Abakada v. Ermita
Abakada v. Ermita
Abakada v. Ermita
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* EN BANC.
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from income taxes and value-added taxes. As these house bills were
transmitted to the Senate, the latter, approaching the measures
from the point of national perspective, can introduce amendments
within the purposes of those bills. It can provide for ways that
would soften the impact of the VAT measure on the consumer, i.e.,
by distributing the burden across all sectors instead of putting it
entirely on the shoulders of the consumers.
Same; Same; Same; Germaneness Rule; The amendments made
on provisions in the tax on income of corporations are germane to the
purpose of the house bills which is to raise revenues for the
government, and the sections referring to other percentage and excise
taxes are germane to the reforms to the VAT system, as these sections
would cushion the effects of VAT on consumers.·As the Court has
said, the Senate can propose amendments and in fact, the
amendments made on provisions in the tax on income of
corporations are germane to the purpose of the house bills which is
to raise revenues for the government. Likewise, the Court finds the
sections referring to other percentage and excise taxes germane to
the reforms to the VAT system, as these sections would cushion the
effects of VAT on consumers. Considering that certain goods and
services which were subject to percentage tax and excise tax would
no longer be VAT-exempt, the consumer would be burdened more as
they would be paying the VAT in addition to these taxes. Thus,
there is a need to amend these sections to soften the impact of VAT.
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tality of his own judgment and not through the intervening mind of
another.
Same; Same; Exception to the Non-Delegation of Legislative
Powers; Words and Phrases; The powers which Congress is
prohibited from delegating are those which are strictly, or inherently
and exclusively, legislative·appertaining exclusively to the
legislative department; Purely legislative power has been described
as the authority to make a complete law·complete as to the time
when it shall take effect and as to whom it shall be applicable·and
to determine the expediency of its enactment; It is the nature of the
power, and not the liability of its use or the manner of its exercise,
which determines the validity of its delegation.·With respect to the
Legislature, Section 1 of Article VI of the Constitution provides that
„the Legislative power shall be vested in the Congress of the
Philippines which shall consist of a Senate and a House of
Representatives.‰ The powers which Congress is prohibited from
delegating are those which are strictly, or inherently and
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be done, who must do it, and what is the scope of his authority; in
our complex economy that is frequently the only way in which the
legislative process can go forward.
Same; Same; Taxation; Value-Added Tax; The intent and will to
increase the VAT rate to 12% came from Congress and the task of the
President is to simply execute the legislative policy.·As to the
argument of petitioners ABAKADA GURO Party List, et al. that
delegating to the President the legislative power to tax is contrary
to the principle of republicanism, the same deserves scant
consideration. Congress did not delegate the power to tax but the
mere im-
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plementation of the law. The intent and will to increase the VAT
rate to 12% came from Congress and the task of the President is to
simply execute the legislative policy. That Congress chose to do so in
such a manner is not within the province of the Court to inquire
into, its task being to interpret the law.
Judicial Review; The Court does not rule on allegations which
are manifestly conjectural, as these may not exist at all·the Court
deals with facts, not fancies, on realities, not appearances.·The
insinuation by petitioners Pimentel, et al. that the President has
ample powers to cause, influence or create the conditions to bring
about either or both the conditions precedent does not deserve any
merit as this argument is highly speculative. The Court does not
rule on allegations which are manifestly conjectural, as these may
not exist at all. The Court deals with facts, not fancies; on realities,
not appearances. When the Court acts on appearances instead of
realities, justice and law will be short-lived.
Same; Separation of Powers; Statutory Construction; Rewriting
the law is a forbidden ground that only Congress may tread upon.·
Under the common provisos of Sections 4, 5 and 6 of R.A. No. 9337,
if any of the two conditions set forth therein are satisfied, the
President shall increase the VAT rate to 12%. The provisions of the
law are clear. It does not provide for a return to the 10% rate nor
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Same; Same; Due Process; Vested Rights; The input tax is not a
property or a property right within the constitutional purview of the
due process clause·a VAT-registered personÊs entitlement to the
creditable input tax is a mere statutory privilege; The right to credit
input tax as against the output tax is clearly a privilege created by
law, a privilege that also the law can remove or limit; The
distinction between statutory privileges and vested rights must be
borne in mind for persons have no vested rights in statutory
privileges.·The input tax is not a property or a property right
within the constitutional purview of the due process clause. A VAT-
registered personÊs entitlement to the creditable input tax is a mere
statutory privilege. The distinction between statutory privileges
and vested rights must be borne in mind for persons have no vested
rights in statutory privileges. The state may change or take away
rights, which were created by the law of the state, although it may
not take away property, which was vested by virtue of such rights.
Under the previous system of single-stage taxation, taxes paid at
every level of distribution are not recoverable from the taxes
payable, although it becomes part of the cost, which is deductible
from the gross revenue. When Pres. Aquino issued E.O. No. 273
imposing a 10% multi-stage tax on all sales, it was then that the
crediting of the input tax paid on purchase or importation of goods
and services by VAT-registered persons against the output tax was
introduced. This was adopted by the Expanded VAT Law (R.A. No.
7716), and The Tax Reform Act of 1997 (R.A. No. 8424). The right to
credit input tax as against the output tax is clearly a privilege
created by law, a privilege that also the law can remove, or in this
case, limit.
Same; Same; Congress admitted that the spread-out of the
creditable input tax in this case amounts to a 4-year interest-free
loan to the government; For whatever is the purpose of the 60-month
amortization, this involves executive economic policy and legislative
wisdom in which the Court cannot intervene.·It is worth
mentioning that Congress admitted that the spread-out of the
creditable input tax in this case amounts to a 4-year interest-free
loan to the government. In the same breath, Congress also justified
its move by saying that the provision was designed to raise an
annual revenue of 22.6 billion. The legislature also dispelled the
fear that the provision will fend off foreign investments, saying that
foreign investors have other tax incentives provided by law, and
citing the case of China, where despite a 17.5% non-creditable VAT,
foreign investments were not
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of the income tax due from the payee on the said income. The
liability for payment of the tax rests primarily on the payor as a
withholding agent. Thus, in case of his failure to withhold the tax or
in case of underwithholding, the deficiency tax shall be collected
from the payor/withholding agent. . . . (B) Creditable Withholding
Tax.·Under the creditable withholding tax system, taxes withheld
on certain income payments are intended to equal or at least
approximate the tax due of the payee on said income. . . . Taxes
withheld on income payments covered by the expanded withholding
tax (referred to in Sec. 2.57.2 of these regulations) and
compensation income (referred to in Sec. 2.78 also of these
regulations) are creditable in nature. As applied to value-added tax,
this means that taxable transactions with the government are
subject to a 5% rate, which constitutes as full payment of the tax
payable on the transaction. This represents the net VAT payable of
the seller. The other 5% effectively accounts for the standard input
VAT (deemed input VAT), in lieu of the actual input VAT directly or
attributable to the taxable transaction.
Same; Same; It is clear that Congress intended to treat
differently transactions with the government; Since it has not been
shown that the class subject to the final 5% final withholding tax
has been unreasonably narrowed, there is no reason to invalidate the
provision.·The Court need not explore the rationale behind the
provision. It is clear that Congress intended to treat differently
taxable transactions with the government. This is supported by the
fact that under the old provision, the 5% tax withheld by the
government remains creditable against the tax liability of the seller
or contractor, to wit: SEC. 114. Return and Payment of Value-added
Tax.·(C) Withholding of Creditable Value-added Tax.·The
Government or any of its political subdivisions, instrumentalities or
agencies, including government-owned or controlled corporations
(GOCCs) shall, before making payment on account of each purchase
of goods from sellers and services rendered by contractors which are
subject to the value-added tax imposed in Sections 106 and 108 of
this Code, deduct and withhold the value-added tax due at the rate
of three percent (3%) of the gross payment for the purchase of goods
and six percent (6%) on gross receipts for services rendered by
contractors on every sale or installment payment which shall be
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kinds of property of the same class shall be taxed at the same rate.
Different articles may be taxed at different amounts provided that
the rate is uniform on the same class everywhere with all people at
all times. In this case, the tax law is uniform as it provides a
standard rate of 0% or 10% (or 12%) on all goods and services.
Sections 4, 5 and 6 of R.A. No. 9337, amending Sections 106, 107
and 108, respectively, of the NIRC, provide for a rate of 10% (or
12%) on sale of goods and properties, importation of goods, and sale
of services and use or lease of properties. These same sections also
provide for a 0% rate on certain sales and transaction. Neither does
the law make any distinction as to the type of industry or trade that
will bear the 70% limitation on the creditable input tax, 5-year
amortization of input tax paid on purchase of capital goods or the
5% final withholding tax by the government. It must be stressed
that the rule of uniform taxation does not deprive Congress of the
power to classify subjects of taxation, and only demands uniformity
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to pay. This principle was also lifted from Adam SmithÊs Canons of
Taxation, and it states: I. The subjects of every state ought to
contribute towards the support of the government, as nearly as
possible, in proportion to their respective abilities; that is, in
proportion to the revenue which they respectively enjoy under the
protection of the state. Taxation is progressive when its rate goes up
depending on the resources of the person affected.
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mation of Art. VIII, §17 (1) of the 1973 Constitution from which the
present Art. VI, §28 (1) was taken. Sales taxes are also regressive.
Resort to indirect taxes should be minimized but not avoided
entirely because it is difficult, if not impossible, to avoid them by
imposing such taxes according to the taxpayers' ability to pay. In
the case of the VAT, the law minimizes the regressive effects of this
imposition by providing for zero rating of certain transactions (R.A.
No. 7716, §3, amending §102 (b) of the NIRC), while granting
exemptions to other transactions. (R.A. No. 7716, §4 amending §103
of the NIRC)
Same; Same; Judicial Review; The Court cannot strike down a
law as unconstitutional simply because of its yokes.·It has been
said that taxes are the lifeblood of the government. In this case, it is
just an enema, a first-aid measure to resuscitate an economy in
distress. The Court is neither blind nor is it turning a deaf ear on
the plight of the masses. But it does not have the panacea for the
malady that the law seeks to remedy. As in other cases, the Court
cannot strike down a law as unconstitutional simply because of its
yokes. Let us not be overly influenced by the plea that for every
wrong there is a remedy, and that the judiciary should stand ready
to afford relief. There are undoubtedly many wrongs the judicature
may not correct, for instance, those involving political questions. . . .
Let us likewise disabuse our minds from the notion that the
judiciary is the repository of remedies for all political or social ills;
We should not forget that the Constitution has judiciously allocated
the powers of government to three distinct and separate
compartments; and that judicial interpretation has tended to the
preservation of the independence of the three, and a zealous regard
of the prerogatives of each, knowing full well that one is not the
guardian of the others and that, for official wrong-doing, each may
be brought to account, either by impeachment, trial or by the ballot
box.
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are „not immediately involved are not thereby thrown open for a judicial
determination of constitutionality.‰
Same; Same; Same; Taxation; The power to adjust the tax rate given
to the President is futuristic and may or may not be exercised·the Court
is therefore beseeched to render a conjectural judgment based on
hypothetical facts.·It is manifest that the constitutional challenge to
sections 4 to 6 of R.A. No. 9337 cannot hurdle the requirement of
ripeness. These sections give the President the power to raise the VAT rate
to 12% on January 1, 2006 upon satisfaction of certain fact-based
conditions. We are not endowed with the infallible gift of prophesy to
know whether these conditions are certain to happen. The power to
adjust the tax rate given to the President is futuristic and may or may
not be exercised. The Court is therefore beseeched to render a conjectural
judgment based on hypothetical facts. Such a supplication has to be
rejected.
Congress; Bicameral Conference Committee; A Bicameral Conference
Committee has limited powers and cannot be allowed to act as if it were a
„third house‰ of Congress.·With due respect, I submit that the most
important constitutional issue posed by the petitions at bar relates to the
parameters of power of a Bicameral Conference Committee. Most of the
issues in the petitions at bar arose because the Bicameral Conference
Committee concerned exercised powers that went beyond reconciling the
differences between Senate Bill No. 1950 and House Bill Nos. 3705 and
3555. In Tolentino v. Secretary of Finance, I ventured the view that a
Bicameral Conference Committee has limited powers and cannot be
allowed to act as if it were a „third house‰ of Congress. I further warned
that unless its roving powers are reigned in, a Bicameral Conference
Committee can wreck the lawmaking process which is a cornerstone of
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„third‰ chamber of Congress. Under the clear rules of both the Senate
and House, its power can go no further than settling differences in their
bills or joint resolutions. Sections 88 and 89, Rule XIV of the Rules of the
House of Representatives provide as follows: * * * Under both rules, it is
obvious that a Bicameral Conference Committee is a mere agent of the
House or the Senate with limited powers. The House contingent in the
Committee cannot, on its own, settle differences which are substantial in
character. If it is confronted with substantial differences, it has to go
back to the chamber that created it „for the latterÊs appropriate action.‰
In other words, it must take the proper instructions from the chambers
that created it. It cannot exercise its unbridled discretion. Where there is
no difference between the bills, it cannot make any change. Where the
difference is substantial, it has to return to the chamber of its origin and
ask for appropriate instructions. It ought to be indubitable that it cannot
create a new law, i.e., that which has never been discussed in either
chamber of Congress. Its parameters of power are not porous, for they are
hedged by the clear limitation that its only power is to settle differences
in bills and joint resolutions of the two chambers of Congress.
are entirely new and extraneous concepts which fall beyond the median
thereof. They transgress the limits of the Bicameral Conference
CommitteeÊs authority and must be struck down. I cannot therefore
subscribe to the thesis of the majority that „the changes introduced by
the Bicameral Conference Committee on disagreeing provisions were
meant only to reconcile and harmonize the disagreeing provisions for it
did not inject any idea or intent that is wholly foreign to the subject
embraced by the original provisions.‰ Same; Same; Germaneness Rule; It
is high time to re-examine the test of germaneness proffered in Tolentino v.
Secretary of Finance, 235 SCRA 630 (1994)·the test of germaneness is
overly broad and is the fountainhead of mischief for it allows the
Bicameral Conference Committee to change provisions in the bills of the
House and the
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Senate when they are not even in disagreement; The Constitution did not
establish a Bicameral Conference Committee that can act as a „third
house‰ of Congress with super veto power over bills passed by the Senate
and the House.·The majority further defends the constitutionality of the
above provisions by holding that „all the changes or modifications were
germane to subjects of the provisions referred to it for reconciliation.‰
With due respect, it is high time to re-examine the test of germaneness
proffered in Tolentino. The test of germaneness is overly broad and is the
fountainhead of mischief for it allows the Bicameral Conference
Committee to change provisions in the bills of the House and the Senate
when they are not even in disagreement. Worse still, it enables the
Committee to introduce amendments which are entirely new and have
not previously passed through the coils of scrutiny of the members of
both houses. The Constitution did not establish a Bicameral Conference
Committee that can act as a „third house‰ of Congress with super veto
power over bills passed by the Senate and the House. We cannot concede
that super veto power without wrecking the delicate architecture of
legislative power so carefully laid down in our Constitution. The clear
intent of our fundamental law is to install a lawmaking structure
composed only of two houses whose members would thoroughly debate
proposed legislations in representation of the will of their respective
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news that our debt payments for the year 2006 will exceed Pph1 billion
daily for interest alone. Experts underscore some factors that will further
drive up the debt service expenses such as the devaluation of the peso,
credit downgrades and a spike in interest rates. But no doomsday
scenario will ever justify the thrashing of the Constitution. The
Constitution is meant to be our rule both in good times as in bad times. It
is the CourtÊs uncompromising obligation to defend the Constitution at
all times lest it be condemned as an irrelevant relic.
