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University of The Philippines College of Law: Case Name Topic Case No. - Date Ponente

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University of the Philippines College of Law

LTD H; [JBVG]

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, petitioner, vs. THE COURT OF APPEALS, COURT OF TAX APPEALS and A.
Case Name
SORIANO CORP., respondents
Topic Gross Income; Inclusions
Case No. | Date GR. No. 108576 | January 20, 1999
Ponente Martinez, J.
Don Andres Soriano, a citizen and resident of the USA formed in the 1930's the corporation "A Soriano Y Cia," predecessor of
ANSCOR. A day after Don Andres died, ANSCOR increased their accumulated shareholdings to 138,867 and 138,864 common shares
each. ANSCOR redeemed 28,000 common shares from Don Andres' estate. By November 1968, the Board further increased ANSCOR's
capital stock to P75M divided into 150,000 preferred shares and 600,000 common shares. About a year later ANSCOR again redeemed
80,000 common shares from Don Andres' estate, further reducing the latter's common shareholdings. In 1973, after examining
ANSCOR's books of account and records Revenue Examiners issued a report proposing that ANSCOR be assessed for deficiency
withholding tax-at-source, pursuant to Secs 53 and 54 of the 1939 Revenue Code for the year 1968 and the second quarter of 1969
Case Summary based on the transactions of exchange and redemption of stocks.
The SC held that ANSCOR'S redemption of 82,752.5 stock dividends is herein considered as essentially equivalent to a distribution of
taxable dividends for which it is liable for the withholding tax-at-source. Although a corporation under certain exceptions, has the
prerogative when to issue dividends, yet when no cash dividends are issued for about three decades, this circumstance negate the
legitimacy of ANSCOR's alleged purposes. With regard to the exchange of shares, the Court ruled that the exchange of common with
preferred shares is not taxable because it produces no realized income to the subscriber but only a modification of the subscriber's rights
and privileges which is not a flow of wealth for tax purposes.
Decision The decision of the Court of Appeals is MODIFIED
Income taxpayer – covers all persons who derive taxable income.

Stock dividends (strictly speaking) – represent capital and do not constitute income to its recipient. So that the mere issuance thereof is
not yet subject to income tax as they are nothing but an enrichment through increase in value of capital investment.

Stock dividends (in a loose sense) – unrealized gain, and cannot be subjected to income tax until that gain has been realized. Before the
realization, stock dividends are nothing but a representation of an interest in the corporate properties.

Income (in tax law) – an "an amount of money coming to a person within a specified time, whether as payment for services, interest,
or profit from investment." It means cash or its equivalent. It is gain derived and severed from capital, from labor or from both
combined — so that to tax a stock dividend would be to tax a capital increase rather than the income.
Capital – wealth or fund; Income – profit or gain or the flow of wealth

The determining factor for the imposition of income tax is whether any gain or profit was derived from a transaction
Doctrine
Exempting clause: redemption or cancellation of stock dividends, depending on the “time” and “manner” it was made, is “essentially
equivalent to a distribution of taxable dividends,” making the proceeds thereof “taxable income” to the extent it represents profits.

The three elements in the imposition of income tax are: (1) there must be gain or and profit, (2) that the gain or profit is realized or
received, actually or constructively, and (3) it is not exempted by law or treaty from income tax.

The redemption converts into money the stock dividends which become a realized profit or gain and consequently, the stockholder's
separate property. Profits derived from the capital consequently, the stockholder's separate property. Profits derived from the capital
invested cannot escape income tax. As realized income, the proceeds of the redeemed stock dividends can be reached by income taxation
regardless of the existence of any business purpose for the redemption.

There is no other conclusion but that the proceeds thereof are essentially considered equivalent to a distribution of taxable dividends.
As "taxable dividend" under Section 83(b), it is part of the "entire income" subject to tax under Section 22 in relation to Section 21 of
the 1939 Code. Moreover, under Section 29(a) of said Code, dividends are included in "gross income". As income, it is subject to
income tax which is required to be withheld at source.

