65 - (G.R. No. 160756. March 09, 2010)
65 - (G.R. No. 160756. March 09, 2010)
65 - (G.R. No. 160756. March 09, 2010)
EN BANC
[ G.R. No. 160756. March 09, 2010 ]
CHAMBER OF REAL ESTATE AND BUILDERS' ASSOCIATIONS,
INC., PETITIONER, VS. THE HON. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
ALBERTO ROMULO, THE HON. ACTING SECRETARY OF
FINANCE JUANITA D. AMATONG, AND THE HON.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE GUILLERMO
PARAYNO, JR., RESPONDENTS.
DECISION
CORONA, J.:
In this original petition for certiorari and mandamus,[1] petitioner Chamber of Real Estate
and Builders' Associations, Inc. is questioning the constitutionality of Section 27 (E) of
Republic Act (RA) 8424[2] and the revenue regulations (RRs) issued by the Bureau of
Internal Revenue (BIR) to implement said provision and those involving creditable
withholding taxes.[3]
Petitioner assails the validity of the imposition of minimum corporate income tax (MCIT) on
corporations and creditable withholding tax (CWT) on sales of real properties classified as
ordinary assets.
Section 27(E) of RA 8424 provides for MCIT on domestic corporations and is implemented
by RR 9-98. Petitioner argues that the MCIT violates the due process clause because it levies
income tax even if there is no realized gain.
Petitioner also seeks to nullify Sections 2.57.2(J) (as amended by RR 6-2001) and 2.58.2 of
RR 2-98, and Section 4(a)(ii) and (c)(ii) of RR 7-2003, all of which prescribe the rules and
procedures for the collection of CWT on the sale of real properties categorized as ordinary
assets. Petitioner contends that these revenue regulations are contrary to law for two reasons:
first, they ignore the different treatment by RA 8424 of ordinary assets and capital assets and
second, respondent Secretary of Finance has no authority to collect CWT, much less, to base
the CWT on the gross selling price or fair market value of the real properties classified as
ordinary assets.
Petitioner also asserts that the enumerated provisions of the subject revenue regulations
violate the due process clause because, like the MCIT, the government collects income tax
even when the net income has not yet been determined. They contravene the equal protection
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clause as well because the CWT is being levied upon real estate enterprises but not on other
business enterprises, more particularly those in the manufacturing sector.
(1) whether or not this Court should take cognizance of the present case;
(3) whether or not the imposition of CWT on income from sales of real properties
classified as ordinary assets under RRs 2-98, 6-2001 and 7-2003, is
unconstitutional.
Under the MCIT scheme, a corporation, beginning on its fourth year of operation, is assessed
an MCIT of 2% of its gross income when such MCIT is greater than the normal corporate
income tax imposed under Section 27(A).[4] If the regular income tax is higher than the
MCIT, the corporation does not pay the MCIT. Any excess of the MCIT over the normal tax
shall be carried forward and credited against the normal income tax for the three
immediately succeeding taxable years. Section 27(E) of RA 8424 provides:
(3) Relief from the [MCIT] under certain conditions. - The Secretary
of Finance is hereby authorized to suspend the imposition of the
[MCIT] on any corporation which suffers losses on account of
prolonged labor dispute, or because of force majeure, or because
of legitimate business reverses.
regulations that shall define the terms and conditions under which
he may suspend the imposition of the [MCIT] in a meritorious
case.
(1) Imposition of the Tax. - A [MCIT] of two percent (2%) of the gross
income as of the end of the taxable year (whether calendar or fiscal year,
depending on the accounting period employed) is hereby imposed upon any
domestic corporation beginning the fourth (4th) taxable year immediately
following the taxable year in which such corporation commenced its
business operations. The MCIT shall be imposed whenever such
corporation has zero or negative taxable income or whenever the amount of
minimum corporate income tax is greater than the normal income tax due
from such corporation.
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For purposes of these Regulations, the term, "normal income tax" means the
income tax rates prescribed under Sec. 27(A) and Sec. 28(A)(1) of the Code
xxx at 32% effective January 1, 2000 and thereafter.
(2) Carry forward of excess [MCIT]. - Any excess of the [MCIT] over the
normal income tax as computed under Sec. 27(A) of the Code shall be
carried forward on an annual basis and credited against the normal income
tax for the three (3) immediately succeeding taxable years.
Sec. 2.57.2. Income payment subject to [CWT] and rates prescribed thereon:
(J) Gross selling price or total amount of consideration or its equivalent paid to
the seller/owner for the sale, exchange or transfer of. - Real property, other than
capital assets, sold by an individual, corporation, estate, trust, trust fund or
pension fund and the seller/transferor is habitually engaged in the real estate
business in accordance with the following schedule -
Gross selling price shall mean the consideration stated in the sales document or
the fair market value determined in accordance with Section 6 (E) of the Code, as
amended, whichever is higher. In an exchange, the fair market value of the
property received in exchange, as determined in the Income Tax Regulations
shall be used.
