- versus - CASANOVA, and
MANAHAN, 11.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL Promulgated:


REVENUE, JUL 1 L. 2018
Respondent.

X- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - X

RESOLUTION

CASTANEDA, JR.,~:

For resolution are the following:

1. petitioner's Motion for Partial Reconsideration of


the Decision dated February 27, 2018, filed on
March 8, 2018, with respondent's Opposition Re:
Petitioner's Motion for Partial Reconsideration,
filed on April 5, 2018; and

2. respondent's Motion for Partial Reconsideration


Re: Decision dated 27 February 2018, filed on
March 14, 2018, with petitioner's Opposition to
Respondent's "Motion for Partial
Reconsideration ..... " dated March 14, 2018,
filed on April 16, 2018. 9t-
RESOLUTION
CTA CASE NO. 9337
Page 2 of 11

Both parties seek reconsideration of the Court's Decision


(assailed Decision) 1 promulgated on February 27, 2018, the
dispositive portion of which reads:

"WHEREFORE, the present Petition for Review is


PARTIALLY GRANTED. Accordingly, respondent is
ORDERED TO REFUND or TO ISSUE A TAX CREDIT
CERTIFICATE to petitioner in the aggregate amount of
P1,359,773.48, representing the following amounts:

PENALTIES ERRONEOUSLY AMOUNT


PAID BY PETITIONER
Surcharge p 345,434.50
Interest up to April 30, 2014 989L338.98
Compromise Penalty 25LOOO.OO
TOTAL p 1L359_L773.48

SO ORDERED."2

Petitioner's Motion for Partial Reconsideration

Petitioner argues that the decision in the case of Commissioner


of Internal Revenue vs. Rlinvest Development Corporatiofi3 (Filinvest
case) cannot be given any retroactive application. It claims that the
decision of the Supreme Court in Co vs. Court of AppealS', that
judicial decisions shall be applied prospectively, should be applied in
this case, instead of the ruling of the Supreme Court in Visayas
Geothermal Power Company vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenu&
( Visayas case) and the decisions of this Court in Brewery Properties,
Inc. vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenu(j and San Miguel
Corporation vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue'. It contends that
the Co case specifically deals with the matter of prospectivity and
non-retrospectivity of decisions of the Supreme Court in relation to
Article 4 of the Civil Code, while the Wsayas case deals with the
effect of decisions of the Supreme Court in general.

Moreover, petitioner asserts that in the Rlinvest case, the


Supreme Court did not interpret Section 180 (now Section 179) of tfr-
1 Docket, vol. II, pp. 439-467.
2
Docket, vol. II, p. 465-466.
3 G.R. Nos. 163653 and 167689, July 19, 2011.
4
G.R. No. 100776, October 28, 1993.
5 G.R. No. 197525, June 4, 2014.
6 CTA Case No. 8892, September 30, 2016.
7
CTA Case No. 9007, April 19, 2017.
RESOLUTION
CTA CASE NO. 9337
Page 3 of 11

the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) of 1997, as amended, as


ascertaining "the contemporaneous legislative intent" behind Section
180. The Supreme Court simply applied the said legal provision to
the "instructional letters as well as journal and cash vouchers" by
peremptorily declaring that the said "instructional letters and journal
and cash vouchers" qualified as "loan agreements". Hence,
petitioner argues that the Filinvest case cannot be characterized as
"interpretation of a statute" constituting "part of the law as of the
date it was originally passed" as it did not establish "the
contemporaneous legislative intent" that then Section 180 of the
NIRC supposedly "carried into effect". Consequently, the A/invest
case does not fall within the coverage of the Supreme Court decision
in the Visayascase.

Petitioner also contends that prior to the promulgation of the


Filinvest case, the rule was that intercompany advances covered by
mere inter-office memos were not loan agreements subject to
documentary stamp tax (DST) under the NIRC, on which petitioner
had relied. This rule was embodied, among others, in (a) the
decision of the Court of Appeals in Commissioner of Internal Revenue
vs. APC Group, Inc. 8 ; (b) the decision of the Court of Tax Appeals En
Bane in Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Belle Corporatiotf; (c)
BIR Ruling [DA (C-035) 127-08] dated August 8, 2008; and (d) in the
Resolution of the Supreme Court dated May 17, 2004 in G.R. No.
162185. Petitioner submits that these rulings constitute the previous
doctrine that was overruled in the A/invest decision. Thus, petitioner
concludes that the Filinvestcase cannot be applied retroactively.