RELEVANT FACTS
• 1930s: Don Andres Soriano, a US citizen and resident, formed the “A. Soriano y Cia Corp.,” ANSCOR’s predecessor with a P1M capitalization divided
into 10,000 common shares at a par value of P100/share.
o ANSCOR – wholly owned and controlled by Don Andres’ family (all non-resident aliens)
o 1937: Don Andres subscribed to 4,963 shares of the 5,000 shares originally issued.
• September 12, 1945: ANSCOR’s authorized capital stock was increased to P2,500,000.00 divided into 25,000 common shares with the same par value.
o Of the additional 15,000 shares, only 10,000 was issued which were all subscribed by Don Andres, after the other stockholders waived in
favor of the former their pre-emptive rights to subscribe to the new issues. This increased his subscription to 14,963 common shares.
o A month later, Don Andres transferred 1,250 shares each to his two sons (both foreigners), Jose and Andres Jr., as their initial investments in
ANSCOR.
• 1947: ANSCOR declared stock dividends. Other stock dividend declarations were made between 1949-Dec. 20, 1963.
University of the Philippines College of Law
LTD H; [JBVG]
• Dec. 30, 1964: Don Andres died; As of that date, he has a total shareholding of 185,154 shares - 50,495 of which are original issues and the balance of
134,659 shares as stock dividend declarations.
o One-half of that shareholdings or 92,577 shares were transferred to his wife, Doña Carmen Soriano. The offer half formed part of his estate
• A day after Don Andres died, ANSCOR increased its capital stock to P20M and in 1966 further increased it to P30M. In the same year (Dec. 1966),
stock dividends worth 46,290 and 46,287 shares were respectively received by the Don Andres estate and Doña Carmen from ANSCOR. Hence,
increasing their accumulated shareholdings to 138,867 and 138,864 common shares each.
• Dec. 28, 1967: Doña Carmen requested a ruling from the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS), inquiring if an exchange of common with preferred shares
may be considered as a tax avoidance scheme. By Jan. 2, 1968: ANSCOR reclassified its existing 300,000 common shares into 150,000 common and
150,000 preferred shares.
o IRS: the exchange is only a recapitalization scheme and not tax avoidance.
• Mar. 31, 1968: Doña Carmen exchanged her whole 138,864 common shares for 138,860 of the preferred shares, thus reducing its common shares to
127,727.
• Jun. 30, 1968: ANSCOR redeemed 28,000 common shares from Don Andres’ estate. By Nov., the Board further increased ANSCOR’s capital stock to
P75M divided into 150K preferred shares and 600K common shares
o A year later, it again redeemed 80K common shares from the estate, further reducing the latter’s shareholdings to 19,727.
o Purpose for both redemptions: to partially retire said stocks as treasury shares in order to reduce the company’s foreign exchange remittances
in case cash dividends are declared.
• 1973: after examining ANSCOR’s books of account and record, Revenue examiners issued a report proposing that ANSCOR be assessed for
deficiency withholding tax-at-source, for the year 1968 and the 2nd quarter of 1969 based on the transaction of exchange and redemption of stocks. BIR
made the corresponding assessments despite ANSCOR’s claim that it availed of the tax amnesty under PD 23.
• ANSCOR’s subsequent protest on the assessments was denied in 1983 by petitioner. ANSCOR filed a petition for review with the CTA, the Tax Court
reversed petitioners ruling. CA affirmed the ruling of the CTA. Hence this position

