n •~
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REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES
COURT OF TAX APPEALS
QUEZON CITY
EN BANC
PANAY POWER CORPORATION, C.T.A . EB NO. 551
Petitioner, (C.T.A. Case Nos. 7353 &
7401)
Members:
ACOSTA, PJ
CASTANEDA, JR.
- versus - BAUTISTA,
UY,
CASANOVA,
PALAN CA-E N RI Q U EZ,
FABON -VICTORINO,
MINDARO - GRULLA, and
COTANGCO - MANALASTAS,JJ.
Promulgated:
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL
REVENUE, JAN 2 7 2011
~~~~~--~1~~-'~' ~ · ~f
/l~tr"':/~--
Respondents.
x- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - x
DECISION
Fabon - Victorino, J.:
1
This is a Petition for Review filed by petitioner Panay
Power Corporation on October 23, 2009, seeking to set aside the
(1) Decision 2 dated May 15, 2009 of the Court in Division in the
1
2
En Bane Case Docket, pp. 1- 55.
Penned by Associa te Ju stice Olga Palan ca- Enriquez and concurred by Associate Justices Juanita
C. Castaneda Jr. and Erlinda P. Uy.
/
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 2 of 29
consolidated cases docketed as C.T.A. Cases Nos. 7353 and 7401,
denying due course to petitioner's claim for refund of its alleged
creditable and unutilized input Value-Added Tax ("VAT") in the
amount of Nine Million Two Hundred Thirty Seven Thousand
Eight Hundred Sixty and 07/100 Pesos (P9,237,860.07) for the
third and fourth quarters of calendar year 2003; and (2) the
3
Resolution dated September 30, 2009, denying petitioner's
Motion for Reconsideration for lack of merit. The respective
dispositive portions of the assailed Decision and Resolution read
as follows:
WHEREFORE , prem ises considered,
the petition is hereby DENIED DUE
COURSE, and accordingly , DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED .
XXX XXX XXX
WHEREFORE, premises considered,
petition er 's "Motion for Reconsideration " is
h er eby DENIED fo r lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.
I
3
See Note 2.
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 3 of 29
THE PARTIES
Petitioner is a duly organized domestic corporation with
principal office at the 2nd Floor, Benpres Building, Mera lco
Avenue, Pasig Ci t y. It is into the business of power generation.
and wholesale of electric power to the National Power
Corporation (NPC), private electric utilities and electric
cooperatives, and other businesses incident thereto, including
but not limited to the sale of by-products of power generation. It
is authorized to operate facilities for electric generation and is
registered with the Energy Regulatory Commission ("ERC"). It is
a registered VAT taxpayer with Tax Iden t ification Number ("TIN")
004 - 964-861-VAT.
Respondent, on the other hand, is the duly appointed
Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) with the authority to
decide, . approve and grant or deny application for refunds or
issuance of tax credit certificate of erroneously or excessively
collected or paid taxes, with office address at the Bureau of
Internal Revenu e (BIR) National Office Building, BIR Road,J'/
Diliman, Que zon City.
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Pa ge 4 of 2 9
THE FACTS
The facts as found by the Court in Division are as follows:
Petitioner filed its Quarterly VAT Returns for
calendar year 2003 on the following dates:
Pe riod s Date of Filing Ex hibit I
3ra Quarter October 27 2003 "E" I
4th Quarter - Original Janua ry 26, 2004 "F"
i
Amended February 20, 2004 "G" !
Second Amended Jul_y 28,2004
- - - - -- - --- -- --
"H"
On December 22, 2004, petitioner filed an
administrative claim for refund of unutilized excess input
VAT for the four ( 4) quarters of calendar year 2003 in the
amount of P18,002,410.37 with the BIR Revenue District
Office No. 043.
Since respondent has not acted on petitioner's
administrative claim for refund, petitioner elevated its
claim before this Court by way of two separate Petitions
for Review, docketed as C.T.A. Case No. 7353 and 7401.
CTA Case No. 7353
In C.T.A . Case No. 7353, in his Answer, respondent
alleged by way of special and affirmative defenses:
/
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 5 51
Page 5 of 29
"6. The claim for refund is still
under examination by the respondent's
Bureau;
7. The burden of proof is upon the
petitioner to prove that it is entitled to the
claim for refund;
8. The grant of a claim for refund
[is] tantamount to an exemption from
taxation which is construed strictly against
the claimant and in favor of the taxing
authority;
9. The taxes sought to be
refunded were paid in accordance with law;
the burden of proof to the contrary is upon
the petitioner-claimant to show with clear
and unambiguous provision of law
supporting the same."