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alter ego of Congress, but of the President.·I concur with the ponencia in
that there was no undue delegation of legislative power in the increase
from 10 percent to 12 percent of the VAT rate. I respectfully disagree,
however, with the statements therein that, first, the secretary of finance
is „acting as the agent of the legislative department‰ or an „agent of
Congress‰ in determining and declaring the event upon which its
expressed will is to take effect; and, second, that the secretaryÊs
personality „is in reality but a projection of that of Con-gress.‰ The
secretary of finance is not an alter ego of Congress, but of the President.
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Same; Same; Unlike the laws of physical science, the VAT system can
always be modified to suit modern fiscal demands.·It is contended that
the VAT should be proportional in nature. I submit that this
proportionality pertains to the rate imposable, not the credit allowable.
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a bill becomes a law, it must pass three readings. Hence, the ponenciaÊs
submission that despite its limited authority, the Bicameral Conference
Committee could „compromise the disagreeing provisions‰ by
substituting it with its own version·clearly violate the three-reading
requirement, as the committeeÊs version would no longer undergo the
same since it would be immediately put into vote by the respective
houses. In effect, it is not a bill that was passed by the entire Congress
but by the members of the ad hoc committee only, which of course is
constitutionally infirm. I disagree that the no-amendment rule referred
only to „the procedure to be followed by each house of Congress with
regard to bills initiated in each of said respective houses‰ because it
would relegate the no-amendment rule to a mere rule of procedure. To
my mind, the no-amendment rule should be construed as prohibiting the
Bicameral Conference Committee from introducing amendments and
modifications to non-disagreeing provisions of the House and Senate
bills. In sum, the committee could only either adopt the version of the
House bill or the Senate bill, or adopt neither. As Justice Reynato S.
Puno said in his Dissenting Opinion in Tolentino v. Secretary of Finance,
there is absolutely no legal warrant for the bold submission that a
Bicameral Conference Committee possesses the power to add/delete
provisions in bills already approved on third reading by both Houses or
an ex post veto power.
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bearing and the benefits they need.‰ Also, this set-up provides security
against the abuse of power. As Chief Justice Marshall said: „In imposing
a tax, the legislature acts upon its constituents. The power may be
abused; but the interest, wisdom, and justice of the representative body,
and its relations with its constituents, furnish a sufficient security.‰
Consequently, Section 24, Article VI of our Constitution enshrined the
principle of „no taxation without representation‰ by providing that „all . . .
revenue bills . . . shall originate exclusively in the House of
Representatives, but the Senate may propose or concur with
amendments.‰ This provision generally confines the power of taxation to
the Legislature.
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ers of the Constitution is to permit the delegation of the power to fix tax
rates or VAT rates to the President, such could have been easily achieved
by the mere inclusion of the term „tax rates‰ or „VAT rates‰ in the
enumeration. It is a dictum in statutory construction that what is
expressed puts an end to what is implied. Expressium facit cessare
tacitum. This is a derivative of the more familiar maxim express
mention is implied exclusion or expressio unius est exclusio alterius.
Considering that Section 28 (2), Article VI expressly speaks only of „tariff
rates, import and export quotas, tonnage and wharfage dues and other
duties and imposts,‰ by no stretch of imagination can this enumeration
be extended to include the VAT.
Same; Same; Same; Same; Same; Control Power; The two conditions
set forth by law would have been sufficient had it not been for the fact that
the President, being at the helm of the entire officialdom, has more than
enough power of control to bring about the existence of such conditions·
that the PresidentÊs exercise of an authority is practically within her
control is tantamount to giving no conditions at all.·At first glance, the
two conditions may appear to be definite standards sufficient to guide the
President. However, to my mind, they are ineffectual and malleable as
they give the President ample opportunity to exercise her authority in
arbitrary and discretionary fashion. The two conditions set forth by law
would have been sufficient had it not been for the fact that the President,
being at the helm of the entire officialdom, has more than enough power
of control to bring about the existence of such conditions. Obviously, R.A.
No. 9337 allows the President to determine for herself whether the VAT
rate shall be increased or not at all. The fulfillment of the conditions is
entirely placed in her hands. If she wishes to increase the VAT rate, all
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begin or start solely and only in the House. Not the Senate. Not both
Chambers of Congress. But there is more to it than that. It also means
that „an act for taxation must pass the House first.‰ It is no consequence
what amendments the Senate adds. A perusal of the legislative history of
R.A. No. 9337 shows that it did not „exclusively originate‰ from the House
of Representatives.
Same; Same; The Senate in passing Senate Bill No. 1950, a tax
measure, merely took into account House Bills No. 3555 and 3705, but did
not concur with or amend either or both bills.·Senate Bill No. 1950 is
not based on any bill passed by the House of Representatives. It has a
legislative identity and existence separate and apart from House Bills
No. 3555 and 3705. Instead of concurring or proposing amendments,
Senate Bill No. 1950 merely „takes into consideration‰ the two House
Bills. To take into consideration means „to take into account.‰
Consideration, in this sense, means „deliberation, attention, observation
or contemplation. Simply put, the Senate in passing Senate Bill No.
1950, a tax measure, merely took into account House Bills No. 3555 and
3705, but did not concur with or amend either or both bills. As a matter
of fact, it did not even take these two House Bills as a frame of reference.
In Tolentino, the majority subscribed to the view that Senate may amend
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that the Senate could not, without violating the germaneness rule and
the principle of „exclusive origination,‰ propose tax matters not included
in the House Bills.
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ture to guard against the consequences of its own future passions, myopia,
or herd behavior.·It is well to recall the rationale for the „no-
amendment rule‰ and the „three-reading rule‰ in Article VI, Section 26(2)
of the Constitution. The proscription on amendments upon the last
reading is intended to subject all bills and their amendments to intensive
deliberation by the legislators and the ample ventilation of issues to
afford the public an opportunity to express their opinions or objections
thereon. Analogously, it is said that the „three-reading rule‰ operates „as
a self-binding mechanism that allows the legislature to guard against the
consequences of its own future passions, myopia, or herd behavior. By
requiring that bills be read and debated on successive days, legislature
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and certain to occur, effective January 1, 2006. All that the President will
do is state which of the two conditions occurred and thereupon
implement the rate increase.
Same; Germaneness Rule; I would rather give the necessary leeway to
Congress, as long as the changes are germane to the bill being changed,
the bill which originated from the House of Representatives, and these are
so, since these were precisely the mitigating measures that go hand-on-
hand with E-VAT, and are, therefore, essential·and hopefully sufficient·
means to enable our people to bear the sacrifices they are being asked to
make; The provisions on corporate income taxes, which are not germane to
the E-VAT law, are not found in the Senate and House bills.·The
introduction of the mitigating or cushioning measures through the
Senate or through the Bicameral Conference Committee, is also being
questioned by petitioners as unconstitutional for violating the rule
against amendments after third reading and the rule that tax measures
must originate exclusively in the House of Representatives (Art. VI, Secs.
24 and 26 [2], Constitution). For my part, I would rather give the
necessary leeway to Congress, as long as the changes are germane to the
bill being changed, the bill which originated from the House of
Representatives, and these are so, since these were precisely the
mitigating measures that go hand-on-hand with the E-VAT, and are,
therefore, essential·and hopefully sufficient·means to enable our
people to bear the sacrifices they are being asked to make. Such an
approach is in accordance with the Enrolled Bill Doctrine that is the
prevailing rule in this jurisdiction. (Tolentino v. Secretary of Finance, 249
SCRA 628 [1994]). The exceptions I find are the provisions on corporate
income taxes, which are not germane to the E-VAT law, and are not found
in the Senate and House bills.
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Same; Same; Same; The deletion of the two disparate „no pass on‰
provisions which were approved by the House in one instance, and only by
the Senate in the other, remains in the sphere of compromise that
ultimately guides the approval of the final version.·I also offer this brief
comment regarding the deletion of the so-called „no pass on‰ provisions,
which several of my colleagues deem unconstitutional. Both the House
and Senate Bills contained these provisions that would prohibit the
seller/producer from passing on the cost of the VAT payments to the
consumers. However, an examination of the said bills reveal that the „no
pass on‰ provisions in the House Bill affects a different subject of
taxation from that of the Senate Bill. In the House Bill No. 3705, the
taxpayers who are prohibited from passing on the VAT payments are the
sellers of petroleum products and electricity/power generation companies.
In Senate Bill No. 1950, no prohibition was adopted as to sellers of
petroleum products, but enjoined therein are electricity/power generation
companies but also transmission and distribution companies. I consider
such deletions as valid, for the same reason that I deem the amendments
valid. The deletion of the two disparate „no pass on‰ provisions which
were approved by the House in one instance, and only by the Senate in
the other, remains in the sphere of compromise that ultimately guides
the approval of the final version. Again, I point out that even while the
two provisions may have been originally approved by the House and
Senate respectively, their subsequent deletion by the Bicameral
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clause. After all, the inherent nature of taxation is to cause pain and
injury to the taxpayer, albeit for the greater good of society. Perhaps
whatever collective notion there may be of what constitutes an arbitrary,
confiscatory, and unreasonable tax might draw more from the fairy
tale/legend traditions of absolute monarchs and the oppressed peasants
they tax. Indeed, it is easier to jump to the conclusion that a tax is
oppressive and unfair if it is imposed by a tyrant or an authoritarian
state.
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most significant legal principles of the last century, the „clear and present
danger‰ doctrine in free speech cases, in fact emanates from the
prospectivity, and not the actuality of danger.·The Court has long
responded to strike down prospective actions, even if the injury has not
yet even occurred. One of the most significant legal principles of the last
century, the „clear and present danger‰ doctrine in free speech cases, in
fact emanates from the prospectivity, and not the actuality of danger. The
Court has not been hesitant to nullify acts which might cause injury,
owing to the presence of a clear and present danger of a substantive evil
which the State has the right to prevent. It has even extended the „clear
and present danger rule‰ beyond the confines of freedom of expression to
the realm of freedom
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Same; Same; Same; Same; If our society can take cold comfort in the
ability of the legislature to amend its enactments as the defense against
unconstitutional laws, what remains then as the function of judicial
review? The long-standing tradition has been reliance on the judicial
branch, and not the legislative branch, for salvation from
unconstitutional laws.·It is also asserted that if the implementation of
the 70% cap imposes an unequal effect on different types of businesses
with varying profit margins and capital requirements, then the remedy
would be an amendment of the law. Of course, the remedy of legislative
amendment applies to even the most unconstitutional of laws. But if our
society can take cold comfort in the ability of the legislature to amend its
enactments as the defense against unconstitutional laws, what remains
then as the function of judicial review? This legislative capacity to amend
unconstitutional laws runs concurrently with the judicial capacity to
strike down unconstitutional laws. In fact, the long-standing tradition
has been reliance on the judicial branch, and not the legislative branch,
for salvation from unconstitutional laws.
Same; Same; VAT is distinguishable from the standard excise or
percentage taxes in that it is imposable not only on the final transaction
involving the end user, but on previous stages as well so long as there was
a sale involved.·VAT is distinguishable from the standard excise or
percentage taxes in that it is imposable not only on
64
the final transaction involving the end user, but on previous stages as
well so long as there was a sale involved. Thus, VAT does not simply
pertain to the extra percentage paid by the buyer of a fast-food meal, but
also that paid by restaurant itself to its suppliers of raw food products.
This multi-stage system is more acclimated to the vagaries of the modern
industrial climate, which has long surpassed the stage when there was
only one level of transfer between the farmer who harvests the crop and
the person who eats the crop. Indeed, from the extraction or production of
the raw material to its final consumption by a user, several transactions
or sales materialize. The VAT system assures that the government shall
reap income for every transaction that is had, and not just on the final
sale or transfer.
the consumer, that ultimately shoulders the tax. Despite its name, VAT is
generally not intended to be a tax on value added, but rather as a tax on
consumption. Hence, there is a mechanism in the VAT system that
enables firms to offset the tax they have paid on their own purchases of
goods and services against the tax they charge on their sales of goods and
services. Section 105 of the NIRC assures that „the amount of tax may be
shifted or passed on to the buyer, transferee or lessee of the goods,
properties or services.‰ The assailed provisions of the E-VAT law strike at
the heart of this accepted principle.
Same; Same; In theory, VAT is not supposed to affect the profit
margin·if such margin is affected, it is only because of the prepayment of
the input taxes, and this should be remedied by the immediate recovery
through the crediting system of the settled input taxes; The new E-VAT
law changes all that, and puts in jeopardy the survival of small to
medium enterprises.·Profit is a chancy matter, and in cases of small to
medium enterprises, usually small if any. It is quite common for retail
and distribution enterprises to incur profits of less than 1% of their gross
revenues. Low profitability is not an
65
automatic badge of poor business skills, but a reality dictated by the laws
of the marketplace. The probability of profit is lower than that of capital
expenditures, and ultimately, many business establishments end up with
a higher input tax than output tax in a given quarter. This would be
especially true for small to medium enterprises who do not reap
sufficient profits from its business in the first place, and for those firms
that opt to also invest in capital expenses in addition to the overhead.
Whatever miniscule profit margins that can be obtained usually spell the
difference between life and death of the business. The possibility of profit
is further diminished by the fact that businesses have to shoulder the
input VAT in the purchase of their capital expenses. Yet the erstwhile VAT
system was not tainted by the label of oppressiveness and neither did it
bear the confiscatory mode. This was because of the immediate relief
afforded from the input taxes paid by the crediting system. In theory, VAT
is not supposed to affect the profit margin. If such margin is affected, it is
only because of the prepayment of the input taxes, and this should be
Same; Same; The raison dÊetre of this 70% cap is to make it appear on
paper that the government is more solvent than it actually is; If the 70%
cap was designed in order to enhance revenue collection, then I submit
that the means employed stand beyond reason.·It would be sad, but fair,
if a business ceases because of its inability to
66
67
68
would have been more credible had it faced the issue squarely, and
endeavored to demonstrate in like numerical fashion why the 70% cap is
not oppressive, confiscatory, or otherwise violative of the due process
clause. Sadly, the majority refuses to confront the figures or engage in a
meaningful demonstration of how these assailed provisions truly operate.
Instead, it counters with platitudes and bromides that do not
intellectually satisfy. Considering that the very vitality, if not life of our
domestic economy is at stake, I think it derelict to our duty to block out
these urgent concerns presented to the Court with blind faith tinged with
irrational Panglossian optimism.
Same; Same; The 70% cap is not merely an unwise imposition·it is a
burden designed, either through sheer heedlessness or cruel calculation, to
kill off the small and medium enterprises that are the soul, if not the
heart, of our economy, and it is not merely an undue taking of property,
but constitutes an unjustified taking of life as well; The illusion of wealth
is hardly a legitimate state purpose, especially if projected at the expense
of the very business life of the country.· The 70% cap is not merely an
unwise imposition. It is a burden designed, either through sheer
heedlessness or cruel calculation, to kill off the small and medium
enterprises that are the soul, if not the heart, of our economy. It is not
merely an undue taking of property, but constitutes an unjustified taking
of life as well. And what legitimate, germane purposes does this lethal
70% cap serve? It certainly does not increase the governmentÊs revenue
since the unutilized creditable input VAT should be entered in the
government books as a debt payable as it is supposed to be eventually
repaid to the taxpayer, and so on the contrary it increases the
governmentÊs debts. I do see that the 70% cap temporarily allows the
government to brag to the world of an increased cash flow. But this
situation would be akin to the provincial man who borrows from
everybody in the barrio
69
Same; Same; What the majority fails to mention is that under Section
10 of the E-VAT Law, which amends Section 112 of the NIRC, the tax
credit or refund may not be done while the enterprise remains operational.