RATIO DECIDENDI
Issue Ratio
Whether ANSCOR’s • Petitioner:
redemption of stocks from its o the exchange transaction is tantamount to “cancellation” under Sec. 83(b) making the proceeds thereof taxable.
stockholder as well as the o the said Section applies to stock dividends which is the bulk of stocks that ANSCOR redeemed.
exchange of common with o Under the “net effect test,” Don Andres’ estate gained from the redemption. Accordingly, it was ANSCOR’s duty
preferred shares can be to withhold the tax-at-source arising from the 2 transactions, pursuant to Secs. 53 and 54, 1939 Revenue Act.
considered as “essentially • Respondent (ANSCOR):
equivalent to the distribution of o It has no duty to withhold any tax either from the Estate or from Dona Carmen based on the 2 transactions, because
taxable dividend,” making the the same were done for legitimate business purposes which are: a) to reduce its foreign exchange remittances in the
proceeds thereof taxable under event the company would declare cash dividends; b) subsequently “filipinized ownership of ANSCOR, as alleged
the provisions of the above- envisioned by Don Andres
quoted law - YES o Invoked PD 67’s amnesty provisions
• SC: The application of Sec. 83(b) depends on the special factual circumstances of each case. The findings of fact of a
special court (CTA) exercising expertise on the subject of tax, generally binds this Court.
o The issue in this case does not only deal with facts but whether the law applies to a particular set of facts.
AMNESTY
• Sec. 1, PD 67 (see notes) condones "the collection of all internal revenue taxes including the increments or
penalties or account of non-payment as well as all civil, criminal or administrative liable arising from or incident
to" (voluntary) disclosures under the NIRC of previously untaxed income and/or wealth "realized here or abroad
by any taxpayer, natural or juridical."
• Income taxpayer – covers all persons who derive taxable income.
• ANSCOR was assessed by petitioner for deficiency withholding tax under Secs. 53, 54, 1939 Code. As such, it is
being held liable in its capacity as a withholding agent and not in its personality as a taxpayer.
• In the operation of the withholding tax system, …the payer is the taxpayer, and the payee is the taxing
authority…the withholding agent is merely a tax collector, not a taxpayer.
• The Tax Code only makes the agent personally liable for the tax arising from the breach of its legal duty to
withhold as distinguished from its duty to pay taxes since:
o the government's cause of action against the withholding is not for the collection of income tax, but for
the enforcement of the withholding provision of Section 53 of the Tax Code, compliance with which
is imposed on the withholding agent and not upon the taxpayer.
• Not being a taxpayer, a withholding agent, like ANSCOR in this transaction is not protected by the amnesty under
the decree
• Codal provisions on withholding tax are mandatory and must be complied with by the withholding agent. The
taxpayer should not answer for the non-performance by the withholding agent of its legal duty to withhold unless
there is collusion or bad faith.
• To curtail tax evasion and give tax evaders a chance to reform, it was deemed administratively feasible to grant
tax amnesty in certain instances. In addition, a "tax amnesty, much like a tax exemption, is never favored nor
presumed in law and if granted by a statute, the term of the amnesty like that of a tax exemption must be construed
strictly against the taxpayer and liberally in favor of the taxing authority.
• ANSCOR’s claim of amnesty cannot prosper. The IRR of PD 370 is very explicit (see notes). ANSCOR was
assessed under Secs. 53, 53, 1939 Tax Code; thus, it is not covered by the amnesty.
TAX ON STOCK DIVIDENDS
General Rule
• Sec. 83(b), 1939 NIRC was taken from Sec. 115(g)(1), 1928US Revenue Code. It laid down the general rule:
o A stock dividend representing the transfer of surplus to capital account shall not be subject to tax.
University of the Philippines College of Law
LTD H; [JBVG]
• Stock dividends (strictly speaking) – represent capital and do not constitute income to its recipient. So that the
mere issuance thereof is not yet subject to income tax as they are nothing but an enrichment through increase in
value of capital investment.
• Stock dividends (in a loose sense) – unrealized gain, and cannot be subjected to income tax until that gain has
been realized. Before the realization, stock dividends are nothing but a representation of an interest in the corporate
properties.
• Income (in tax law) – an "an amount of money coming to a person within a specified time, whether as payment
for services, interest, or profit from investment." It means cash or its equivalent. It is gain derived and severed
from capital, from labor or from both combined — so that to tax a stock dividend would be to tax a capital increase
rather than the income.
• Capital – wealth or fund; Income – profit or gain or the flow of wealth
• The determining factor for the imposition of income tax is whether any gain or profit was derived from a
transaction
The Exception
