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8689457 Tax Reviewer

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    TAX REVIEWERGENERAL PRINCIPLES:

    BY: Rene Callanta

    DEFINITION OF TAXATIONTaxation is the inherent power of the sovereign, exercised through the legislature, to impose burdens

    upon the subjects and objects within its jurisdiction, for the purpose of raising revenues to carry out thelegitimate objects of the government.

    TAXESEnforced proportional contributions from properties and persons levied by the State by virtue its

    sovereignty for the support of the government and for public needs.

    BASIS OF TAXATION> GOVERNMENTAL NECESSITY* The existence of the government depends upon its capacity to perform its two (2) basic functions:

    A.. to serve the peopleB.. to protect the people

    THEORY OF TAXATION>RECIPROCAL DUTIES OF SUPPORT AND PROTECTION1) Support on the part of the taxpayers2) Protection and benefits on the part of the government

    BENEFITS RECEIVED PRINCIPLE(CIR vs. ALGUE)

    Despite the natural reluctance to surrender part of ones hard earned income to the taxing authority,every person who is able to must contribute his share in the running of the government.

    The government is expected to respond in the form of tangible or intangible benefits intended toimprove the lives of the people and enhanced their material and moral values.

    In return for his contribution, the taxpayer receives the general advantages and protection which the

    government affords the taxpayer and his property. One is compensation or consideration for the other.Protection for support and support for protection.However, it does not mean that only those who are able to

    pay taxes can enjoy the privileges and protectiongiven to a citizen by the government.

    LORENZO vs. POSADAS > The only benefit to which the taxpayer is entitled is that derived form the enjoyment of the privileges

    of living in an organized society established and safeguarded by the devotion of taxes to publicpurpose. The government promises nothing to the person taxed beyond what maybe anticipated froman administration of the laws for the general good.

    > Taxes are essential to the existence of the government. The

    obligation to pay taxes rests not upon the privileges enjoyed by or the protection afforded to the citizenby the government, but upon the necessity of money for the support of the State. For this reason, noone is allowed to object to or resist payment of taxes solely because no personal benefit to him can bepointed out as arising from the tax.

    ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF A TAX1) It is an enforced contribution2) It is generally payable in money3) It is proportionate in character4) It is levied on persons, property, or the exercise of a right or privilege5) It is levied by the State which has jurisdiction over the subject or object of taxation6) It is levied by the law-making body of the State

    7) It is levied for publics purpose or purposes

    REQUISITES of a VALID TAX code: [P, U, J, A, N]1) It should be for a public purpose2) The rule of taxation should be uniform3) That either the person or property taxed be within the jurisdiction of the taxing authority4) That the assessment and collection be in consonance with the due process clause5) The tax must not infringe on the inherent and constitutional limitations of the power of taxation

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    *> Taxes are the lifeblood of the government and should be collected without unnecessary hindrance. Buttheir collection should not be tainted with arbitrariness

    NATURE OF TAXATION1) Inherent in sovereignty2) Legislative in character

    SCOPE OF TAXATION1) Comprehensive2) Unlimited3) Plenary4) Supreme

    TOLENTINO vs. SEC. Of FINANCE > In the selection of the object or subject of taxation the courts have no power to inquire into the

    wisdom, objectivity, motive, expediency or necessity of such tax law. (WOMEN)

    PURPOSES OF TAXATION

    PRIMARY- To raise revenue in order to support the government

    SECONDARY1) Used to reduce social inequality2) Utilized to implement the police power of the State3) Used to protect our local industries against unfair competition4) Utilized by the government to encourage the growth of local industries

    PAL vs. EDU

    > It is possible for an exaction to be both a tax and a regulation. License fees and charges, looked to asa source of revenue as well as a means regulation. The fees may properly regarded as taxes eventhough they also serve as an instrument of regulation. If the purpose is primarily revenue, or if revenueis at least one of the real and substantial purposes, then the exaction is properly called a tax.

    CALTEX vs.. CIR > Taxation is no longer a measure merely to raise revenue to support the existence of the government.

    Taxes may be levied with a regulatory purpose to provide means for rehabilitation and stabilization of athreatened industry which is affected with public interest as to be within the police power of the State.

    LIFEBLOOD DOCTRINE

    > Taxes are the lifeblood of the nation

    > Without revenue raised from taxation, the government will not survive, resulting in detriment tosociety. Without taxes, the government would be paralyzed for lack of motive power to activate andoperate it. (CIR vs. ALGUE)

    > Taxes are the lifeblood of the government and there prompt and certain availability is an imperiousneed.

