Taxation Syl2
Taxation Syl2
Taxation Syl2
General concepts
Requisites of a valid assessment
After examining the books and records of EDS Corporation, the 2004 final assessment
notice, showing basic tax of 1,000,000, deficiency interest of 400,000, and due date for
payment of April 30, 2007 but without the demand letter, was mailed and released by
the BIR on April 15, 2007. The registered letter, containing the tax assessment, was
received by the EDS Corporation on April 25, 2007. What is an assessment notice?
What are the requisites of a valid assessment? Explain.
An assessment notice is a formal notice to the taxpayer stating that the amount
thereon is due as a tax and containing a demand for the payment thereof. To be valid,
the taxpayer must be informed in writing of the law and the facts on which the
assessment is made.
As tax lawyer of EDS Corporation, what legal defense(s) would you raise against the
assessment? Explain.
I will question the validity of the assessment because of the failure to send the
demand letter which contains a statement of the law and the facts upon which the
assessment is based. If an assessment notice is sent without informing the taxpayer in
writing about the law and facts on which the assessment is made, the assessment is
void.
Mr. Castro inherited from his father, who died on June 10, 1994, several pieces of real
property in Metro Manila. The estate tax return was filed and the estate tax due in the
amount of 250,000 was paid on December 06, 1994. The Tax Fraud Division of the BIR
investigated the case on the basis of confidential information given by Mr. Santos on
January 06, 1998 that the return filed by Mr. Castro was fraudulent and that he failed to
declare all properties left by his father with intent to evade payment of the correct tax.
As a result, a deficiency estate tax assessment for 1,250,000, inclusive of 50%
surcharge for fraud, interest and penalty, was issued against him on January 10, 2001.
Mr. Castro protested the assessment on the ground of prescription. Decide Mr. Castro’s
protest.
The protest should be resolved against Mr. Castro. What was filed is a fraudulent
return making the prescriptive period for assessment ten years from discovery of the
fraud pursuant to the Tax Code. Accordingly, the assessment was issued within the
prescriptive period to make an assessment based on a fraudulent return.
Civil penalties
New rule on delinquency interest and deficiency interest
There shall be assessed and collected on any unpaid amount of tax, interest at the rate
of twenty percent (12%) from the date prescribed for payment until the amount is fully
paid: Provide, that in no case shall the deficiency and the delinquency interest
prescribed be imposed simultaneously.
Surcharge
Compromise penalty
If any person required to pay the tax is qualified and elects to pay the tax on installment
under the provisions of this Code, but fails to pay the tax or any installment hereof, or
any part of such amount or installment on or before the date prescribed for its payment,
or where the Commissioner has authorized an extension of time within which to pay a
tax or a deficiency tax or any part thereof, there shall be assessed and collected interest
at the rate hereinabove prescribed on the tax or deficiency tax or any part thereof
unpaid from the date of notice and demand until it is paid.
How much time does a Revenue Officer have to conduct an audit? A Revenue Officer is
allowed only one hundred twenty days from the date of receipt of a Letter of Authority by
the Taxpayer to conduct the audit and submit the required report of investigation. If the
Revenue Officer is unable to submit his final report of investigation within the 120-day
period, he must then submit a Progress Report to his Head of Office, and surrender the
Letter of Authority for revalidation.
How is a particular taxpayer selected for audit? Officers of the Bureau (Revenue District
Officers, Chief, Large Taxpayer Assessment Division, Chief, Excise Taxpayer
Operations Division, Chief, Policy Cases and Tax Fraud Division) responsible for the
conduct of audit/investigation shall prepare a list of all taxpayer who fall within the
selection criteria prescribed in a Revenue Memorandum Order issued by the CIR to
establish guidelines for the audit program of a particular year. The list of taxpayers shall
then be submitted to their respective Assistant Commissioner for pre-approval and to
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue for final approval. The list submitted by RDO
shall be pre-approved by the Regional Director and finally approved by Assistant
Commissioner, Assessment Service.
How many times can a taxpayer be subjected to examination and inspection for the
same taxable year? A taxpayer’s books of accounts shall be subjected to examination
and inspection only once for a taxable year, except in the following cases:
(1) When the Commissioner determines that fraud, irregularities, or mistakes were
committed by Taxpayer;
(2) When the Taxpayer himself requests a re-investigation or re-examination of his
books of accounts;
(3) When there is a need to verify the Taxpayer’s compliance with withholding and other
internal revenue taxes as prescribed in a Revenue Memorandum Order issued by the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
(4) When the Taxpayer’s capital gains tax liabilities must be verified; and
(5) When the Commissioner chooses to exercise his power to obtain information relative
to the examination of other Taxpayers.