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Sec. 2.57.2. Income payment subject to [CWT] and rates prescribed thereon:
(J) Gross selling price or total amount of consideration or its equivalent paid to
the seller/owner for the sale, exchange or transfer of real property classified as
ordinary asset. - A [CWT] based on the gross selling price/total amount of
consideration or the fair market value determined in accordance with Section
6(E) of the Code, whichever is higher, paid to the seller/owner for the sale,
transfer or exchange of real property, other than capital asset, shall be imposed
upon the withholding agent,/buyer, in accordance with the following schedule:
With a selling price of more than two Million Pesos (P2,000,000.00). 5.0%
Gross selling price shall remain the consideration stated in the sales document or
the fair market value determined in accordance with Section 6 (E) of the Code, as
amended, whichever is higher. In an exchange, the fair market value of the
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(i) If the sale is a sale of property on the installment plan (that is,
payments in the year of sale do not exceed 25% of the selling price),
the tax shall be deducted and withheld by the buyer on every
installment.
(ii) If, on the other hand, the sale is on a "cash basis" or is a "deferred-
payment sale not on the installment plan" (that is, payments in the
year of sale exceed 25% of the selling price), the buyer shall withhold
the tax based on the gross selling price or fair market value of the
property, whichever is higher, on the first installment.
Section 2.58.2 of RR 2-98 implementing Section 58(E) of RA 8424 provides that any sale,
barter or exchange subject to the CWT will not be recorded by the Registry of Deeds until
the CIR has certified that such transfers and conveyances have been reported and the taxes
thereof have been duly paid:[7]
On February 11, 2003, RR No. 7-2003[8] was promulgated, providing for the guidelines in
determining whether a particular real property is a capital or an ordinary asset for purposes
of imposing the MCIT, among others. The pertinent portions thereof state:
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a. In the case of individual citizen (including estates and trusts), resident aliens,
and non-resident aliens engaged in trade or business in the Philippines;
(ii) The sale of land and/or building classified as ordinary asset and other
real property (other than land and/or building treated as capital asset),
regardless of the classification thereof, all of which are located in the
Philippines, shall be subject to the [CWT] (expanded) under Sec. 2.57.2(J)
of [RR 2-98], as amended, and consequently, to the ordinary income tax
under Sec. 27(A) of the Code. In lieu of the ordinary income tax, however,
domestic corporations may become subject to the [MCIT] under Sec. 27(E)
of the Code, whichever is applicable.
Courts will not assume jurisdiction over a constitutional question unless the following
requisites are satisfied: (1) there must be an actual case calling for the exercise of judicial
review; (2) the question before the court must be ripe for adjudication; (3) the person
challenging the validity of the act must have standing to do so; (4) the question of
constitutionality must have been raised at the earliest opportunity and (5) the issue of
constitutionality must be the very lis mota of the case.[9]
Respondents aver that the first three requisites are absent in this case. According to them,
there is no actual case calling for the exercise of judicial power and it is not yet ripe for
adjudication because
[petitioner] did not allege that CREBA, as a corporate entity, or any of its
members, has been assessed by the BIR for the payment of [MCIT] or [CWT] on
sales of real property. Neither did petitioner allege that its members have shut
down their businesses as a result of the payment of the MCIT or CWT. Petitioner
has raised concerns in mere abstract and hypothetical form without any actual,
specific and concrete instances cited that the assailed law and revenue regulations
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have actually and adversely affected it. Lacking empirical data on which to base
any conclusion, any discussion on the constitutionality of the MCIT or CWT on
sales of real property is essentially an academic exercise.
Contrary to respondents' assertion, we do not have to wait until petitioner's members have
shut down their operations as a result of the MCIT or CWT. The assailed provisions are
already being implemented. As we stated in Didipio Earth-Savers' Multi-Purpose
Association, Incorporated (DESAMA) v. Gozun:[13]
By the mere enactment of the questioned law or the approval of the challenged
act, the dispute is said to have ripened into a judicial controversy even without
any other overt act. Indeed, even a singular violation of the Constitution and/or
the law is enough to awaken judicial duty.[14]
If the assailed provisions are indeed unconstitutional, there is no better time than the present
to settle such question once and for all.
Legal standing or locus standi is a party's personal and substantial interest in a case such that
it has sustained or will sustain direct injury as a result of the governmental act being
challenged.[16] In Holy Spirit Homeowners Association, Inc. v. Defensor,[17] we held that the
association had legal standing because its members stood to be injured by the enforcement of
the assailed provisions:
Petitioner association has the legal standing to institute the instant petition xxx.
There is no dispute that the individual members of petitioner association are
residents of the NGC. As such they are covered and stand to be either benefited
or injured by the enforcement of the IRR, particularly as regards the selection
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In any event, this Court has the discretion to take cognizance of a suit which does not satisfy
the requirements of an actual case, ripeness or legal standing when paramount public interest
is involved.[19] The questioned MCIT and CWT affect not only petitioners but practically all
domestic corporate taxpayers in our country. The transcendental importance of the issues
raised and their overreaching significance to society make it proper for us to take cognizance
of this petition.[20]
Senator Enrile. Mr. President, we are not unmindful of the practice of certain
corporations of reporting constantly a loss in their operations to avoid the
payment of taxes, and thus avoid sharing in the cost of government. In this
regard, the Tax Reform Act introduces for the first time a new concept called the
[MCIT] so as to minimize tax evasion, tax avoidance, tax manipulation in the
country and for administrative convenience. ... This will go a long way in
ensuring that corporations will pay their just share in supporting our public life
and our economic advancement.[22]
Domestic corporations owe their corporate existence and their privilege to do business to the
government. They also benefit from the efforts of the government to improve the financial
market and to ensure a favorable business climate. It is therefore fair for the government to
require them to make a reasonable contribution to the public expenses.