    > Taxes are the lifeblood of the nation through which the agencies of the government continue tooperate and with which the state effects its functions for the benefit of its constituents

    ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE LIFEBLOOD THEORY1) Collection of the taxes may not be enjoined by injunction2) Taxes could not be the subject of compensation or set off3) A valid tax may result in destruction of the taxpayers property4) Taxation is an unlimited and plenary power

    POWER TO TAX AND POWER TO DESTROY

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    * > The power to tax includes the power to destroy if it is used as an implement of the police power(regulatory) of the State. However, it does not include the power to destroy if it is used solely for the purpose ofraising revenue. (ROXAS vs. CTA)

    NOTES:

    > If the purpose of taxation is regulatory in character, taxation is used to implement the police power ofthe state

    > If the power of taxation is used to destroy things, businesses, or enterprises and the purpose is toraise revenue, the court will come in because there will be violation of the inherent and constitutionallimitations and it will be declared invalid.

    NATURE OF THE TAXING POWER1) Attribute of sovereignty and emanates from necessity, relinquishment of which is never presumed2) Legislative in character, and3) Subject to inherent and constitutional limitations

    NECESSITY THEORY

    > Existence of a government is a necessity and cannot continue without any means to pay forexpenses

    BENEFITS PROTECTION THEORY

    > Reciprocal duties of protection and support between State and inhabitants. Inhabitants pay taxes andin return receive benefits and protection from the State

    SCOPE OF LEGISLATIVE TAXING POWER1) The persons, property and excises to be taxed, provided it is within its jurisdiction2) Amount or rate of tax

    3) Purposes for its levy, provided it be for a public purpose4) Kind of tax to be collected5) Apportionment of the tax6) Situs of taxation7) Method of collection

    ASPECTS OF TAXATION1) LEVY or IMPOSITION

    enactment of tax laws

    legislative in character2) ASSESSMENT

    collection

    administrative in character

    NOTES:

    > It is inherent in the power to tax that the State is free to select the object of taxation

    > The power of the legislature to impose tax includes the power1) what to tax2) whom to tax3) how much to tax

    BAGATSING vs. RAMIREZ > What cannot be delegated is the legislative enactment of a tax measure but as regards to the

    administrative implementation of a tax law that can be delegated.

    > The collection may be entrusted to a private corporation.

    > The rule that the power of taxation cannot be delegated does not apply to the administrativeimplementation of a tax law

    > There is no violation because what is delegated or entrusted is the collection and not the enactmentof such laws

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    > The issuance of regulations or circulars by the BIR or the Secretary of Finance should not gobeyond the scope of the tax measure

    BASIC PRINCIPLES OF A SOUND TAX SYSTEM1) THEORETICAL JUSTICE2) FISCAL ADEQUACY3) ADMINISTRATIVE FEASIBILITY

    NOTES:FISCAL ADEQUACY

    - VIOLATION VALID

    > Sources of revenue should be sufficient to meet the demands of public expenditure

    > Revenues should be elastic or capable of expanding or contracting annually in response to variationsin public expenditure

    >Elasticity may be obtained without creating annually any new taxes or any new tax machinery butmerely by changes in the rates applicable to existing taxes

    > Even if a tax law violates the principle of Fiscal Adequacy , in other words, the proceeds may not besufficient to satisfy the needs of the government, still the tax law is valid

    ADMINISTRATIVE FEASIBILITY- VIOLATION VALID

    > The tax law must be capable of effective or efficient enforcement> Tax laws should be capable of convenient, just and effective administration

    > Tax laws should close-up the loopholes for tax evasion and deter unscrupulous officials fromcommitting fraud

    > There is no law that requires compliance with this principle, so even if the tax law violates thisprinciple; such tax law is valid.

    THEORETICAL JUSTICE- VIOLATION INVALID

    > This principle mandates that taxes must be just, reasonable and fair

    Taxation shall be uniform and equitable

    > Equitable taxation has been mandated by our constitution, as if taxes are unjust and unreasonablethen they are not equitable, thus invalid.

    > The tax burden should be in proportion to the taxpayers ability to pay (ABILITY TO PAY PRINCIPLE)

    DISTINCTIONS:

    TAXATION vs. POLICE POWER vs. EMINENT DOMAIN

    1) As to purpose:Taxation for the support of the governmentEminent Domain_- for public usePolice Power to promote general welfare, public health, public morals, and public safety.

    2) As to compensation:Taxation Protection and benefits received from the government.Eminent Domain just compensation, not to exceed the market value declared by the owner oradministrator or anyone having legal interest in the property, or as determined by the assessor,whichever is lower.Police Power The maintenance of a healthy economic standard of society.

