MIAA V CA
MIAA V CA
MIAA V CA
*
G.R. No. 155650. July 20, 2006.
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* EN BANC.
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Same; Words and Phrases; The term „ports‰ in Article 420 (1) of
the Civil Code includes seaports and airports·the MIAA Airport
Lands and Buildings constitute a „port‰ constructed by the State.·
No one can dispute that properties of public dominion mentioned in
Article 420 of the Civil Code, like „roads, canals, rivers, torrents,
ports and bridges constructed by the State,‰ are owned by the
State. The term „ports‰ includes seaports and airports. The
MIAA Airport Lands and Buildings constitute a „port‰ constructed
by the State. Under Article 420 of the Civil Code, the MIAA Airport
Lands and Buildings are properties of public dominion and thus
owned by the State or the Republic of the Philippines.
use. Someone must pay for the maintenance of the road, either the
public indirectly through the taxes they pay the government, or
only those among the public who actually use the road through the
toll fees they pay upon using the road. The tollway system is even a
more efficient and equitable manner of taxing the public for the
maintenance of public roads. The charging of fees to the public does
not determine the character of the property whether it is of public
dominion or not. Article 420 of the Civil Code defines property of
public dominion as one „intended for public use.‰ Even if the
government collects toll fees, the road is still „intended for public
use‰ if anyone can use the road under the same terms and
conditions as the rest of the public. The charging of fees, the
limitation on the
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kind of vehicles that can use the road, the speed restrictions and
other conditions for the use of the road do not affect the public
character of the road.
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Parañaque can foreclose and compel the auction sale of the 600-
hectare runway of the MIAA for non-payment of real estate tax.
Same; The transfer of the Airport Lands and Buildings from the
Bureau of Air Transportation to MIAA was not meant to transfer
beneficial ownership of these assets from the Republic to MIAA·the
Republic remains the beneficial owner of the Airport Lands and
Buildings.·The transfer of the Airport Lands and Buildings from
the Bureau of Air Transportation to MIAA was not meant to
transfer beneficial ownership of these assets from the Republic to
MIAA. The purpose was merely to reorganize a division in the
Bureau of Air
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the only instance when the national government, its agencies and
instrumentalities are subject to any kind of tax by local governments.
·The saving clause in Section 133 refers to the exception to the
exemption in Section 234(a) of the Code, which makes the national
government subject to real estate tax when it gives the
beneficial use of its real properties to a taxable entity.
Section 234(a) of the Local Government Code provides: SEC. 234.
Exemptions from Real Property Tax.·The following are
exempted from payment of the real property tax: (a) Real
property owned by the Republic of the Philippines or any of
its political subdivisions except when the beneficial use thereof
has been granted, for consideration or otherwise, to a
taxable person. x x x. (Emphasis supplied) Under Section 234(a),
real property owned by the Republic is exempt from real estate tax.
The exception to this exemption is when the government gives the
beneficial use of the real property to a taxable entity. The exception
to the exemption in Section 234(a) is the only instance when the
national government, its agencies and instrumentalities are subject
to any kind of tax by local governments. The exception to the
exemption applies only to real estate tax and not to any other tax.
The justification for the exception to the exemption is that the real
property, although owned by the Republic, is not devoted to public
use or public service but devoted to the private gain of a taxable
person.
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special charters are those that meet the two conditions prescribed
in Section 16, Article XII of the Constitution. The first condition is
that the government-owned or controlled corporation must be
established for the common good. The second condition is that the
government-owned or controlled corporation must meet the test of
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compete in the market place. MIAA does not compete in the market
place because there is no competing international airport operated
by the private sector. MIAA performs an essential public service as
the primary domestic and international airport of the Philippines.
Same; Words and Phrases; The terminal fees that MIAA charges
every passenger are regulatory or administrative fees and not income
from commercial transactions.·MIAA performs an essential public
service that every modern State must provide its citizens. MIAA
derives its revenues principally from the mandatory fees and
charges MIAA imposes on passengers and airlines. The terminal
fees that MIAA charges every passenger are regulatory or
administrative fees and not income from commercial transactions.