Congress intended to put a stop to the practice of corporations which, while having large
turn-overs, report minimal or negative net income resulting in minimal or zero income taxes
year in and year out, through under-declaration of income or over-deduction of expenses
otherwise called tax shelters.[23]
Mr. Javier (E.) ... [This] is what the Finance Dept. is trying to remedy, that is why
they have proposed the [MCIT]. Because from experience too, you have
corporations which have been losing year in and year out and paid no tax. So, if
the corporation has been losing for the past five years to ten years, then that
corporation has no business to be in business. It is dead. Why continue if you are
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losing year in and year out? So, we have this provision to avoid this type of tax
shelters, Your Honor.[24]
The primary purpose of any legitimate business is to earn a profit. Continued and repeated
losses after operations of a corporation or consistent reports of minimal net income render its
financial statements and its tax payments suspect. For sure, certain tax avoidance schemes
resorted to by corporations are allowed in our jurisdiction. The MCIT serves to put a cap on
such tax shelters. As a tax on gross income, it prevents tax evasion and minimizes tax
avoidance schemes achieved through sophisticated and artful manipulations of deductions
and other stratagems. Since the tax base was broader, the tax rate was lowered.
To further emphasize the corrective nature of the MCIT, the following safeguards were
incorporated into the law:
First, recognizing the birth pangs of businesses and the reality of the need to recoup initial
major capital expenditures, the imposition of the MCIT commences only on the fourth
taxable year immediately following the year in which the corporation commenced its
operations.[25] This grace period allows a new business to stabilize first and make its
ventures viable before it is subjected to the MCIT.[26]
Second, the law allows the carrying forward of any excess of the MCIT paid over the normal
income tax which shall be credited against the normal income tax for the three immediately
succeeding years.[27]
Third, since certain businesses may be incurring genuine repeated losses, the law authorizes
the Secretary of Finance to suspend the imposition of MCIT if a corporation suffers losses
due to prolonged labor dispute, force majeure and legitimate business reverses.[28]
Even before the legislature introduced the MCIT to the Philippine taxation system, several
other countries already had their own system of minimum corporate income taxation. Our
lawmakers noted that most developing countries, particularly Latin American and Asian
countries, have the same form of safeguards as we do. As pointed out during the committee
hearings:
[Mr. Medalla:] Note that most developing countries where you have of course
quite a bit of room for underdeclaration of gross receipts have this same form of
safeguards.
In the case of Thailand, half a percent (0.5%), there's a minimum of income tax
of half a percent (0.5%) of gross assessable income. In Korea a 25% of taxable
income before deductions and exemptions. Of course the different countries have
different basis for that minimum income tax.
The other thing you'll notice is the preponderance of Latin American countries
that employed this method. Okay, those are additional Latin American countries.
[29]
At present, the United States of America, Mexico, Argentina, Tunisia, Panama and Hungary
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Petitioner claims that the MCIT under Section 27(E) of RA 8424 is unconstitutional because
it is highly oppressive, arbitrary and confiscatory which amounts to deprivation of property
without due process of law. It explains that gross income as defined under said provision
only considers the cost of goods sold and other direct expenses; other major expenditures,
such as administrative and interest expenses which are equally necessary to produce gross
income, were not taken into account.[31] Thus, pegging the tax base of the MCIT to a
corporation's gross income is tantamount to a confiscation of capital because gross income,
unlike net income, is not "realized gain."[32]
We disagree.
Taxes are the lifeblood of the government. Without taxes, the government can neither exist
nor endure. The exercise of taxing power derives its source from the very existence of the
State whose social contract with its citizens obliges it to promote public interest and the
common good.[33]
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.
[37] Nevertheless, it is circumscribed by constitutional limitations. At the same time, like any
other statute, tax legislation carries a presumption of constitutionality.
The constitutional safeguard of due process is embodied in the fiat "[no] person shall be
deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law." In Sison, Jr. v. Ancheta, et
al.,[38] we held that the due process clause may properly be invoked to invalidate, in
appropriate cases, a revenue measure[39] when it amounts to a confiscation of property.[40]
But in the same case, we also explained that we will not strike down a revenue measure as
unconstitutional (for being violative of the due process clause) on the mere allegation of
arbitrariness by the taxpayer.[41] There must be a factual foundation to such an
unconstitutional taint.[42] This merely adheres to the authoritative doctrine that, where the
due process clause is invoked, considering that it is not a fixed rule but rather a broad
standard, there is a need for proof of such persuasive character.[43]
Petitioner is correct in saying that income is distinct from capital.[44] Income means all the
wealth which flows into the taxpayer other than a mere return on capital. Capital is a fund or
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property existing at one distinct point in time while income denotes a flow of wealth during a
definite period of time.[45] Income is gain derived and severed from capital.[46] For income
to be taxable, the following requisites must exist:
(3) the gain must not be excluded by law or treaty from taxation.[47]
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[48] and other direct expenses
from gross sales. Clearly, the capital is not being taxed.