    3) As to persons affected:Taxation and Police Power operate upon a community or a class of individualsEminent Domain operates on the individual property owner.

    4) As to authority which exercises the power:Taxation and Police Power Exercised only by the government or its political subdivisions.

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    Eminent Domain may be exercised by public services corporation or public utilities if granted by law.

    5) As to amount of imposition:Taxation Generally no limit to the amount of tax that may be imposed.Police Power Limited to the cost of regulationEminent Domain There is no imposition; rather, it is the owner of the property taken who is just paidcompensation.

    6) As to the relationship to the Constitution:Taxation and Eminent Domain Subject to certain constitutional limitations, including the prohibitionagainst impairment of the obligation of contracts.Police Power Relatively free from constitutional limitations and superior to the non-impairmentprovisions thereof.

    TAX DISTINGUISHED FROM LICENSE FEE:

    a) PURPOSE: Tax imposed for revenue WHILE license fee for regulation. Tax for general purposesWHILE license fee for regulatory purposes only.

    b) BASIS: Tax imposed under power of taxation WHILE license fee under police power.

    c) AMOUNT: In taxation, no limit as to amount WHILE license fee limited to cost of the license andexpenses of police surveillance and regulation.

    d) TIME OF PAYMENT: Taxes normally paid after commencement of business WHILE license feebefore.

    e) EFFECT OF PAYMENT: Failure to pay a tax does not make the business illegal WHILE failure to paylicense fee makes business illegal.

    f) SURRENDER: Taxes, being lifeblood of the state, cannot be surrendered except for lawfulconsideration WHILE a license fee may be surrendered with or without consideration.

    IMPORTANCE OF DISTINCTION BETWEEN TAXES AND LICENSE FEES.It is necessary to determine whether a particular imposition is a tax or a license fee, because some

    limitations apply only to one and not to the other.Furthermore, exemption from taxes does not include exemption from license fees

    TAXES DISTINGUISHED FROM OTHER IMPOSITIONS:

    1) toll amount charged for the cost and maintenance of property used;

    2) compromise penalty amount collected in lieu of criminal prosecution in cases of tax violations;

    3) special assessment levied only on land based wholly on the benefit accruing thereon as a result ofimprovements of public works undertaken by government within the vicinity.

    4) license fee regulatory imposition in the exercise of the police power of the State;

    5) margin fee exaction designed to stabilize the currency

    6) custom duties and fees duties charged upon commodities on their being imported into or exportedfrom a country;

    7) debt a tax is not a debt but is an obligation imposed by law.

    Special assessment v. tax

    1. A special assessment tax is an enforced proportional contribution from owners of lands especiallybenefited by public improvements

    2. A special assessment is levied only on land.3. A special assessment is not a personal liability of the person assessed; it is limited to the land.4. A special assessment is based wholly on benefits, not necessity.5. A special assessment is exceptional both as to time and place; a tax has general application.

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    Republic v. Bacolod, 17 SCRA 632

    A special assessment is a levy on property which derives some special benefit from the improvement.Its purpose is to finance such improvement. It is not a tax measure intended to raise revenues for thegovernment. The proceeds thereof may be devoted to the specific purpose for which the assessmentwas authorized, thus accruing only to the owners thereof who, after all, pay the assessment.

    Some Rules:

    An exemption from taxation does not include exemption from a special treatment.

    The power to tax carries with it a power to levy a special assessment.

    Toll v. tax

    1. Toll is a sum of money for the use of something. It is the consideration which is paid for the use of aroad, bridge, or the like, of a public nature. Taxes, on the other hand, are enforced proportionalcontributions from persons and property levied by the State by virtue of its sovereignty for the support

    of the government and all public needs.

    2. Tollis a demand of proprietorship; taxis a demand of sovereignty.

    3. Tollis paid for the used of anothers property; taxis paid for the support of government.

    4. The amount paid as toll depends upon the cost of construction or maintenance of the publicimprovements used; while there is no limit on the amount collected as tax as long as it is not excessive,unreasonable, or confiscatory.

    5. Tollmay be imposed by the government or by private individuals or entities; taxmay be imposed onlyby the government.

    Tax v. penalty

    1. Penaltyis any sanction imposed as a punishment for violation of law or for acts deemed injurious;taxes are enforced proportional contributions from persons and property levied by the State byvirtue of its sovereignty for the support of the government and all public needs.