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find another way to collect the taxes due from MIAA, thus paving
the way for a mutually acceptable negotiated solution.
Same; Same; Had this petition been denied instead with Mactan
as basis, but with the caveat that the MIAA properties could not be
subject of execution sale without the consent of the President, I
suspect that the parties would feel little distress·unfortunately, the
majority will cause precisely the opposite result of unremitting
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CARPIO, J.:
The Antecedents
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Appeals
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The Issue
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Contribution to the General Fund for the Maintenance and Operation of other
Airports.·Within thirty (30) days after the close of each quarter, twenty per
centum (20%) of the gross operating income, excluding payments for utilities of
tenants and concessionaires and terminal fee collections, shall be remitted to
the General Fund in the National Treasury to be used for the maintenance and
operation of other international and domestic airports in the country.
Adjustments in the amount paid by the Authority to the National Treasury
under this Section shall be made at the end of each year based on the audited
financial statements of the Authority.
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The reason for the rule does not apply in the case of exemptions
running to the benefit of the government itself or its agencies. In
such case the practical effect of an exemption is merely to reduce
the amount of money that has to be handled by government in the
course of its operations. For these reasons, provisions granting
exemptions to government agencies may be construed liberally, in
19
favor of non tax-liability of such agencies.
„Justice Holmes, speaking for the Supreme Court, made reference to the
entire absence of power on the part of the States to touch, in that way
(taxation) at least, the instrumentalities of the United States (Johnson v.
Maryland, 254 US 51) and it can be agreed that no state or
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19 274 Phil. 1060, 1100; 197 SCRA 771, 799 (1991) quoting C. Dallas
Sands, 3 STATUTES and STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION 207.
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ARTICLE 421. All other property of the State, which is not of the
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„According to article 344 of the Civil Code: „Property for public use
in provinces and in towns comprises the provincial and town roads,
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cease, and the town officials should see to it that the town plazas
should ever be kept open to the public and free from encumbrances
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or illegal private constructions.‰ (Emphasis supplied)
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wealth Act No. 141, which „remains to this day the existing
general law governing the classification and disposition of
lands of
27
the public domain other than timber and mineral
lands,‰ provide:
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27 Chavez v. Public Estates Authority, 433 Phil. 506; 384 SCRA 152
(2002).
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SEC. 14. Power to Reserve Lands of the Public and Private Domain
of the Government.·(1) The President shall have the power to
reserve for settlement or public use, and for specific public
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33
ment Authority, Bases Conversion Development
34 35
Authority, Philippine
36
Ports Authority, Cagayan
37
de Oro
Port Authority,
38
San Fernando Port Authority,39 Cebu Port
Authority, and Philippine National Railways.
The minorityÊs theory violates Section 133(o) of the Local
Government Code which expressly prohibits local
governments from imposing any kind of tax on national
government instrumentalities. Section 133(o) does not
distinguish between national government instrumentalities
with or without juridical personalities. Where the law does
not distinguish, courts should not distinguish. Thus,
Section 133(o) applies to all national government
instrumentalities, with or without juridical personalities.
The determinative test whether MIAA is exempt from local
taxation is not whether MIAA is a juridical person, but
whether it is a national government instrumentality under
Section 133(o) of the Local Government Code. Section
133(o) is the specific provision of law prohibiting local
governments from imposing any kind of tax on the national
government, its agencies and instrumentalities.
Section 133 of the Local Government Code starts with
the saving clause „[u]nless otherwise provided in this Code.‰
This means that unless the Local Government Code grants
an express authorization, local governments have no power
to tax the national government, its agencies and
instrumentalities. Clearly, the rule is local governments
have no power to tax the national government, its agencies
and instrumentalities. As an exception to this rule, local
governments may tax the national government, its
agencies and instrumentalities only if the Local
Government Code expressly so provides.
