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

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Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Palanca vs CIR GR L-16661 – January 31, 1962


Facts:
On July 1950, Don Carlos Palanca, Sr., donated to his son Carlos Jr., shares of stock in La Tondeña, Inc. amounting to 12,500 shares. Carlos Jr. failed to file a return on the donation within the statutory period so Carlos Jr. was assessed P97,691.23 (gift tax), P24,442.81 (25% surcharge), P47,868.70 (interest), which he paid on June 22, 1955. On March 1,1956, Carlos Jr. filed with BIR his ITR for 1955 claiming a deduction for interest of P9,706.45 and reporting a taxable income of P65,982.12. He was assessed P21,052.01 as income tax. On November 1956, Carlos Jr. filed an amended return for 1955, claiming an additional deduction of P47,868.70 (allegedly the interest paid on the donee’s gift tax based on Sec.30(b)(1) of the Tax Code) so taxable income is P18,113.42 (not P65,982.12) and tax due thereon in sum of P3,167.00. He claimed for a refund of P17,885.01 (P21,052.01 - P3,167.00)– BIR denied. Carlos Jr. reiterated claim for refund, BIR denied

The BIR considered the donation by Carlos Sr. as a transfer in contemplation of death so Carlos Jr. was assessed P191,591.62 as estate and inheritance taxes. Carlos paid P17,002.74 on June 22, 1955 as gift tax (includes interest and surcharge) which was applied to his estate andinheritance tax liability. Petitioner paid P60,581.80 as interest for delinquency.

On August 1958, Carlos Jr. filed again an amended ITR for 1955 claiming the following: As interest deductions: P9,706.45 (as in the original ITR) + P60,581.80 (interest on the estate and inheritance taxes); Net Taxable income: P5,400.32; Income tax due: P428.00; claimed a refund of P20,624.01 (P21,052.01 – P428) Even before BIR ruled on his claim, Carlos Jr. filed petition for review before CTA. The CTA ruled that BIR should refund Carlos P20,624.01.

Issue:
WON there is a difference between “indebtedness” and “taxes” to determine the deductible interest

Ruling:
NO. The CIR seeks the reversal of the Court of Tax Appeal's ruling on the aforementioned petition for review. Specifically, he takes issue with the said court's determination that the amount paid by respondent Palanca for interest on his delinquent estate and inheritance tax is deductible from the gross income for that year under Section 30 (b) (1) of the Revenue Code. CIR urges that a tax is not an indebtedness. He adopts the view that "debts are due to the government in its corporate capacity, while taxes are due to the government in its sovereign capacity. A debt is a sum of money due upon contract express or implied or one which is evidenced by a judgment. Taxes are imposts levied by government for its support or some special purpose which the government has recognized."
In view of the distinction, then, the Commissioner submits that the deductibility of "interest on indebtedness" from a person's income tax under Section 30(b) (1) cannot extend to "interest on taxes."

While "taxes" and "debts" are distinguishable legal concepts, in certain cases as in the suit at bar, on account of their nature, the distinction becomes inconsequential. The term "debt" is properlyused in a comprehensive sense as embracing not merely money due by contract, but whatever one is bound to render to another, either for contract or the requirements of the law. (Camden vs. Fink Coule and Coke Co., 61 ALR 584).

Where statutes impose a personal liability for a tax, the tax becomes at least in a broad sense, a debt.
In our jurisdiction, the rule is settled that although taxes already due have not, strictly speaking, the same concept as debts, they are, however obligations that may be considered as such. (Sambrano vs. Court of Tax Appeals, G.R. no. L-8652, March 30, 1957). In a more recent case Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Prieto, G.R. No. L-13912, September 30, 1960, we explicitly announced that while the distinction between "taxes" and "debts" was recognized in this jurisdiction, the variance in their legal conception does not extend to the interests paid on them, at least insofar as Section 30 (b) (1) of the National Internal Revenue Code is concerned. Thus, under the law, for interest to be deductible, it must be shown that there be an indebtedness, that there should be interest upon it, and that what is claimed as an interest deduction should have been paid or accrued within the year. It is here conceded that the interest paid by respondent was in consequence of the late payment of her donor's tax, and the same was paid within the year it is sought to be deducted.

In both this and the Prieto case, the taxpayer sought the allowance as deductible items from the gross income of the amounts paid by them as interests on delinquent tax liabilities. Of course, what was involved in the cited case was the donor's tax while the present suit pertains to interest paid on the estate and inheritance tax. This difference, however, submits no appreciable consequence to the rationale of this Court's previous determination that interests on taxes should be considered as interests on indebtedness within the meaning of Section 30(b) (1) of the Tax Code. The interpretation we have placed upon the said section was predicated on the congressional intent, not on the nature of the tax for which the interest was paid.

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