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These are all original case digests or case briefs done while the author was studying law school in the Philippines.

Hopefully these digested cases will help you get a good grasp of the salient facts and rulings of the Supreme Court in order to have a better understanding of Philippine Jurisprudence.

Please forgive any typo/grammatical errors as these were done while trying to keep up with the hectic demands brought about by the study of law.

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Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Bank of America vs CA 234 SCRA 302


Facts:
Bank of America is a foreign corporation licensed to engage in business in the Philippines through a branch in Makati.Bank of America paid 15% branch profit remittance tax amounting to PhP7.5M from its REGULAR UNIT OPERATIONS and another 405K PhP from its FOREIGN CURRENCY DEPOSIT OPERATIONS. The tax was based on net profits after income tax without deducting the amount corresponding to the 15% tax.Bank of America thereafter filed a claim for refund with the BIR for the portion the corresponds with the 15% branch profit remittance tax. BOA’s claim: “BIR should tax us based on the profits actually remitted (45M), and NOT on the amount before profit remittance tax (53M)... The basis should be the amount actually remitted abroad.”CIR contends otherwise and holds that in computing the 15% remittance tax, the tax should be inclusive of the sum deemed remitted.

Issue:
Whether or not the branch profit remittance tax should be baseon the amount actually remitted

Ruling:
Yes, it should be based on the amount actually committed, NOT what was applied for.There is nothing in Section 24which indicates that the 15% tax/branch profit remittance is on the total amount of profit; where the law does NOT qualify that the tax is imposed and collected at source, the qualification should not be read into law.Rationale of 15%: To equalize/ share the burden of income taxation with foreign corporations. 

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