Furthermore, petitioner argues that even if the Filinvest


decision may be applied retroactively, the same may not be invoked
against it, as the facts involved in the instant case differ from those
involved in the Filinvestcase.

Petitioner avers that there are two (2) basic requisites that
must exist before DST may be imposed: (1) there must be a
transaction or privilege which is exercised by persons; and (2) this
transaction is evidenced through the execution of specific
instruments. Petitioner points out that respondent has not
controverted that these two (2) requisites must be present; and that
respondent, in imposing the alleged deficiency DST, merely relied on
mere Notes to the Audited Financial Statements (AFS) of petitioner
and its affiliates. Finally, petitioner submits that the Notes to the AFS ~
8 CA-GR No. 69869, November 29, 2002.
9 CTA EB No. 147, October 13, 2006.
RESOLUTION
erA CASE NO. 9337
Page 4 of 11

of petitioner and its affiliates are not debt instruments under Section
179 of the NIRC, as amended.

Respondent opposes petitioner's motion for utter lack of merit.

Respondent contends that the instant Petition for Review


should be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. According to respondent,
petitioner was not able to file its appeal or request for consideration
within thirty (30) days from receipt of the Formal Letter of Demand
on July 30, 2015. Thus, petitioner lost its remedy to contest the
illegality of the tax assessed by respondent.

Moreover, respondent argues that the taxes paid are not


erroneously or illegally collected. Respondent alleges that the
amount of P2,741,511.48 representing Documentary Stamp Tax
(DST) is not an erroneously or illegally collected tax for taxable year
2010 because the period to contest if the same is erroneous or illegal
has already lapsed.

Lastly, respondent states that petitioner is not entitled to


refund of interest, surcharge, and compromise penalty. Respondent
avers that in the Filinvest case, the Supreme Court affirmed the
imposition of surcharge interest and even the compromise penalty.

Petitioner's Motion for Partial Reconsideration is bereft of merit.

It must be noted that the Supreme Court in the Visayas case


recognized the prospective application of judicial decisions, but
qualifies that the prospective application shall only apply if there is a
prior ruling that was overruled by new doctrine. In that case, the
new doctrine may have to be applied prospectively in favor of parties
who have relied on the old doctrine and have acted in good faith.

In the present case, contrary to petitioner's assertion, there is


no previous doctrine that was overruled by the doctrine in the
Filinvest case. Hence, the interpretation placed upon Section 180 of
the NIRC (now Section 179 of the NIRC of 1997, as amended) by the
Supreme Court in the Filinvestcase constitutes part of the NIRC as of
the date it was originally passed since it establishes the
contemporaneous legislative intent of the law, as held by this Court
in the assailed Decision, to wit: ~
RESOLUTION
CTA CASE NO. 9337
Page 5 of 11

"In the case of Visayas Geothermal Power Company


vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , it was held that
the Supreme Court's interpretation of a statute
constitutes part of the law as of the date it was originally
passed since it establishes the contemporaneous
legislative intent of the law, to wit:

Article 8 of the Civil Code provides that


judicial decisions applying or interpreting the
law shall form part of the legal system of the
Philippines and shall have the force of law.
The interpretation placed upon a law by a
competent court establishes the
contemporaneous legislative intent of the law.
Thus, such interpretation constitutes a part of
the law as of the date the statute is enacted.
It is only when a prior ruling of the Court is
overruled, and a different view adopted, that
the new doctrine may have to be applied
prospectively in favor of parties who have
relied on the old doctrine and have acted in
good faith."

Considering that the interpretation of Section 180 of the NIRC


(now Section 179 of the NIRC of 1997, as amended) in the Filinvest
case was deemed part of the NIRC as of December 23, 1994 up to
the present time, the same may therefore be applied to this case
without violating the principle on non-retroactivity of laws and
rulings.

The Court finds no merit to petitioner's assertion that there was


a previous doctrine that was overruled by the doctrine in the A/invest
case.

It must be noted that the decisions cited by petitioner were


those issued by the Court of Appeals (CA) and Court of Tax Appeals
(CTA) and not by the Supreme Court. Article 8 of the Civil Code
provides that judicial decisions applying or interpreting the law shall
form part of the legal system of the Philippines and shall have the
force of law. ~
RESOLUTION
CTA CASE NO. 9337
Page 6 of 11

Moreover, in the case of Government Service Insurance System


vs. Leo L. Cadit- 0 , the Supreme Court stressed that judicial decisions
which form part of our legal system are only the decisions of the
Supreme Court.