CTA Case No. 7401
While in C.T.A. Case No. 7401, respondent alleged
the following:
"2 . He SPECIFICALLY DENIES the
allegations in paragraphs 1, 3, 4, 5, 10, 11
and 12 of the petition for lack of knowledge
or information sufficient to form a belief as
to the truth thereof;
3. He SPECIFICALLY DENIES the
allegations in paragraphs 6, 7, 8, 9, 13 and
14 of the petition for being, as a whole,
mere opinions, gratuitous assertions 1 and
erroneous conclusions or interpretations of
fact and/or the law, the truth of the matter
being those stated hereunder;
4. Petitioner's alleged claim for
refund is subject to administrative routinary
investigation/examination by the Bureau of
Internal Revenue;
/
Decisio n
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 6 of 29
5. The amount of P6,916,039.97
being claimed by petitioner as alleged
unutilized input VAT on domestic purchases
of goods and services for the fourth quarter
of 2003 is not properly documented;
6. In an action for refund/credit,
the burden of proof is on the taxpayer to
establish its right to refund, and failure to
sustain the burden is fatal to the claim for
refund/credit;
7. Petitioner must show that it has
complied with the provisions of Sections 204
(C) and 229 of the 1997 Tax Code on the
prescriptive period for claiming tax
refund/credit;
8. Claims for refund are construed
strictly against the claimant for the same
partake the nature of exemption from
taxation (Commissioner of Internal Revenue
vs. Ledesma, 31 SCRA 95) and as such, they
are looked upon with disfavor (Western
Minolco Corporation vs. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, 124 SCRA 1211)."
On April 27, 2006 , petitioner filed a Motion for
Consolidation, praying for the consolidation of CTA Case
No. 7401 with CTA Case No. 7353, the case bearing the
lower docket number, which the Court granted in a
Resolution dated May 26, 2006.
In view of th e consol idation, on July 18, 2006, the
parti es fil ed th eir "Joint Stipulation of Facts and Issues" J
and stipulated the following facts:
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 7 of 29
1. Existence of VAT Ruling No.
050-03 dated December 1, 2003.
2. On 26 January 2004, petitioner
filed its original quarterly VAT return for the
fourth quarter of taxable year 2003. The
said quarterly VAT return was amended and
filed with the BIR on 20 February 2004 and
28 July 2004.
3. Existence of Section 112(A) and
(D) of the Tax Code.
4. To date, respondent has not
favourably acted upon petitioner's
administrative claim for refund."
In the course of the proceedings, petitioner presented
several witnesses who identified documents in support of its
claim for refund. On the other hand, respondent submitted the
cases for decision without presenting any witness.
On December 23, 2008, petitioner filed its Memorandum.
On January 16, 2009, the cases were deemed submitted
for decision sans the memorandum from respondent, who failed
to file any despite the directive issued by the Court in Division on
November 26, 2008.
assailed
On May 15, 2009, the Court in Division rendered the
Decision denying petitioner's judicial claim for /
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 8 of 29
refund/issuance of a TCC for its unutilized input VAT for the third
and fourth quarters of calendar year 2003 for having been filed
beyond the two-year prescriptive period reckoned from the close
of the taxable quarter when the relevant sales were made as
enunciated in the case of Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs.
Mirant Pagbilao Corporation [Formerly Southern Energy Quezon,
Inc., G.R. No. 172129, September 12, 2008 (the "Mirant Case")].
Believing otherwise, petitioner filed a "Motion for
Reconsideration" on June 4, 2009, which the Court in Division
denied for lack of merit in its Resolution of September 30, 2009.
On October 23, 2009, petitioner 'filed the instant Petition
for Review raising the following issues for the resolution of the
Court En Bane, to wit:
Th e I ss u es
I. WHETHER OR NOT THE PETITIONS FOR
REVIEW FILED BY THE PETITIONER FOR
C::.T.A. CASE NOS. 7353 AND 7401 ARE
.ALREADY BARRED BY PRESCRIPTION.
II. WHETHER OR NOT PETITIONER IS ENTITLED
TO A REFUND AND/OR ISSUANCE OF TAX
CREDIT CERTIFICATE FOR THE UNUTILIZED
/
Decision
C. T. A. EB NO. 551
Page 9 of 29
INPUT VAT PAYMENTS IN THE AMOUNT OF
pg ,237,860.07.
In the Resolution dated December 15, 2009, respondent
was granted ten (10) days from notice, within which to comment
on the Petition for Review.
On February 10, 2010, the instant petition was deemed
submitted for decision without any comment from respondent
whose second Motion for Extension of Time to File comment was
denied.