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Appeals
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deemed paid for by the Government with the net asset values of the
Bank remaining after the transfer of assets and liabilities as
provided in Section 30 hereof. (Emphasis supplied)
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SEC. 16. The Congress shall not, except by general law, provide for
the formation, organization, or regulation of private corporations.
Government-owned or controlled corporations may be
created or established by special charters in the interest of
the common good and subject to the test of economic viability.
(Emphasis and italics supplied)
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Constitution.
Thus, the Constitution imposes no limitation when the
legislature creates government instrumentalities vested
with corporate powers but performing essential
governmental or public functions. Congress has plenary
authority to create government instrumentalities vested
with corporate powers provided these instrumentalities
perform essential government functions or public services.
However, when the legislature creates through special
charters corporations that perform economic or commercial
activities, such entities·known as „government-owned or
controlled corporations‰·must meet the test of economic
viability because they compete in the market place.
This is the situation of the Land Bank of the Philippines
and the Development Bank of the Philippines and similar
government-owned or controlled corporations, which derive
their income to meet operating expenses solely from
commercial transactions in competition with the private
sector. The intent of the Constitution is to prevent the
creation of government-owned or controlled corporations
that cannot survive on their own in the market place and
thus merely drain the public coffers.
Commissioner Blas F. Ople, proponent of the test of
economic viability, explained to the Constitutional
Commission the purpose of this test, as follows:
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4. Conclusion
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DISSENTING OPINION
TINGA, J.:
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2) The rulings
6
in National Power Corporation v. City of
Cabanatuan, wherein the Court, through Justice Puno,
declared that the National Power Corporation, a GOCC, is
liable for franchise taxes under the Local Government
Code, and succeeding cases that have relied
7
on it such as
Batangas Power Corp. v. Batangas City The majority now
states that deems instrumentalities as defined under the
Administrative Code of 1987 as purportedly beyond the
reach of any form of taxation by LGUs, stating „[l]ocal
governments are devoid of power to tax the national8
government, its agencies and instrumen-talities.‰
Unfortunately, using the definition employed by the major-
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Mactan Explained
A brief recall of the Mactan case is in order. The Mactan-
Cebu International Airport Authority (MCIAA) claimed
that it was exempt from payment of real property taxes to
the City of Cebu, invoking the specific exemption granted
in Section 14 of its charter, Republic Act No. 6958, and its
status as an instrumentality
25
of the government performing
governmental functions. Particularly, MCIAA invoked
Section 133 of the Local Government Code, precisely the
same provision utilized by the majority as the basis for
MIAAÊs exemption. Section 133 reads:
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(o) Taxes, fees or charges of any kind on the National
Government, its agencies and instrumentalities and local
government units. (emphasis and italics supplied)
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The foregoing sections of the LGC speak of: (a) the limitations on
the taxing powers of local government units and the exceptions to
such limitations; and (b) the rule on tax exemptions and the
exceptions thereto. The use of exceptions or provisos in these
sections, as shown by the following clauses:
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The reason for the rule does not apply in the case of exemptions
running to the benefit of the government itself or its agencies. In such
case the practical effect of an exemption is merely to reduce the amount
of money that has to be handled by government in the course of its
operations. For these reasons, provisions granting exemptions to
government agencies may be construed liberally, in favor of non tax-
liability of such agencies.
Strikingly, the majority cites these two very cases and the
stodgy rationale provided therein. This evinces the
perspective from which the majority is coming from. It is
admittedly a viewpoint once shared by this Court, and en
vogue prior to the enactment of the Local Government Code
of 1991.
However, the Local Government Code of 1991 ushered in
a new ethos on how the art of governance should be
practiced in the Philippines, conceding greater powers once
held in the private reserve of the national government to
LGUs. The majority might have private qualms about the
wisdom of the policy of local autonomy, but the members of
the Court are not expected to substitute their personal
biases for the legislative will, especially when the 1987
Constitution itself promotes the principle of local
autonomy.