CTA or CA decisions are specific rulings applicable only to the


parties to the case and not to the public. CTA or CA decisions, unlike
those of the Supreme Court, do not form part of the law of the land.
Decisions of lower courts do not have any value as precedents and
are not binding on the Supreme Court. Only decisions of the
Supreme Court constitute binding precedents, forming part of the
Philippine legal system. 11

Based on the foregoing, petitioner's cited CA and CTA decisions


cannot be considered as previous doctrines and therefore have no
value as precedents. Thus, there was no previous doctrine overruled
by the Filinvestcase.

There being no doctrine or jurisprudence being overruled, the


interpretation of the Supreme Court in the A/invest case on Section
180 of the NIRC constitutes part thereof as of the date it was
originally passed, i.e., on December 23, 1994, as stated in the
assailed Decision. Consequently, the Filinvestcase cannot be applied
prospectively.

Finally, there is also no merit to petitioner's argument that the


decision in the Filinvest case will not cover the advances subject of
this case, as the BIR relied on mere Notes in the Audited Financial
Statements of petitioner and/or its affiliates which are not debt
instruments under Section 179 of the NIRC, as amended.

The foregoing arguments of petitioner has already been


addressed in the assailed Decision, as follows:

"Petitioner argues that under Section 179 of the Tax


Code, as amended, DST may not be imposed on
advances in the absence of a debt instrument evidencing
such advances.~

1
0G.R. No. 154093, July 8, 2003.
11
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. San Roque Power Corporation, G.R. No. 187485,
October 8, 2013, Taganito Mining Corporation vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No.
196113, October 8, 2013, Phi/ex Mining Corporation vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R.
No. 197156, October 8, 2013.
RESOLUTION
CTA CASE NO. 9337
Page 7 of 11

A DST 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. The DST is actually an
excise tax, because it is imposed on the
transaction rather than on the document. It is
levied on the exercise by persons of privileges
conferred by law.

From the foregoing, there is no basis for


petitioner's assertion that if there is no document
or if the document itself does not in any way
manifest such borrowing and lending transaction,
then DST on debt instruments under Section 179
of the NIRC of 1997, as amended, cannot be
applied. DST may be imposed even in the absence
of debt instrument, as long as the transactions are
clearly established."

Considering the foregoing, the Court finds no merit in


petitioner's Motion for Partial Reconsideration.

Respondent's Motion for Partial Reconsideration

Respondent moves for the partial reconsideration of the


assailed Decision on the ground that the Court erred in ruling that
petitioner is not liable to pay interest, surcharge and compromise
penalty.

According to respondent, petitioner is not entitled to its claim


for refund for the following reasons:

1. The instant petition should be dismissed for lack of


jurisdiction;
2. The taxes paid are not erroneously or illegally
collected which is the proper subject of an action for
refund; and
3. Petitioner is not entitled to refund of interest,
surcharge, and compromise penalty.

Petitioner opposes respondent's motion for partial


reconsideration on the following grounds: 7-t-
RESOLUTION
CTA CASE NO. 9337
Page 8 of 11

1. Respondent is precluded from filing the instant motion for


partial reconsideration on the portion of the assailed
Decision which ordered respondent to refund or issue to
petitioner a tax credit certificate in the amount of
P1,359,773.48, representing surcharge, interest and
compromise penalty paid by petitioner;
2. The grounds raised by respondent in his motion for partial
reconsideration had already been raised in his Answer to
the Petition for Review in this case and has already been
considered by the Court in the assailed Decision; and
3. There is no merit in the arguments raised by the
respondent in his motion for partial reconsideration.

Respondent's Motion for Partial Reconsideration is likewise


bereft of merit.

The first two arguments raised by respondent in his Motion for


Partial Reconsideration are mere rehash of the arguments previously
raised in his Answer which have already been duly considered and
extensively discussed in the assailed Decision.

It must be clarified that 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. 12

In the assailed Decision, the Court, in essence, ruled that there


is no "erroneous or illegal tax" which may be refunded, since the
subject documentary stamp tax was correctly assessed and collected.
However, as regards the interest, surcharge, and compromise
penalty, the Court held that the same must be refunded since
petitioner is not liable to pay the same.