On March 3, 2010, respondent, instead of seeking a
reconsideration of the foregoing resolution, filed a Motion to
Admit Comment. In the attached Comment dated March 1,
2010, respondent agrees with the finding of the Court in Division
that prescription had set in justifying the denial of the two
Petitions for Review but on a different ground. He argues that
judicial claims for refund of input VAT are dismissible as they
were instituted after the lapse of the 30-day period to appeal
prescribed under Section 112(D) of the NIRC, as amended, and
not because they were filed beyond the two-year prescriptive
period. J
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 10 of 29
THE RULING OF THE COURT EN BANC
Petitioner strongly rejects the finding of the Court in
'
Division that prescription had already set in when it filed its
judicial claims for refund for the third and fourth quarters of
calendar year 2003 on October 26, 2005 and January 18, 2006,
respectively . It argues that the two-year prescriptive period for
filing a claim for refund of unutilized creditable input VAT should
be reckoned from the date of the filing of the corresponding
quarterly VAT return as held in Atlas Consolidated Mining &
Development Corporation v. CIR 4 and not from the close of
taxable quarter when the relevant sales were made as
erroneously ruled by the Court in Division following the doctrine
5
laid down in CIR v . Mirant Pagbilao Corporation. According to
petitioner, the former aimed to harmonize Sections 112(6), 114
and 229, all of the NIRC, as amended, and it was the prevailing
doctrine at the time the two Petitions for Review were instituted
in Court.
Further, the Mirant Case has a different factual milieu, thus
the principle laid therein cannot be considered as a precedent but
a mere obiter dictum not binding upon petitioner. In contrast,
j
4
G.R. Nos. 141104 and 148763, Jun e 8, 2007 .
5
G.R. No.l719, September 12, 2008 .
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 11 of 29
the Atlas Case resolved the very same issue raised in this
petition.
There is also no substantial difference between the wording
of Section 106 of the 1977 Tax Code and Section 112 of the
1997 Tax Code, as amended, that could justify a change in the
interpretation of basically the same provisions. Although the
doctrine in the Mirant case is in direct conflict with that of the
Atlas Case, to the mind of petitioner, the former did not overturn
the latter. Petitioner posits that only a decision of the Supreme
Court En Bane can reverse or modify an existing principle
promulgated by its Division like the two conflicting cases.
It is also flawed to state that judicial interpretations
become part of the law as of the date of its enactment as it
merely establishes the contemporaneous legislative intent of the
6
law, applying Senarillos v. Hermosisima. The attendant
circumstances of the cited case are different, therefore
inapplicable in the case at bar.
Even granting that the Mirant Case is now the prevailing
doctrine, the same cannot be applied retroactively as to impair /
6
100 Phil 501.
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 12 of 29
the vested rights of petitioner, who in good faith, relied on the
old doctrine in pursuing its judicial claim for refund. Contrary to
the opinion of the Court in Division, procedural laws may not be
given retrospective effect if it would work injustice to those who
would be affected. Besides, Section 112(A) is not a procedural
legislation since it affects petitioner's substantive right to claim
for a refund. If at all, the new doctrine enunciated in the Mirant
Case should apply to cases filed after its promulgation on
September 12, 2008 and not to those fi led prior thereto such as
petitioner's cases.
With all the foregoing, petitioner maintains that it is
entitled to a refund and/or issuance of a tax credit for its
unutilized input VAT payments in the total amount of
Php9,237,860.07, having complied with all the requirements
specified under the rules.
Indeed, the primordial issue in a claim for refund or tax
credit of creditable and unutilized input VAT attributable to zero-
rated sales or effectively zero-rated sales is the timeliness of the
filing of such claim, both in the administrative and judicial levels.
Admittedly, the governing rule on the matter is Section 112 of
the NIRC, as amended. It fact, petitioner in its own pleading j
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 13 of 29
invokes the said provision in asking j ud icial interve ntio n in its
petitions for review separately filed before the Court in Divisi on.
The relevant portion of Section 112 of t he NIRC, as amen ded,
reads as follows:
"SEC. 112. Refunds or Tax Credits of
Input Tax . -
(A) Zero-rated or Effectively Zero-
rated Sales. - Any VAT-regis t ered person,
whose sales are zero-rated or effectively
zero-rated may, within two (2) years
after the close of the taxable quarter
when the sales were made , apply for the
issuance of a tax credit certificate or refund
of creditable input tax due or paid
attributable to such sales, except transitional
input tax, to the extent that such input tax
has not been applied against output tax:
Provided, however, That in the case of zero-
rated sales under Section 106(A)(2)(a)(1),
(2) and (B) and Section 108(8)(1) and (2),
the acceptable foreign currency exchange
proceeds thereof had been duly accounted
for in accordance with the rules and
regulations of the Bangko Sentral ng
Pilipinas (BSP): Provided, further, That
where th e ta x payer is engaged in zero - rated
or effectively zero - rated sales and also in
ta xable or exempt sale of goods or
properties or serv ices, and the amount of
creditable input ta x due or paid cannot be
directly and entirely attributed to any one of
the transactions, it shall be allocated
proportionately on th e basis of the volume of
sal es ."