·Nonetheless, the majority notes that the excess creditable input tax
may be the subject of a tax credit certificate, which then could be used in
payment of internal revenue taxes, or a refund to the extent that such
input taxes have not been applied against output taxes. What the
majority fails to mention is that under Section 10 of the E-VAT Law,
which amends Section 112 of the NIRC, such credit or refund may not be
done while the enterprise remains operational.
Same; Same; The inability to immediately credit or otherwise recover
the unutilized input VAT could cause such prepaid amount to actually be
recognized in the accounting books as a loss; What heretofore was
recognized as an asset would now, with the imposition of the 70% cap, be
now considered as a loss, enhancing the view that the 70% cap is
ultimately confiscatory in nature.·The inability to immediately credit or
otherwise recover the unutilized input VAT could cause such prepaid
amount to actually be recognized in the accounting books as a loss.
Under international accounting practices, the unutilized input VAT due
to the 70% cap would not even be recognized as a deferred asset. The
same would not hold true if the 70% cap were eliminated. Under the
International Accounting Standards, the unutilized input VAT credit is
recognized as an asset „to the extent that it is probable that future
taxable profit will be available against which the unused tax losses and
unused tax credits can be utili[z]ed‰ Thus, if the immediate accreditation
of the input VAT credit can be obtained, as it would without the 70% cap,
the asset could be recognized. However, the same Standards hold that
„[t]o the extent that it is not probable that taxable profit will be available
against which the unused tax losses or unused tax credits can be utilised,
the deferred tax asset is not recognised.‰ As demonstrated, the
continuous operation of the 70% cap precludes the recovery of input VAT
prepaid months or years prior. Moreover, the inability to claim a refund
or tax credit certificate until after the business has
70
Same; Same; Same; To assert that the input VAT is merely a privilege
is to correspondingly claim that the business profit is similarly a mere
privilege.·The prepaid input tax represents unutilized profit, which can
only be utilized if it is refunded or credited to output taxes. To assert that
the input VAT is merely a privilege is to correspondingly claim that the
business profit is similarly a mere privilege. The Constitution itself
recognizes the right to profit by private enterprises. As I stated earlier,
one of the enunciated State policies under the Constitution is the
recognition of the indispensable role of the private sector, the
encouragement of private enterprise, and the provision of incentives to
needed investments. Moreover, the Constitution also requires the State to
recognize the right of
71
Same; Same; For some lucky enterprises who may be able to survive
the injury brought about by the 70% cap, this 60 month amortization
period might instead provide the mortal head wound.·Even existing
small to medium enterprises are imperiled by this 60 month
amortization restriction, especially considering the application of the
70% cap. The additional purchase of capital goods bears as a means of
adding value to the consumer good, as a means to justify the increased
selling price. However, the purchase of capital goods in excess of
P1,000,000.00 would impose another burden on the small to medium
enterprise by further restricting their ability to immediately recover the
entire prepaid input VAT (which would exceed at least
72
73
bound to adopt with strict conformity the VAT system, and that it has to
power to impose new taxes on business income, this amendment to
Section 114(C) of the NIRC still remains unconstitutional. It unfairly
discriminates against entities which contract with the government by
imposing an additional tax on the income derived from such transactions.
The end result of such discrimination is double taxation on income that is
both oppressive and confiscatory. It is a legitimate purpose of a tax law to
devise a manner by which the government could save money on its own
transactions, but it is another matter if a private enterprise is punished
for doing business with the government. The erstwhile NIRC worked
towards such advantage, by allowing the government to reduce its cash
outlay on purchases of goods and services by withholding the payment of
a percentage thereof. While the new E-VAT law retains this benefit to the
government, at the same time it burdens the private enterprise with an
additional tax by refusing to allow the crediting of this tax withheld to
the businessÊs input VAT.
74
same thing or activity twice, when it should be taxed but once, for the
same purpose and with the same kind of character of tax. Double
taxation is not expressly forbidden in our constitution, but the Court has
recognized it as obnoxious „where the taxpayer is taxed twice for the
benefit of the same governmental entity or by the same jurisdiction for
the same purpose.‰ Certainly, both the 5% final tax withheld and the
general corporate income tax are both paid for the benefit of the national
government, and for the same incidence of taxation, the sale/lease of
goods and services to the government.
Same; Same; Intelligent tax policy should extend beyond the singular-
minded goal of raising State funds·the old-time philosophy behind the
taxing schemes of war-mongering monarchs and totalitarian states·and
should sincerely explore the concept of taxation as a means of providing
genuine incentives to private enterprise to spur economic growth, of
promoting egalitarian social justice that would allow everyone to their
fair share of the nationÊs wealth.·The VAT system, in itself, is
intelligently designed, and stands as a fair means to raise revenue. It has
been adopted worldwide by countries hoping to employ an efficient
means of taxation. The concerns I have raised do not detract from my
general approval of the VAT system. I do lament though that our
governmentÊs wholehearted adoption of the VAT system is endemic of
what I deem a flaw in our national tax policy in the last few decades. The
power of taxation, inherent in the State and ever so powerful, has been
generally employed by our financial planners for a solitary purpose: the
raising of revenue. Revenue generation is a legitimate purpose of
taxation, but standing alone, it is a woefully unsophisticated design.
Intelligent tax policy should extend beyond the singular-minded goal of
raising State funds·the old-time philosophy behind the taxing schemes
of war-mongering monarchs and totalitarian states·and should
sincerely explore the concept of taxation as a means of providing genuine
75
Same; Same; Under the device employed in the E-VAT law, the price
to be paid for a more sustainable liquidity of the governmentÊs finances
will be the death of local business, and correspondingly, the demise of our
society.·I am not insensitive to the concerns raised by the respondents
as to the dire consequences to the economy should the E-VAT law be
struck down. I am aware that the granting of the petition in G.R. No.
168461 will negatively affect the cash flow of the government. If that
were the only relevant concern at stake, I would have no problems
denying the petition. Unfortunately, under the device employed in the E-
VAT law, the price to be paid for a more sustainable liquidity of the
governmentÊs finances will be the death of local business, and
correspondingly, the demise of our society. It is a measure just as
draconian as the standard issue taxes of medieval tyrants.
Same; Same; Taxes may be the lifeblood of the state, but never at the
expense of the life of its subjects.·I am not normally inclined towards the
language of the overwrought, yet if the sky were indeed truly falling, how
else could that fact be communicated. The E-VAT Law is of multiple fatal
consequences. How are we to survive as a nation without the bulwark of
private industries? Perhaps the larger scale, established businesses may
ultimately remain standing, but they will be unable to sustain the void
left by the demise of small to medium enterprises. Or worse, domestic
industry would be left in the absolute control of monopolies, combines or
cartels, whether dominated by foreigners or local oligarchs. The
76
77
Taxation; Germaneness Rule; If we have one Code for all our national
internal revenue taxes, then there is no reason why we cannot have a
single statute amending provisions thereof even if they involve different
taxes under separate titles.·Although House Bills No. 3555 and 3705
were limited to the amendments of the provisions on VAT of the National
Internal Revenue Code of 1997, Senate Bill No. 1950 had a much wider
scope and included amendments of other provisions of the said Code,
such as those on income, percentage, and excise taxes. It should be borne
in mind that the very purpose of these three Bills and, subsequently, of
Rep. Act No. 9337, was to raise additional revenues for the government
to address the dire economic situation of the country. The National
Internal Revenue Code of 1997, as its title suggests, is the single Code
that governs all our national internal revenue taxes. While it does cover
different taxes, all of them are imposed and collected by the national
government to raise revenues. If we have one Code for all our national
internal revenue taxes, then there is no reason why we cannot have a
single statute amending provisions thereof even if they involve different
taxes under separate titles. I hereby submit that the amendments
introduced by the Bicameral Conference Committee to non-VAT
provisions of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997 are not
unconstitutional for they are germane to the purpose of House Bills No.
3555 and 3705 and Senate Bill No. 1950, which is to raise national
revenues.
Same; Value-Added Tax; Since the privilege of an input VAT credit is
granted by law, then an amendment of such law may limit the exercise of
or may totally withdraw the privilege.·The crediting of the input VAT
against the output VAT is a statutory privilege, granted by Section 110 of
the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997. It gives the VAT-registered
person the opportunity to recover the input VAT he had paid, so that, in
effect, the input VAT does not
78
constitute an additional cost for him. While it is true that input VAT
credits are reported as assets in a VAT-registered personÊs financial
statements and books of account, this accounting treatment is still based
on the statutory provision recognizing the input VAT as a credit. Without
Section 110 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997, then the
accounting treatment of any input VAT will also change and may no
longer be booked outright as an asset. Since the privilege of an input VAT
credit is granted by law, then an amendment of such law may limit the
exercise of or may totally withdraw the privilege.
Same; Same; To say that Congress may not trifle with Section 110 of
the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997 would be to violate a basic
precept of constitutional law·that no law is irrepealable; There can be no
vested right to the continued existence of a statute, which precludes its
79
accorded to it by Rep. Act No. 9337, the petroleum dealers reject the
limitation imposed by the very same law on such use. It should be
remembered that prior to Rep. Act No. 9337, the petroleum dealersÊ input
VAT credits were inexistent·they were unrecognized and disallowed by
law. The petroleum dealers had no such property called input VAT
credits. It is only rational, therefore, that they cannot acquire vested
rights to the use of such input VAT credits when they were never entitled
to such credits in the first place, at least, not until Rep. Act No. 9337. My
view, at this point, when Rep. Act No. 9337 has not yet even been
implemented, is that petroleum dealersÊ right to use their input VAT as
credit against their output VAT unlimitedly has not vested, being a mere
80
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J.:
_______________
1 Entitled „An Act Amending Sections 27, 28, 34, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110,
111, 112, 113, 114, 116, 117, 119, 121, 148, 151, 236, 237, and 288 of the
National Internal Revenue Code of 1997, As Amended and For Other Purposes.‰
81
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY
_______________
82
_______________
4 Entitled, „An Act Amending Sections 27, 28, 34, 106, 108, 109, 110,
112, 113, 114, 116, 117, 119, 121, 125, 148, 151, 236, 237 and 288 of the
National Internal Revenue Code of 1997, As Amended, and For Other
Purposes.‰
5 Section 26, R.A. No. 9337.
83
84
BANIQUED:
J. There are other products that the people
PANGANIBAN: were complaining on that first day, were
being increased arbitrarily by 10%. And
thatÊs one reason among many others
this Court had to issue TRO because of
the confusion in the implementation.
ThatÊs why we added as an issue in this
case, even if itÊs tangentially taken up by
the pleadings of the parties, the
confusion in the implementation of the E-
vat. Our people were subjected to the
mercy of that confusion of an across the
board increase of 10%, which you
yourself now admit and I think even the
Government will admit is incorrect. In
some cases, it should be
85
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86
87
88
the creditable input tax if: (1) the entity has a high ratio of
input tax; or (2) invests in capital equipment; or (3) has
several transactions with the government, is not based on
real and substantial differences to meet a valid
classification.
Lastly, petitioners contend that the 70% limit is
anything but progressive, violative of Article VI, Section
28(1) of the Constitution, and that it is the smaller
businesses with higher input tax to output tax ratio that
will suffer the consequences thereof for it wipes out
whatever meager margins the petitioners make.
alleg-
_______________
89
RESPONDENTSÊ COMMENT
90
ISSUES
PROCEDURAL ISSUE
SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
91
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92
PROCEDURAL ISSUE
I.
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93
Sec. 88. Conference Committee.·In the event that the House does
not agree with the Senate on the amendment to any bill or joint
resolution, the differences may be settled by the conference
committees of both chambers.
In resolving the differences with the Senate, the House panel
shall, as much as possible, adhere to and support the House Bill. If
the differences with the Senate are so substantial that they
materially impair the House Bill, the panel shall report such fact to
the House for the latterÊs appropriate action.
_______________
94
Sec. 35. In the event that the Senate does not agree with the House
of Representatives on the provision of any bill or joint resolution,
the differences shall be settled by a conference committee of both
Houses which shall meet within ten (10) days after their
composition. The President shall designate the members of the
Senate Panel in the conference committee with the approval of the
Senate.
Each Conference Committee Report shall contain a detailed and
sufficiently explicit statement of the changes in, or amendments to
the subject measure, and shall be signed by a majority of the
members of each House panel, voting separately.
A comparative presentation of the conflicting House and Senate
provisions and a reconciled version thereof with the explanatory
statement of the conference committee shall be attached to the
report.
...
95
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96
_______________
97
_______________
98
99
services
other than
capital
goods shall
not exceed
90% of the
output VAT.
100
101
102
. . . the thinking was just to keep the VAT law or the VAT bill
simple. And we were thinking that no sector should be a beneficiary
of legislative grace, neither should any sector be discriminated on.
The VAT is an indirect tax. It is a pass on-tax. And letÊs keep it
_______________
103
plain and simple. LetÊs not confuse the bill and put a no pass-on
provision. Two-thirds of the world have a VAT system and in this
two-thirds of the globe, I have yet to see a VAT with a no pass-
though provision. So, the thinking of the Senate is basically simple,
26
letÊs keep the VAT simple. (Emphasis supplied)
_______________
104
_______________
105
Nor is there any reason for requiring that the CommitteeÊs Report
in these cases must have undergone three readings in each of the
two houses. If that be the case, there would be no end to negotiation
since each house may seek modification of the compromise bill . . . .
Art. VI. § 26 (2) must, therefore, be construed as referring
only to bills introduced for the first time in either house of
32
Congress, not to the conference committee report.
(Emphasis supplied)
_______________
32 Id., p. 671.
106
Section
27 Rates of Income Tax on Domestic Corporation
28(A) Tax on Resident Foreign Corporation
(1)
28(B) Inter-corporate Dividends
(1)
34(B) Inter-corporate Dividends
(1)
116 Tax on Persons Exempt from VAT
117 Percentage Tax on domestic carriers and keepers
ofGarage
119 Tax on franchises
121 Tax on banks and Non-Bank Financial
Intermediaries
107
108
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109
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110
All in all, the proposal of the Senate Committee on Ways and Means
will raise P64.3 billion in additional revenues annually even while
by mitigating prices of power, services and petroleum products.
However, not all of this will be wrung out of VAT. In fact, only
P48.7 billion amount is from the VAT on twelve goods and services.
The rest of the tab·P10.5 billion- will be picked by corporations.
What we therefore prescribe is a burden sharing between corporate
Philippines and the consumer. Why should the latter bear all the
pain? Why should the fiscal salvation be only on the burden of the
consumer?
The corporate worldÊs equity is in form of the increase in the
corporate income tax from 32 to 35 percent, but up to 2008 only.
This will raise P10.5 billion a year. After that, the rate will slide
back, not to its old rate of 32 percent, but two notches lower, to 30
percent.
Clearly, we are telling those with the capacity to pay,
corporations, to bear with this emergency provision that will be in
effect for 1,200 days, while we put our fiscal house in order. This
fiscal medicine will have an expiry date.
For their assistance, a reward of tax reduction awaits them. We
intend to keep the length of their sacrifice brief. We would like to
assure them that not because there is a light at the end of the
tunnel, this government will keep on making the tunnel long.
The responsibility will not rest solely on the weary shoulders of
35
the small man. Big business will be there to share the burden.
_______________
35 Journal of the Senate, Session No. 67, March 7, 2005, pp. 727-728.
111
However, for power plants that run on oil, we will reduce to zero the
present excise tax on bunker fuel, to lessen the effect of a VAT on
this product.
For electric utilities like Meralco, we will wipe out the franchise
tax in exchange for a VAT.
And in the case of petroleum, while we will levy the VAT on oil
products, so as not to destroy the VAT chain, we will however bring
down the excise tax on socially sensitive products such as diesel,
bunker, fuel and kerosene.
...