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34 Id., at p. 799.
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Sec. 25. The State shall ensure the autonomy of local governments.
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„Thus, the doctrine laid down in the Basco case is no longer true. In
the Cabanatuan case, the Court noted primarily that the Basco case
was decided prior to the effectivity of the LGC, when no law
empowering the local government units to tax instrumentalities of
the National Government was in effect. It further explained that in
enacting the LGC, Congress empowered
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41 Id.
42 G.R. No. 143214, 11 November 2004, 442 SCRA 175.
43 Id., at p. 184.
44 Id., at pp. 185-186, citing MIAA v. Marcos, supra note 2.
45 Supra note 11.
46 P.D. No. 1981. See City of Davao v. RTC, supra note 40, at p. 289.
47 Id., at pp. 287-288.
48 32 Phil. 36, 49; cited in City of Davao v. RTC, supra note 40 at pp.
296-297.
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49 Id.
50 Supra note 22.
51 Id.
52 Decision, p. 6.
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approach might not have won the votes of the minority, but
at least it would provide some degree of intellectual clarity
for the parties, LGUs and the national government,
students of jurisprudence and practitioners. A more
meaningful debate on the matter would have been possible,
enriching the study of law and the intellectual dynamic of
this Court.
There is no way the majority can be justified unless
Mactan is overturned. The MCIAA and the MIAA are
similarly situated. They are both, as will be demonstrated,
GOCCs, commonly engaged in the business of operating an
airport. They are the owners of airport properties they
respectively maintain and hold title over these properties
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53
in their name. These entities are both owned by the State,
and denied by their respective charters the absolute right
to dispose54 of their properties without prior approval
elsewhere. Both of them are not
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mortgage by the Authority nor to transfer to any entity other than the
National Government.‰
55 See Section 16, E.O. 903 (as amended) and Section 13, Rep. Act No.
6958.
56 See Articles 40 to 43, Civil Code.
57 See Articles 44 to 47, Civil Code.
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held in trust for the use and the benefit of its members, shall not be
covered by this Act such as, but not limited to: the Government Service
Insurance System, the Home Development Mutual Fund, the Employees
Compensation Commission, the Overseas Workers Welfare
Administration, and the Philippine Medical Care Commission.
73 See Pres. Decree No. 857 (as amended).
74 See Section 10, Pres. Decree No. 857.
75 See Section 11, Pres. Decree No. 857.
674
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79 See Section 47, Rep. Act No. 7916 in relation to Section 5, Pres.
Decree No. 66.
80 See Executive Order No. 603, as amended.
81 See Article 6, Section 15 of Executive Order No. 603, as amended.
82 See Rep. Act No. 7653. If there is any doubt whether the BSP was
intended to be covered by Rep. Act No. 7656, see Section 2(b), Rep. Act
No. 7656, which states that „This term [GOCCs] shall also include
financial institutions, owned or controlled by the National Government,
but shall exclude acquired asset corporations, as defined in the next
paragraphs, state universities, and colleges.‰
83 See Section 2, Rep. Act No. 7653.
84 See Sections 43 & 44, Rep. Act No. 7653.
85 See Rep. Act No. 6395.
86 Supra note 35.
87 See Decision, p. 10.
88 Id., at pp. 10-11.
89 Id.
675
676
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95
charters „hereby created a body corporate.‰
However, these corporations do not have capital stock nor
members, and are obliged to return the unexpended
balances of their appropriations and earnings to a
revolving fund in the National Treasury. The majority
effectively declassifies these entities as GOCCs, never mind
the fact that their very charters declare them to be GOCCs.
I mention these entities not to bring an element of
obscurantism into the fray. I cite them as examples
to emphasize my fundamental point·that it is the
legislative charters of these entities, and not the
Administrative Code, which define the class of
personality of these entities created by Congress. To
adopt the view of the majority would be, in effect, to
sanction an implied repeal of numerous
congressional charters for the purpose of
declassifying GOCCs. Certainly, this could not have
been the intent of the crafters of the Administrative
Code when they drafted the „Definition of Terms‰
incorporated therein.