XXX XXX XXX
(D) Period within which Refund or
Ta x Credit of Input Ta x es shall be Made. - In
proper cases, the Commissioner shall grant a
refund or issue the ta x credit certificate for /
creditable input ta xes within one hundred
Decision
C. T. A. EB NO. 551
Page 14 of 29
twenty ( 120) days from the date of
submission of complete documents in
support of the application filed in accordance
with Subsections (A) and (B) hereof.
"In case of full or partial denial of the
claim fo r ta x refund or ta x credit, or the
failure on the part of the Commissioner to
act on the application within the period
prescribed above, the taxpayer affected may,
within thirty (30) days from the receipt of
the decision denying the claim or after the
ex piration of the one hundred twenty day-
period, app eal the decision or the unacted
claim with the Court of Tax Appeals."
(Emphasis supplied)
XXX XXX XXX
Clearly, a VAT- registered person has two {2) years after
the close of the taxabl e quarter when the pertinent sales
were made, within which to apply with respondent a claim for
refund or ta x credit of creditable input tax which remains
unutili zed. Respondent, on th e other hand, has 120 days from
the date of submission of complete documents in support
of the appl ication for re fund or tax credit of input tax to
grant or deny th e same, pursuant to Section 112(0). Upon
riotice of denial or expiration of the allowable period of 120 days
without any action on the part of respondent, the VAT-registered
person has 30 days, with in which to appeal the adverse
decision or the inact ion of respond e nt with th e Court of
Ta x App ea ls via a petition for review. J
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 15 of 29
Note that the two-year prescriptive limit referre d to in th e
provision is only for the filing of an a d ministrative claim for
refund or tax credit with respondent and n ot resort to Court. It
starts to run after th e close of the taxab le quarter when t he
pertinent sales were made irrespective of when the payment w as
7
made as enunciated in the case of Inte l v. CIR, where t he
Supreme Court held, thus:
Under Section 106 (A)(2)(a)(1) in
relation to 112 (A) of the Tax Code, a
ta x pay er engaged in zero-rated or effectively
zero-rated transactions may app ly for a
refund or issuance of a tax credit certificate
for input ta x es paid attributable to such sales
upon complying with the following requisites:
( 1) th e ta xpayer is engaged in sales which
are zero-rated (like export sales) or
effectively ze ro-rated; (2) the taxpayer is
VAT-registered; (3) the claim must be
filed within two years after the close of
the taxabl e quarter when such sale
were made; ( 4) the creditable input tax due
or paid must be attributable to such sales,
except the transitional input tax, to the
ex tent that such input ta x has not been
applied against the output tax; and (5) in
case of ze ro - rated sal es under Section
106(A)(2)(a)(1) and (2), the acceptable
foreign currency exchange proceeds thereof
had been duly accounted for in accordance
with BSP rules and regulations.
Since delay on the part of respondent will not in a ny w ay
extend the allowable 120- day period to act on the app licatio n f o r /
7
G.R. No. 166732, Apri l 27, 2007.
Decision
C. T. A. EB NO. 551
Page 16 of 29
refund, it is incumbent upon the aggrieved taxpayer - such as
petitioner - to challenge respondent's inaction before the CTA via
a petition for review filed under Rule 42 of the Rules of Court
within 30 days from the lapse of the 120 days in the
8
administrative level. Failure to seasonably seek judicial
recourse is fatal as it will deprive the Court of the authority to
hear and determin e the claim in a trial de novo, where evidence
are presented anew in support of the parties' respective
positions.
The Suprem e Court echoed this ruling in the case of
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Mirant Pagbilao
I,
9
Corporation [Formerly Southern Energy Quezon, Inc.] and San
Roque Power Corporation vs. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue. 10
Thus, to eliminate all doubts in the application of the
doctrine articulated in the foregoing cases, the Court En Bane in
case of Mindanao II Geothermal Partnership vs. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue 11 spelled out the reasons therefore, in this wisej
8
Section 4, Rule 8 of the Revised Rules of the CTA.
9
G.R . No . 172129, September 12, 2008, 565 SCRA 154, 171.
10
G.R. No. 180345, November 25, 2009.
11
C.T.A. EB No. 513, March 10, 2010.