Mr. Tiaga has been a law-abiding citizen diligently paying his income taxes. On May 5,
2014, he was surprised to receive an assessment notice from the Bureau of Internal
Revenue (BIR) informing him of a deficiency tax assessment as a result of a
mathematical error in the computation of his income tax, as appearing on the face of his
income tax return for the year 2011, which he filed on April 15, 2012. Mr. Tiaga believes
that there was no such error in the computation of his income tax for the year 2011.
Based on the assessment received by Mr. Tiaga, may he already file a protest thereon?
Yes. Mr. Tiaga may consider the assessment notice as a final assessment notice and
his right to protest within 30 days from receipt may now be exercised by him. When the
finding of a deficiency tax is the result of mathematical error in the computation of the
tax appearing on the face of the return, a pre-assessment notice shall not be required,
hence the assessment notice is a final assessment notice.
Considering the functions and effects of a PAN vis a vis a FAN, it is clear that the
assessment contemplated in Sections 203 and 222 of the National Internal Revenue
Code refers to the service of the FAN upon the taxpayer. A PAN merely informs the
taxpayer of the initial findings of the Bureau of Internal Revenue. It contains the
proposed assessment, and the facts, law, rules, and regulations or jurisprudence on
which the proposed assessment is based. It does not contain a demand for payment but
usually requires the taxpayer to reply within 15 days from receipt. Otherwise, the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue will finalize an assessment and issue a FAN. The
PAN is a part of due process. It gives both the taxpayer and the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue the opportunity to settle the case at the earliest possible time without
the need for the issuance of a FAN.
On the other hand, a FAN contains not only a computation of tax liabilities but also a
demand for payment within a prescribed period. As soon as it is served, an obligation
arises on the part of the taxpayer concerned to pay the amount assessed and
demanded. It also signals the time when penalties and interests begin to accrue against
the taxpayer. Thus, the National Internal Revenue Code imposes a penalty, in addition
to the tax due, in case the taxpayer fails to pay the deficiency tax within the time
prescribed for its payment in the notice of assessment. Likewise, an interest, or such
higher rate as may be prescribed by rules and regulations, is to be collected from the
date prescribed for payment until the amount is fully paid. Failure to file an
administrative protest within 30 days from receipt of the FAN will render the assessment
final, executory, and demandable.
Disputed assessment
Requisites
Prescriptive periods
A final assessment notice was issued by the BIR on June 13, 2000, and received by the
taxpayer on June 15, 2000. The taxpayer protested the assessment on July 31, 2000.
The protest was initially given due course, but was eventually denied by the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue in a decision dated June 15, 2005. The taxpayer
then filed a petition for review with the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA), but the CTA
dismissed the same. Assume that the CTA’s decision dismissing the petition for review
has become final. May the Commissioner legally enforce collection of the delinquent
tax? Explain.
No. The protest was filed out of time and, therefore, did not suspend the running
of the prescriptive period for the collection of the tax. Once the right to collect has
prescribed, the Commissioner can no longer enforce collection of the tax liability against
the taxpayer pursuant to the Tax Code.
Taxpayer’s remedies
Protesting an assessment
Period to file protest
What are the differences between a request for reconsideration and a request for
reinvestigation?
1. A request for reinvestigation suspends the running of the prescriptive period for
collection of taxes while a motion for reconsideration does not.
2. A request for reinvestigation requires the presentation of newly discovered or
additional evidence while a motion for reconsideration does not.
3. The period of 60 days for submission of the relevant supporting documents finds
application only to a request for reinvestigation and not to a request for reconsideration.
4. The failure of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to act on the request for
reconsideration after a period of 180 days from filing thereof authorizes the taxpayer to
file a petition for review with the CTA within a period of 30 days from the expiration of
such 180 day period while for a request for reinvestigation the period is the expiration of
the 180 day period from the submission of the complete supporting documents.
Under the above factual setting, the taxpayer, instead of questioning the assessment he
received on 15 January 1996, paid on 01 March 1996 the "deficiency tax" assessed.
The taxpayer requested a refund from the Commissioner by submitting a written claim
on 01 March 1997. It was denied. The taxpayer, on 15 March 1997, filed a petition for
review with the Court of Appeals. Could the petition still be entertained?
No, the petition for review cannot be entertained by the Court of Appeals. The
decisions of the Commissioner on cases involving claim for tax refunds are within the
exclusive and primary jurisdiction of the Court of Tax Appeals without filing its protest
against the assessment and without a denial thereof by the BIR.
If you were the judge, would you deny the petition for review filed by the taxpayer and
consider the case as prematurely filed? Explain you answer.