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SECTION 16. Borrowing Power.·The Authority may, after
consultation with the Minister of Finance and with the
approval of the President of the Philippines, as
recommended by the Minister of Transportation and
Communications, raise funds, either from local or
international sources, by way of loans, credits or securities,
and other borrowing instruments, with the power to create
pledges, mortgages and other voluntary liens or
encumbrances on any of its assets or properties.
All loans contracted by the Authority under this Section,
together with all interests and other sums payable in respect
thereof, shall constitute a charge upon all the revenues and assets
of the Authority and shall rank equally with one another, but shall
have priority over any other claim or charge on the revenue and
assets of the Authority: Provided, That this provision shall not be
construed as a prohibition or restriction on the power of the
Authority to create pledges, mortgages, and other voluntary liens or
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local and foreign currency, shall not at any time exceed the net
worth of the Authority at any given time.
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The President or his duly authorized representative after
consultation with the Minister of Finance may guarantee, in the
name and on behalf of the Republic of the Philippines, the payment
of the loans or other indebtedness of the Authority up to the amount
herein authorized.
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96 See Art. 37, Civil Code, which provides in part, „Juridical capacity,
which is the fitness to be the subject of legal relations. . .‰
97 See Rollo, p. 18. „Petitioner [MIAA] is a government-owned
and controlled corporation with original charter as it was created
by virtue of Executive Order No. 903 issued by then President Ferdinand
E. Marcos on July 21, 1983, as amended by Executive Order No. 298
issued by President Corazon C. Aquino on July 26, 1987, and with office
address at the MIAA Administration Bldg Complex, MIAA Road, Pasay
City.‰ (emphasis supplied).
98 See „Department of Budget and Management·Web Linkages,‰
http://www.dbm. gov.ph/web_linkages.htm (Last visited 25 February
2005).
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99 G.R. No. 104217, 5 December 1994, 238 SCRA 714; per Quiazon, J.,
„Petitioner MIAA is a government-owned and controlled corporation for
the purpose, among others, of encouraging and promoting international
and domestic air traffic in the Philippines as a means of making the
Philippines a center of international trade and tourism and accelerating
the development of the means of transportation and communications in
the country.‰ Id., at p. 716.
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100 See Section 23, Chapter 6, Title XV, Book IV, Administrative Code
of 1987.
101 Supra note 60.
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tion is frequently held to prevail, unless it clearly appears that the intent of
the legislature is otherwise.‰ R. AGPALO, STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION
(3rd ed., 1995), p. 201; citing Lichauco & Co. v. Apostol, 44 Phil. 138 (1922);
Cuyegkeng v. Cruz, 108 Phil. 1147 (1960); Montenegro v. Castañeda, 91 Phil.
882 (1952).
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Sec. 25. The State shall ensure the autonomy of local
governments.
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Sec. 2. The territorial and political subdivisions shall enjoy local
autonomy.
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Section 5. Each local government unit shall have the power to
create its own sources of revenues and to levy taxes, fees, and
charges subject to such guidelines and limitations as the Congress
may provide, consistent with the basic policy of local autonomy.
Such taxes, fees, and charges shall accrue exclusively to the local
governments.
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Justice Puno,106
in National Power Corporation v. City of
Cabanatuan, provides a more „sound and compelling
policy considerations‰ that would warrant sustaining the
taxability of governmentowned entities by local
government units under the Local Government Code.