Decisio n
C. T.A. EB NO . 55 1
Page 17 of 2 9
"First, the applicable provision of law in
the instant case which can be found under
Section 112 of NIRC of 1997 is clear and
unambiguous. Under the verba legis rule, if the
words of the law are clear, plain, and free from
ambiguity, it must be given its literal meaning
and applied without any interpretation. 12 It is
not within the province of the Court to inquire
into the wisdom of the law, for indeed, we are
bound by the words of the statute. 13 As in the
case of Abello vs. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue 14 the Supreme Court enunciated:
It bears stressing that the first
and fundamental duty of the Court is
to apply the law. When the law is
clear and free from any doubt or
ambiguity, there is no room for
construction or interpretation. As has
been our consistent ruling, where the
law speaks in clear and categorical
language, there is no occasion for
interpretation; there is only room for
application (Cebu Portland Cement
Co. v. Municipality of Naga, 24 SCRA
708 [1968])
Where the law is clear and
unambiguous, it must be taken to
mean exactly what it says and the
court has no choice but to see to it
that its mandate is obeyed
(Chartered Bank Employees
Association v. Ople, 138 SCRA 273
[1985]; Luzon Surety Co ., Inc. v. De
Garcia, 30 SCRA 111 [1969];
Quijano v. Development Bank of the
Philippines, 35 SCRA 270 [1970]).
XXX --- XXX --- XXX.
Second, the Atlas ruling was not modified
by Mirant. It is noteworthy that in the Atlas case, /
petitioner claimed for a refund/credit of the
12
Com m iss io ner of I n te rn a l Revenu e vs. Central Lu zon Dr ug Corpo rati o n, G .R. No. 159610, June
12, 2008 , 554 SCRA 3 98.
13
Co mmi ss io ner of Custo m s vs . Ma nila Sta r Ferry, Inc., G.R. Nos. L-3 177 6 -78, October 21, 1993,
227 SCRA 3 17.
14
G.R . No . 120 721 , Februa ry 23, 2005 , 452 SC RA 162 cit ing th e case o& Rizal Commercial
Ban k ing Co rpo ratio n vs. In te rm ed iate Ap pe ll ate Cou rt , G. R. No. 748 5 1, DeceMber 9, 1999, 320
SCRA 289.
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO . 551
Page 18 of 29
input VAT on its purchases of ca pital goods for
the taxable quarters 1990 and 1992 where the
applicable law was the then Tax Code of 1977.
In contrast with the Mirant case where the
present NIRC of 1997 was applied. Clearly, the
cases involved different tax codes. Hence, there
is no modification of ruling to speak of.
If indeed there was modification of the
Atlas ruling, the Supreme Court effected and
adopted outright in the Mirant case the literal
application of Section 112 (A) of the NIRC of
1997 notwithstanding the existence of a
contrary rule in the Atlas case. Significantly,
Mirant case itself confirmed the retroactive
application of the Supreme Court's current view
in the reckoning of the two-year prescriptive
period in a claim for refund.
Further, petitioner's contention of non-
retroactivity of Mirant ruling runs counter to a
more recent decision of the Supreme Court in
the case of San Roque Power Corporation vs.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue ("San Roque
case"). 15 In San Roque case, petitioner San
Roque filed a claim for refund of its unutilized
input VAT for the period covering January to
December 2002. It filed its judicial claim on April
15, 2004. In determining the reckoning of the
two-year prescriptive period, the Supreme Court
held:
"The last requirement
determines that the claim should be
filed within two years after the close
of the taxable quarter when such
sales were made. The sale of
electricity to NPC was reported at the
fourth quarter of 2002, which closed
on 31 December 2002. Petitioner had
until 30 December 2004 to file its
claim for refund or credit. For the
period January to Ma rch 2002,
petitioner filed an amended request
for refund or tax credit on 30 May
2003; for the period July 2002 to
September 2002, on 27 February
2003; and for the period October /
2002 to December 2002, on 31 July J
15
G.R . No. 180345, Novembe r 25, 2009 .
Decisio n
C. T.A. EB NO . 5 51
Pa ge 19 of 29
2003. In these three quarters,
petitioners seasonably filed its
requests for refund and tax credit.
However, for the period April 2002 to
May 2002, the claim was filed
prematurely on 25 October 2002,
before the last quarter had closed on
31 December 2002."
It should be emphasized that when Mirant
case was promulgated, San Roque case was
already and still pending before the Supreme
Court. Yet, the Supreme Court in deciding San
Roque case, it retroactively adopted Mirant
ruling. Hence, We see no reason why We should
not adopt the same ruling to the instant case.
Moreso, assuming arguendo that the
Mirant case modified Atlas ruling, it is
nonetheless clear that the provision itself,
standing alone, provides that input VAT
payments attributable to zero-rated or
effectively zero-rated sales not otherwise
applied against output tax may be claimed
within the two years after the close of the
taxable quarter when the sales were made. And,
where a provision of law spea ks categorically,
the need for interpretation is obviated, no
plausible pretense being entertained to justify
non-compliance . All that has to be done is to
apply it in every case that falls within its
terms. 16
XXX - - - XXX --- XXX.