No, the Petition for Review should not be denied. The case is an exception to the
rule on exhaustion of administrative remedies. The BIR is estopped from claiming that
the filing of the Petition for Review is premature because the taxpayer failed to exhaust
all administrative remedies. The statement of the BIR in its Final Assessment Notice
and Demand Letter led the taxpayer to conclude that only a final judicial ruling in his
favor would be accepted by the BIR. The taxpayer cannot be blamed for not filing a
protest against the Formal Letter of Demand with Assessment Notices since the
language used and the tenor of the demand letter indicate that it is the final decision of
the respondent on the matter. The CIR should indicate, in a clear and unequivocal
language, whether his action on a disputed assessment constitutes his final
determination thereon in order for the taxpayer concerned to determine when his or her
right to appeal to the tax court accrues. Although there was no direct reference for the
taxpayer to bring the matter directly to the CTA, it cannot be denied that the word
“appeal” under prevailing tax laws refers to the filing of a Petition for Review with the
CTA.
On March 27, 2012, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) issued a notice of
assessment against Blue Water Industries Inc. (BWI), a domestic corporation, informing
the latter of its alleged deficiency corporate income tax for the year 2009. On April 20,
2012, BWI filed a letter protest before the BIR contesting said assessment and
demanding that the same be cancelled or set aside. However, on May 19, 2013, that is
after more than a year from the filing of the letter protest, the BIR informed BWI that the
latter’s letter protest was denied on the ground that the assessment had already
become final, executory and demandable. The BIR reasoned that its failure to decide
the case within 180 days from filing of the letter protest should have prompted BWI to
seek recourse before the CTA by filing a petition for review within 30 days after the
expiration of the 180- day period as mandated by the provisions of the last paragraph of
Section 228 of the NIRC. Accordingly, BWI’s failure to file a petition for review before
the CTA rendered the assessment final, executory and demandable. Is the contention of
the BIR correct? Explain.
No, the contention of BIR is not correct. The right of BWI to consider the inaction
of the Commissioner on the protest within 180 days as an appealable decision is only
optional and will not make the assessment final, executory and demandable.
Under what conditions may the Commissioner of Internal Revenue be authorized to:
Compromise the payment of any internal revenue tax?
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue may be authorized to compromise the
payment of any internal revenue tax where:
1. A reasonable doubt as to the validity of the claim against the taxpayer exists; or
2. The financial position of the taxpayer demonstrates a clear inability to pay the
assessed tax.
State and discuss briefly whether the following cases may be compromised or may not
be compromised: Delinquent accounts;
Delinquent accounts may be compromised if either of the two conditions is
present: (1) the assessment is of doubtful validity, or (2) the financial position of the
taxpayer demonstrates a clear inability to pay the tax.
Cases under administrative protest, after issuance of the final assessment notice to the
taxpayer, which are still pending.
These may be compromised, provided that it is premised upon doubtful validity of
the assessment or financial incapacity to pay.
State the conditions required by the Tax Code before the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue could authorize the refund or credit of taxes erroneously or illegally received.
The conditions are:
1. A written claim for refund is filed by the taxpayer with the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue;
2. The claim for refund must be a categorical demand for reimbursement;
3. The claim for refund or tax credit must be filed with the Commissioner, or the suit or
proceeding therefore must be commenced in court within 2 years from date of payment
of the tax or penalty regardless of any supervening cause.
In its final adjustment return for the 2010 taxable year, ABC Corp. had excess tax
credits arising from its over withholding of income payments. It opted to carry over the
excess tax credits to the following year. Subsequently, ABC Corp. changed its mind and
applied for a refund of the excess tax credits. Will the claim for refund prosper?
No. The claim for refund will not prosper. While the law gives the taxpayer an
option whether to carry-over or claim as refund the excess tax credits shown on its final
adjustment return, once the option to carry over has been made, such option shall be
considered irrevocable for that taxable period and no application for cash refund or
issuance of a tax credit certificate shall be allowed.
DEF Corporation is a wholly owned subsidiary of DEF, Inc., California, USA. Starting
December 15, 2004. DEF Corporation paid annual royalties to DEF, Inc., for the use of
the latter's software, for which the former, as withholding agent of the government,
withheld and remitted to the BIR the 15% final tax based on the gross royalty payments.
The withholding tax return was filed and the tax remitted to the BIR on January 10 of the
following year. On April 10, 2007, DEF Corporation filed a written claim for tax credit
with the BIR, arising from erroneously paid income taxes covering the years 2004 and
2005. The following day, DEF Corporation filed a petition for review with the Court of
Tax Appeals involving the tax credit claim for 2004 and 2005. As a BIR lawyer handling
the case, would you raise the defense of prescription in your answer to the claim for tax
credit? Explain.
Yes. The claim for refund for the 2004 erroneously paid income tax was filed out
of time because the claim was only filed after more than two years had elapsed from the
payment thereof.