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Tax Deficiency Case: HPCO vs. CIR

This document is a court decision from the Court of Tax Appeals regarding an assessment of deficiency value-added tax and expanded withholding tax issued against HPCO AgridEv Corporation for tax year 1997 totaling P2,165,373.93. The key issues are whether the right to assess has prescribed, whether the assessment notices are void for failure to inform the petitioner of facts/law, and whether surcharges and penalties are proper. The court finds that the assessments were made within the 3-year prescriptive period according to tax law and are therefore valid.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
74 views12 pages

Tax Deficiency Case: HPCO vs. CIR

This document is a court decision from the Court of Tax Appeals regarding an assessment of deficiency value-added tax and expanded withholding tax issued against HPCO AgridEv Corporation for tax year 1997 totaling P2,165,373.93. The key issues are whether the right to assess has prescribed, whether the assessment notices are void for failure to inform the petitioner of facts/law, and whether surcharges and penalties are proper. The court finds that the assessments were made within the 3-year prescriptive period according to tax law and are therefore valid.

Uploaded by

dwight yu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES

COURT OF TAX APPEALS


QUEZON CITY

HPCO AGRIDEV CORPORATION,


Petitioner,

-versus- C.T.A. CASE NO. 6355

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL Promulgated:


REVENUE,
Respondent . JUL 1 8 2002
dJO/Ij1~~
X- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - X

DECISION

This case stemmed from an assessment issued against petitioner for deficiency

value-added tax and expanded withholding tax for the taxable year 1997 in the aggregate

amount ofP2, 165,373 .93 , inclusive ofsurcharge, interests and compromise penalties.

The facts are simplified by the parties in their Joint Stipulation of Facts.

Petitioner is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the

Philippines with office address at corner Washington and Figueroa Streets, Silay City,

Negros Occidental. It is engaged, among others, in the business of developing and

leasing private agricultural lands and planting, cultivating and selling products of such

lands.

On January 24, 2001 , petitioner received Notice of Assessment Nos. 00007-2001

and 00008-2001 from the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), together with the

corresponding demand letter, all dated January 10, 2001 .


DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page 2

As per said assessment notices and accompanymg demand letter, there is

allegedly due from petitioner deficiency taxes for taxable year 1997 in the total amount of

P2, 165,3 73 .96, inclusive of interest, surcharge and compromise penalties, comprising of

deficiency VAT and EWT, computed as follows :

DEFICIENCY VALUE-ADDED TAX (VAT)


Assessment Notice No. 00007-2001

Basic Tax Due p 826,0 17.47


Add: 25% Surcharge 206,504.37
20% Annual Interest from 1/21/98
to 2/28/01 (.6205) 512,543 .85
Compromise Penalty 25 000.00
Total Deficiency VAT Pl .570.065.70

DEFICIENCY WITHHOLDING TAX


Assessment Notice No. 00008-2001

Basic Tax Due p 356, 168.62


Add: 20% Annual Interest from 1/10/98
to 2/28/01 (.6265) 223, 139.64
Compromise Penalty 16 000.00
Total Deficiency EWT p 595.308.26

Petitioner protested the assessment notices in a letter dated February 22, 2001

addressed to the Regional Director ofRevenue Region No. 12 (Bacolod City).

On April 20, 2001 , petitioner submitted to respondent its Quarterly VAT Returns

(BIR Form No. 2550) for the 1st to 4th quarters of taxable year 1997 and the Monthly

Remittance Returns of Income Taxes Withheld (BIR Form No. 1743W) for the months of

January to December oftaxable year 1997.


DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page3

For taxable year 1997, petitioner filed its Quarterly VAT Returns on the following

dates:

Period {199 7) Date Filed

1st Qtr. 4/25/97


2nd Qtr. 7/21/97
3rd Qtr. 10/20/97
4th Qtr. 1/20/98

For taxable year 1997, petitioner filed its Monthly Remittance Returns of Income

Taxes Withheld on the following dates:

Period {199 7) Date Filed

January 2/10/97
February 3/10/97
March 4/10/97
April 5/09/97
May 6/10/97
June 7/10/97
July 8/08/97
August 9/10/97
September 10/10/97
October 11/10/97
November 12/10/97
December 1112/98

As of October 17, 2001 , however, respondent had not yet resolved/decided

petitioner' s protest. Consequently, to prevent the assessment notices from becoming

"final, executory and demandable" pursuant to Section 228 of the 1997 NIRC, petitioner

filed the instant petition on November 16, 2001.

