Tax Cases
Tax Cases
Tax Cases
of
Taxation
1.)
Pascual
vs.
Secretary
of
Publicworks
GR
No.
L-‐10405,
December
29,
1960]
FACTS:
Governor
Wenceslao
Pascual
of
Rizal
instituted
this
action
for
declaratory
relief,
with
injunction,
upon
the
ground
that
RA
No.
920
("An
Act
Appropriating
Funds
for
Public
Works"),
which
apropriates
funds
for
public
works
particularly
for
the
construction
and
improvement
of
Pasig
feeder
road
terminals.
Some
of
the
feeder
roads,
however,
as
alleged
and
as
contained
in
the
tracings
attached
to
the
petition,
were
nothing
but
projected
and
planned
subdivision
roads,
not
yet
constructed
within
the
Antonio
Subdivision,
belonging
to
private
respondent
Zulueta,
situated
at
Pasig,
Rizal;
and
which
projected
feeder
roads
do
not
connect
any
government
property
or
any
important
premises
to
the
main
highway.
The
respondents'
contention
is
that
there
is
public
purpose
because
people
living
in
the
subdivision
will
directly
be
benefitted
from
the
construction
of
the
roads,
and
the
government
also
gains
from
the
donation
of
the
land
supposed
to
be
occupied
by
the
streets,
made
by
its
owner
to
the
government.
ISSUES:
Whether
or
not
the
petitioner
has
the
standing
to
file
the
petition
Whether
or
not
RA
#
920
is
unconstitutional.
HELD:
1)
Petitioner
has
standing.
He
is
not
merely
a
taxpayer
but
the
governor
of
the
province
of
Rizal
which
is
considered
one
of
the
most
populated
biggest
provinces
during
that
time,
its
taxpayers
bear
a
substantial
portion
of
the
burden
of
taxation
in
the
country
2)
Public
funds
can
only
be
appropriated
for
a
public
purpose.
The
test
of
the
constitutionality
of
a
statute
requiring
the
use
of
public
funds
is
whether
it
is
used
to
promote
public
interest.
Moreover,
the
validity
of
a
stature
depends
on
the
powers
of
the
Congress
at
the
time
of
its
passage
or
approval,
not
upon
events
occurring,
or
acts
performed
subsequent
thereto,
unless
it
is
an
amendment
of
the
organic
law.
2.) Punsalan vs. Municipal Board of Manila [GR No. L-‐4817. May 26, 1954]
FACTS:
Ordinance
3398
was
enacted
pursuant
to
paragraph
1
of
Section
18
ofthe
Revised
Charter
of
the
Cityof
Manila,
imposing
a
municipal
occupation
tax
on
persons
exercising
various
professions
in
the
city.
Variousprofessionals
filed
suit
to
annul
the
ordinance
and
the
provision
of
law
authorizing
the
enactment
of
theordinance,
and
to
call
for
the
refund
collected
taxes
under
the
ordinance.
ISSUE:
Whether
the
Ordinance
violates
the
equal
protection
clause.
HELD:
The
legislature
may,
in
its
discretion,
select
what
occupation
shall
be
taxed,
and
in
the
exercise
of
thatdiscretion
it
may
tax
all,
or
it
may
select
for
taxation
certain
classes
and
leave
the
other
untaxed.
Manila,
asthe
seat
of
the
National
Government
and
with
a
population
and
volume
of
trade
many
times
that
of
any
otherPhilippine
city
or
municipality,
offers
a
more
lucrative
field
for
the
practice
of
the
professions,
so
that
it
is
butfair
that
the
professionals
in
Manila
be
made
to
pay
a
higher
occupation
tax
than
their
brethen
in
theprovinces.
The
ordinance
imposes
the
tax
upon
every
person
“exercising”
or
“pursuing”
any
of
the
occupation
named
in
the
ordinance,
and
does
not
make
any
distinction
between
professional
having
offices
in
Manila
andoutsiders
who
practice
their
profession
therein.
What
constitutes
exercise
or
pursuit
of
a
profession
in
the
city
is
a
matter
of
judicial
determination.
The
Ordinance
does
not
violate
the
equal
protection
clause.
