Taxation Notes I. Taxation 1. Definition of Taxation Taxation As A Power
Taxation Notes I. Taxation 1. Definition of Taxation Taxation As A Power
Taxation Notes I. Taxation 1. Definition of Taxation Taxation As A Power
I. TAXATION
1. DEFINITION OF TAXATION
Taxation as a power:
Taxation is the inherent power of the sovereign, exercised through the legislature, to
impose burdens upon subjects and objects within its jurisdiction for the purpose of
raising revenues to carry out the legitimate objects of government.
Taxation as a process:
It is the act of levying the tax, i.e., the process or means by which the sovereign,
through its law-making body, raises income to defray the necessary expenses of the
government.
It is merely a way of apportioning the cost if the government among those who in
some measures are privileged to enjoy its benefits and, therefore, must bear its
burdens. (71 Am Jur. 2nd 342; 1 Cooley 72-73)
Note:
The power of taxation is inherently legislative. Thus, congress has the power to determine:
[CONES]
1. Coverage of taxation
2. Object or purpose of taxation
3. Nature or kind of product taxed
4. Extent or rate of tax
5. Situs of taxation
The Secretary of Finance is vested with authority to revoke, repeal or abrogate the
acts or previous rulings of his predecessor in office because the construction of a
statute by those administering it is not binding on their successors if thereafter the
latter become satisfied that a different construction should be given.
(Association of Clerical Employees vs. Brotherhood of Railways & Steamship Clerks)
Art. 2254. — No vested or acquired right can arise from acts or omissions which are
against the law or which infringe upon the rights of others. (New Civil Code)
3. SCOPE OF TAXATION
Must be: Comprehensive ▪ Unlimited ▪ Plenary ▪ Supreme
Restrictions: Practical ▪ Useful ▪ Lawful ▪ Published
As a general rule, the power to tax is plenary and unlimited in its range, acknowledging
in its very nature no limits, so that the principal check against its abuse is to be found
only in the responsibility of the legislature (which imposes the tax) to its constituency
who are to pay it. Nevertheless, it is circumscribed by constitutional limitations. At the
same time, like any other statute, tax legislation carries a presumption of
constitutionality.
Income v Capital
Income means all the wealth which flows into the taxpayer other than a mere
return on capital.
Capital is a fund or property existing at one distinct point in time while income
denotes a flow of wealth during a definite period of time.
Income is gain derived and severed from capital.
Certainly, an income tax is arbitrary and confiscatory if it taxes capital because capital
is not income. In other words, it is income, not capital, which is subject to income tax.
However, the MCIT is not a tax on capital.
The MCIT is imposed on gross income which is arrived at by deducting the capital spent
by a corporation in the sale of its goods, i.e., the cost of goods and other direct
expenses from gross sales. Clearly, the capital is not being taxed.
The Secretary of Finance is granted, under Section 244 of RA 8424, the authority to
promulgate the necessary rules and regulations for the effective enforcement of the
provisions of the law. Such authority is subject to the limitation that the rules and
regulations must not override, but must remain consistent and in harmony with, the
law they seek to apply and implement. It is well-settled that an administrative agency
cannot amend an act of Congress.
We have long recognized that the method of withholding tax at source is a procedure
of collecting income tax which is sanctioned by our tax laws.
The withholding tax system was devised for three primary reasons:
1) to provide the taxpayer a convenient manner to meet his probable income tax
liability;
2) to ensure the collection of income tax which can otherwise be lost or substantially
reduced through failure to file the corresponding returns and
3) to improve the governments cash flow.
Respondent Secretary has the authority to require the withholding of a tax on items
of income payable to any person, national or juridical, residing in the Philippines.
Passive Income
The BIR defines passive income by stating what it is not:
if the income is generated in the active pursuit and performance of the
corporations primary purposes, the same is not passive income
It is income generated by the taxpayers assets. These assets can be in the form of real
properties that return rental income, shares of stock in a corporation that earn
dividends or interest income received from savings.
The taxing power has the authority to make reasonable classifications for purposes of
taxation. Inequalities which result from a singling out of one particular class for
taxation, or exemption, infringe no constitutional limitation. The real estate industry
is, by itself, a class and can be validly treated differently from other business
enterprises.
Equality and uniformity in taxation means that all taxable articles of kinds of
property of the same class shall be taxed at the same rate. The taxing power has the
authority to make reasonable and natural classifications for purposes of taxation.
There is a similarity to the standard of equal protection for what is required is that the
tax applies equally to all persons, firms and corporations placed in a similar situation.