Furthermore, the MCIT is not an additional tax imposition. It is imposed in lieu of the
normal net income tax, and only if the normal income tax is suspiciously low. The MCIT
merely approximates the amount of net income tax due from a corporation, pegging the rate
at a very much reduced 2% and uses as the base the corporation's gross income.
Besides, there is no legal objection to a broader tax base or taxable income by eliminating all
deductible items and at the same time reducing the applicable tax rate.[49]
The United States has a similar alternative minimum tax (AMT) system which is generally
characterized by a lower tax rate but a broader tax base.[51] Since our income tax laws are of
American origin, interpretations by American courts of our parallel tax laws have persuasive
effect on the interpretation of these laws.[52] Although our MCIT is not exactly the same as
the AMT, the policy behind them and the procedure of their implementation are comparable.
On the question of the AMT's constitutionality, the United States Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit stated in Okin v. Commissioner:[53]
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[AMT]. xxx [It] is a rational means of obtaining a broad-based tax, and therefore
is constitutional.[54]
The U.S. Court declared that the congressional intent to ensure that corporate taxpayers
would contribute a minimum amount of taxes was a legitimate governmental end to which
the AMT bore a reasonable relation.[55]
American courts have also emphasized that Congress has the power to condition, limit or
deny deductions from gross income in order to arrive at the net that it chooses to tax.[56] This
is because deductions are a matter of legislative grace.[57]
Absent any other valid objection, the assignment of gross income, instead of net income, as
the tax base of the MCIT, taken with the reduction of the tax rate from 32% to 2%, is not
constitutionally objectionable.
Moreover, petitioner does not cite any actual, specific and concrete negative experiences of
its members nor does it present empirical data to show that the implementation of the MCIT
resulted in the confiscation of their property.
In sum, petitioner failed to support, by any factual or legal basis, its allegation that the MCIT
is arbitrary and confiscatory. The Court cannot strike down a law as unconstitutional simply
because of its yokes.[58] Taxation is necessarily burdensome because, by its nature, it
adversely affects property rights.[59] The party alleging the law's unconstitutionality has the
burden to demonstrate the supposed violations in understandable terms.[60]
Petitioner alleges that RR 9-98 is a deprivation of property without due process of law
because the MCIT is being imposed and collected even when there is actually a loss, or a
zero or negative taxable income:
(1) Imposition of the Tax. -- xxx The MCIT shall be imposed whenever such
corporation has zero or negative taxable income or whenever the amount of
[MCIT] is greater than the normal income tax due from such corporation.
(Emphasis supplied)
RR 9-98, in declaring that MCIT should be imposed whenever such corporation has zero or
negative taxable income, merely defines the coverage of Section 27(E). This means that even
if a corporation incurs a net loss in its business operations or reports zero income after
deducting its expenses, it is still subject to an MCIT of 2% of its gross income. This is
consistent with the law which imposes the MCIT on gross income notwithstanding the
amount of the net income. But the law also states that the MCIT is to be paid only if it is
greater than the normal net income. Obviously, it may well be the case that the MCIT would
be less than the net income of the corporation which posts a zero or negative taxable income.
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The withholding tax system is a procedure through which taxes (including income taxes) are
collected.[61] Under Section 57 of RA 8424, the types of income subject to withholding tax
are divided into three categories: (a) withholding of final tax on certain incomes; (b)
withholding of creditable tax at source and (c) tax-free covenant bonds. Petitioner is
concerned with the second category (CWT) and maintains that the revenue regulations on
the collection of CWT on sale of real estate categorized as ordinary assets are
unconstitutional.
Petitioner, after enumerating the distinctions between capital and ordinary assets under RA
8424, contends that Sections 2.57.2(J) and 2.58.2 of RR 2-98 and Sections 4(a)(ii) and (c)(ii)
of RR 7-2003 were promulgated "with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of
jurisdiction" and "patently in contravention of law"[62] because they ignore such distinctions.
Petitioner's conclusion is based on the following premises: (a) the revenue regulations use
gross selling price (GSP) or fair market value (FMV) of the real estate as basis for
determining the income tax for the sale of real estate classified as ordinary assets and (b)
they mandate the collection of income tax on a per transaction basis, i.e., upon
consummation of the sale via the CWT, contrary to RA 8424 which calls for the payment of
the net income at the end of the taxable period.[63]
Petitioner theorizes that since RA 8424 treats capital assets and ordinary assets differently,
respondents cannot disregard the distinctions set by the legislators as regards the tax base,
modes of collection and payment of taxes on income from the sale of capital and ordinary
assets.