Power
of
Taxation
3.)
LIаdoc
vs.
Commissioner
of
Internal
Revenue
[GR
No.
L-‐19201.
June
16,
1965]
FACTS:
in
1957,
the
M.B.
Estate,
Inc.,
of
Bacolod
City,
donated
P10,000.00
in
cash
to
Rev.
Fr.
Crispin
Ruiz,
then
parish
priest
of
Victorias,
Negros
Occidental,
and
predecessor
of
herein
petitioner,
for
the
construction
of
a
new
Catholic
Church
in
the
locality.
The
total
amount
was
actually
spent
for
the
purpose
intended.
On
March
3,
1958,
the
donor
M.B.
Estate,
Inc.,
filed
the
donor's
gift
tax
return.
Under
date
of
April
29,
1960,
the
respondent
Commissioner
of
Internal
Revenue
issued
an
assessment
for
donee's
gift
tax
against
the
Catholic
Parish
of
Victorias,
Negros
Occidental,
of
which
petitioner
was
the
priest.
The
tax
amounted
to
P1,370.00
including
surcharges,
interests
of
1%
monthly
from
May
15,
1958
to
June
15,
1960,
and
the
compromise
for
the
late
filing
of
the
return.
Rev.
Fr.
Casimiro
Lladoc
claimed,
among
others,
that
at
the
time
of
the
donation,
he
was
not
the
parish
priest
in
Victorias;
that
there
is
no
legal
entity
or
juridical
person
known
as
the
"Catholic
Parish
Priest
of
Victorias,"
and,
therefore,
he
should
not
be
liable
for
the
donee's
gift
tax.
It
was
also
asserted
that
the
assessment
of
the
gift
tax,
even
against
the
Roman
Catholic
Church,
would
not
be
valid,
for
such
would
be
a
clear
violation
of
the
provisions
of
the
Constitution.
ISSUE:
Whether
or
not
petitioner
should
be
liable
for
the
assessed
donee's
gift
tax.
HELD:
The
decision
appealed
from
should
be,
as
it
is
hereby
affirmed
insofar
as
tax
liability
is
concerned;
it
is
modified,
in
the
sense
that
petitioner
herein
is
not
personally
liable
for
the
said
gift
tax,
and
that
the
Head
of
the
Diocese,
herein
substitute
petitioner,
should
pay,
as
he
is
presently
ordered
to
pay,
the
said
gift
tax,
without
special,
pronouncement
as
to
costs.
4.) Abra Valley College vs. Aquino GR. No. L-‐39086, June 15, 1983
FACTS:
Abra
Valley
College
rents
out
the
ground
floor
of
its
college
building
to
Northern
MarketingCorporation
while
the
second
floor
thereof
is
used
by
the
Director
of
the
College
for
residential
purposes.
Themunicipal
and
provincial
treasurers
served
upon
the
College
a
“notice
of
seizure”
and
later
a
“notice
of
sale”due
to
the
alleged
failure
of
the
College
to
pay
real
estate
taxes
and
penalties
thereon.
The
school
filed
suit
toannul
said
notices,
claiming
that
it
is
tax-‐exempt.
ISSUE:
Whether
the
College
is
exempt
from
taxes.
HELD:
While
the
Court
allows
a
more
liberal
and
non-‐restrictive
interpretation
of
the
phrase
“exclusively
isedfor
educational
purposes,”
reasonable
emphasis
has
always
been
made
that
exemption
extends
to
facilitieswhich
are
incidental
to
and
reasonably
necessary
for
the
accomplishment
of
the
main
purposes.
While
thesecond
floor’s
use,
as
residence
of
the
director,
is
incidental
to
education;
the
lease
of
the
first
floor
cannot
byany
stretch
of
imagination
be
considered
incidental
to
the
purposes
of
education.
The
test
of
exemption
fromtaxation
is
the
use
of
the
property
for
purposes
mentioned
in
the
Constititution.
The
decision
of
the
Court
of
First
Instance
of
Abra,
Branch
I,
is
hereby
AFFIRMED
subject
to
the
modification
that
half
of
the
assessed
tax
be
returned
to
the
petitioner.