By way of answer, respondent raised the following Special and Affirmative

Defenses:
DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page 4

a) He reiterates and repleads the preceding paragraphs of this answer as


part of his Special and Affirmative Defenses;

b) The assessments for deficiency VAT and withholding tax for the year
1997 were issued within the prescriptive period provided by law;

c) Petitioner was informed of the law and the facts on which the
assessments are made, in compliance with Section 228 of the Tax
Code;

d) The assessments were issued in accordance with law and regulations;


and

e) All presumptions are in favor of the correctness of tax assessments.

The petitioner and the respondent likewise stipulated the issues to be resolved by

this court, to wit :

(1) Whether or not the right of the government to assess deficiency VAT and
EWT for taxable year 1997 has already prescribed;

(2) Whether or not the Assessment Notices are void for failure of the respondent
to inform petitioner of the facts and the law upon which the assessment is
based; and

(3) Whether or not the imposition of surcharge and compromise penalties is


proper.

With the facts and issues in this case having been jointly stipulated, the parties

readily agreed that the only remaining issues for resolution are purely legal, hence, the

instant petition can be resolved on the basis of the pleadings, admissions and memoranda

of the parties. Thus, upon the submission of their respective memorandum, this case was

considered submitted for decision.

Anent the first issue, petitioner posits that the right of the government to assess

the deficiency VAT and EWT for taxable year 1997 has already prescribed inasmuch as
DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page 5

the assessment notices in question were issued only on January 10, 2001 and received by

the petitioner on January 24, 2001. Respondent, on the other hand, argues that the

assessments were issued within the prescriptive period. He asserts that the last day for

the filing of the VAT return for the year 1997 is January 20, 1998. And since the

assessment was issued on January 10, 2001 , said issuance was within the three-year

prescriptive period. As regards the EWT assessment, the same was issued within the

period allowed by law for respondent had until March 1, 2001 within which to assess

pursuant to Section 5l(c) ofthe 1993 Tax Code.

Under Section 203 ofthe 1997 Tax Code, it is clearly provided that :

Section 203. Period of Limitation Upon Assessment and Collection. -


Except as provided in Section 222, internal revenue taxes shall be assessed
within three (3) years after the last day prescribed by law for the filing of the
return, and no proceeding in court without assessment for the collection of
such taxes shall be begun after the expiration of such period: Provided, That
in case where the return is filed beyond the period prescribed by law, the three
(3)-year period shall be counted from the day the return was filed. For the
purposes of this Section, a return filed before the last day prescribed by law
for the filing thereof shall be considered as filed on such last day.

Corollary thereto, then Section 110 of the NIRC, in relation to Section 2 of

Revenue Regulations No. 5-93 , provides that "every person liable to pay the value-added

tax shall file a quarterly return of the amount of his/its gross sales or receipts within

twenty (20) days following the close of each taxable quarter prescribed for each

taxpayer."

Pursuant to Section 203 in relation to Section 110 of the Tax Code and Section 2

of Revenue Regulations No . 5-93, the period to assess commences after the last day

prescribed by law for the filing of the return. In the case of VAT, it is twenty (20) days
DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page6

following the close of each taxable quarter. Hence, if the return was filed earlier than the

last day allowed by law, the period to assess shall still be counted from the last day

prescribed for filing of the return. However, if the return was filed beyond the period

prescribed by law, the three-year period shall be counted from the day the return was

filed . Therefore, respondent had until the following dates within which to assess

petitioner for deficiency VAT:

Last Day to Last Day


Period (199 7) Date Filed File Return to Assess

1st Qtr. 4/25/97 4/20/97 4/25/00


2nd Qtr. 7/21/97 7/20/97 7/21/00
3rd Qtr. 10/20/97 10/20/97 10/20/00
4th Qtr. 1/20/98 1120/98 1/20/01

Respondent alleges that the last day for the filing of VAT return for the year 1997

was January 20, 1997. Since the assessment notice was issued on January 10, 2001 , it

was issued well within the prescriptive period.

We do not agree.