It is undoubted that the due process clause may be invoked where a taxing statute is
so arbitrary that it finds no support in the Constitution. An obvious example is where
it can be shown to amount to the confiscation of property. That would be a clear abuse
of power. It then becomes the duty of this Court to say that such an arbitrary act
amounted to the exercise of an authority not conferred. That properly calls for the
application of the Holmes dictum. It has also been held that where the assailed tax
measure is beyond the jurisdiction of the state, or is not for a public purpose, or, in
case of a retroactive statute is so harsh and unreasonable, it is subject to attack on due
process grounds.
Taxes are the lifeblood of the government and so should be collected without
unnecessary hindrance On the other hand, such collection should be made in
accordance with law as any arbitrariness will negate the very reason for government
itself.
SC Decision: The Solicitor General is correct when he says that the burden is on the
taxpayer to prove the validity of the claimed deduction. In the present case, however, we
find that the onus has been discharged satisfactorily. The private respondent has proved
that the payment of the fees was necessary and reasonable in the light of the efforts
exerted by the payees in inducing investors and prominent businessmen to venture in an
experimental enterprise and involve themselves in a new business requiring millions of
pesos. This was no mean feat and should be, as it was, sufficiently recompensed.
It is said that taxes are what we pay for civilization society. Without taxes, the
government would be paralyzed for lack of the motive power to activate and operate
it. Hence, despite the natural reluctance to surrender part of one's hard earned income
to the taxing authorities, every person who is able to must contribute his share in the
running of the government. The government for its part, is expected to respond in the
form of tangible and intangible benefits intended to improve the lives of the people
and enhance their moral and material values. This symbiotic relationship is the
rationale of taxation and should dispel the erroneous notion that it is an arbitrary
method of exaction by those in the seat of power.
But even as we concede the inevitability and indispensability of taxation, it is a
requirement in all democratic regimes that it be exercised reasonably and in
accordance with the prescribed procedure. If it is not, then the taxpayer has a right to
complain and the courts will then come to his succor. For all the awesome power of
the tax collector, he may still be stopped in his tracks if the taxpayer can demonstrate,
as it has here, that the law has not been observed.
THEORIES:
NECESSITY THEORY
Taxation is a power predicated upon necessity. It is a necessary burden to preserve the
State’s sovereignty and a means to give the citizenry an army to resist aggression, a
navy to defend its shores from invasion, a corps of civil servants to serve, public
improvements for the enjoyment of the citizenry, and those which come within the
State’s territory and facilities and protection which a government is supposed to
provide.
For the delegation to be valid, it must be complete and it must fix a standard. A
sufficient standard is one which defines legislative policy, marks its limits, maps out its
boundaries and specifies the public agency to apply it.
The principle of fiscal adequacy as a characteristic of a sound tax system was originally
stated by Adam Smith in his Canons of Taxation (1776), as:
IV. Every tax ought to be so contrived as both to take out and to keep out of the pockets
of the people as little as possible over and above what it brings into the public treasury
of the state.
As earlier stated, the input tax is the tax paid by a person, passed on to him by the
seller, when he buys goods. Output tax meanwhile is the tax due to the person when
he sells goods. In computing the VAT payable, three possible scenarios may arise:
1) If at the end of a taxable quarter the output taxes charged by the seller are equal
to the input taxes that he paid and passed on by the suppliers, then no payment is
required;
2) When the output taxes exceed the input taxes, the person shall be liable for the
excess, which has to be paid to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR); and
3) If the input taxes exceed the output taxes, the excess shall be carried over to the
succeeding quarter or quarters. Should the input taxes result from zero-rated or
effectively zero-rated transactions, any excess over the output taxes shall instead
be refunded to the taxpayer or credited against other internal revenue taxes, at the
taxpayers option.
The equal protection clause does not require the universal application of the laws on
all persons or things without distinction. This might in fact sometimes result in unequal
protection. What the clause requires is equality among equals as determined
according to a valid classification. By classification is meant the grouping of persons or
things similar to each other in certain particulars and different from all others in these
same particulars.
c. Progressivity in Taxation
Progressive taxation is built on the principle of the taxpayers ability to pay. This
principle was also lifted from Adam Smiths Canons of Taxation, and it states:
I. The subjects of every state ought to contribute towards the support of the
government, as nearly as possible, in proportion to their respective abilities; that is, in
proportion to the revenue which they respectively enjoy under the protection of the
state.
Taxation is progressive when its rate goes up depending on the resources of the person
affected.
The VAT is an antithesis of progressive taxation. By its very nature, it is regressive. The
principle of progressive taxation has no relation with the VAT system inasmuch as the
VAT paid by the consumer or business for every goods bought or services enjoyed is
the same regardless of income.
The power of taxation and the police power are both distinct, coexistent powers of a
state.
An exaction which is invalid as an exercise of the taxing power may not be upheld as
an exercise of police power where it is clear that the legislative body imposing it did
not intend it as such.