What do all these exercises point to? These are not contortions of
giving to the left hand what was taken from the right. Rather, these
sprang from our concern of softening the impact of VAT, so that the
people can cushion the blow of higher prices they will have to pay as
36
a result of VAT.
_______________
36 Id., p. 726.
112
SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
I.
(A) Rate and Base of Tax.·There shall be levied, assessed and collected
on every sale, barter or exchange of goods or properties, a value-added
tax equivalent to ten percent (10%) of the gross selling price or gross
value in money of the goods or properties sold, bartered or exchanged,
such tax to be paid by the seller or transferor: provided, that the
President, upon the recommendation of the Secretary of
Finance, shall, effective January 1, 2006, raise the rate of value-
added tax to twelve percent (12%), after any of the following
conditions has been satisfied.
113
114
They argue that the VAT is a tax levied on the sale, barter
or exchange of goods and properties as well as on the sale
or exchange of services, which cannot be included within
the purview of tariffs under the exempted delegation as the
latter refers to customs duties, tolls or tribute payable upon
merchandise to the government and usually imposed on
goods or merchandise imported or exported.
Petitioners ABAKADA GURO Party List, et al., further
contend that delegating to the President the legislative
115
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37 See Angara vs. Electoral Commission, No. 45081, July 15, 1936, 63
Phil. 139, 156.
116
38
delegated, cannot be delegated.‰ This doctrine is based on
the ethical principle that such as delegated power
constitutes not only a right but a duty to be performed by
the delegate through the instrumentality of his own
judgment 39
and not through the intervening mind of
another.
With respect to the Legislature, Section 1 of Article VI of
the Constitution provides that „the Legislative power shall
be vested in the Congress of the Philippines which shall
consist of a Senate and a House of Representatives.‰ The
powers which Congress is prohibited from delegating are
those which are strictly, or inherently and exclusively,
legislative. Purely legislative power, which can never be
delegated, has been described as the authority to make a
complete law·complete as to the time when it shall take
effect and as to whom it shall be applicable·and
40
to
determine the expediency of its enactment. Thus, the rule
is that in order that a court may be justified in holding a
statute unconstitutional as a delegation
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117
41
delegate; and (b) fixes a standard·the limits of which are
sufficiently determinate and determinable·to which the
delegate 42must conform in the performance of his
functions. A suffi-
_______________
41 Pelaez vs. Auditor General, No. L-23825, December 24, 1965, 122
Phil. 965, 974; 15 SCRA 569, 577, citing Calalang vs. Williams, No.
47800, December 2, 1940, 70 Phil. 726; Pangasinan Transp. Co. vs.
Public Service Commission, No. 47065, June 26, 1940, 70 Phil. 221; Cruz
vs. Youngberg, No. 34674, October 26, 1931, 56 Phil. 234; Alegre vs.
Collector of Customs, No. 30783, August 27, 1929, 53 Phil. 394 et seq.
42 Pelaez vs. Auditor General, supra, citing People vs. Lim Ho, No. L-
12091-2, January 28, 1960, 106 Phil. 887; People vs. Jolliffee, No. L-9553,
May 13, 1959, 105 Phil 677; People vs. Vera, No. 45685, November 16,
1937, 65 Phil. 56; U.S. vs. Nag Tang Ho, No. L-17122, February 27, 1922,
43 Phil. 1; Compañia General de Tabacos vs.
118
_______________
Board of Public Utility, No. 11216, March 6, 1916, 34 Phil. 136 et seq.
43 Edu vs. Ericta, No. L-32096, October 24, 1970, 35 SCRA 481, 497.
44 Eastern Shipping Lines, Inc. vs. Philippine Overseas Employment
Administration, No. L-76633, October 18, 1988, 166 SCRA 533, 543-544.
45 No. 45685, November 16, 1937, 65 Phil. 56.
119
of the United States ruled that the legislature may delegate a power
not legislative which it may itself rightfully exercise. The power to
ascertain facts is such a power which may be delegated.
There is nothing essentially legislative in ascertaining the
existence of facts or conditions as the basis of the taking
into effect of a law. That is a mental process common to all
branches of the government. Notwithstanding the apparent
tendency, however, to relax the rule prohibiting delegation of
legislative authority on account of the complexity arising from
social and economic forces at work in this modern industrial age,
the orthodox pronouncement of Judge Cooley in his work on
Constitutional Limitations finds restatement in Prof. Willoughby's
treatise on the Constitution of the United States in the following
language·speaking of declaration of legislative power to
administrative agencies: The principle which permits the
legislature to provide that the administrative agent may
_______________
120
47
In Edu vs. Ericta, the Court reiterated:
_______________
121
_______________
122
_______________
53 Province of Batangas vs. Romulo, G.R. No. 152774, May 27, 2004,
429 SCRA 736; Enriquez vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 140473, January
28, 2003, 396 SCRA 377; Codoy vs. Calugay, G.R. No. 123486, August 12,
1999, 312 SCRA 333.
54 Province of Batangas vs. Romulo, supra; Quisumbing vs. Meralco,
G.R. No. 142943, April 3, 2002, 380 SCRA 195; Agpalo, Statutory
Construction, 1990 ed., p. 45.
123
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55 Villena vs. Secretary of Interior, No. 46570, April 21, 1939, 67 Phil
451, 463-464.
56 Alunan vs. Mirasol, G.R. No. 108399, July 31, 1997, 276 SCRA 501,
513-514, citing Panama Refining Co. vs. Ryan, 293 U.S. 388, 79 L.Ed.
469 (1935).
124
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125
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126
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127
The condition set for increasing VAT rate to 12% have economic or
fiscal meaning. If VAT/GDP is less than 2.8%, it means that
government has weak or no capability of implementing the VAT or
that VAT is not effective in the function of the tax collection.
Therefore, there is no value to increase it to 12% because such
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128
First, let me explain the position that the Philippines finds itself in
right now. We are in a position where 90 percent of our revenue is
used for debt service. So, for every peso of revenue that we currently
raise, 90 goes to debt service. ThatÊs interest plus amortization of
our debt. So clearly, this is not a sustainable situation. ThatÊs the
first fact.
The second fact is that our debt to GDP level is way out of line
compared to other peer countries that borrow money from that
international financial markets. Our debt to GDP is approximately
equal to our GDP. Again, that shows you that this is not a
sustainable situation.
The third thing that IÊd like to point out is the environment that
we are presently operating in is not as benign as what it used to be
the past five years.
What do I mean by that?
In the past five years, weÊve been lucky because we were
operating in a period of basically global growth and low interest
rates. The past few months, we have seen an inching up, in fact, a
rapid increase in the interest rates in the leading economies of the
world. And, therefore, our ability to borrow at reasonable prices is
going to be challenged. In fact, ultimately, the question is our ability
to access the financial markets.
_______________
129
When the President made her speech in July last year, the
environment was not as bad as it is now, at least based on the
forecast of most financial institutions. So, we were assuming that
raising 80 billion would put us in a position where we can then
convince them to improve our ability to borrow at lower rates. But
conditions have changed on us because the interest rates have gone
up. In fact, just within this room, we tried to access the market for a
billion dollars because for this year alone, the Philippines will have
_______________
130
In the same vein, the Court in this case will not dawdle on
the purpose of Congress or the executive policy, given that
it is not for the judiciary to „pass upon
67
questions of wisdom,
justice or expediency of legislation.‰
II.
_______________
66 G.R. No. 147387, December 10, 2003, 417 SCRA 503, 524.
67 National Housing Authority vs. Reyes, G.R. No. L-49439, June 29,
1983, 123 SCRA 245, 249.
131
_______________
68 Sison vs. Ancheta, G.R. No. L-59431, July 25, 1984, 130 SCRA 654,
661.
132
133
Second, when the output taxes exceed the input taxes, the
person shall be liable for the excess, which
69
has to be paid to
the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR); and
Third, if the input taxes exceed the output taxes, the
excess shall be carried over to the succeeding quarter or
quarters. Should the input taxes result from zero-rated or
effectively zero-rated transactions, any excess over the
output taxes shall instead be refunded to the taxpayer or
credited against 70other internal revenue taxes, at the
taxpayerÊs option.
Section 8 of R.A. No. 9337 however, imposed a 70%
limitation on the input tax. Thus, a person can credit his
input tax only up to the extent of 70% of the output tax. In
laymanÊs term, the value-added taxes that a
person/taxpayer paid and passed on to him by a seller can
only be credited up to 70% of the value-added taxes that is
due to him on a taxable transaction. There is no retention
of any tax collection because the person/taxpayer has
already previously paid the input tax to a seller, and the
seller will subsequently remit such input tax to the BIR.
The party
71
directly liable for the payment of the tax is the
seller. What only needs to be done is for the
person/taxpayer to apply or credit these input taxes, as
evidenced by receipts, against his output taxes.
Petitioners Association of Pilipinas Shell Dealers, Inc.,
et al. also argue that the input tax partakes the nature of a
property that may not be confiscated, appropriated, or
limited without due process of law.
The input tax is not a property or a property right
within the constitutional purview of the due process clause.
A VAT-registered personÊs entitlement to the creditable
input tax is a mere statutory privilege.
_______________
70 Ibid.
71 Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Benguet Corp., G.R. Nos.
134587 & 134588, July 8, 2005, 463 SCRA 28.
134
_______________
72 United Paracale Mining Co. vs. Dela Rosa, G.R. Nos. 63786-87, April 7,
1993, 221 SCRA 108, 115.
73 E.O. No. 273, Section 1.
74 Section 5.
75 Section 110(B).
135
_______________
76 Journal of the Senate, Session No. 71, March 15, 2005, p. 803.
77 Id., Session No. 67, March 7, 2005, p. 726.
78 Id., Session No. 71, March 15, 2005, p. 803.
136
137
_______________
138
139
_______________
140
clear showing 84
of unreasonableness, discrimination, or
arbitrariness.
Petitioners point out that the limitation on the
creditable input tax if the entity has a high ratio of input
tax, or invests in capital equipment, or has several
transactions with the government, is not based on real and
substantial differences to meet a valid classification.
The argument is pedantic, if not outright baseless. The
law does not make any classification in the subject of
taxation, the kind of property, the rates to be levied or the
amounts to be raised, the methods of assessment, valuation
and collection. PetitionersÊ alleged distinctions are based on
variables that bear different consequences. While the
implementation of the law may yield varying end results
_______________
141
_______________
142
_______________
143
92
gas were reduced.
93
Percentage tax on domestic carriers
was removed. Power producers are now exempt from
94
paying franchise tax.
Aside from these, Congress also increased the income
tax rates of corporations, in order to distribute the burden
of taxation. Domestic, foreign, and non-resident
corporations are now subject
95
to a 35% income tax rate,
from a previous 32%. Intercorporate dividends of non-
resident foreign corporations are still subject to 15% final
withholding tax but the tax credit allowed on 96
the
corporationÊs domicile was increased to 20%. The
Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation
97
(PAGCOR) is not exempt from income taxes anymore.
Even the sale by an artist of his works or services
performed for the production of such works was not spared.
All these were designed to ease, as well as spread out,
the burden of taxation, which would otherwise rest largely
on the consumers. It cannot therefore be gainsaid that R.A.
No. 9337 is equitable.
C. Progressivity of Taxation
_______________
144
_______________
98 Reyes vs. Almanzor, G.R. Nos. 49839-46, April 26, 1991, 196 SCRA 322,
327.
145
the oldest form of indirect taxes, would have been prohibited with
the proclamation of Art. VIII, §17 (1) of the 1973 Constitution from
which the present Art. VI, §28 (1) was taken. Sales taxes are also
regressive.
Resort to indirect taxes should be minimized but not avoided
entirely because it is difficult, if not impossible, to avoid them by
imposing such taxes according to the taxpayersÊ ability to pay. In
the case of the VAT, the law minimizes the regressive effects of this
imposition by providing for zero rating of certain transactions (R.A.
No. 7716, §3, amending §102 (b) of the NIRC), while granting
exemptions to other transactions. (R.A. No. 7716, §4 amending §103
99
of the NIRC)‰
CONCLUSION
Let us not be overly influenced by the plea that for every wrong
there is a remedy, and that the judiciary should stand ready to
afford relief. There are undoubtedly many wrongs the judicature
may not correct, for instance, those involving political questions. . . .
Let us likewise disabuse our minds from the notion that the
judiciary is the repository of remedies for all political or social ills;
We should not forget that the Constitution has judiciously allocated
the powers of government to three distinct and separate
compartments; and that judicial interpretation has tended to the
preservation of the independence of the three, and a zealous regard
of the prerogatives of each, knowing full well that one is not the
guardian
_______________
99 Tolentino vs. Secretary of Finance, G.R. No. 115455, October 30, 1995, 249
SCRA 628, 659.
146
of the others and that, for official wrong-doing, each may be brought
100
to account, either by impeachment, trial or by the ballot box.
101
The words of the Court in Vera vs. Avelino holds true
then, as it still holds true now. All things considered, there
is no raison d'être for the unconstitutionality of R.A. No.
9337.
WHEREFORE, Republic Act No. 9337 not being
unconstitutional, the petitions in G.R. Nos. 168056,
168207, 168461, 168463, and 168730, are hereby
DISMISSED. There being no constitutional impediment to
the full enforcement and implementation of R.A. No. 9337,
the temporary restraining order issued by the Court on
July 1, 2005 is LIFTED upon finality of herein decision.
SO ORDERED.
_______________
100 Vera vs. Avelino, G.R. No. L-543, August 31, 1946, 77 Phil. 365.
101 Ibid.
147
SEPARATE CONCURRING
AND DISSENTING OPINION
_______________
148
_______________
149
150
3
In Philippine Judges Association v. Prado, the Court
described the function of a conference committee in this
wise: „A conference committee may deal generally with the
subject matter or it may be limited to resolving the precise
differences between the two houses. Even where the
conference committee is not by rule limited in its
jurisdiction, legislative custom severely limits the freedom
with which new subject matter can be inserted into the
conference bill.‰
The limitation on the power of a conference committee to
insert new provisions 4
was laid down in Tolentino v.
Secretary of Finance. There, the Court, while recognizing
the power of a conference committee to include in its report
an entirely new provision that is not found either in the
House bill or in the Senate bill, held that the exercise of
that power is subject to the condition that the said
provision is „germane to the subject of the House and Senate
bills.‰
As pointed out by the petitioners, Tolentino differs from
the present cases in the sense that in that case the
amendments introduced in the Senate bill were on the
same subject matter treated in the House bill, which was
_______________
151
152
PUNO, J.:
_______________
153
_______________
3 Id., at p. 87.
4 Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136 (1967); I Tribe,
American Constitutional Law, p. 334 (3rd ed.).
5 Texas v. United States, 523 U.S. 296 (1998); Thomas v. Union
Carbide Agricultural Products Co., 473 U.S. 568 (1985); I Tribe,
American Constitutional Law, pp. 335-336 (3rd ed.).
6 Communist Party of the United States v. Subversive Activities
Control Bd., 367 U.S. 1, 71 (1961); I Tribe, American Constitutional Law,
p. 336 (3rd ed.); See also concurring opinion of Justice Brandeis in
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority, 297 U.S. 288 (1936).
154
In the event that the Senate does not agree with the House of
Representatives on the provision of any bill or joint resolution, the
differences shall be settled by a conference committee of both Houses
which shall meet within ten days after their composition.
Each Conference Committee Report shall contain a detailed and
sufficiently explicit statement of the changes in or amendments to the
subject measure, and shall be signed by the conferees. (Emphasis
supplied)
In the event that the House does not agree with the Senate on the
amendments to any bill or joint resolution, the differences may be settled
by a conference committee of both chambers.