Under then Section 110 of the Tax Code, as implemented by Section 2 of

Revenue Regulations No. 5-93, the taxpayer is required to file a quarterly VAT return not

later than twenty days following the close of each quarter. For each quarter, the taxpayer

is mandated to file an adjusted and complete return. A final or adjustment return is not

required in the case of value-added tax, unlike in the case of an annual Income Tax

Return filed for income tax purposes. In other words, each taxable quarter shall have its
DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page 7

own prescriptive period and not just after twenty days following the close of the last

quarter for the taxable year as what respondent espouses.

Furthermore, although the assessment notices were dated or issued on January 10,

2001 , it does not necessarily mean that the assessments were made on said date. The

"issue" date is necessarily anterior to the date of actual release or mailing of the

assessment notice and/or demand letter. The Supreme Court on several occasions ruled

that it is the date when the demand letter or notice of assessment is released, mailed or

sent to the taxpayer that constitutes an actual assessment (Republic vs. Limaco & de

Guzman Commercial Co., Inc., 5 SCRA 990; Basilan Estates, Inc. vs. Commissioner

of Internal Revenue, et al., 21 SCRA 17). The law does not require that the demand or

notice be received within the prescriptive period. As long as the release thereof is

effected before prescription sets in, the assessment is deemed made on time even if the

same is actually received by the taxpayer after the expiration of the prescriptive period

(Basilan Estates, Inc. vs. Commissioner, supra).

As disclosed by the records in this case, both the assessment notices and demand

letter were mailed only on January 16, 2001 (BIR Records, pages 234 to 236).

Apparently, the assessments made on January 16, 2001 for deficiency VAT covering the

taxable year 1997 had already prescribed with respect to the first, second and third

quarters thereof

It is the position of the petitioner that by applying the same law, regulation and

jurisprudence, the respondent had until the following dates within which to assess the

alleged deficiency withholding tax, viz:


DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
PageS

Last Day to Last Day


Period (199 7) Date Filed File Return to Assess

January 2/10/97 2/10/97 2110/00


February 3/10/97 3/10/97 3/10/00
March 4/10/97 4/10/97 4/10/00
April 5/09/97 5/10/97 5/10/00
May 6/10/97 6/10/97 6/10/00
June 7/10/97 7/10/97 7/10/00
July 8/08/97 8/10/97 8/10/00
August 9/10/97 9/10/97 9/10/00
September 10/10/97 10/10/97 10/10/00
October 11/10/97 11/10/97 11/10/00
November 12/10/97 12/10/97 12/10/00
December 1/12/98 1/25/98 1/25/01

But respondent disagrees. He avers that the last day to file a creditable

withholding tax return for the year 1997 is March 1, 1998 in accordance with Section

51(c) [actually Section 5l(d)] ofthe 1993 Tax Code, to wit :

"(d) Annual returns. - Every withholding agent required to


deduct and withhold taxes under Section 50 shall submit to the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue a reconciliation statement of quarterly
payments and list of payees and income payments. In the case of final
withholding taxes, the return shall be filed on or before January 31 of the
succeeding year, and for creditable withholding taxes, not later than March
1 of the year following the year for which the annual report is being
submitted. x x x"

We are not persuaded by respondent's arguments.

The return required under Section 51 (d) is what is commonly called or known as

the Annual Information Return of Income Tax Withheld on Compensation, Expanded and

Withholding Taxes wherein the withholding agent is required to submit to the Bureau a

list of payees and income payments for the appropriate taxable year. It is not an

adjustment return as required of corporations to be filed under Section 76 of the Tax


DECISION-
C.T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page9

Code, as amended. Such monthly returns already provide for any adjustment for previous

month(s) payments. In other words, each monthly return is in itself already a complete

return. Further, we do not believe that the same Annual Information Return falls in the

same category as the Final Adjustment Return required of a corporation, so that the

reckoning period would start from March 1 at the latest, following the year for which the

annual report is being submitted. As clearly termed by the law, it is but an annual report

of payments withheld and remitted for the subject year. Thus, Section 1 of Revenue

Regulations No. 3-93, implementing Section 51 of the Tax Code, is the applicable

provision considering that it specifies the period for the filing of monthly return and

remittance of taxes withheld, quoted hereunder for easy reference:

Section 1. Section 2 of Revenue Regulations No. 5-85 is hereby


amended to read as follows :