An exaction which would be invalid as an exercise of the taxing power may be upheld
as a regulatory measure where the primary purpose of the legislature in imposing it
was the regulation of some calling or activity which is potentially adverse, unless, of
course, the legislature, in imposing such an exaction, acts in an arbitrary and
unreasonable manner.
EMINENT DOMAIN:
TAXATION EMINENT DOMAIN
No compensation. Requires compensation for private
property taken for public use.
On the other hand, police power is the power of the state to promote public welfare
by restraining and regulating the use of liberty and property. It is the most pervasive,
the least limitable, and the most demanding of the three fundamental powers of the
State. The justification is found in the Latin maxims salus populi est suprema lex (the
welfare of the people is the supreme law) and sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas (so
use your property as not to injure the property of others).
If generation of revenue is the primary purpose and regulation is merely incidental, the
imposition is a tax; but if regulation is the primary purpose, the fact that revenue is
incidentally raised does not make the imposition a tax.
The taxing power may be used as an implement of police power. The theory behind
the exercise of the power to tax emanates from necessity; without taxes, government
cannot fulfill its mandate of promoting the general welfare and well-being of the
people.
The amount collected under the ordinance in question partakes of the nature of a tax,
although denominated as "police inspection fee" since its undeniable purpose is to raise
revenue.
However, the tax imposed under the ordinance can be stricken down on another
ground. According to Section 2 of the abovementioned Act, the tax levied must be "for
public purposes, just and uniform.” As correctly held by the trial court, the so-called
"police inspection fee" levied by the ordinance is "unjust and unreasonable."
The Court ruled that tax should be based on sales, not in the quantity of goods that
have yet to be sold. Moreover, for taxes to be valid, it should be levied “for public
purposes, just, and uniform.”
The act is primarily an exercise of the police power. It is shown in the Act that the tax is
levied with a regulatory purpose, to provide means for the rehabilitation and
stabilization of the threatened sugar industry.
This Court can take judicial notice of the fact that sugar production is one of the great
industries of our nation, sugar occupying a leading position among its export products;
that it gives employment to thousands of laborers in fields and factories; that it is a
great source of the state's wealth, is one of the important sources of foreign exchange
needed by our government, and is thus pivotal in the plans of a regime committed to
a policy of currency stability. Its promotion, protection and advancement, therefore
redounds greatly to the general welfare. Hence it was competent for the legislature to
find that the general welfare demanded that the sugar industry should be stabilized in
turn; and in the wide field of its police power, the lawmaking body could provide that
the distribution of benefits therefrom be readjusted among its components to enable
it to resist the added strain of the increase in taxes that it had to sustain.
The protection of a large industry constituting one of the great sources of the state's
wealth and therefore directly or indirectly affecting the welfare of so great a portion
of the population of the State is affected to such an extent by public interests as to be
within the police power of the sovereign.
e. NTC v CA (1999)
Sometime in 1988, the NTC served on PLDT the following assessment notices and demands
for payment of Supervision and regulation fee under Section 40 (e) of the PSA for the said
year, 1988; Permit fee under Section 40 (f) of the PSA for the approval of the protestants
increase of its authorized capital stock; and Permit fees under Section 40 (g) of the PSA in
connection with the Commissions decisions in NTC Cases approving the Protestants equity
participation in the Fiber Optic Interpacific Cable systems and X-5 Service Improvement and
Expansion Program. PLDT challenged the aforesaid assessments alleging that the
assessments were being made to raise revenues and not as mere reimbursements for actual
regulatory expenses.
Succinct and clear is the ruling of this Court in the case of Philippine Long Distance
Telephone Company vs. Public Service Commission, 66 SCRA 341, that the basis for
computation of the fee to be charged by NTC on PLDT, is the capital stock subscribed
or paid and not, alternatively, the property and equipment.
The law in point is clear and categorical. There is no room for construction. It simply
calls for application. To repeat, the fee in question is based on the capital stock
subscribed or paid, nothing less nothing more.
It bears stressing that it is not the NTC that imposed such a fee. It is the legislature
itself. Since Congress has the power to exercise the State inherent powers of Police
Power, Eminent Domain and Taxation, the distinction between police power and the
power to tax, which could be significant if the exercising authority were mere
political subdivisions (since delegation by it to such political subdivisions of one
power does not necessarily include the other), would not be of any moment when, as
in the case under consideration, Congress itself exercises the power. All that is to be
done would be to apply and enforce the law when sufficiently definitive and not
constitutional infirm.
II. TAXES
1. DEFINITION
Republic v Philippine Rabbit Bus Lines
Cooley: "Taxes are the enforced proportional contributions from persons and property
levied by the state by virtue of its sovereignty for the support of government and for
all public needs."
As distinguished from other pecuniary burdens, the differentiating factor is that the
purpose to be subserved is the raising of revenue. A tax then is neither a penalty that
must be satisfied or a liability arising from contract.