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.[64] It is well-settled that an administrative agency cannot amend an act
of Congress.[65]
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.[66] The withholding tax system
was devised for three primary reasons: first, to provide the taxpayer a convenient manner to
meet his probable income tax liability; second, to ensure the collection of income tax which
can otherwise be lost or substantially reduced through failure to file the corresponding
returns and third, to improve the government's cash flow.[67] This results in administrative
savings, prompt and efficient collection of taxes, prevention of delinquencies and reduction
of governmental effort to collect taxes through more complicated means and remedies.[68]
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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. Such
authority is derived from Section 57(B) of RA 8424 which provides:
(B) Withholding of Creditable Tax at Source. The [Secretary] may, upon the
recommendation of the [CIR], require the withholding of a tax on the items
of income payable to natural or juridical persons, residing in the
Philippines, by payor-corporation/persons as provided for by law, at the rate
of not less than one percent (1%) but not more than thirty-two percent
(32%) thereof, which shall be credited against the income tax liability of the
taxpayer for the taxable year.
The questioned provisions of RR 2-98, as amended, are well within the authority given by
Section 57(B) to the Secretary, i.e., the graduated rate of 1.5%-5% is between the 1%-32%
range; the withholding tax is imposed on the income payable and the tax is creditable against
the income tax liability of the taxpayer for the taxable year.
Petitioner maintains that RR 2-98, as amended, arbitrarily shifted the tax base of a real estate
business' income tax from net income to GSP or FMV of the property sold.
Petitioner is wrong.
The taxes withheld are in the nature of advance tax payments by a taxpayer in order to
extinguish its possible tax obligation. [69] They are installments on the annual tax which may
be due at the end of the taxable year.[70]
Under RR 2-98, the tax base of the income tax from the sale of real property classified as
ordinary assets remains to be the entity's net income imposed under Section 24 (resident
individuals) or Section 27 (domestic corporations) in relation to Section 31 of RA 8424, i.e.
gross income less allowable deductions. The CWT is to be deducted from the net income tax
payable by the taxpayer at the end of the taxable year.[71] Precisely, Section 4(a)(ii) and (c)
(ii) of RR 7-2003 reiterate that the tax base for the sale of real property classified as ordinary
assets remains to be the net taxable income:
(ii) The sale of real property located in the Philippines, classified as ordinary
assets, shall be subject to the [CWT] (expanded) under Sec. 2.57.2(j) of [RR 2-
98], as amended, based on the [GSP] or current [FMV] as determined in
accordance with Section 6(E) of the Code, whichever is higher, and consequently,
to the ordinary income tax imposed under Sec. 24(A)(1)(c) or 25(A)(1) of the
Code, as the case may be, based on net taxable income.
The sale of land and/or building classified as ordinary asset and other real
property (other than land and/or building treated as capital asset), regardless of
the classification thereof, all of which are located in the Philippines, shall be
subject to the [CWT] (expanded) under Sec. 2.57.2(J) of [RR 2-98], as amended,
and consequently, to the ordinary income tax under Sec. 27(A) of the Code. In
lieu of the ordinary income tax, however, domestic corporations may become
subject to the [MCIT] under Sec. 27(E) of the same Code, whichever is
applicable. (Emphasis supplied)
Accordingly, at the end of the year, the taxpayer/seller shall file its income tax return and
credit the taxes withheld (by the withholding agent/buyer) against its tax due. If the tax due
is greater than the tax withheld, then the taxpayer shall pay the difference. If, on the other
hand, the tax due is less than the tax withheld, the taxpayer will be entitled to a refund or tax
credit. Undoubtedly, the taxpayer is taxed on its net income.
The use of the GSP/FMV as basis to determine the withholding taxes is evidently for
purposes of practicality and convenience. Obviously, the withholding agent/buyer who is
obligated to withhold the tax does not know, nor is he privy to, how much the taxpayer/seller
will have as its net income at the end of the taxable year. Instead, said withholding agent's
knowledge and privity are limited only to the particular transaction in which he is a party. In
such a case, his basis can only be the GSP or FMV as these are the only factors reasonably
known or knowable by him in connection with the performance of his duties as a
withholding agent.
NO BLURRING OF DISTINCTIONS
BETWEEN ORDINARY ASSETS AND
CAPITAL ASSETS
RR 2-98 imposes a graduated CWT on income based on the GSP or FMV of the real
property categorized as ordinary assets. On the other hand, Section 27(D)(5) of RA 8424
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imposes a final tax and flat rate of 6% on the gain presumed to be realized from the sale of a
capital asset based on its GSP or FMV. This final tax is also withheld at source.[72]
The differences between the two forms of withholding tax, i.e., creditable and final, show
that ordinary assets are not treated in the same manner as capital assets. Final withholding
tax (FWT) and CWT are distinguished as follows:
FWT CWT
a) The amount of income tax withheld a) Taxes withheld on certain income
by the withholding agent is constituted payments are intended to equal or at
as a full and final payment of the least approximate the tax due of the
income tax due from the payee on the payee on said income.
said income.
b)The liability for payment of the tax b) Payee of income is required to report
rests primarily on the payor as a the income and/or pay the difference
withholding agent. between the tax withheld and the tax due
on the income. The payee also has the
right to ask for a refund if the tax
withheld is more than the tax due.
c) The payee is not required to file an c) The income recipient is still required
income tax return for the particular to file an income tax return, as
income.[73] prescribed in Sec. 51 and Sec. 52 of the
NIRC, as amended.[74]
As previously stated, FWT is imposed on the sale of capital assets. On the other hand, CWT
is imposed on the sale of ordinary assets. The inherent and substantial differences between
FWT and CWT disprove petitioner's contention that ordinary assets are being lumped
together with, and treated similarly as, capital assets in contravention of the pertinent
provisions of RA 8424.