"Section 2. MONTHLY RETURN AND


REMITTANCE OF TAXES WITHHELD. Taxes
deducted and withheld on:

(i) compensation income;

(ii) income payments subject to the creditable


(expanded) withholding taxes; and

(iii) income subject to final withholding taxes shall be


remitted within ten (10) days after the end of each
calendar month with the filing of appropriate return
(BIR Form 1743-W). However, taxes withheld
from the last compensation/income payment for the
calendar year (December) shall be remitted on or
before the 25 1h day of January of the succeeding
year."
DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page 10

Apparently, the three (3)-year period within which respondent has to assess

petitioner of expanded withholding tax shall be counted from the last day required by law

for filing a monthly remittance return, which is ten (1 0) days after the end of each

calendar month (save December) and twenty-five (25) days after the end of December for

taxes withheld from the last compensation/income payment for the said month.

Consequently, the assessment notice received by the petitioner on January 24, 2001 for

deficiency expanded withholding tax had already prescribed for the months of January to

November of 1997.

Having resolved that only the assessment for deficiency VAT for the last quarter

of 1997 and the assessment for deficiency expanded withholding tax for December of

1997 were issued within the period allowed by law, we now tackle the issue of whether or

not the assessment notices issued therefor are valid.

Petitioner maintains that the assessment notices are void for failure to inform it of

the facts and the law upon which they are based, in violation of Section 228 of the Tax

Code, as implemented by Revenue Regulations No. 12-99.

Respondent, however, counters that petitioner was informed of the result of the

investigation of its 1997 internal revenue tax liabilities in the pre-assessment notice dated

October 6, 2000 relying upon the case of Toledo Power Company vs. Court of Tax

Appeals, CTA Case No. 5881, March 5, 2002.

Although this Court ruled in the Toledo case that the requirement to inform

petitioner of the law and the facts on which the assessment was made under Section 228

of the Tax Code refers to the pre-assessment notice, we do not concur with the
DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page 11

respondent that the pre-assessment notice dated October 6, 2000 already informed the

petitioner on how the assessment was arrived at. In the case of Toledo, the Court found

that petitioner was fairly informed because it was able to categorically explain how the

assessment came about in its protest letter. Therefore, it was held therein that the

allegation that petitioner was not informed of the law and facts on how the assessment

was made did not hold water.

In the case at bar, the pre-assessment notice merely stated that "please be

informed that as a result of the review of the report of investigation, x x x, on your

company' s internal revenue tax liability for the year 1997, there has been found due and

collectible from your company the amount of P2,088,353 .78 as deficiency value-added

and withholding taxes, inclusive of penalties, as per attached computation sheet." (BIR.

records, page 216). While there was an attached audit sheet to the pre-assessment notice,

the same, however, merely stated the sections of the NIRC or the revenue regulations

where the stated computations were based. There was no explanation whatsoever on how

the assessment was arrived at. Neither did the demand letter dated January 10, 2001

contain information on the law and facts on which the assessment was made (BIR

records, page 234). Ditto with the assessment notices both dated January 10, 2001 (BIR.

records, pages 235 and 236). It must be stressed that Section 228 of the Tax Code is

quite precise in providing that "the taxpayers shall be informed in writing of the law and

the facts on which the assessment is made; otherwise, the assessment shall be void".

Lastly, as to the question of propriety of the imposition of compromise penalty,

the same becomes moot and academic in view of the findings that the assessments were
DECISION-
C. T.A. CASE NO. 6355
Page 12

issued out of time and were void for failure to inform petitioner of the law and facts on

which they were made.

WHEREFORE, m vtew of all the foregoing, the assessments issued against

petitioner for deficiency VAT and EWT in the total amount of P2, 165,373 .93 covering

the year 1997 are hereby CANCELLED and SET ASIDE.

SO ORDERED.

~19-L'~
ERNESTO D. ACOSTA
Presiding Judge

I CONCUR:

<L.~~C? - ~~ Q
,f{JANiio C. CASTANEDA, 'ff{' .
Associate Judge

CERTIFICATION

I hereby certify that the above decision was reached after due consultation with the

members of the Court of Tax Appeals in accordance with Section 13, Article VIII of the

Constitution.

k \:" ' C?L-y.l\,_


ERNESTO D. ACOSTA
Presiding Judge

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