Fort Bonifacio Vs CIR
Fort Bonifacio Vs CIR
Facts:
In 1995, Fort Bonifacio Development Corporation purchased from the national government a
portion of the Fort Bonifacio reservation. On January 1, 1996, the enactment of RA 7716 extended
the coverage of VAT to real properties held primarily for sale to customers or held for lease in the
ordinary course of trade or business. Thus, FBDC sought to register by submitting to BIR an
inventory of all its real properties, the book value of which aggregated to about P71 B.
In October 1996, FBDC started selling Global City lots to interested buyers. For the first quarter of
1997, it paid the output VAT by making cash payments to the BIR and credited its unutilized input
tax credit on purchases of goods and services. Realizing that its 8% transitional input tax
credit was not applied in computing its output VAT for the first quarter of 1997, FBDC filed with
the BIR a claim for refund of the amount erroneously paid as output VAT for the said period.
The CTA denied refund on the ground that the benefit of transitional input tax credit comes with
the condition that business taxes should have been paid first. It contends that since FBDC
acquired the Global City property under a VAT-free sale transaction, it cannot avail of the
transitional input tax credit. The CTA likewise pointed out that under RR 7-95, implementing
Section 105 of the old NIRC, the 8% transitional input tax credit should be based on the value of
the improvements on land such as buildings, roads, drainage system and other similar structures,
constructed on or after January 1, 1998, and not on thebook value of the real property.
Issue 1: W/N prior payment of taxes is required in availing of the transitional input tax credit
No. First, nothing in Sec 105 of the NIRC indicates that prior payment of taxes is necessary to
avail of the transitional input tax credit. Clearly, all it requires is for the taxpayer to file a
beginning inventory with the BIR. Courts cannot limit the application or coverage of a law nor can
it impose conditions not provided therein because to do so constitutes judicial legislation.
Second, prior payment of taxes is not required to avail of the transitional input tax credit because
it is not a tax refund per se but a tax credit. Tax credit is not synonymous to tax refund. Tax
refund is defined as the money that a taxpayer overpaid and is thus returned by the taxing
authority. Tax credit, on the other hand, is an amount subtracted directly from ones total tax
liability. It is any amount given to a taxpayer as a subsidy, a refund, or an incentive to encourage
investment. Thus, unlike a tax refund, prior payment of taxes is not a prerequisite to avail of a tax
credit.
Lastly, the fact that FBDC acquired the Global City property under a tax-free transaction makes
no difference as prior payment of taxes is not a pre-requisite.
Issue 2: W/N the transitional input tax credit applies only to the value of improvements
No. Section 4.105-1 of RR 7-95, insofar as it limits the transitional input tax credit to the value of
the improvement of the real properties, is a nullity. The 8% transitional input tax credit should not
be limited to the value of the improvements on the real properties but should include the value of
the real properties as well.
Hence, since FBDC is entitled to the 8% transitional input tax credit which is more than sufficient
to cover its output tax for the first taxable quarter, the amount of VAT output taxes erroneously
paid must be refunded.
Issue 3: W/N the Tax Code allows either a cash refund or a tax credit for input VAT
Yes. First, a careful reading of Section 112 of the Tax Code shows that it does not prohibit cash
refund or tax credit of transitional input tax in the case of zero-rated or effectively zero-rated VAT
registered taxpayers, who do not have any output VAT.
The phrase except transitional input tax in Section 112 of the Tax Code was inserted to
distinguish creditable input tax fromtransitional input tax credit. Transitional input tax credits are
input taxes on a taxpayers beginning inventory of goods, materials, and supplies equivalent to
8% (then 2%) or the actual VAT paid on such goods, materials and supplies, whichever is higher.
It may only be availed of once by first-time VAT taxpayers. Creditable input taxes, on the other
hand, are input taxes of VAT taxpayers in the course of their trade or business, which should be
applied within two years after the close of the taxable quarter when the sales were made.
As regards Section 110, while the law only provides for a tax credit, a taxpayer who erroneously
or excessively pays his output tax is still entitled to recover the payments he made either as a
tax credit or a tax refund.
Here, since FBDC still has available transitional input tax credit, it filed a claim for refund to
recover the output VAT it erroneously or excessively paid for the 1st quarter of 1997. Thus, there
is no reason for denying its claim for tax refund/credit.