"
Third, the law takes effect from the time
of its effectivity and not from t he time of the
promulgation of a decision applying the law.
Considering that the law applicable here is the
1997 Tax Code which took effect on January 1,
1998, 17 petitioner is very well within its
coverage. Notably, it is only upon effectivity of
the statute that legal rights and obligation
become available to those entitled by the
language of the statute. 18 The validity and
16
Ca r me lin o F. Pansaco la vs. Comm iss ioner of I nte rn al Reve nu e, G.R. No. 159991 , November 16,
200 6, 507 SCRA 81 citin g th e case of Alli ed Bro kerage Corpora t ion v s. Co mmi ss ioner of Custo ms,
No. L-27641 , Au gust 31, 197 1, 40 SC RA 555, 559, 560. /
17
I bid.
18
Abakada Guro Party Li st, et.a l. vs. Cesar V. Pu risima , et. al., G.R. No. 1667 15, Au g ust 14, 2008,
562 SCRA 251.
Decisio n
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 2 0 of 29
obligatory force of a law proceed from a fact
that it has first been promulgated. 19
Fourth, the Court's interpretation of the
law is part of the law as of the date of its
enactment since the Court's interpretation
merely establishes contemporary legis lative
intent that construed the law purports (sic) to
carry into effect. 20 Such judicial doctrine does
not amount to the passage of a new law, but
consists merely of a construction or
interpretation of a pre-existing one, and that is
precise ly the situation obtaining in this case. 2 1
Significantly, in the very recent case of Commissioner of
Internal Revenue vs. Aichi Forging Company of Asia, Inc., 22 t h e
Final Arbiter, in an erudite disquisition interpreted Section 112 of
the Tax Code, as amended, as referring only to the filing of the
administrative claim for refund or cred it with respondent and
does not include judicial recourse, thus:
" There is nothing in Section 112 of the
NIRC to support respondent's view.
Subsection (A) of the said provision states
that "any VAT-registered person, whose
sales are zero-rated or effectively zero-rated
may, within two years after the close of
the taxable quarte r when the sales were
m a d e, apply for the issuance of a tax
credit ce rtificate or refund of creditable
input ta x due or paid attributable to such
sales." Th e phras e " within two (2) years
xxx a pply for t h e issuance of a tax
19
Mi g hty Corpor atio n vs. E. & J. Ga llo Winery, G. R. No. 154342, July 14, 20 04, 43 4 SCRA 4 73 .
20
Phili ppine Co nstitu t io n Association vs. Enriq uez , G. R. No . 113 105 , Augu st 19, 1994, 235 SCRA
506 citin g Peop le vs . Li cera, 65 SCRA 270.
21
Kepco Ilija n Co rporati on vs. Com m issioner of In te rn al Revenue, C.T.A. Case No . 6590,
Resolu t io n dated July 23, 2009 citing Se nari llos vs. Hermosisim a, et. al., No. L- 10662, December
14, 1956, 100 Phil. 50 1.
/
22
G. R. No. 184823, October 6, 2010 .
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 21 of 2 9
credit certificate or refund" refers to
application for refund/credit filed with
the CIR and not to appeals made to the
CTA. T his is apparent in t he f irst paragra ph
of Subsection (D) of t he sa m e provisio n,
which states that the CIR has "120 days
from the submission of complete
documents in support of the application
filed in accordance with Subsections (A)
and (B)" within which to decide on the
claim .
In fact, applying the two- y ear period
to judicial claims would render nugatory
Section 112(0) of the NIRC, which
already provides for a specific period
within which a taxpayer should appeal
the decision or inaction of the CIR. The
second paragraph of Section l12( D) of the
NIRC envisions two scenarios: (1) when a
decision is issued by the CIR before the
laps e of the 120- day period; and (2) when
no decision is mad e after the 120-day period.
In both in stances, th e ta x payer has 30 days
within which to fil e an appeal wit h t he CTA .
As we see it then, the 120- day period is
crucial in filing an app eal with the CTA.