• Exempting clause: redemption or cancellation of stock dividends, depending on the “time” and “manner” it was
made, is “essentially equivalent to a distribution of taxable dividends,” making the proceeds thereof “taxable
income” to the extent it represents profits.
• The clause was added because provision corporation found a loophole in the original provision. They resorted to
devious means to circumvent the law and evade the tax. Corporate earnings would be distributed under the guise
of its initial capitalization by declaring the stock dividends previously issued and later redeem said dividends by
paying cash to the stockholder.
• Depending on the circumstances, the proceeds of redemption of stock dividends are essentially distribution of cash
dividends, which when paid becomes the absolute property of the stockholder. Thereafter, the latter becomes the
exclusive owner thereof and can exercise the freedom of choice. Having realized gain from that redemption, the
income earner cannot escape income tax.
• As qualified by the phrase "such time and in such manner," the exception was not intended to characterize as
taxable dividend every distribution of earnings arising from the redemption of stock dividend.
• Whether the amount distributed in the redemption should be treated as the equivalent of a "taxable dividend" is a
question of fact, which is determinable on "the basis of the particular facts of the transaction in question. No
decisive test can be used to determine the application of the exemption under Section 83(b).
REDEMPTION AND CANCELLATION
• For the exempting clause of Sec. 83(b) to apply, it is indispensable that: (a) there is redemption or cancellation;
(b) the transaction involves stock dividends and (c) the "time and manner" of the transaction makes it "essentially
equivalent to a distribution of taxable dividends."
o The most important is the third.
• Redemption - repurchase, a reacquisition of stock by a corporation which issued the stock in exchange for
property, whether or not the acquired stock is cancelled, retired or held in the treasury. Essentially, the corporation
gets back some of its stock, distributes cash or property to the shareholder in payment for the stock, and continues
in business as before.
o used as a veil for the constructive distribution of cash dividends
• ANSCOR redeemed shares of stocks from a stockholder (Don Andres) twice (28,000 and 80,000 common shares).
• Where did the shares redeemed come from?
o If its source is the original capital subscriptions upon establishment of the corporation or from initial
capital investment in an existing enterprise, its redemption to the concurrent value of acquisition may
not invite the application of Sec. 83(b) under the 1939 Tax Code, as it is not income but a mere return
of capital.
o If the redeemed shares are from stock dividend declarations other than as initial capital investment, the
proceeds of the redemption is additional wealth, for it is not merely a return of capital but a gain
thereon.
• It is not the stock dividends but the proceeds of its redemption that may be deemed as taxable dividends
o At the time of the last redemption, the original common shares owned by the estate were only 25,247.5.
This means that from the total of 108K shares redeemed from the estate, the balance of 82,752.5 (108K
less 25,247.5) must have come from stock dividends.
• In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the Tax Code presumes that every distribution of corporate property,
in whole or in party, is made out of corporate profits, such as stock dividends
• The capital cannot be distributed in the form of redemption of stock dividends without violating the trust fund
doctrine — wherein the capital stock, property and other assets of the corporation are regarded as equity in trust
for the payment of the corporate creditors
o Once capital, it is always capital
o Doctrine was intended for the protection of corporate creditors.
• With respect to the third requisite, ANSCOR redeemed stock dividends issued just 2 to 3 years earlier. The time
alone that lapsed from the issuance to the redemption is not a sufficient indicator to determine taxability. It is a
must to consider the factual circumstances as to the manner of both the issuance and the redemption.
• "time" element - a factor to show a device to evade tax and the scheme of cancelling or redeeming the same shares
is a method usually adopted to accomplish the end sought.
• Net effect test – an inference to be drawn or a conclusion to be reached.
• The issuance of stock dividends and its subsequent redemption must be separate, distinct, and not related, for the
redemption to be considered a legitimate tax scheme.
• Redemption cannot be used as a cloak to distribute corporate earnings. Otherwise, the apparent intention to avoid
tax become doubtful as the intention to evade becomes manifest.
University of the Philippines College of Law
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• The exempting provision of Sec. 83(b), 1939 Code may not be applicable if the redeemed shares were issued with
bona fide business purposes.
