Commissioner of Internal Revenue V. SM Prime Holdings, Inc. G.R. NO. 183505, (FEBRUARY 26, 2010), 627 PHIL 581-605 Facts
Commissioner of Internal Revenue V. SM Prime Holdings, Inc. G.R. NO. 183505, (FEBRUARY 26, 2010), 627 PHIL 581-605 Facts
Commissioner of Internal Revenue V. SM Prime Holdings, Inc. G.R. NO. 183505, (FEBRUARY 26, 2010), 627 PHIL 581-605 Facts
FACTS:
Respondents SM Prime Holdings, Inc. (SM Prime) and First Asia Realty Development Corporation (First
Asia) are domestic corporations duly organized and existing under the laws of the Republic of the
Philippines. Both are engaged in the business of operating cinema houses, among others.
Simply put, the issue in this case is whether the gross receipts derived by operators or proprietors of
cinema/theater houses from admission tickets are subject to VAT.
Petitioner’s Arguments
Petitioner argues that the enumeration of services subject to VAT in Section 108 of the NIRC is not
exhaustive because it covers all sales of services unless exempted by law. He claims that the CTA erred
in applying the rules on statutory construction and in using extrinsic aids in interpreting Section 108
because the provision is clear and unambiguous. Thus, he maintains that the exhibition of movies by
cinema operators or proprietors to the paying public, being a sale of service, is subject to VAT.
Respondents’ Arguments
Respondents, on the other hand, argue that a plain reading of Section 108 of the NIRC of 1997 shows
that the gross receipts of proprietors or operators of cinemas/theaters derived from public admission
are not among the services subject to VAT. Respondents insist that gross receipts from cinema/theater
admission tickets were never intended to be subject to any tax imposed by the national government.
According to them, the absence of gross receipts from cinema/theater admission tickets from the list of
services which are subject to the national amusement tax under Section 125 of the NIRC of 1997
reinforces this legislative intent. Respondents also highlight the fact that RMC No. 28-2001 on which the
deficiency assessments were based is an unpublished administrative ruling.
ISSUE:
HELD:
NO. It is the legislative intent not to impose VAT on persons already covered by the amusement tax. This
holds true even in the case of cinema/theater operators taxed under the LGC of 1991 precisely because
the VAT law was intended to replace the percentage tax on certain services. The mere fact that they are
taxed by the local government unit and not by the national government is immaterial. The Local Tax
Code, in transferring the power to tax gross receipts derived by cinema/theater operators or proprietor
from admission tickets to the local government, did not intend to treat cinema/theater houses as a
separate class. No distinction must, therefore, be made between the places of amusement taxed by the
national government and those taxed by the local government.
The repeal of the Local Tax Code by the LGC of 1991 is not a legal basis for the imposition of VAT on the
gross receipts of cinema/theater operators or proprietors derived from admission tickets. The removal
of the prohibition under the Local Tax Code did not grant nor restore to the national government the
power to impose amusement tax on cinema/theater operators or proprietors. Neither did it expand the
coverage of VAT. Since the imposition of a tax is a burden on the taxpayer, it cannot be presumed nor
can it be extended by implication. A law will not be construed as imposing a tax unless it does so clearly,
expressly, and unambiguously. As it is, the power to impose amusement tax on cinema/theater
operators or proprietors remains with the local government.
Considering that there is no provision of law imposing VAT on the gross receipts of cinema/theater
operators or proprietors derived from admission tickets, RMC No. 28-2001 which imposes VAT on the
gross receipts from admission to cinema houses must be struck down. We cannot overemphasize that
RMCs must not override, supplant, or modify the law, but must remain consistent and in harmony with,
the law they seek to apply and implement.
In view of the foregoing, there is no need to discuss whether RMC No. 28-2001 complied with the
procedural due process for tax issuances as prescribed under RMC No. 20-86.
Moreover, contrary to the view of petitioner, respondents need not prove their entitlement to an
exemption from the coverage of VAT. The rule that tax exemptions should be construed strictly against
the taxpayer presupposes that the taxpayer is clearly subject to the tax being levied against him. The
reason is obvious: it is both illogical and impractical to determine who are exempted without first
determining who are covered by the provision. Thus, unless a statute imposes a tax clearly, expressly
and unambiguously, what applies is the equally well-settled rule that the imposition of a tax cannot be
presumed. In fact, in case of doubt, tax laws must be construed strictly against the government and in
favor of the taxpayer.