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„Section 5. Each Local Government unit shall have the power to create
its own sources of revenue, to levy taxes, fees and charges subject to such
guidelines and limitations as the Congress may provide, consistent with
the basic policy of local autonomy. Such taxes, fees and charges shall
accrue exclusively to the Local Governments.‰
„Section 3. The Congress shall enact a local government code which shall
provide for a more responsive and accountable local government
structure instituted through a system of decentralization with effective
mechanisms of recall, initiative, and referendum, allocate among the
different local government units their powers, responsibilities, and
resources, and provide for the qualifications, election, appointment and
removal, term, salaries, powers and functions and duties of local officials,
and all other matters relating to the organization and operation of the
local units.‰
To recall, prior to the enactment of the Rep. Act No. 7160, also
known as the Local Government Code of 1991 (LGC), various
measures have been enacted to promote local autonomy. These
include the Barrio Charter of 1959, the Local Autonomy Act of 1959,
the Decentralization Act of 1967 and the Local Government Code of
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110 Id., at p. 102; citing National Power Corp. v. Presiding Judge, RTC,
Br. XXV, 190 SCRA 477 (1990).
111 Decision, p. 25.
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113
Lung Center of the Philippines v. Quezon City provides
another illustrative example of the jurisprudential havoc
wrought about by the majority. Pursuant to its charter, the
Lung Center was organized as a trust administered
114
by an
eponymous GOCC organized with the SEC. There is no
doubt it is a GOCC, even by the majorityÊs reckoning.
Applying the Administrative Code, it is also considered as
an agency, the term encompassing even GOCCs. Yet since
the Administrative Code definition of „instrumentalities‰
encompasses agencies, especially those not attached to a
line department such as the Lung Center, it also follows
that the Lung Center is an instrumentality, which for the
majority is exempt from all local government taxes,
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112 „Unless otherwise expressed in the tax law, the government and its
political subdivisions are exempt therefrom.‰ J. VITUG AND E.
ACOSTA, TAX LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE (2nd ed., 2000), at p. 36.
113 Supra note 9.
114 See P.D. No. 1423.
691
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693
MIAA charter:
694
„x x x The bare fact that the port and its facilities and
appurtenances are accessible to the general public does not exempt
it from the payment of real property taxes. It must be stressed that
the said port facilities and appurtenances are the petitionerÊs
corporate patrimonial properties, not for public use, and that the
operation of the port and its facilities and the administration of its
buildings are in the nature of ordinary business. The petitioner is
clothed, under P.D. No. 857, with corporate status and corporate
powers in the furtherance of its proprietary interests x x x The
petitioner is even empowered to invest its funds in such government
securities approved by the Board of Directors, and derives its
income from rates, charges or fees for the use by vessels of the port
premises, appliances or equipment. x x x Clearly then, the
petitioner is a profit-earning corporation; hence, its patrimonial
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properties are subject to tax.‰
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taxable entity.‰
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697
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125
ties and barangays.‰ In correlation, the Administrative
Code of 1987 defines „local government‰ as referring to „the
political subdivisions established by or in accordance with
the Constitution.‰
Clearly then, these political subdivisions are engaged in
the exercise of sovereign functions and are accordingly
exempt. The same could be said generally of the national
government, which would be similarly exempt. After all,
even with the principle of local autonomy, it is inherently
noxious and self-defeatist for local taxation to interfere
with the sovereign exercise of functions. However, the
exercise of proprietary functions is a different matter
altogether.
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134 Section 32(24), Rep. Act No. 776. See CAA v. Court of Appeals,
supra note 18, at p. 36.
135 Supra note 18.
136 Id., at p. 36.
137 Teodoro v. National Airports Commission, supra note 17, at p. 207.
138 See Article XII, Section 11, CONST.
705
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139 Vitug & Acosta, supra note 112, at p. 35; citing Bisaya Land
Transportation Co., Inc. v. Collector of Internal Revenue, L-11812, 29 May
1959, 105 Phil. 1338.
140 See Section 3, E.O. 903, as amended.
706
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142 See Section 17, Article VII, Constitution. „The President shall have
control of all the executive departments. He shall ensure that the laws be
faithfully executed.‰
143 See note 141.
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IX. Epilogue
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I dissent.
Petition granted, assailed resolutions set aside.
··o0o··