(Underscoring ours)
Agai n, fo llowing the fore going j urispr ud ence, an agg rieved
VAT- regi stered pe rso n, w hose clai m fo r t ax refund or ta x credit
has bee n denied or has not bee n act ed upon in th e
admin istrative level may, within 30 days from rece ipt of th e
adverse decision or after th e ex piratio n of t he 120- day period
without any action on the part of responde nt , seek j ud icia l reli ef
via a petition for revi ew with this Court seating in Division. /
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 22 of 29
Until and unless the Supreme Court reverses its own ruling,
this Court is obliged to apply the prevailing jurisprudence as
enunciated in the cited relevant cases. By tradition in our
system of judicial administration, the Supreme Court, as the
23
final Arbiter of any justiciable controversy, has the last word
on what the law is. There is only one Supreme c·o urt from
whose decisions all other courts should take bearings. 24
Verily, petitioner's administrative claim for refund and/or
tax credit for the third and fourth quarters of taxable year 2003
were seasonably filed on December 22, 2004. The same is
however not true insofar as its judicial claims are concern.
It was establish ed that respondent failed to act on
petitioner's claims for refund or tax credit within the allowable
period of 120 days reckoned from December 22, 2004 or until
April 21, 2005. Henceforth, petitioner had 30 days or until May
21, 2005, within which to invoke this Court's competence via a
petition for revi ew. But for reason only known to it, petitioner
filed its judicial claims for the third and fourth quarters of taxable
year 2003 only on October 26, 2005 and January 18, 2006,
respectively. At that time, the Court was already deprived of its ~
" Dante Nacuray et, al. v. NLRC, 270 SCRA 59
24
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Michael J. Lhuiller Pawnshop, I nc., G.R. No. 150947, July
15, 2003, 406 SCRA 178 citing the case of GS!S vs. Court of Appea ls, 334 Ph ils. 163, 175 .
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 23 of 29
ju risdi ction t o entertain th e clai m s as t hey were fil ed way beyond
t he 30-day period to appea l provid ed und er Secti on 112(D) of
the 1997 Tax Code, as amended.
Note that the 30-day period to appeal the decisio n or
inaction of respondent is also express ly m an dated in Section 11
of Repub lic Act No. 9282, 25 whic h ame nd ed Re pu bli c Act No.
1125 26 , to wit:
"SEC. 11. Who May Appeal; Mode
of Appeal; Effect of Ap peal. - Any party
adversely affected by a decision, ruling
or inaction of the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue , the Commissioner of
Customs, the Secretary of Finance, the
Secretary of Trade and Industry or the
Secretary of Agriculture or the Central Board
of Assessment Appeals or the Regional Trial
Courts may file an appeal with the CTA
within thirty (30) days after the receipt
of such decision or ruling or after the
expiration of the period fixed by law for
action as referred to in Section 7(a)(2)
herein.
"Appeal shall be made by filing a
petition for review under a procedure
analogous to that provided for under
Rule 42 of the 1997 Rules of Civil
Procedure with the CTA within thirty
(30) days from the receipt of the
decision or ruling or in the . case of
inaction as herein provided, from the
expiration of the period fixed by law to /
act thereon ." XXX XXX XXX ..c./
25
An Act Expa nding the Ju risdiction of the Court of Tax Appea ls (CTA), Elevating its Rank to the
Level of a Coll egia te Court with Special Jurisdiction and Enlarging its Membe rship , Am ending fo r
th e Purpose Certain Sections of Rep ubli c Act No. 1125, as me nd ed, otherwi se known as the Law
Creati ng the Court of Tax Appea ls, and for other purposes.
26
the La w Creating the Court of Tax Appea ls.
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 24 of 29
Established is the rule that an appeal is neither a natural
nor constitutional right but a mere statutory privilege. Hence,
parties who seek to avail of the privilege must comply with the
statutes or rules allowing it. 27 The perfection of an appeal in the
manner and within the period set by law is not only mandatory,
but as well jurisdictional. And failure to perfect an appeal within
the reglementary period deprived the court otherwise
competent - of jurisdiction to hear and determine it.
In the 1996 case of Videogram Regulatory Board v. Court
28
of Appeals , the Supreme Court, no less, chronicled the
inviolability of the period of perfecting an appeal in this fashion:
x x x There are certain procedural rules
that must remain inviolable, like those setting
the periods for perfecting an appeal or filing a
petition for review, fo r it is doctrinally
entrenched that the right to appeal is a
statutory right and one who seeks to avail of
that right must comply with the sta t ute or rules.
The rules, particularly the requirements for
perfecting an appeal within the
reglementary period specified in the law,
must be strictly followed as they are
considered indispensable interdictions
against needless delays and for orderly
discharge of judicial business. Furthermore,
the perfection of an appeal in the manner
and within the period permitted by law is
not only mandatory but also jurisdictional
and the failure to perfect the appeal renders the
judgment of the co urt final and executory. Just
/
27
Air France Philippines v. Leachon, 472 SCRA 439, 442-443 [2005].
28
G.R. No. 106564, Novembe r 28, 1996.