• Petitioner: 2 reasons to justify the redemptions: 1) “filipinization” program; 2) reduction of foreign exchange
remittances in case cash dividends are declared
• SC: Court is not concerned with the wisdom of these purposes but on their relevance to the whole transaction
which can be inferred from the outcome thereof.
o It is the "net effect rather than the motives and plans of the taxpayer or his corporation" that is the
fundamental guide in administering Sec. 83(b).
o It also applies even if at the time of the issuance of the stock dividend, there was no intention to redeem
it as a means of distributing profit or avoiding tax on dividends.
• The existence of legitimate business purposes in support of the redemption of stock dividends is immaterial in
income taxation. It has no relevance in determining "dividend equivalence.” Such purposes may be material only
upon the issuance of the stock dividends.
• The test of taxability under the exempting clause: whether the redemption resulted into a flow of wealth. If no
wealth is realized from the redemption, there may not be a dividend equivalence treatment.
• The three elements in the imposition of income tax are: (1) there must be gain or and profit, (2) that the gain or
profit is realized or received, actually or constructively, and (3) it is not exempted by law or treaty from income
tax.
o Business purpose is not a requirement
• Income tax is assessed on income received from any property, activity or service that produces the income because
the Tax Code stands as an indifferent neutral party on the matter of where income comes from.
• The redemption converts into money the stock dividends which become a realized profit or gain and consequently,
the stockholder's separate property. Profits derived from the capital consequently, the stockholder's separate
property. Profits derived from the capital invested cannot escape income tax. As realized income, the proceeds of
the redeemed stock dividends can be reached by income taxation regardless of the existence of any business
purpose for the redemption.
• The payment of tax under the exempting clause of Section 83(b) would be made to depend not on the income of
the taxpayer, but on the business purposes of a third party (the corporation herein) from whom the income was
earned.
o This is absurd, illogical and impractical considering that the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) would
be pestered with instances in determining the legitimacy of business reasons that every income earner
may interposed.
o It is not administratively feasible and cannot therefore be allowed.
• Petitioners cited American cases, arguing that so long as the redemption is supported by valid corporate purposes
the proceeds are not subject to tax
• SC: Misleading. A review of the cited American cases shows that the presence or absence of "genuine business
purposes" may be material with respect to the issuance or declaration of stock dividends but not on its subsequent
redemption. The issuance and the redemption of stocks are two different transactions. Although the existence of
legitimate corporate purposes may justify a corporation's acquisition of its own shares under Section 41 of the
Corporation Code, such purposes cannot excuse the stockholder from the effects of taxation arising from the
redemption.
o The substance of the whole transaction, not its form, usually controls the tax consequences.
• The two purposes invoked by ANSCOR are no excuse. First, the alleged "filipinization" plan cannot be considered
legitimate as it was not implemented until the BIR started making assessments on the proceeds of the redemption.
Such corporate plan was not stated in nor supported by any Board Resolution but a mere afterthought interposed
by the counsel of ANSCOR. Being a separate entity the corporation can act only through its Board of Directors.
• The Board Resolutions authorizing the redemptions state only one purpose — reduction of foreign exchange
remittances in case cash dividends are declared. Not even this purpose can be given credence. Records show that
despite the existence of enormous corporate profits no cash dividend was ever declared by ANSCOR from 1945
until the BIR started making assessments in the early 1970's.
o This circumstance negates the legitimacy of ANSCOR's alleged purposes.
o To issue stock dividends is to increase the shareholdings of ANSCOR's foreign stockholders contrary
to its "filipinization" plan.
• Secondly, assuming arguendo, that those business purposes are legitimate, the same cannot be a valid excuse for
the imposition of tax….the same has no bearing whatsoever on the imposition of the tax herein assessed because
the proceeds of the redemption are deemed taxable dividends since it was shown that income was generated
therefrom.
• Thirdly, ANSCOR’s argue: to treat as "taxable dividend" the proceeds of the redeemed stock dividends would be
to impose on such stock an undisclosed lien and would be extremely unfair to intervening purchase, i.e. those
who buy the stock dividends after their issuance
• SC: No intervening buyer is involved. And even if there is an intervening buyer, it is necessary to look into the