    2. Penaltyis designed to regulate conduct; taxes are generally intended to generate revenue.

    3. Penaltymay be imposed by the government or by private individuals or entities; taxes only by thegovernment.

    Obligation to pay debt v. obligation to pay tax

    1. A debtis generally based on contract, express or implied, while a taxis based on laws.

    2. A debtis assignable, while a taxcannot generally be assigned.

    3. A debtmay be paid in kind, while a taxis generally paid in money.

    4. A debtmay be the subject of set off or compensation, a taxcannot.

    5. A person cannot be imprisoned for non-payment of tax, except poll tax.

    6. A debt is governed by the ordinary periods of prescription, while a tax is governed by the specialprescriptive periods provided for in the NIRC.

    7. A debt draws interest when it is so stipulated or where there is default, while a taxdoes not drawinterest except only when delinquent.

    Requisites of compensation

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    1. That each one of the obligor be bound principally, and that he be at the same time a principal creditorof the other.

    2. That both debts consist in a sum of money, or if the things due are consumable, they be of the samekind and also of the same quality if the latter has been stated.

    3. That the two (2) debts be due.

    4. That they be liquidated and demandable.

    5. That over neither of them there be any retention or controversy, commenced by third persons andcommunicated in due time to the debtors.

    Rules re: set off or compensation of debts

    General rule: A tax delinquency cannot be extinguished by legal compensation. This is so because thegovernment and the tax delinquent are not mutually creditors and debtors. Neither is a tax obligation anordinary act. Moreover, the collection of a tax cannot await the results of a lawsuit against thegovernment. Finally, taxes are not in the nature of contracts but grow out of the duty to, and are thepositive acts of the government to the making and enforcing of which the personal consent of thetaxpayer is not required. (Francia v. IAC, 162 SCRA 754 and Republic v. Mambulao Lumber, 4 SCRA622)

    Exception: SC allowed set off in the case ofDomingo v. Garlitos [8 SCRA 443] re: claim for payment ofunpaid services of a government employee vis--vis the estate taxes due from his estate. The fact thatthe court having jurisdiction of the estate had found that the claim of the estate against the governmenthas been appropriated for the purpose by a corresponding law shows that both the claim of thegovernment for inheritance taxes and the claim of the intestate for services rendered have alreadybecome overdue and demandable as well as fully liquidated. Compensation therefore takes place byoperation of law.

    Philex Mining Corporation v. Commissioner, 294 SCRA 687 (1998)

    Philex Mining Corporation was to set off its claims for VAT input credit/refund for the excise taxes duefrom it. The Supreme Court disallowed such set off or compensation.

    Survey of Philippine Taxes

    A. Internal Revenue taxes imposed under the NIRC.

    1. Income tax2. Transfer taxes

    a) Estate taxb) Donors tax

    3. Percentage taxesa) Value Added Taxb) Other Percentage Taxes

    4. Excise taxes5. Documentary stamp tax

    B. Local/ Municipal Taxes

    C. Tariff and Customs Duties

    D. Taxes / Tax Incentives under special laws

    CLASSIFICATION OF TAXES

    AS TO SUBJECT MATTER OR OBJECT

    1. Personal, poll or capitation tax

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    Tax of a fixed amount imposed on persons residing within a specified territory, whether citizens or not,without regard to their property or the occupation or business in which they may be engaged, i.e. communitytax.

    2. Property tax

    Tax imposed on property, real or personal, in proportion to its value or in accordance with some otherreasonable method of apportionment.

    3. Excise tax

    A charge impose upon the performance of an act, the enjoyment of privilege, or the engaging in anoccupation.

    AS TO PURPOSE

    General/fiscal revenue tax is that imposed for the purpose of raising public funds for the service of thegovernment.

    A special or regulatory tax is imposed primarily for the regulation of useful or non-useful occupation or

    enterprises and secondarily only for the purpose of raising public funds.

    AS TO WHO BEARS THE BURDEN

    1. Direct tax

    A direct tax is demanded from the person who also shoul,ders the burden of the tax. It is a tax which thetaxpayer is directly or primarily liable and which he or she cannot shift to another.

    2. Indirect tax

    An indirect tax is demanded from a person in the expectation and intention that he or she shall indemnify

    himself or herself at the expense of another, falling finally upon the ultimate purchaser or consumer. A taxwhich the taxpayer can shift to another.

    AS TO THE SCOPE OF THE TAX

    1. National tax

    A national tax is imposed by the national government.

    2. Local tax

    A local tax is imposed by the municipal corporations or local government units (LGUs).