Petitioner insists that the levy, collection and payment of CWT at the time of transaction are
contrary to the provisions of RA 8424 on the manner and time of filing of the return,
payment and assessment of income tax involving ordinary assets.[75]
The fact that the tax is withheld at source does not automatically mean that it is treated
exactly the same way as capital gains. As aforementioned, the mechanics of the FWT are
distinct from those of the CWT. The withholding agent/buyer's act of collecting the tax at the
time of the transaction by withholding the tax due from the income payable is the essence of
the withholding tax method of tax collection.
Petitioner submits that only passive income can be subjected to withholding tax, whether
final or creditable. According to petitioner, the whole of Section 57 governs the withholding
of income tax on passive income. The enumeration in Section 57(A) refers to passive income
being subjected to FWT. It follows that Section 57(B) on CWT should also be limited to
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passive income:
(B) Withholding of Creditable Tax at Source. -- The [Secretary] may, upon the
recommendation of the [CIR], require the withholding of a tax on the items of
income payable to natural or juridical persons, residing in the Philippines,
by payor-corporation/persons as provided for by law, at the rate of not less than
one percent (1%) but not more than thirty-two percent (32%) thereof, which shall
be credited against the income tax liability of the taxpayer for the taxable year.
(Emphasis supplied)
Section 57(A) expressly states that final tax can be imposed on certain kinds of income and
enumerates these as 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
corporation's primary purposes, the same is not passive income...[76]
It is income generated by the taxpayer's 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.
On the other hand, Section 57(B) provides that the Secretary can require a CWT on "income
payable to natural or juridical persons, residing in the Philippines." There is no requirement
that this income be passive income. If that were the intent of Congress, it could have easily
said so.
Indeed, Section 57(A) and (B) are distinct. Section 57(A) refers to FWT while Section 57(B)
pertains to CWT. The former covers the kinds of passive income enumerated therein and the
latter encompasses any income other than those listed in 57(A). Since the law itself makes
distinctions, it is wrong to regard 57(A) and 57(B) in the same way.
To repeat, the assailed provisions of RR 2-98, as amended, do not modify or deviate from the
text of Section 57(B). RR 2-98 merely implements the law by specifying what income is
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subject to CWT. It has been held that, where a statute does not require any particular
procedure to be followed by an administrative agency, the agency may adopt any reasonable
method to carry out its functions.[77] Similarly, considering that the law uses the general
term "income," the Secretary and CIR may specify the kinds of income the rules will apply
to based on what is feasible. In addition, administrative rules and regulations ordinarily
deserve to be given weight and respect by the courts[78] in view of the rule-making authority
given to those who formulate them and their specific expertise in their respective fields.
NO DEPRIVATION OF PROPERTY
WITHOUT DUE PROCESS
Petitioner avers that the imposition of CWT on GSP/FMV of real estate classified as
ordinary assets deprives its members of their property without due process of law because, in
their line of business, gain is never assured by mere receipt of the selling price. As a result,
the government is collecting tax from net income not yet gained or earned.
Again, it is stressed that the CWT is creditable against the tax due from the seller of the
property at the end of the taxable year. The seller will be able to claim a tax refund if its net
income is less than the taxes withheld. Nothing is taken that is not due so there is no
confiscation of property repugnant to the constitutional guarantee of due process. More
importantly, the due process requirement applies to the power to tax.[79] The CWT does not
impose new taxes nor does it increase taxes.[80] It relates entirely to the method and time of
payment.
Petitioner protests that the refund remedy does not make the CWT less burdensome because
taxpayers have to wait years and may even resort to litigation before they are granted a
refund.[81] This argument is misleading. The practical problems encountered in claiming a
tax refund do not affect the constitutionality and validity of the CWT as a method of
collecting the tax.
Petitioner complains that the amount withheld would have otherwise been used by the
enterprise to pay labor wages, materials, cost of money and other expenses which can then
save the entity from having to obtain loans entailing considerable interest expense. Petitioner
also lists the expenses and pitfalls of the trade which add to the burden of the realty industry:
huge investments and borrowings; long gestation period; sudden and unpredictable interest
rate surges; continually spiraling development/construction costs; heavy taxes and
prohibitive "up-front" regulatory fees from at least 20 government agencies.[82]
Petitioner's lamentations will not support its attack on the constitutionality of the CWT.