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 25 of 29
as a losing party has the right to file an appeal
within the prescribed period, the winning party
also has the correlative right to enjoy the
finality of the resolution of his/her case. These
periods are carefully guarded and lawyers are
well - advised to keep track of their applications.
After all, a denial of a petition for being time -
barred is a decision on the merits.
Irrefragably, the timeliness of an appeal is a jurisdictional
caveat that not e~en the Supreme Court can trifle with. 29
Precisely this Court, in a number of cases, emphasized the
pronouncement in Aichi Case that a taxpayer claimant must
prove not only his entitlement to a refund, but also his
compliance with the procedural due process which petitioner
utterly failed to do. Non - observance of the prescriptive periods
within which to file the administrative and judicial claims will
result in the denial of the relief sought as should happen in this
case.
Note that procedural rules should be treated with utmost
respect and due regard since they are designed to facilitate the
adjudication of cases to remedy the worsening problem of delay
in the resolution of rival claims and the administration of justice 30 .
There is no quarrel that litigation is not a game of technicality,
but every case must be prosecuted in accordance with t h e /
29
BA vs. Gerochi, Jr. 230 SCRA 9 [1 994 ].
"' Fortech v. Corona, G.R. No. 131457, November 17, 1998.
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 26 of 29
prescribed procedure to ensure an orderly and speedy
administration of justice. Not only litigants but also the courts
are enjoined to abide strictly by the rules. While there have
been instances where the Supreme Court allowed relaxation in
the application of the rules, but this flex ibility was never intended
to forge a bastion for erring litigants to violate the rules with
impunity. 31
Far from petitioner's protestation, procedural rules should
not to be belittled or dismissed simply because their non-
observance would result in prejudice to a party's substantive
rights. 32 In point is the ruling in Spouses Baniqued v. Teresita S.
Ramos and the Register of Deeds o Manila, 33 where the Supreme
Court held, thus:
In a catena of cases, the Court has
ruled that the right to appeal is neither a
natural right nor a part of due process. It is
merely a procedural remedy of statutory
origin, a remedy that may be exercised only
in the manner prescribed by the provisions
of law authorizing such exercise. Hence, the
legal requirements must be strictly complied
with. It would be incorrect to consider
the requirements of the rules on appeal
as merely harmless and trivial
technicalities that can be discarded.
Indeed, deviations from the rules
cannot be tolerated. In these times when
31
32
Norris v . Hon. Jose Parentela, Jr. et., al, G.R. No. 143216, February 27, 2003. /
Pedrosa vs. Hill, 257 SCRA 373 (1996].
33
G.R. No. 158615, March 4, 2005.
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Pa ge 27 of 29
court dockets are clogged with numerous
litigations, such rules have to be followed by
parties with greater fidelity, so as to
facilitate the orderly disposition of cases.
After a judgment has become final, vested
rights reacquired by the winning party. If
the proper losing has the right to file an
appeal within the prescribed period, then the
former has the correlative right to enjoy the
finality of the resolution of the case. Thus,
we agree with the Court of Appeals that the
trial court did not commit any grave abuse of
discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction when it denied t he petitioners'
motion to elevate the records to the CA.
Hence, for failure to appeal within the prescribed period,
petitioner is now barred from claiming a refund or issuance of a
tax credit certificate for its alleged unutilized input VAT from its
domestic purchases of taxable goods and services attributable to
its zero-rated sales for the period covering the third and fourth
quarters of calendar year 2003 in the aggregate amount of
Php9,237,860.07.
WHEREFORE , the instant Petition for Review filed by
petitioner Panay Power Corporation is hereby DENIED . The
Decision dated May 15, 2009 and the Resolution dated
September 30, 2009 are AF FI RM ED, however, the dismissal is
on the ground that C.T.A. Cases Nos. 7353 and 7401 were filed
beyond the thirty (30)-day period to appeal pursuant to Section /
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 28 of 2 9
112(D) of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997, as
amended .
SO ORDERED.
ON-VICTORINO
WE CONCUR:
L~ . o~
ERNESTO D. ACOSTA
Presiding Justice
(On Leave)
JUANITO C. CASTANEDA, JR.
Associate Justice
ER~P. UY
~
CAESAR A. CASANOVA
Associate Justice Associate Justice
~~~rW ~N.M~-G~
OLG.A: PALANCA- ENRIQU~ CIELITO N. MINDARO-GRULLA
Associate Justice Associate Justice
/ . /~~
AMEL~ANG~~ANALASTAS
Associate Justice
Decision
C. T.A. EB NO. 551
Page 29 of 29
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Article VIII, Section 13 of the Constitution, it is
hereby certified that the conclusions in the above Decision were
reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the
writer of the opinion of the Court's Division.
LA: p. \L,.._
ERNESTO D. ACOSTA
Presiding Justice
i,·