_______________
155
156
It is only when the Senate and the House act as whole bodies that
they truly represent the people. And it is only when they represent
157
the people that they can legitimately pass laws. Laws that are not
enacted by the peopleÊs rightful representatives subvert the peopleÊs
sovereignty. Bicameral Conference Committees, with their ad hoc
character and limited membership, cannot pass laws for they do not
represent the people. The Constitution does not allow the tyranny of
the majority. Yet, the respondents will impose the worst kind of
tyranny·the tyranny of the minority over the majority. Secondly,
the Constitution delineated in deft strokes the steps to be followed
in making laws. The overriding purpose of these procedural rules is
to assure that only bills that successfully survive the searching
scrutiny of the proper committees of Congress and the full and
unfettered deliberations of both Houses can become laws. For this
reason, a bill has to undergo three (3) mandatory separate readings
in each House. In the case at bench, the additions and deletions
made by the Bicameral Conference Committee did not enjoy the
enlightened studies of appropriate committees. It is meet to note
that the complexities of modern day legislations have made our
committee system a significant part of the legislative process.
Thomas Reed called the committee system as „the eye, the ear, the
hand, and very often the brain of the house.‰ President Woodrow
Wilson of the United States once referred to the government of the
United States as „a government by the Chairmen of the Standing
Committees of Congress ⁄‰‰ Neither did these additions and
deletions of the Bicameral Conference Committee pass through the
coils of collective deliberation of the members of the two Houses
acting separately. Due to this short-circuiting of the constitutional
procedure of making laws, confusion shrouds the enactment of R.A.
No. 7716. Who inserted the additions and deletions remains a
mystery. Why they were inserted is a riddle. To use a Churchillian
phrase, lawmaking should not be a riddle wrapped in an enigma. It
cannot be, for Article II, section 28 of the Constitution mandates the
State to adopt and implement a „policy of full public disclosure of all
its transactions involving public interest.‰ The Constitution could
not have contemplated a Congress of invisible and unaccountable
John and Mary Does. A law whose rationale is a riddle and whose
authorship is obscure cannot bind the people.
All these notwithstanding, respondents resort to the legal
cosmetology that these additions and deletions should govern the
people as laws because the Bicameral Conference Committee
Report was anyway submitted to and approved by the Senate and
the House of Representatives. The submission may have some merit
with respect
158
Their power lies chiefly in the fact that reports of conference committees
must be accepted without amendment or else rejected in toto. The
impulse is to get done with the matter and so the motion to accept has
undue advantage, for some members are sure to prefer swallowing
unpalatable provisions rather than prolong controversy. This is the more
likely if the report comes in the rush of business toward the end of a
session, when to seek further conference might result in the loss of the
measure altogether. At any time in the session there is some risk of such
a result following the rejection of a conference report, for it may not be
possible to secure a second con-
159
xxx
a. Constitutional rules.
b. Statutory rules or charter provisions.
c. Adopted rules.
d. Judicial decisions.
e. Adopted parliamentary authority.
f. Parliamentary law.
g. Customs and usages.
160
prevails over the rule from the source listed later. Thus, where the
Constitution requires three readings of bills, this provision controls over
any provision of statute, adopted rules, adopted manual, or of
parliamentary law, and a rule of parliamentary law controls over a local
usage but must give way to any rule from a higher source of authority.
(Emphasis ours)
xxx
Where the failure of constitutional compliance in the enactment of
statutes is not discoverable from the face of the act itself but may be
demonstrated by recourse to the legislative journals, debates, committee
reports or papers of the governor, courts have used several conflicting
theories with which to dispose of the issue. They have held: (1) that the
enrolled bill is conclusive and like the sheriff Ês return cannot be attacked;
(2) that the enrolled bill is prima facie correct and only in case the
legislative journal shows affirmative contradiction of the constitutional
requirement will the bill be held invalid; (3) that although the enrolled
bill is prima facie correct, evidence from the journals, or other extrinsic
sources is admissible to strike the bill down; (4) that the legislative
journal is conclusive and the enrolled bills is valid only if it accords with
the recital in the journal and the constitutional procedure.
161
162
Sec. 88. Conference Committee.·In the event that the House does
not agree with the Senate on the amendment to any bill or joint
resolution, the differences may be settled by the conference
committees of both chambers.
In resolving the differences with the Senate, the House panel
shall, as much as possible, adhere to and support the House Bill. If
the differences with the Senate are so substantial that they
materially impair the House Bill, the panel shall report such fact to
the House for the latterÊs appropriate action.
163
Sec. 35. In the event that the Senate does not agree with the House
of Representatives on the provision of any bill or joint resolution,
the differences shall be settled by a conference committee of both
Houses which shall meet within ten (10) days after their
164
_______________
9 H.B. No. 3555 has no „no pass on provision.‰ House Bill No. 3705 expresses
the latest intent of the House on the matter.
165
166
Even the faintest eye contact with the above provisions will
reveal that: (a) both the House bill and the Senate bill
prohibited the passing on to consumers of the VAT on sales
of electricity and (b) the House bill prohibited the passing
on to consumers of the VAT on sales of petroleum products
while the Senate bill is silent on the prohibition.
In the guise of reconciling disagreeing provisions of the
House and the Senate bills on the matter, the Bicameral
167
Fifty percent of the local government unitÊs share from VAT shall be
allocated and used exclusively for the following purposes:
168
_______________
169
11
ments; (3) requiring that appropriation, revenue or tariff
bills, bills authorizing increase of public debt, bills of local
application, and private bills
12
originate exclusively in the
House of Representatives; (4) requiring that bills 13
embrace
one subject expressed in the title thereof; and (5)
mandating
_______________
rate deliberations and actions in the respective bodies that check and
balance each other.‰
11 Const., Article VI, Section 16(2) (1987): „(2) A majority of each
House shall constitute a quorum to do business, but a smaller number
may adjourn from day to day and may compel the attendance of absent
Members in such manner, and under such penalties, as such House may
provide.‰
12 Const., Article VI, Section 24 (1987); 1 Sutherland Statutory
Construction § 9:6 (6th ed.): The provision helps guarantee that the
exercise of the taxing power is well studied as the lower house is
„presumably more representative in character.‰
13 Const., Article VI, Section 26(1) (1987); I Cooley, A Treatise on
Constitutional Limitations, p. 143; Central Capiz v. Ramirez, 40 Phil. 883
(1920): „In the construction and application of this constitutional
restriction the courts have kept steadily in view the correction of the
mischief against which it was aimed. The object is to prevent the
practice, which was common in all legislative bodies where no such
restrictions existed of embracing in the same bill incongruous matters
having no relation to each other or to the subject specified in the title, by
which measures were often adopted without attracting attention. Such
distinct subjects represented diverse interests, and were combined in
order to unite the members of the legislature who favor either in support
of all. These combinations were corruptive of the legislature and
dangerous to the State. Such omnibus bills sometimes included more
than a hundred sections on as many different subjects, with a title
appropriate to the first section, and for other purposes.‰
„The failure to indicate in the title of the bill the object intended to be
accomplished by the legislation often resulted in members voting
ignorantly for measures which they would not knowingly have approved;
and not only were legislators thus misled, but the public also; so that
legislative provisions were steadily pushed through in the closing hours
of a session, which, having no merit to commend them, would have been
made odious by popular discussion
170
_______________
171
15
discussion and vote. . . .‰
_______________
15 235 SCRA 630, 783-784 citing Luce, Legislative Procedure, pp. 404-
405, 407 (1922); See also Davies, Legislative Law and Process, p. 81 (2nd
ed.): „conference reports are returned to assembly and Senate on a take-
it or leave-it-basis, and the bodies are generally placed in the position
that to leave-it is a practical impossibility.‰ Thus, he concludes that
„conference committee action is the most undemocratic procedure in the
legislative process.‰
172
_______________
173
SEPARATE OPINION
PANGANIBAN, J.:
Precedence of Mandatory
Constitutional Provisions
Over the Enrolled Bill Doctrine
3
I believe, however, that the enrolled bill doctrine is not
absolute. It may be all-encompassing in some countries like
_______________
1 235 SCRA 630, August 25, 1994; and 249 SCRA 628, October 30,
1995. The second case is an en banc Resolution on the Motions for
Reconsideration of the first case.
2 417 SCRA 503, December 10, 2003.
3 „[I]t is well-settled that the enrolled bill doctrine is conclusive upon
the courts as regards the tenor of the measure passed by Con-
174
_______________
Phil. 363, 366; 7 SCRA 347, 350, February 28, 1963, per Concepciónn, J.,
later C.J.). It is a doctrine that flows as a corollary to the separation of
powers, and by which due respect is given by one branch of government
to the actions of the others. See Morales v. Subido, 136 Phil. 405, 412; 27
SCRA 131, February 27, 1969.
Following Field v. Clark (143 US 649, 12 S.Ct. 495, February 29,
1892), such conclusiveness refers not only to the provisions of the law,
but also to its due enactment. Mabanag v. Lopez Vito, 78 Phil. 1, 13-18,
March 5, 1947.
„[T]he signing of a bill by the Speaker of the House and the Senate
President and the certification of the Secretaries of both [h]ouses of
Congress that it was passed are conclusive of its due enactment.‰
Fariñas v. Executive Secretary, supra, p. 529, per Callejo, Sr., J.
4 Mabanag v. Lopez Vito, supra, p. 12.
5 §1 of Rule 129 of the Rules of Court.
6 The United Kingdom has an uncodified Constitution, consisting of
both written and unwritten sources, capable of evolving to be responsive
to political and social change, and found partly in conventions and
customs and partly in statute. Its Parliament has the power to change or
abolish any written or unwritten element of the Constitution. There is
neither separation of powers nor formal checks and balances. Every bill
drafted has to be approved by both the House of Commons and the House
of Lords, before it receives the Royal Assent and becomes an Act of
Parliament. The House of Lords is the second chamber that complements
the work of the Commons, whose members are elected to represent their
constituents. The first is the House of Commons that alone may start
bills to raise taxes or authorize expenditures. Each bill goes through
several stages in each House. The first stage, called the first reading, is a
mere for-
175
the judiciary has both the power and the duty to strike
down congressional actions that are done in plain
contravention
8
of such conditions, restrictions or
limitations. Insofar as the present case is concerned, the
three most important restrictions or limitations to the
enrolled bill doctrine are the „origination,‰ „no-amendment‰
and „three-reading‰ rules which I will discuss later.
Verily, these restrictions or limitations to the enrolled9
bill doctrine are safeguarded by the expanded
constitutional mandate of the judiciary „to determine
whether or not there has been a grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the 10part of
any branch or instrumentality
11
of the government.‰ Even
the ponente of Tolentino,
_______________
176
First, the BCC had the option of adopting the House bills
either in part or in toto, endorsing them without changes.
_______________
12 Arroyo v. De Venecia, 343 Phil. 42, 61-62; 277 SCRA 268, 286,
August 14, 1997, per Mendoza, J.
13 These refer to House Bill Nos. 3555 & 3705; and Senate Bill No.
1950.
177
Since these 14
bills had passed 15the three-reading
requirement under the Constitution, it readily becomes
apparent that no procedural impediment would arise. 16
There would also be no question as to their origination,
because the bills originated exclusively from the House of
Representatives itself.
In the present case, the BCC did not ignore the Senate
and adopt any of the House bills in part or in toto.
Therefore, this option was not taken by the BCC.
_______________
178
_______________
of policy confined within the august halls of Congress. See Pindyck and
Rubinfeld, Microeconomics (5th ed., 2003), pp. 314-317.
23 Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Allapattah Services, Inc., 125 S. Ct. 2611,
2622, June 23, 2005, per Kennedy, J.
179
Compromising
by Consolidating
_______________
180
_______________
181
_______________
182
_______________
35 See Pelaez v. Auditor General, 122 Phil. 965, 974; 15 SCRA 569, 576-
577, December 24, 1965.
36 The acts of retroactively implementing the 12 percent VAT rate,
should the finance secretary be able to make recommendation only weeks
or months after the end of fiscal year 2005, or reverting to 10 percent if
both conditions are not met, are best addressed to the political branches
of government.
The following excerpts from the Transcript of the Oral Arguments in
G.R. Nos. 168461, 168463, 168056, and 168207, held on July 14, 2005 at
„Atty. Gorospe:
[ItÊs] supposed to be 2005, Your Honor, but apparently, it [will] be
impossible to determine GDP the first day of 2006, Your
Honor.‰ (p. 57);
xxx
„Justice Panganiban:
Now [letÊs see] when it is possible then to determine this formula. It
cannot be on the first day of January 2006, because the year [2005]
ended just the midnight before, isnÊt it?
„Atty. Gorospe:
Yes, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
x x x if itÊs only determined on March 1[,] then how can the law
become effective January 1[.] In other words, how will the [people
be] able to pay the tax if ever that formula is exceeded x x x?‰ (pp.
59-60);
xxx
„Atty. Gana:
Well, x x x it would take a grace period of 6 to 8 months[,]
because obviously, determination could not be made on
January 1, 2006. Yes, they were under the impression that at the
earliest it would take 30 days.
„Justice Panganiban:
Historically, when [will] these figures [be] available[:] the GDP,
[VAT] collection?‰ (p. 192);
xxx
„Justice Panganiban:
But certainly not on January 1. Therefore, by January 1, people
would not know whether the rate would be increased or not,
even if there is no discretion?
„Atty. Gana:
ThatÊs true, Your Honor, even if there is no discretion.
„Justice Panganiban:
It will take weeks, or months to be able to determine that?
It will take weeks, or months to be able to determine that?
183
37
This eventuality has been predetermined by Congress.
_______________
„Atty. Gana:
Well, they anticipated it, would take at most by March.‰ (p. 193);
and
xxx
„Justice Panganiban:
March, I will ask the government later on when they argue.
„Atty. Gana:
As early as January but not later than 60 to 90 days.‰
(boldface supplied; p. 194). Culled from the same record, the
following excerpts show the position of public respondents:
„Justice Panganiban:
It will be based on actual figures?
„Usec. Bonoan:
It will be based on actual figures.
„Justice Panganiban:
That creates a problem[,] because where do you get the actual
figures[?]
„Usec. Bonoan:
I understand that[,] traditionally[,] we can come in March, but
there is no impediment to speeding up the gathering.
„Justice Panganiban:
Speed it up. February 15?
„Usec. Bonoan:
Even within January, Your Honor, I think this can be⁄.
„Justice Panganiban:
Alright at the end of January, itÊs just estimate to get the figures
in January.
„Usec. Bonoan:
Yes, Your Honor (pp. 661-662); and
xxx
„Justice Panganiban:
My only point is, I raised this earlier and I promised counsel for the
petitioner whom I was questionin[g] that I will raise it with you,
whether the date January 1, 2006 would present an
impossibility of a condition happening.
„Usec. Bonoan:
It will not, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
So, your position [is] it will not present an impossibility. Elaborate
on it in your memorandum.
„Usec. Bonoan:
Yes, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
Because it is important. The administrative regulations are
important[,] because they clarify the law and it will guide
taxpayers. So[,] by January 1[,] [taxpayers] would not be
wondering. Do we charge the end consumers 10 [percent] or 12
[percent]? The regulations should be able to spell that out [i]n the
same manner that even now the various consumers of various
products and services must be able to get from your regulations how
much they [would] be charged, how much should gasoline stations
charge in addition to their correct prices, how much carriers should
charge[,] so there [would] be no confusion.
„Usec. Bonoan:
Yes, Your Honor.‰ (boldface supplied; pp. 665-666).
184
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185
_______________
Manufacturers Corp., G.R. No. 158540, August 3, 2005, 465 SCRA 532,
660.