Petitioner's complaints are essentially matters of policy best addressed to the executive and
legislative branches of the government. Besides, the CWT is applied only on the amounts
actually received or receivable by the real estate entity. Sales on installment are taxed on a
per-installment basis.[83] Petitioner's desire to utilize for its operational and capital expenses
money earmarked for the payment of taxes may be a practical business option but it is not a
fundamental right which can be demanded from the court or from the government.
NO VIOLATION OF
EQUAL PROTECTION
Petitioner claims that the revenue regulations are violative of the equal protection clause
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because the CWT is being levied only on real estate enterprises. Specifically, petitioner
points out that manufacturing enterprises are not similarly imposed a CWT on their sales,
even if their manner of doing business is not much different from that of a real estate
enterprise. Like a manufacturing concern, a real estate business is involved in a continuous
process of production and it incurs costs and expenditures on a regular basis. The only
difference is that "goods" produced by the real estate business are house and lot units.[84]
Again, we disagree.
The equal protection clause under the Constitution means that "no person or class of persons
shall be deprived of the same protection of laws which is enjoyed by other persons or other
classes in the same place and in like circumstances."[85] Stated differently, all persons
belonging to the same class shall be taxed alike. It follows that the guaranty of the equal
protection of the laws is not violated by legislation based on a reasonable classification.
Classification, to be valid, must (1) rest on substantial distinctions; (2) be germane to the
purpose of the law; (3) not be limited to existing conditions only and (4) apply equally to all
members of the same class.[86]
The taxing power has the authority to make reasonable classifications for purposes of
taxation.[87] Inequalities which result from a singling out of one particular class for taxation,
or exemption, infringe no constitutional limitation.[88] The real estate industry is, by itself, a
class and can be validly treated differently from other business enterprises.
On the other hand, each manufacturing enterprise may have tens of thousands of transactions
with several thousand customers every month involving both minimal and substantial
amounts. To require the customers of manufacturing enterprises, at present, to withhold the
taxes on each of their transactions with their tens or hundreds of suppliers may result in an
inefficient and unmanageable system of taxation and may well defeat the purpose of the
withholding tax system.
Petitioner counters that there are other businesses wherein expensive items are also sold
infrequently, e.g. heavy equipment, jewelry, furniture, appliance and other capital goods yet
these are not similarly subjected to the CWT.[89] As already discussed, the Secretary may
adopt any reasonable method to carry out its functions.[90] Under Section 57(B), it may
choose what to subject to CWT.
A reading of Section 2.57.2 (M) of RR 2-98 will also show that petitioner's argument is not
accurate. The sales of manufacturers who have clients within the top 5,000 corporations, as
specified by the BIR, are also subject to CWT for their transactions with said 5,000
corporations.[91]
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Lastly, petitioner assails Section 2.58.2 of RR 2-98, which provides that the Registry of
Deeds should not effect the regisration of any document transferring real property unless a
certification is issued by the CIR that the withholding tax has been paid. Petitioner proffers
hardly any reason to strike down this rule except to rely on its contention that the CWT is
unconstitutional. We have ruled that it is not. Furthermore, this provision uses almost exactly
the same wording as Section 58(E) of RA 8424 and is unquestionably in accordance with it:
CONCLUSION
The renowned genius Albert Einstein was once quoted as saying "[the] hardest thing in the
world to understand is the income tax."[92] When a party questions the constitutionality of an
income tax measure, it has to contend not only with Einstein's observation but also with the
vast and well-established jurisprudence in support of the plenary powers of Congress to
impose taxes. Petitioner has miserably failed to discharge its burden of convincing the Court
that the imposition of MCIT and CWT is unconstitutional.
SO ORDERED.
Puno, C.J., Carpio, Carpio Morales, Velasco, Jr., Nachura, Leonardo-De Castro, Brion,
Peralta, Bersamin, Del Castillo, Abad, Villarama, Jr., Perez and Mendoza, JJ., concur.
[3]In particular, these are Section 2.27 (E), Section 2.57.2 (J) (as amended by RR 6-2001)
and Section 2.58.2 of RR 2-98 and Section 4 (a) (ii) and (c) (ii) of RR-7-2003.
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[5]Implementing [RA 8424], "An Act Amending the National Internal Revenue Code, as
amended" Relative to the Imposition of the [MCIT] on Domestic Corporations and Resident
Foreign Corporations.
[6]
Implementing [RA 8424] relative to the Withholding on Income subject to the Expanded
Withholding Tax and Final Withholding Tax, Withholding of Income Tax on Compensation,
Withholding of Creditable Value-Added Tax and Other Percentage Taxes.
[7] This Certificate is commonly known as the "CAR" or the "certificate authorizing
registration."
[9] Jumamil v. Cafe, G.R. No. 144570, 21 September 2005, 470 SCRA 475, 486-487.
Citations omitted.
[12] Id., citing Integrated Bar of the Philippines v. Zamora, 392 Phil. 618, 632-633 (2000).
[13] Id.
[14] Id., p. 600, citing Pimentel, Jr. v. Hon. Aguirre, 391 Phil. 84, 107 (2000).