As previously held by. this Court in the case of Brewery


Properties, Inc. vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue13, while it is
true that the taxpayer's failure to file a petition for review with this
Court within the statutory period renders the disputed assessment
final, executory and demandable, thereby precluding petitioner from
interposing the defenses of legality or validity of the assessment and J2-

12
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation, G.R. No. 188497,
April 25, 2012.
13
CTA Case No. 8892, Resolution dated February 27, 2017.
RESOLUTION
CfA CASE NO. 9337
Page 9 of 11

prescription of the Government's right to assess 14, there is no law


prohibiting the refund of what has been paid by virtue of the said
assessment. Thus, what the law does not prohibit, it allows. 15

Section 229 of the NIRC of 1997, as amended, states that any


penalty claimed to have been excessively or in any manner
wrongfully collected may be a subject of a claim for refund, to wit:

"SEC. 229. 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
excessively 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 filed


after the expiration of two (2) 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 supplied)

In the assailed Decision, the Court held that petitioner is not


liable to pay interest, surcharge, and compromise penalty, to wit:

"In the case of Commissioner of Internal Revenue


vs. St Luke's Medical Center, Inc., the Supreme Court
held that good faith and honest belief that one is not
subject to tax on the basis of previous interpretation of
government agencies tasked to implement the tax law,~

14
Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue/ G.R. No. 168498,
April 24, 2007.
15
In the Matter of the Adoption of Stephanie Nathy Astorga Garcia/ Honorato B. Catindig, G.R.
No. 148311, March 31, 2005.
RESOLUTION
CTA CASE NO. 9337
Page 10 of 11

are sufficient justification to delete the imposition of


surcharges and interest.

An examination of petitioner's claim for refund


shows that at the time the advances were made in 2010,
petitioner relied on prevailing court decisions and
previous BIR issuances to the effect that inter-company
loans and advances covered by inter-office memoranda
were not loan agreements subject to DST. Petitioner
relied on the cases of Commissioner of Internal Revenue
vs. APC Group, Inc. and Commissioner of Internal
Revenue vs. Belle Corporation and on BIR Ruling [DA (C-
035) 127-2008]55 dated August 8, 2008, BIR Ruling No.
116-98 dated July 30, 1998, and BIR Ruling No. DAO 16-
2008 dated January 17, 2008. Hence, petitioner's reliance
on the said cases and BIR issuances justifies the non-
imposition of surcharges and interest.

Petitioner is also not subject to compromise penalty


since this penalty is by its nature, mutual in essence. The
payment made under protest by petitioner could only
mean that there was no agreement that had been
reached between the parties. In the case of De San
Agustin vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the
Supreme Court held that:

The Court of Tax Appeals correctly held


that the compromise penalty of P20,000.00
could not be imposed on petitioner, a
compromise being, by its nature, mutual in
essence. The payment made under protest by
petitioner could only signify that there was no
agreement that had effectively been reached
between the parties.

Since petitioner disputed respondent's assessment


of compromise penalty, the same cannot be imposed
upon it. "16

Thus, the interest, surcharge, and compromise penalty were


wrongfully collected by respondent. Petitioner is therefore entitled to
the refund of interest, surcharge, and compromise penalty. }k--

16
Assailed Decision, docket, vol. II, pp. 464-465.
RESOLUTION
CTA CASE NO. 9337
Page 11 of 11

Finally, with respect to the allegation of respondent on the


imposition of compromise penalties based on Revenue Memorandum
Order (RMO) No. 7-2015, in relation to RMO No. 1-90, the Court finds
that the same does not apply in this case.

A perusal of RMO No. 7-2015, in relation to RMO No. 1-90,


shows that the compromise penalties provided therein refers to
criminal violations of the provision of NIRC of 1997, as amended, and
that the same are mere amounts suggested in settlement of criminal
liability which may not therefore be imposed or exacted on the
taxpayer. Since the instant case does not involve criminal violations
of the NIRC, and that petitioner did not agree to settle its tax liability,
the compromise penalty assessed should not have been imposed and
collected. Thus, the same was properly refunded to petitioner.

In view of the foregoing, the Court finds no cogent reason to


reverse or modify the assailed Decision promulgated on February 27,
2018.

WHEREFORE, premises considered, petitioner's Motion for


Partial Reconsideration of the Decision dated February 27,
2018 and respondent's Motion for Partial Reconsideration Re:
Decision dated 27 February 2018 are both DENIED for lack of
merit.

SO ORDERED.

Q ~~ c -G.d"-..-..1A~ <1.
JijANITO C. CASTAN Eo(' JR.
Associate Justice

WE CONCUR:

~· ~-;-..~~
CAESAR A. CASANOVA CATHERINE T. MANAHAN
Associate Justice Associate Justice

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