CIR V Javier
CIR V Javier
CIR V Javier
SUPREME COURT
Manila
SECOND DIVISION
SARMIENTO, J.:p
Central in this controversy is the issue as to whether or not a taxpayer
who merely states as a footnote in his income tax return that a sum of
money that he erroneously received and already spent is the subject of
a pending litigation and there did not declare it as income is liable to
pay the 50% penalty for filing a fraudulent return.
This question is the subject of the petition for review before the Court
of the portion of the Decision 1 dated July 27, 1983 of the Court of Tax
Appeals (CTA) in C.T.A. Case No. 3393, entitled, "Melchor J. Javier, Jr.
vs. Ruben B. Ancheta, in his capacity as Commissioner of Internal
Revenue," which orders the deletion of the 50% surcharge from
Javier's deficiency income tax assessment on his income for 1977.
The respondent CTA in a Resolution 2 dated May 25, 1987, denied the
Commissioner's Motion for Reconsideration 3 and Motion for New
Trial 4 on the deletion of the 50% surcharge assessment or imposition.
The pertinent facts as are accurately stated in the petition of private
respondent Javier in the CTA and incorporated in the assailed decision
now under review, read as follows:
the decision which held him liable for deficiency income tax, but only to
show that there is no basis for the imposition of the surcharge." This
subsequent disavowal therefore renders moot and academic the
posturings articulated in as Comment 10 on the non-taxability of the
amount he erroneously received and the bulk of which he had already
disbursed. In any event, an appeal at that time (of the filing of the
Comments) would have been already too late to be seasonable. The
petitioner, through the office of the Solicitor General, stresses that:
xxx xxx xxx
The record however is not ambivalent, as the
record clearly shows that private respondent is
self-convinced, and so acted, that he is the
beneficial owner, and of which reason is liable to
tax. Put another way, the studied insinuation that
private respondent may not be the beneficial
owner of the money or income flowing to him as
enhanced by the studied claim that the amount is
"subject of litigation" is belied by the record and
clearly exposed as a fraudulent ploy, as witness
what transpired upon receipt of the amount.
Here, it will be noted that the excess in the amount
erroneously remitted by MELLON BANK for the
amount of private respondent's wife was
$999,000.00 after opening a dollar account with
Prudential Bank in the amount of $999,993.70,
private respondent and his wife, with haste and
dispatch, within a span of eleven (11) electric
days, specifically from June 3 to June 14, 1977,
effected a total massive withdrawal from the said
dollar account in the sum of $975,000.00 or
P7,020,000.00. . . . 11
In reply, the private respondent argues:
xxx xxx xxx
The petitioner contends that the private
respondent committed fraud by not declaring the
"mistaken remittance" in his income tax return and
by merely making a footnote thereon which read:
"Taxpayer was the recipient of some money from