factual milieu of the case if income was realized from the transaction
• The dividend equivalence test depends on such “time and manner” of the transaction and its net effect. The
undisclosed lien may be unfair to a subsequent stock buyer who has no capital interest in the company. But the
unfairness may not be true to an original subscriber like Don Andres, who holds stock dividends as gains from his
investments.
• The effect of its (stock dividends) redemption from that subsequent buyer is merely to return his capital
subscription, which is income if redeemed from the original subscriber.
• There is no other conclusion but that the proceeds thereof are essentially considered equivalent to a distribution of
taxable dividends. As "taxable dividend" under Section 83(b), it is part of the "entire income" subject to tax under
Section 22 in relation to Section 21 of the 1939 Code. Moreover, under Section 29(a) of said Code, dividends are
included in "gross income". As income, it is subject to income tax which is required to be withheld at source.
University of the Philippines College of Law
LTD H; [JBVG]
EXCHANGE OF COMMON WITH PREFERRED SHARES
• Exchange - an act of taking or giving one thing for another involving reciprocal transfer and is generally considered
as a taxable transaction.
• The exchange of common stocks with preferred stocks, or preferred for common or a combination of either for
both, may not produce a recognized gain or loss, so long as the provisions of Section 83(b) is not applicable.
• This is true in a trade between 2 persons as well as a trade between a stockholder and a corporation. In general,
this trade must be parts of merger, transfer to controlled corporation, corporate acquisitions or corporate
reorganizations. No taxable gain or loss may be recognized on exchange of property, stock or securities related to
reorganizations.
• Under the facts herein, any difference in their market value would be immaterial at the time of exchange because
no income is yet realized — it was a mere corporate paper transaction. It would have been different, if the
exchange transaction resulted into a flow of wealth, in which case income tax may be imposed.
• Reclassification of shares does not always bring any substantial alteration in the subscriber's proportional interest.
But the exchange is different — there would be a shifting of the balance of stock features, like priority in dividend
declarations or absence of voting rights. Yet neither the reclassification nor exchange per se, yields realize income
for tax purposes
• Common stock - the residual ownership interest in the corporation. It is a basic class of stock ordinarily and usually
issued without extraordinary rights or privileges and entitles the shareholder to a pro rata division of profits.
• Preferred stocks - those which entitle the shareholder to some priority on dividends and asset distribution
• Both shares are part of the corporation's capital stock. Both stockholders are no different from ordinary investors
who take on the same investment risks.
o Both participate in the same venture, willing to share in the profits and losses of the enterprise.
o Under the doctrine of equality of shares — all stocks issued by the corporation are presumed equal
with the same privileges and liabilities, provided that the Articles of Incorporation is silent on such
differences
• In this case, the exchange of shares, without more, produces no realized income to the subscriber. There is only a
modification of the subscriber's rights and privileges — which is not a flow of wealth for tax purposes.
• The issue of taxable dividend may arise only once a subscriber disposes of his entire interest and not when there
is still maintenance of proprietary interest

RULING
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the decision of the Court of Appeals is MODIFIED in that ANSCOR's redemption of 82,752.5 stock dividends is herein
considered as essentially equivalent to a distribution of taxable dividends for which it is LIABLE for the withholding tax-at-source. The decision is AFFIRMED
in all other respects.

NOTES

Sec. 83. Distribution of dividends or assets by corporations. —

(b) Stock dividends — A stock dividend representing the transfer of surplus to capital account shall not be subject to tax. However, if a
corporation cancels or redeems stock issued as a dividend at such time and in such manner as to make the distribution and cancellation or redemption,
in whole or in part, essentially equivalent to the distribution of a taxable dividend, the amount so distributed in redemption or cancellation of the stock
shall be considered as taxable income to the extent it represents a distribution of earnings or profits accumulated after March first, nineteen hundred
and thirteen.

PD 370

Sec. 4. Cases not covered by amnesty. — The following cases are not covered by the amnesty subject of these regulations:

xxx xxx xxx

(2) Tax liabilities with or without assessments, on withholding tax at source provided under Section 53 and 54 of the National Internal Revenue Code,
as amended

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