40 Escudero Memorandum, pp. 38-39.
GDP data are far from perfect measures of either economic output or
welfare. There are three major problems: (1) some outputs are poorly
measured because they are not traded in the market, and government
services are not directly priced by such market; (2) some activities
measured as additions to GDP in fact only represent the use of resources
in order to avoid crime or risks to national security; and (3) it is difficult
to account correctly for improvements in the quality of goods. Dornbusch,
Fischer, and Startz, Macroeconomics (9th ed., 2005), pp. 35-36.
41 Fariñas v. Executive Secretary, 417 SCRA, 503, 530, December 10,
2003.
42 „Any meaningful change in the method and procedures of Congress
or its committees must x x x be sought in that body itself.‰
186
43
branches of44 government, outside the range of judicial
cognizance. „[T]he right to select the measure and objects
of taxation devolves upon the Congress, and not upon the
courts, and such selections are
45
valid unless constitutional
limitations are overstepped.‰ Moreover, each house of
Congress has the power46 and authority to determine the
rules of its proceedings. The contention that this case is
not ripe for determination because there is no violation yet
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187
47
from the Senate version) regarding income taxes are not
legally germane to the subject matter of the House bills.
Revising the income tax rates on domestic, resident foreign
and nonresident foreign corporations; increasing the tax
credit against taxes due from nonresident foreign
corporations on intercorporate dividends; and reducing the
_______________
47 HBs 3555 & 3705 do not contain any provision that seeks to revise
non-VAT provisions of the Tax Code, but SB 1950 has §§1-3 that seek to
amend the rates of income tax on domestic, resident foreign and
nonresident foreign corporations at 35% (30% in 2009), with a tax credit
on intercorporate dividends at 20% (15% in 2009); and to reduce the
allowable deductions for interest expense by 42% (33% in 2009) of the
interest income subject to final tax.
48 The amendments to income taxes also partake of the nature of
taxation without representation. As I will discuss in the succeeding
paragraphs of this Opinion, they did not emanate from the House of
Representatives that, under §24 of Article VI of the 1987 Constitution, is
the only body from which revenue bills should exclusively originate.
49 Mamalateo, Philippine Income Tax (2004), p. 1.
50 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. American Express
International, Inc. (Philippine Branch), G.R. No. 152609, 462 SCRA 197,
215, June 29, 2005, per Panganiban, J. See Deoferio, Jr. & Mamalateo,
The Value Added Tax in the Philippines (2000), p. 36.
51 De Leon, The Fundamentals of Taxation (12th ed., 1998), pp. 92 &
132.
188
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189
_______________
computed as follows:
35% - 20% = 15%
15% : 35% = 42%, the amount of reduction.
190
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61 §§1-3 of HB 3705.
62 §5 of SB 1950. There seems to be a discrepancy between the
Conference Committee Report and the various pleadings before this
Court. While such report, attaching a copy of the bill as reconciled and
approved by its conferees, as well as the report submitted by the SenateÊs
Committee on Ways & Means to the Senate President on March 7, 2005,
show that SB 1950 does not contain a no-pass on provision, the
petitioners and respondents show that it does (Pimentel Memorandum,
191
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192
_______________
tors; and 12% of the payments for the lease or use of properties
orproperty rights to nonresident owners.
67 §11 of SB 1950 seeks to amend §114 of the Tax Code by requiring
193
70
rect tax on consumption, called taxe sur la valeur ajoutée,
which was quickly adopted by the Direction Générale des
Impost, the new French tax authority of which he became
joint director. Consequently, taxpayers at all levels in the
production process, rather than retailers or tax authorities,
were forced
71
to administer and account for the tax them-
selves.
Since the unutilized input VAT can be carried over to
succeeding quarters, there is no undue deprivation of
property. Alternatively,
72
it can be passed on to the
consumers; there is no law prohibiting that. Merely
speculative and unproven, therefore, is
73
the contention that
the law is arbitrary and oppressive. Laws that impose
taxes are necessarily burdensome, compulsory, and
involuntary.
The deferred input tax account·which accumulates the
unutilized input VAT·remains an asset in the accounting
_______________
English.
71 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Maurice-Laur‹© (Last visited August
23, 2005, 3:20pm PST).
72 The Transcript of the Oral Arguments in G.R. Nos. 168461, 168463,
168056, and 168207, held on July 14, 2005 at the Supreme Court Session
Hall, show that the act of passing on to consumers is a mere cash flow
problem, as agreed to by counsel for petitioners in G.R. No. 168461:
„Justice Panganiban:
So, the final consumer pays the tax?
„Atty. Baniqued:
Yes, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
The trade people in between the middlemen just take it as an input
and then [collect] it as output, isnÊt it?
Atty. Baniqued:
Yes, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
ItÊs just a cash flow problem for them, essentially?
„Atty. Baniqued:
Yes x x x.‰ (p. 375).
194
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195
79
ally accepted accounting principles. These refer to
accounting concepts, measurement techniques, and
standards of presentation in a companyÊs financial
statements, and are not rooted in laws of nature, as are the
laws of physical science, for these are merely developed and
continually modified by
_______________
196
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80 Meigs & Meigs, Accounting: The Basis for Business Decisions (1981),
pp. 28 & 515.
Under §9(b) & (g) of RA 9298, the PRBOA shall supervise the practice
of accountancy in the Philippines and adopt measures·such as the
promulgation of accounting and auditing standards, rules and
regulations, and best practices·that may be deemed proper for the
enhancement and maintenance of high professional, ethical, accounting,
and auditing standards that include international accounting and
auditing standards and generally accepted best practices.
81 The VAT is collected on each sale of goods or properties or upon the
actual or constructive receipt of consideration for services, starting from
the production stage, followed by the intermediate
197
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stages in the distribution process, and culminating with the sale to the
final consumer. This is the essence of a VAT; it is a tax on the value
added, that is, on the excess of sales over purchases. See Deoferio Jr. &
Mamalateo, The Value Added Tax in the Philippines (2000), pp. 33-34.
With the 70 percent cap on output tax that is allowable as an input tax
credit, the remaining 30 percent becomes an outright expense that is,
however, immediately payable and remitted by the business
establishment to the government. This amount can never be recovered or
passed on to the consumer, but it can be an allowable deduction from
gross income under §34(A)(1) of the Tax Code. In effect, it is a tax
computed by multiplying 30 percent to the 10 percent VAT that is
imposed on gross sales, receipts or revenues. It is not a tax on tax and,
mathematically, it is derived as follows:
198
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of Appeals, 403 SCRA 634, 664, June 10, 2003, per Carpio, J. Cruz,
Constitutional Law (1998), p. 89.
84 §116 of the Tax Code as amended.
85 „[C]ourts accord the presumption of constitutionality to legislative
enactments, not only because the legislature is presumed to abide by the
Constitution[,] but also because the judiciary[,] in the determination of
actual cases and controversies[,] must reflect the wisdom and justice of
the people as expressed through their representatives in the executive
and legislative departments of the government.‰ Angara v. Electoral
Commission, 63 Phil. 139, 158-159, July 15, 1936, per Laurel, J.; (cited in
Francisco, Jr. v. House of Representatives, supra, pp. 121-122.)
86 Cawaling, Jr. v. Commission on Elections, 420 Phil. 524, 530; 368
SCRA 453, 456, October 26, 2001, per Sandoval-Gutierrez, J.
87 Ichong v. Hernandez, 101 Phil. 1155, 1164, May 31, 1957, per
Labrador, J.
199
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200
thus:
„Atty. Baniqued:
But if your profit margin is low as i[n] the case of the
petroleum dealers, x x x then we would have a serious
problem, Your Honor.
201
„Justice Panganiban:
IsnÊt the solution to increase the price then?
„Atty. Baniqued:
If you increase the price which you can very well do,
Your Honor, then that [will] be deflationary and it
[will] have a cascading effect on all other basic
commodities[, especially] because what is involved
here is pet roleum, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
That may be true[,] but itÊs not unconstitutional?
„Atty. Baniqued:
That may be true, Your Honor, but the very
limitation of the [seventy percent] input [VAT], when
applied to the case of the petroleum dealers[,] is
oppressive[.] [I]tÊs unjust and itÊs unreasonable, Your
Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
But it can be passed as a part of sales, sales costs
rather.
„Atty. Baniqued:
But the petroleum dealers here themselves⁄⁄
interrupted
„Justice Panganiban:
In your [b]alance [s]heet, it could be reflected as Cost
of Sales and therefore the price will go up?
„Atty. Baniqued:
Even if it were to be reflected as part of the Cost of
Sales, Your Honor, the [input VAT] that you cannot
claim, the benefit to you is only to the extent of the
corporate tax rate which is 32 now 35 [percent].
„Justice Panganiban:
Yes.
„Atty. Baniqued:
ItÊs not 100 [percent] credi[ta]bility[,] unlike if it were
applied against your [output VAT], you get to claim
100 [percent] of it, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
That might be true, but we are talking about whether
that particular provision would be unconstitutional.
You say itÊs oppressive, but you have a remedy, you
just pass it on to the customer. I am not sayin[g]
itÊs good[.] [N]either am I saying itÊs wise[.] [A]ll IÊm
talking about is, whether itÊs constitutional or not.
„Atty. Baniqued:
Yes, in fact we acknowledge, Your Honor, that
that is a remedy available to the petroleum
dealers, but considering the impact of that
limitation[,] and were just talking of the 70 [percent
cap] on [input VAT]
202
„Justice Panganiban:
What I am saying is, there is a remedy, which is
business in character. The mere fact that the
government is imposing that [seventy percent] cap
doesnot make the law unconstitutional, isnÊt it?
„Atty. Baniqued:
It does, Your Honor, if it can be shown. And as we
have shown, it is oppressive and unreasonable, it is
excessive, Your Honor⁄ interrupted
„Justice Panganiban:
If you have no way of recouping it. If you have no way
of recouping that amount, then it will be oppressive,
but you have a business way of recouping it[.] I am
saying that, not advising that itÊs good. All I am
saying is, is it constitutional or not[?] WeÊre not here
to determine the wisdom of the law, thatÊs up for
Congress. As pointed out earlier, if the law is not wise,
the law makers will be changed by the people[.] [T]hat
is their solution t[o] the lack of wisdom of a law. If the
law is unconstitutional[,] then the Supreme Court will
declare it unconstitutional and void it, but[,] in this
case[,] there seems to be a business remedy in the
same manner that Congress may just impose that tax
straight without saying itÊs [VAT]. If Congress will just
say all petroleum will pay 3 [percent] of their Gross
Sales, but you donÊt bear that, you pass that on, isnÊt
it?
„Atty. Baniqued:
We acknowledge your concern, Your Honor, but we
should not forget that when the petroleum dealers
pass these financial burden or this tax differential to
the consumers, they themselves are consumers in
their own right. As a matter of fact, they filed this
case both as petroleum dealer[s] and as taxpayers. If
they pass if on, they themselves would ultimately bear
the burden[, especially] in increase[d] cost of
electricity, land transport, food, everything, Your
Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
Yes, but the issue here in this Court, is whether that
203
„Atty. Baniqued:
Yes, we believe it is unconstitutional, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
You have a right to complain that it is oppressive, it is
excessive, it burdens the people too much, but is it
unconstitutional?
„Atty. Baniqued:
Besides, passing it on, Your Honor, may not be as
simple as it may seem. As a matter of fact, at the
strike of midnight on June 30, when petroleum prices
were being changed upward, the [s]ecretary of [the]
Department of Energy was going around[.] [H]e was
seen on TV going around just to check that prices
donÊt go up. And as a matter of fact, he had
pronouncements that, the increase in petroleum price
should only be limited to the effect of 10 [percent] E-
VAT.
„Justice Panganiban:
ItÊs becaus[e] the implementing rules were not clear
and were not extensive enough to cover how much
really should be the increase for various oil products,
refined oil products. ItÊs up for the dealers to guess,
and the dealers were guessing to their advantage by
saying plus 10 [percent] anyway, right?
„Atty. Baniqued:
In fact, the petroleum dealers, Your Honors, are not
only faced with constitutional issues before this Court.
They are also faced with a possibility of the
Department of Energy not allowing them to pass it
on[,] because this would be an unreasonable price
increase. And so, they are being hit from both sides⁄
interrupted
„Justice Panganiban:
ThatÊs why I say, that there is need to refine the
implementing rules so that everyone will know, the
customers will know how much to pay for gasoline,
not only gasoline, gasoline, and so on, diesel and all
kinds of products, so thereÊll be no confusion and
thereÊll be no undue taking advantage. There will be a
smooth implementation[,] if the law were to be upheld
by the Court. In your case, as I said, it may be unwise
to pass that on to the customers, but definitely, the
dealers will not bear that [·] to suffer the loss that
you mentioned in your consolidated balance sheets.
Certainly, the dealers will not bear that [cost], isnÊt it?
„Atty. Baniqued:
It will be a very hard decision to make, Your Honor.
204
„Justice Panganiban:
Why, you will not pass it on?
„Atty. Baniqued:
I cannot speak for the dealers⁄. interrupted.
„Justice Panganiban:
As a consumer, I will thank you if you donÊt pass it
on[;] but you or your clients as businessm[e]n, I know,
will pass it on.
„Atty. Baniqued:
As I have said, Your Honor, there are many
constraints on their ability to do that[,] and that is
why the first step that we are seeking is to seek
redress from this Honorable Court[,] because we feel
that the imposit on is excessive and oppressive⁄..
interrupted
„Justice Panganiban:
You can find redress here, only if you can show that
„Atty. Baniqued:
At the start of our presentation, Your Honor[,] we
stated clearly that this applies only to capital goods
costing more than one [million].
205
„Justice Panganiban:
Yes, but you combined it later on with the 70 [percent]
cap to show that the dealers are so disadvantaged.
But you didnÊt tell us that that will apply only when
capital equipment or goods is one million or more. And
in your case, what kind of capital goods will be worth
one million or more in your existing gas stations?
„Atty. Baniqued:
Well, you would have petroleum dealers, Your Honor,
who would have[,] aside from sale of petroleum[,] they
would have their service centers[,] like[⁄] to service
cars and they would have those equipments, they are,
Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
But thatÊs a different profit center, thatÊs not from the
sale of⁄
„Atty. Baniqued:
No, they would form part of their [VATable] sale, Your
Honor.
Justice Panganiban:
ItÊs a different profit center[;] itÊs not in the sale of
petroleum products. In fact the mode now is to put up
super stores in huge gas stations. I do not begrudge
the gas station[.] [A]ll I am saying is it should be
presented to us in perspective. Neither am I siding
with the government. All I am saying is, when I saw
your complicated balance sheet and mathematics, I
saw that you were to put in all the time the
depreciation that should be spread over [five] years.
206
„Justice Panganiban:
Not if, you can pass it on⁄.
„Atty. Baniqued:
Yes, we can⁄. interrupted
„Justice Panganiban:
There is no prohibition to passing it on[.] [P]robably
the gas station will simply pass it on to the Supreme
Court and say[,] well[,] there is this 5 [percent]
207
final VAT on you so[,] therefore, for every tank full you
buy[,] weÊll just have to [charge] you 5 [percent] more.
Well, the Supreme Court will probably say, well,
anyway, that 5 [percent] that we will pay the gas
dealer, will be paid back to the government, isnÊt it[?]
So, how [will] you be affected?
„Atty. Baniqued:
I hope the passing on of the burden, Your Honor,
doesnÊt come back to party litigants by way of increase
in docket fees, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
But thatÊs quite another m[a]tter, though⁄(laughs)
[W]hat I am saying, Mr. [C]ounsel is, you still have to
show to us that your remedy is to declare the law
unconstitutional[,] and itÊs not business in character.
„Atty. Baniqued:
Yes, Your Honor, it is our submission that this
limitation in the input [VAT] credit as well as the
amortization⁄⁄.
„Justice Panganiban:
All you talk about is equal protection clause, about
due process, depreciation of property without
observance of due process[,] could really be a remedy
than a business way.