[20]Supra note 11, p. 600. Automotive Industry Workers Alliance (AIWA) v. Romulo, G.R.
No. 157509, 18 January 2005, 449 SCRA 1, 11, citations omitted.
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[22]Senate Deliberations, Sponsorship Speech of Senator Juan Ponce Enrile, July 30, 1997,
p. 41.
[23]
Transcript, House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means hearing, April 23,
1997, pp. 53-61; Oct. 9, 1997, pp. 95-99; Oct. 10, 1997, pp. 11-14.
[26] Manila Banking Corporation v. CIR, C.T.A. Case No. 6442, 21 April 2003.
[28] Id., Section 27(E)(3). The mechanism for the availment of the exemption has been
spelled out in Section 2.27(E)(3) in relation to Section 2.27(E)(4)(b)(c) and (d) of RR 9-98.
[29] Transcript of the House Committee Meeting on Ways and Means hearing, Feb. 20, 1996,
p. 24.
[30]KPMG's Corporate and Indirect Tax Rate Survey 2009. March 1, 2010 [17, 22, 25-26,
29-30].
[31] Rollo, p. 8.
[32] Id., p. 7.
[33]
National Power Corporation v. City of Cabanatuan, G.R. No. 149110, 9 April 2003, 401
SCRA 259, 270.
[34]Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. of the Philippines, Inc. v. Municipality of Tanauan, Leyte, G.R.
No. L-31156, 27 February 1976, 69 SCRA 460, 465, citing Cooley, The Law of Taxation,
Vol. 1, Fourth Edition, 149-150.
[35] Id.
[36]
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Santos, G.R. No. 119252, 18 August 1997, 277
SCRA 617, 631.
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[42] Id.
[44] See Madrigal and Paterno v. Rafferty and Concepcion, 38 Phil. 414, 418-419 (1918).
[45] Id..
[52] Bañas v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 102967, 10 February 2000, 325 SCRA 259, 279,
citations omitted.
[53]808 F. 2d 1338 (9th Cir. 1987). See also Freeman v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2001-
254 (U.S. Tax Court, 2001); Wyly v. United States, 662 F. 2d 784 (5th Cir. 1982); Klaasen v.
Commissioner, No. 98-9035 (10th Cir. 1999).
[55] Id.
[56]
Helvering v. Independent Life Insurance Co., 292 U.S. 371, 381 (1934), citing Burnet v.
Thompson Oil & Gas Co., 283 U.S. 301; Stanton v. Baltic Mining Co., 240 U.S. 103 and
Brushaber v. Union Pac. R. Co., 240 U.S. 1.
[57] New Colonial Ice v. Helvering, 292 U.S. 435, 440 (1934).
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[58]Abakada Guro Party List v. Ermita, G.R. No. 168056, 1 September 2005, 469 SCRA 1,
145.
[65]Echegaray v. Secretary of Justice, G.R. No. 132601, 12 October 1998, 297 SCRA 754,
791, citations omitted.
[66]Filipinas Synthetic Fiber Corporation v. Court of Appeals, G.R. Nos. 118498 & 124377,
12 October 1999, 316 SCRA 480, 485.
[67]Citibank v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 107434, 10 October 1997, 280 SCRA 459, 467-
468, citing Cesar C. Rey, Tax Code Annotated, p. 243, in turn citing the explanatory note to
H. Bill No. 1127 and Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Malayan Ins. Co., Inc., G.R. No.
L-21913, 18 November 1967, 21 SCRA 944, 949.
[69]
Supra note 67, pp. 469-470, citing Gibbs v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No.
L-17406, 29 November 1965, 15 SCRA 318, 325.
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[77]Provident Tree Farms, Inc. v. Batario, G.R. No. 92285, 28 March 1994, 231 SCRA 463,
469, citing 2 Am Jur 2d §340, pp. 155-156, in turn citing Douglas County v. State Bd. of
Equalization and Assessment, 158 Neb 325, 63 NW 2d 449; State ex rel. York v. Walla Walla
County, 28 Wash 2d 891, 184 P 2d 577, 172 ALR 1001.
[78]
Compania General De Tabacos De Filipinas v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 147361, 23
March 2004, 426 SCRA 203, 210, citing Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of
Appeals, G.R. No. 108358, 20 January 1995, 240 SCRA 368, 372.
[79] Chavez v. Ongpin, G.R. No. 76778, 6 June 1990, 186 SCRA 331, 337.
[80] Id.
[86]Coconut Oil Refiners Association, Inc. v. Torres, G.R. No. 132527, 29 July 2005, 465
SCRA 47, 76, citing Tiu v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 127410, 20 January 1999, 301 SCRA
278
[87]Sison v. Ancheta, et al., supra note 38, p. 591, citing Eastern Theatrical Co. v. Alfonso,
83 Phil. 852, 862 (1949).
[88] Id., p. 590, citing Lutz v. Araneta, 98 Phil. 148, 153 (1955).
[92]
Murphy v. Internal Revenue Service, D.C. Cir. No. 05-5139, 22 August 2006, citing The
Macmillan Book of Business and Economic Quotations, Michael Jackman ed., 195 (1984).