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SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 469 27/04/2019, 6+10 AM
„Atty. Baniqued:
Business in the level of the petroleum dealers, Your
Honor, or in the level of Congress, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
Yes, you can pass them on to customers[,] in other
words. ItÊs the customers who should [complain].
„Atty. Baniqued:
Yes, Your Honor⁄ interrupted
„Justice Panganiban:
And perhaps will not elect their representatives
anymore[.]
„Atty. Baniqued:
Yes, Your Honor⁄..
„Justice Panganiban:
For agreeing to it, because the wisdom of a law is not
for the Supreme Court to pass upon.
„Atty. Baniqued:
It just so happens, Your Honor, that what is [involved]
here is a commodity that when it goes up, it affects
everybody⁄.
„Justice Panganiban:
Yes, inflationary and inflammatory⁄.
„Atty. Baniqued:
⁄just like what Justice Puno says it shakes the entire
economic foundation, Your Honor.
208
„Justice Panganiban:
Yes, itÊs inflationary[,] brings up the prices of
everything⁄
„Atty. Baniqued:
209
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„Justice Panganiban:
As a matter of fact[,] a part of the mitigating measures would be the
elimination of the [e]xcise [t]ax and the import duties. That is [why]
it is not correct to say that the [VAT] as to petroleum dealers
increase to 10 [percent].
„Atty. Baniqued:
Yes, Your Honor.
„Justice Panganiban:
And[,] therefore, there is no justification for increasing the retail
price by 10 [percent] to cover the E-[VAT.] [I]f you consider the
excise tax and the import duties, the [n]et [t]ax would probably be
in the neighborhood of 7 [percent]? We are not going into exact
figures[.] I am just trying to deliver a point that different industries,
different
210
Rejecting Non-Conflicting
Provisions
_______________
211
Summary
_______________
212
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213
_______________
214
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
_______________
98 338 Phil. 546, 604-605; 272 SCRA 18, 80, May 2, 1997, per
Panganiban, J.
99 420 Phil. 525, 531; 368 SCRA 453, 457, October 26, 2001, per
Sandoval-Gutierrez, J.; (citing The Philippine Judges Association v.
Prado, 227 SCRA 703, 706, November 11, 1993, per Cruz, J.).
100 Veterans Federation Party v. Commission on Elections, 396 Phil.
419, 452-453; 342 SCRA 244, 283, October 6, 2000, per Panganiban, J.;
(citing Garcia v. Commission on Elections, 227 SCRA 100, 107-108,
October 5, 1993).
215
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216
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217
218
SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ, J.:
under
_______________
4 Supra, p. 811.
219
1
the protection of the state.‰ At no other time this dictum
becomes more urgent and obligatory as in the present time,
when the Philippines is in its most precarious fiscal
position.
At this juncture, may I state that I join Mr. Senior
Justice Reynato S. Puno in his Opinion, specifically on the
following points:
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220
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221
the Legislature.
R.A. No. 9337, in granting to the President the stand-by
authority to increase the VAT rate from 10% to 12%, the
Legislature abdicated its power by delegating it to the
President. This is constitutionally impermissible. The
Legislature may not escape its duties and responsibilities
by delegating its power to any other body or authority. Any
attempt to abdicate the power is unconstitutional and void,
on the principle that
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222
8
potestas delegata non delegare potest. As Judge Cooley
enunciated:
„One of the settled maxims in constitutional law is, that the power
conferred upon the legislature to make laws cannot be delegated by
that department to any other body or authority. Where the
sovereign power of the state has located the authority, there
it must remain; and by the constitutional agency alone the
laws must be made until the Constitution itself is changed.
The power to whose judgment, wisdom, and patriotism this high
prerogative has been entrusted cannot relieve itself of the
responsibility by choosing other agencies upon which the power
shall be devolved, nor can it substitute the judgment, wisdom, and
patriotism of any other body for those to which alone the people
9
have seen fit to confide this sovereign trust.‰
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223
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11 Espiritu vs. Cipriano, G.R. No. 32743, February 15, 1974, 55 SCRA
533, 538, citing Sutherlands Statutory Construction, Vol. 2, Section 4945,
p. 412.
12 A tariff is a list or schedule of articles on which a duty is imposed
upon their importation, with the rates at which they are severally taxed,
it is also the custom or duty payable on such articles. (BlackÊs Law
Dictionary [6th Edition], 1990, at p. 1456).
13 An import quota is a quantitative restriction on the importation of
an article into a country, and is a remedy available to the executive
department upon its determination that an imported article threatens
serious injury to a domestic industry. (Id., at p. 755).
14 An export quota is an amount of specific goods which may be
exported and are set by the government for purposes of national defense,
economic stability and price support. (Id., at p. 579).
15 Tonnage dues are duties laid upon vessels according to their
tonnage or cubical capacity. (Id., at p. 1488).
224
16 17
dues and other duties and imposts, „by no stretch of
imagination can this enumeration be extended to include
the VAT.
And third, it does not relate merely to the
administrative implementation of R.A. No. 9337.
In testing whether a statute constitutes an undue
delegation of legislative power or not, it is usual to inquire
whether the statute was complete in all its terms and
provisions when it left the hands of the Legislature so that
nothing was left to the judgment of any other appointee or
18
delegate of the legislature.
In the present case, the President is the delegate of the
Legislature, endowed with the power to raise the VAT rate
from 10% to 12% if any of the following conditions, to
reiterate, has been satisfied: (i) value-added tax collection
as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) of the
previous year exceeds two and four-fifths percent (2 4/5%)
or (ii) National Government deficit as a percentage of GDP
of the previous year exceeds one and one-half percent (1
1/2%).
At first glance, the two conditions may appear to be
definite standards sufficient to guide the President.
However, to my mind, they are ineffectual and malleable as
they give the President ample opportunity to exercise her
authority in arbitrary and discretionary fashion.
_______________
225
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19 Walter E. Olsen & Co. vs. Aldanese and Trinidad (1922), 43 Phil.,
259; 12 C.J., p. 786.
20 Cruz, Constitutional Law, 1987 Edition, at p. 101.
226
Senator Lacson.
Thank you, Mr. President. Now, I will go back to my
original question, my first question. Who are we
threatening to punish on the imposed condition No. 1
·the public or the President?
Senator Recto.
That is not a punishment, that is supposed to be
a reward system.
Senator Lacson.
Yes, an incentive. So we are offering an
incentive to the Chief Executive.
Senator Recto.
That is right.
Senator Lacson.
·In order for her to be able to raise the VAT to
12 %.
Senator Recto.
That is right. That is the intention, yes.
xxx xxx
227
Senator Osmeña.
All right. Therefore, with the lifting of
exemptions it stands to reason that Value-added
tax collections as a percentage of GDP will be
much higher than . . . Now, if it is higher than
2.5%, in other words, because they collected
more, we will allow them to even tax more. Is
that the meaning of this particular phrase?
Senator Recto.
Yes, Mr. President, that is why it is as low as
2.8%. It is like if a person has a son and his son
asks him for an allowance, I do not think that he
would immediately give his son an increase in
allowance unless he tells his son, You better imp
rove your grades and I will give you an
allowance. That is the analogy of this.
xxxxxx
Senator Osmeña.
So the gentleman is telling the President, If you
collect more than 138 billion, I will give you
additional powers to tax the people.
Senator Recto.
x x x We are saying, kung mataas ang grade mo,
dadagdagan ko ang allowance mo. Katulad ng
sinabi natin dito. What we are saying here is
you prove to me that you can collect it, then we
will increase your rate, you can raise your rate.
It is an incentive.21
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21 TSN, May 10, 2005, Annex ÂE‰ of the Petition in G.R. No. 168056.
228
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229
that a revenue statute·and not only the bill which initiated the
legislative process culminating in the enactment of the law·must
substantially be the same as the House Bill would be to deny the
SenateÊs power not only to Âconcur with amendments: but also to
Âpropose amendments.Ê It would be to violate the co-equality of the
legislative power of the two houses of Congress and in fact, make
the House superior to the Senate.‰
230
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231
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232
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233
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234
235
[1] All Bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House of
Representatives; but the Senate may propose or concur with
Amendments as on other Bills.
[2] Every Bill which shall have passed the House of
Representatives and the Senate, shall, before it become a Law, be
presented to the President of the United States; If he approve he
shall
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236
it, but if not he shall return it, with his Objections to the House in
Sec. 26. (1) Every bill passed by Congress shall embrace only one
subject which shall be expressed in the title thereof.
(2) No bill passed by either House shall become a law unless it
has passed three readings on separate days, and printed copies
thereof in its final form have been distributed to its Members three
days before its passage, except when the President certifies to the
necessity of its immediate enactment to meet a public calamity or
emergency. Upon the last reading of a bill, no amendment thereto
shall be allowed, and the vote thereon shall be taken immediately
thereafter, and the yeas and nays entered in the Journal.
Sec. 27. (1) Every bill passed by Congress shall, before it becomes
a law, be presented to the President. If he approves the same, he
shall sign it; otherwise, he shall veto it and return the same with
his objections to the House where it originated, which
237
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238
Conference Committees
average time consumed in conference was 33 days per bill. Bills are
sent to conference without reading the amendments of the other
chamber. Despite rules to the contrary, conferees do not confine
themselves to matters in dispute, but often initiate entirely new
legislation and even strike out identical provisions previously
approved by both houses. This happened during the 78th Congress,
for instance, when
239
240
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241
242
The task at hand for the Court, but which the ponencia
eschews, is to circumscribe the powers of the Bicameral
Conference Committee in light of the „three-reading‰ and
„noamendment‰ rules in Article VI, Section 26(2) of the
Constitution.
Sec. 88. Conference Committee.·In the event that the House does
not agree with the Senate on the amendments to any bill or joint
resolution, the differences may be settled by the conference
committees of both chambers.
In resolving the differences with the Senate, the House panel
shall, as much as possible, adhere to and support the House Bill. If
the differences with the Senate are so substantial that they
materially impair the House Bill, the panel shall report such fact to
the House for the latterÊs appropriate action.
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5 Bernas SJ, J., The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines, A
Commentary, pp. 702-703 (1996 Ed.).
243
Sec. 35. In the event that the Senate does not agree with the House
of Representatives on the provision of any bill or joint resolution,
the differences shall be settled by a conference committee of both
Houses which shall meet within ten (10) days after their
composition. The President shall designate the members of the
Senate Panel in the conference committee with the approval of the
Senate.
Each Conference Committee Report shall contain a detailed and
sufficiently explicit statement of the changes in, or amendments to
the subject measure, and shall be signed by a majority of the
members of each House panel, voting separately.
244
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245
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246
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247
The Court finds no reason to deviate from the salutary in this case
where the irregularities alleged by the petitioners mostly involved the
internal rules of Congress, whether House or Senate. Parliamentary
rules are merely procedural and with their observance the courts
have no concern. Whatever doubts there may be as to the formal
validity of Rep. Act No. 9006 must be resolved in its favor. The
Court reiterates its ruling in Arroyo v. De Venecia, viz.:
But the cases, both here and abroad, in varying forms of expression, all
deny to the courts the power to inquire into the allegations that, in
enacting a law, a House of Congress failed to comply with its own rules, in
the absence of showing that there was a violation of a constitutional
provision or the rights of private individuals. In Osmeña v. Pendatun, it
was held: „At any rate, courts have declared that Âthe rules adopted by
deliberative bodies are subject to revocation, modification or waiver at
the pleasure of the body adopting them.Ê And it has been said that
ÂParliamentary rules are merely procedural, and with their observance,
the courts have no concern. They may be waived or disregarded by the
legislative body.Ê Consequently, Âmere failure to conform to parliamentary
usage will not invalidate the action (taken by a deliberative body) when
the
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248
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„[e]very bill passed by Congress shall embrace only one subject which
shall be expressed in the title thereof‰; and (2) whether Section 14 of R.A.
No. 9006 violated the equal protection clause of the Constitution. On
both issues the Court ruled in the negative. To reiterate, unlike in the
present cases, the acts of the conference committee with respect to R.A.
No. 9006 in Fariñas allegedly violated the internal rules of either house
of Congress, but it was not alleged therein that they amounted to a
violation of any constitutional provision on legislative procedure.
18 Article VIII, Section 1, CONSTITUTION.
249
AZCUNA, J.:
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and restrictions as it may impose, tariff rates, import and export quotas,
tonnage and wharfage dues, and other duties as imposts within the
framework of the national development program of the Government.‰
(Art. VI, Sec. 28 [2], emphasis supplied.)
Petitioners claim that the power does not extend to fixing the rates of
taxes, since taxes are not tariffs, import and export quotas, tonnage and
wharfage dues, or other duties or imposts.
2 Section 4, Republic Act No. 9337. The pertinent portion of the
provision states:
SEC. 4. Section 106 of the same Code, as amended, is hereby further amended
to read as follows:
„SEC. 106. Value-added Tax on Sale of Goods or Properties.·
„(A) Rate and Base of Tax.·There shall be levied, assessed and collected on
every sale, barter or exchange of goods or properties, a value-added tax
equivalent to ten percent
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(10%) of the gross selling price or gross value in money of the goods or
properties sold, bartered or exchanged, such tax to be paid by the seller
or transferor: Provided, That the President, upon the recommendation of
the Secretary of Finance, shall, effective January 1, 2006, raise the rate
of value-added tax to twelve percent (12%), after any of the following
conditions has been satisfied:
251
its power to fix the rate of the tax since the rate increase
provided under the law, from 10% to 12%, is definite and
certain
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252
253
Provision
Section 27 Rate of income tax on domestic
corporations
Section 28(A) Rate of income tax on resident foreign
(1) corporations
Section 28(B) Rate of income tax on non-resident foreign
(1) corporations
Section 28(B) Rate of income tax on intercorporate
(5-b) dividends received by non-resident foreign
corporations
Section 34(B) Deduction from gross income
(1)
254
tions; (b) amend the tax credit against taxes due from
nonresident foreign corporations on the intercorporate
dividends; and (c) reduce the allowable deduction from
interest expense.‰
Respondents should, in any case, now be able to
implement the E-VAT 4
law without confusion and thereby
achieve its purpose.
I vote to GRANT the petitions to the extent of declaring
unconstitutional the provisions in Republic Act. No. 9337
that are not germane to the subject matter and DENY said
petitions as to the rest of the law, which are constitutional.
TINGA, J.:
1
The E-VAT Law, as it stands, will exterminate our countryÊs
small to medium enterprises. This will be the net effect of
affirming Section 8 of the law, which amends Sections 110
of the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) by imposing
a seventy percent (70%) cap on the creditable input tax a
VAT-registered person may apply every quarter and a
mandatory sixty (60)-month amortization period on the
input tax on goods purchased or imported in a calendar
month if the acquisition cost of such goods exceeds One
Million Pesos (P1,000,000.00).
Taxes may be inherently punitive, but when the fine line
between damage and destruction is crossed, the courts must
step forth and cut the hangmanÊs noose. Justice Holmes
once confidently asserted that „the power to tax is not the
power to
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255
destroy while this Court sits,‰ and we should very well live
up to this expectation not only of the revered Holmes, but
of the Filipino people who rely on this Court as the
guardian of their rights. At stake is the right to exist and
subsist despite taxes, which is encompassed in the due
process clause.
I respectfully submit these views while maintaining the
deepest respect for the prerogative of the legislature to
impose taxes, and of the national government to chart
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256
4
legislature. In tandem with Section 1, Article VI of the
Constitution which institutionalizes the law-making power
of Congress, Section 24 under the same Article crystallizes
this principle, as it provides that „[a]ll appropriation,
revenue or tariff bills ⁄ shall
5
originate exclusively in the
House of Representatives.‰
Consequently, neither the executive nor judicial
branches of government may originate tax measures. Even
if the President desires to levy new taxes, the imposition
cannot be done by mere executive fiat. In such an instance,
the President would have to rely on Congress to enact tax
laws.
Moreover, this plenary power of taxation cannot be
delegated by Congress to any other branch of government
or private persons, unless
6
its delegation is authorized by
the Constitution itself. In this regard, the situation stands
different from that
7
in the recent case Southern Cross v.
PHILCEMCOR, wherein I noted in my ponencia that the
Tariff Commission and the DTI Secretary may be regarded
as agents of Congress for the purpose of imposing
safeguard measures. That pronouncement was made in
light of Section 28(2) Article VI, which allows Congress to
delegate to the President through law the power to impose
tariffs and imposts, subject to limitations and restrictions
as may be ordained by Con-
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3 J. Vitug and E. Acosta, Tax Law and Jurisprudence (2nd ed., 2000),
at pp. 7-8.
4 See National Power Corporation v. Province of Albay, G.R. No.
87479, 4 June 1990, 186 SCRA 198, 203.
5 See Section 24, Article VI, Constitution.
6 The recognized exceptions, both expressly provided by the
Constitution, being the tariff clause under Section 28(2), Article VI, and
the powers of taxation of local government units under Section 5, Article
X.
7 G.R. No. 158540, 8 July 2005, 434 SCRA 65.
257
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259
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260
11
resolved in favor, of the constitutionality of a statute, it
should necessarily follow that the construction upheld
should be one that is not itself noxious to the Constitution.
Congress should be taken to task for imperfect
draftsmanship at least. Much trouble would have been
avoided had the provisos instead read: „that effective
January 1, 2006, the rate of value-added tax shall be raised
to twelve percent (12%), after any of the following
conditions has been satisfied x x x.‰ This, after all is the
operative effect of the provision as it stands. In relation to
the operation of the tax increase, the denominated role of
the President and the Secretary of Finance may be
regarded as a superfluity, as their imprimatur as a
precondition to the increase of the VAT rate must have no
bearing.
Nonetheless, I cannot ignore the fact that both the
President and the Secretary of Finance have designated
roles in the implementation of the tax increase.
Considering that it is Congress, and not these officials,
which properly have imposed the increase in the VAT rate,
how should these roles be construed?
The enactment of a law should be distinguished from its
implementation. Even if it is Congress which exercises the
plenary power of taxation, it is not the body that
administers the implementation of the tax. Under Section 2
of the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC), the
assessment and collection of all national internal revenue
taxes, and the enforcement of all forfeitures, penalties and
fines connected therewith had been previously delegated to
the Bureau of Internal Revenue, under 12
the supervision and
control of the Department of Finance.
Moreover, as intimated earlier, Congress may delegate
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13 There are two eminent tests for valid delegation, the „completeness
test‰ and the „sufficient standard test.‰ The law must be complete in its
essential terms and conditions when it leaves the legislature so that
there will be nothing left for the delegate to do when it reaches him
except enforce it. U.S. v. Ang Tang Ho, 43 Phil. 1, 6-7 (1922). On the
other hand, a sufficient standard is intended to map out the boundaries
of the delegateÊs authority by defining legislative policy and indicating
the circumstances under which it is to be pursued and effected; intended
to prevent a total transference of legislative power from the legislature to
the delegate.
14 Decision, infra, citing Alunan v. Mirasol, G.R. No. 108399, 31 July
1997, 276 SCRA 501, 513-514.
262
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263
One of the more crucial issues now before us, one that has
seriously divided the Court, pertains to the ability of the
Bicameral Conference Committee to introduce
amendments to the final bill which were not contained in
the House bill from which the E-VAT Law originated. Most
of the points addressed by the petitioners have been16settled
in our ruling in Tolentino v. Secretary of Finance, yet a
revisit of that precedent is urged upon this Court. On this
score, I offer my qualified concurrence with the ponencia.
Two key provisions of the Constitution come into play:
Sections 24 and 26(2), Article VI of the Constitution. They
read:
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264
This power over the purse, may in fact be regarded as the most
complete and effectual weapon with which any constitution can arm
the immediate representatives of the people, for obtaining a redress
of every grievance, and for carrying into effect every just and
18
salutary measure.
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265
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266
before said bills are transmitted to the other house for its
concurrence or amendment.‰ I agree with this statement.
Clearly, the procedure under Section 26(2), Article VI only
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267
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268
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269
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270
Moreover, the fact that the nature of the „no pass on‰
provisions adopted by the House essentially differs from
that of the Senate necessarily required the corrective relief
from the Bicameral Conference Committee. The Committee
could have either insisted on the House version, the Senate
version, or
271
II.
272
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273
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274
275
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276
cause pain and injury to the taxpayer, albeit for the greater
good of society. Perhaps whatever collective notion there
may be of what constitutes an arbitrary, confiscatory, and
unreasonable tax might draw more from the fairy
tale/legend traditions of absolute monarchs and the
oppressed peasants they tax. Indeed, it is easier to jump to
the conclusion that a tax is oppressive and unfair if it is
imposed by a tyrant or an authoritarian state.
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277
278
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This was the CourtÊs maiden unequivocal affirmation of the „clear and
present danger‰ rule in the religious freedom area, and in Philippine
jurisprudence, for that matter.‰ Estrada v. Escritor, A.M. No. P-02-1651,
4 August 2003, 408 SCRA 1.
279
280
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281
282
The principle of the common system of value added tax involves the
application to goods and services of a general tax on consumption
exactly proportional to the price of the goods and services,
whatever the number of transactions that take place in the
production and distribution process before the stage at which
tax is charged.
On each transaction, value added tax, calculated on the price of
the goods or services at the rate applicable to such goods or services,
shall be chargeable after deduction of the amount of value
35
added tax borne directly by the various cost components.
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283
284
285
286
287
288
289
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291
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292
293
DEALER „A‰
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294
295
Slide 1
Item Cost VAT
Sales 1,000,000.00 100,000.00
Purchases 800,000.00 80,000.00
Due BIR Due BIR with 70% cap
without cap
Slide 2
Item Cost VAT
Sales 1,000,000.00 100,000.00
Purchases 600,000.00 60,000.00
Due BIR without cap Due BIR with 70% cap
Output VAT 100,000.00 Output VAT 100,000.00
Actual Input VAT (60% of output Allowable 60,000.00
Input VAT
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296
VAT) 60,000.00
Net VAT 40,000.00 Net VAT Payable 40,000.00
Payable
Excess Input VAT ___0_____
Carry-over to next
quarter
Slide 1
Quarter 1
Item No. Cost VAT
Sales 1,000,000.00 100,000.00
Purchases 800,000.00 80,000.00
Due BIR with 70% cap
Output VAT 100,000.00
Allowable Input VAT 70,000.00
Net VAT Payable 30,000.00
Excess Input Vat 10,000.00
Carry-over to next quarter
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297
Quarter 2
Cost VAT
Quarter 3
Cost VAT
Sales 1,000,000.00 100,000.00
Purchases 800,000.00 80,000.00
Due BIR with 70% cap
Output VAT 100,000.00
Less: Input VAT
Excess Input VAT fr. 2nd Qtr. 20,000.00
Input VAT-Current Qtr. 80,000.00
Total Available Input VAT 100,000.00
Allowable Input VAT (100,000 x 70,000.00 70,000.00
70%)
Net VAT Payable 30,000.00
298
Quarter 4
Cost VAT
Sales 1,000,000.00 100,000.00
Purchases 800,000.00 80,000.00
Due BIR with 70% cap
Output VAT 100,000.00
Less: Input VAT
Excess Input VAT fr. 3rd Qtr. 30,000.00
Input VAT-Current Qtr. 80,000.00
Total Available Input VAT 110,000.00
Allowable Input VAT (100,000 x 70,000.00 70,000.00
70%)
Net VAT Payable 30,000.00
Allowable Input VAT 110,000.00
Total Available Input VAT 70,000.00
Excess Input VAT to be 40,000.00
carried over to next quarter
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300
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43 Decision, infra.
301
xxx
„(B) Capital Goods.·A VAT-registered person may apply for the
issuance of a tax credit certificate or refund of input taxes paid on
capital goods imported or locally purchased, to the extent that such
input taxes have not been applied against output taxes. The
application may be made only within two (2) years after the close of
the taxable quarter when the importation or purchase was made.
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„[Q]: Is there a way by which such unapplied excess input tax credits can be
claimed for refund or issuance of TCC?
[A]: The only time application for refund/issuance of TCC is allowed
for input taxes incurred on the purchase of domestic goods/services is
when the same are directly attributable to zero-rated or effectively
zero-rated sales (of goods/services). x x x
For those engaged purely in domestic transactions, the only time
that unapplied input taxes may be applied for the issuance of TCC is
when the VAT registration of the taxpayer is cancelled due to
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his other internal revenue taxes, application for refund thereof is not
an option.‰
See Annexes „18-N‰ and „18-O,‰ Compliance dated 12 July 2005.
45 See SRC Rule 68(1)(b)(c), IMPLEMENTING RULES AND
REGULATIONS TO THE SECURITIES AND REGULATIONS CODE.
46 Section 34, INTERNATIONAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS 12.
47 Section 36, Id.
303
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304
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305
depreciation purposes, then the input VAT shall be spread over such a
shorter period: Provided, finally, That in the case of purchase of services,
lease or use of properties, the input tax shall be creditable to the
purchaser, lessee or licensee upon payment of the compensation, rental,
royalty or fee.
306
307
provision reads:
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308
309
310
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311
Conclusions
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59 Id., at p. 856.
312
313
CONCURRING OPINION
CHICO-NAZARIO, J.:
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314
2
without taxes, the government would be paralyzed.
Without the tax reforms introduced by Rep. Act No. 9337,
the then Secretary of the Department of Finance, Cesar V.
Purisima, assessed that „all economic scenarios point to the
National GovernmentÊs inability to sustain its precarious
fiscal position, resulting in severe3 erosion of investor
confidence and economic stagnation.‰
Finding Rep. Act No. 9337 as not unconstitutional, both
in its procedural enactment and in its substance, I hereby
concur in full in the foregoing majority opinion, penned by
my esteemed colleague, Justice Ma. Alicia Austria-
Martinez.
According to petitioners, the enactment of Rep. Act No.
9337 by Congress was riddled with irregularities and
violations of the Constitution. In particular, they alleged
that: (1) The Bicameral Conference Committee exceeded its
authority to merely settle or reconcile the differences
among House Bills No. 3555 and 3705 and Senate Bill No.
1950, by including in Rep. Act No. 9337 provisions not
found in any of the said bills, or deleting from Rep. Act No.
9337 or amending provisions therein even though they
were not in conflict with the provisions of the other bills; (2)
The amendments introduced by the Bicameral Conference
Committee violated Article VI, Section 26(2), of the
Constitution which forbids the amendment of a bill after it
had passed third reading; and (3) Rep. Act No. 9337
contravened Article VI, Section 24, of the Constitution
which prescribes that revenue bills should originate
exclusively from the House of Representatives.
Invoking the expanded power of judicial review granted
to it by the Constitution of 1987, petitioners are calling
upon
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315
this Court to look into the enactment of Rep. Act No. 9337
by Congress and, consequently, to review the applicability
of the enrolled bill doctrine in this jurisdiction. Under the
said doctrine, the enrolled bill, as signed by the Speaker of
the House of Representatives and the Senate President,
and certified by the Secretaries of both Houses4 of Congress,
shall be conclusive proof of its due enactment.
PetitionersÊ arguments failed to convince me of the
wisdom of abandoning the enrolled bill doctrine. I believe
that it is more prudent for this Court to remain
conservative and to continue its adherence to the enrolled
bill doctrine, for to abandon the said doctrine would be to
open a PandoraÊs Box, giving rise to a situation more
fraught with evil and mischief. Statutes enacted by
Congress may not attain finality or conclusiveness unless
declared so by this Court. This would undermine the
authority of our statutes because despite having been
signed and certified by the designated officers of Congress,
their validity would still be in doubt and their
implementation would be greatly hampered by allegations
of irregularities in their passage by the Legislature. Such
an uncertainty in the statutes would indubitably result in
confusion and disorder. In all probability, it is the
contemplation of such a scenario that led an American
judge to proclaim, thus –
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316
317
7
Arroyo v. De Venecia, which reads·
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318
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8 Supra, note 6.
319
law. They argue further that such 70% cap violates the
equal protection and uniformity of taxation clauses under
Article III, Section 1, and Article VI, Section 28(1),
respectively, of the Constitution, because it will unduly
prejudice taxpayers who have high input VAT and who,
because of the cap, cannot fully utilize their input VAT as
credit.
I cannot sustain the petroleum dealersÊ position for the
following reasons –
First, I adhere to the view that the input VAT is not a
property to which the taxpayer has vested rights. Input
VAT consists of the VAT a VAT-registered person had paid
on his purchases or importation of goods, properties, and
services from a VAT-registered supplier; more simply, it is
VAT paid. It is not, as averred by petitioner petroleum
dealers, a property
10
that the taxpayer acquired for valuable
consideration. A VAT-registered person incurs input VAT
because he complied
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9 Supra, note 3.
10 Petition for Prohibition (Under Rule 65 with Prayer for the Issuance
of a Temporary Restraining Order and/or Writ of Preliminary Injunction)
in G.R. No. 168461 entitled, Association of Pilipinas Shell Dealers, Inc.,
et al. v. Purisima, et al., p. 17, paragraph 52.
320
321
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322
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323
324
17
Code, as amended by Rep. Act No. 9337. The latter
taxpayer is exempt from VAT on the basis that his sale or
lease of goods or properties or services do not exceed
P1,500,000; instead, he is subject to pay a three percent
18
(3%) tax on his gross receipts in lieu of the VAT. If a
taxpayer with presumably a smaller business is required to
pay three percent (3%) gross receipts tax, a type of tax
which does not even allow for any crediting, a VAT-
taxpayer with a bigger business should be obligated,
likewise, to pay a minimum of 30% output VAT (which
should be equivalent to 3% of the gross selling price per
good or property or service sold). The cap assures the
government a collection of at least 30% output VAT,
contributing to an improved cash flow for the government.
Attention is further called to the fact that the output
VAT is the VAT imposed on the sales by a VAT-taxpayer; it
is paid by the purchasers of the goods, properties, and
services, and merely collected through the VAT-registered
seller. The latter, therefore, serves as a collecting agent for
the government. The VAT-registered seller is merely being
required to remit to the government a minimum of 30% of
his output VAT collection.
Fourth, I give no weight to the figures and computations
presented before this Court by the petroleum dealers,
particularly the supposed quarterly profit and loss
statement of a „typical dealer.‰ How these data represent
the financial status of a typical dealer, I would not know
when there was no effort to explain the manner by which
they were surveyed, collated, and averaged out. Without
establishing their source therefor, the figures and
computations presented by the petroleum dealers are
merely self-serving and unsubstantiated, deserving scant
consideration by this Court. Even assuming that these
figures truly represent the financial standing of petro-
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325
„It will thus be seen that the contention that the rates charged for
advertising cannot be raised is purely hypothetical, based entirely
upon the opinion of the plaintiffs, unsupported by actual test, and
that the plaintiffs themselves admit that a number of other persons
have voluntarily and without protest paid the tax herein
complained of. Under these circumstances, can it be held as a
matter of fact that the tax is confiscatory or that, as a matter of law,
the tax is unconstitutional? Is the exercise of the taxing power of
the Legislature dependent upon and restricted by the opinion of two
interested witnesses? There can be but one answer to these
questions, especially in view of the fact that others are paying the
tax and presumably making reasonable profit from their business.‰
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326
Supreme
20
Court. As this Court explained in Agustin v.
Edu, to wit·
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327
··o0o··
328