    AS TO THE DETERMINATION OF AMOUNT

    1. Specific tax

    A specific tax is a tax of a fixed amount imposed by the head or number or by some other standard ofweight or measurement. It requires no assessment other than the listing or classification of the objects to betaxed.

    2. Ad valorem tax

    An ad valorem tax is a fixed proportion of the value of the property with respect to which the tax isassessed. It requires the intervention of assessors or appraisers to estimate the value of such property before

    due from each taxpayer can be determined.

    AS TO GRADUATION OR RATE

    1. Proportional tax

    Tax based on a fixed percentage of the amount of the property receipts or other basis to be taxed.Example: real estate tax.

    2. Progressive or graduated tax

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    Tax the rate of which increases as the tax base or bracket increases.

    Digressive tax rate: progressive rate stops at a certain point. Progression halts at a particular stage.

    3. Regressive tax

    Tax the rate of which decreases as the tax base or bracket increases. There is no such tax in thePhilippines.

    TAX SYSTEMS

    Constitutional mandate

    The rule of taxation shall be uniform and equitable. The Congress shall evolve a progressive system oftaxation. [Section 28 (1), Article VI, Constitution]

    Regressivity is not a negative standard for courts to enforce. What Congress is required by theConstitution to do is to evolve a progressive system of taxation. This is a directive to Congress, justlike the directive to it to give priority of the enactment of law for the enhancement of human dignity. Theprovisions are put in the Constitution as moral incentives to legislation, not as judicially enforceablerights. (Tolentino v. Secretary of Finance.)

    Progressive system of taxation v. regressive system of taxation

    Aprogressive system of taxation means that tax laws shall place emphasis on direct taxes rather thanon indirect taxes, with ability to pay as the principal criterion.

    A regressive system of taxation exists when there are more indirect taxes imposed than direct taxes.

    No regressive taxes in the Philippine jurisdiction

    CLASSIFICATION OF TAXES:

    1. personal tax also known as capitalization or poll tax;

    2. property tax assessed on property of a certain class;

    3. direct tax incidence and impact of taxation falls on one person and cannot be shifted to another;

    4. indirect tax incidence and liability for the tax falls on one person but the burden thereof can bepassed on to another;

    5. excise tax imposed on the exercise of a privilege;

    6. general taxes taxes levied for ordinary or general purpose of the government;

    7. special tax levied for a special purpose;

    8. specific taxes imposed on a specific sum by the head or number or by some standards of weight ormeasurement;

    9. ad valorem tax tax imposed upon the value of the article;

    10. local taxes taxes levied by local government units pursuant to validly delegated power to tax;

    11. progressive taxes rate increases as the tax base increases; and

    12. regressive taxes rate increases as tax base decreases.

    GENERAL RULE:

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    - Taxes are personal to the taxpayer. Corporations tax delinquency cannot be enforced on thestockholder or transfer taxes on the estate be assessed on the heirs.

    EXCEPTIONS1. stockholders may be held liable for unpaid taxes of a dissolved corporation if the corporate assets

    have passed into their hands; and2. heirs may be held liable for the transfer taxes on the estate, if prior to the payment of the same, the

    properties of the decedent have been distributed to the heirs.

    LIMITATIONS ON THE POWER OF TAXATION

    Inherent Limitations

    1. It must be imposed for a public purpose.

    2. If delegated either to the President or to a L.G.U., it should be validly delegated.

    3. It is limited to the territorial jurisdiction of the taxing authority.

    4. Government entities are exempted.

    5. International comity is recognized i.e. property of foreign sovereigns are not subject to tax.

    Constitutional limitations

    Indirect

    a) Due process clause

    b) Equal protection clause

    c) Freedom of the press

    d) Religious freedom

    e) Non-impairment clause

    f) Law-making process

    1. One-subject One-title Rule

    2. 3 readings on 3 separate days Rule except when there is a Certificate ofEmergency

    3. Distribution of copies 3 days before the 3rd reading.

    g) Presidential power to grant reprieves, commutations and pardons, and remit fines and forfeitures afterconviction by final judgment.

    Direct

    a) Revenue bill must originate exclusively in H.R. but the Senate may propose with amendments.

    b) Non-imprisonment for non-payment of poll tax.

    c) Taxation shall be uniform and equitable.

    d) Congress shall evolve a progressive system of taxation.

    e) Tax exemption of charitable institutions, churches and personages or convents appurtenant thereto,mosques, non-profit cemeteries, and all lands, buildings and improvements ADE (actually, directly ,exclusively) used for charitable, religious, and educational purposes.

    f) Tax exemption of all revenues and assets used ADE for educational purposes of

    1. Non-profit non-stock educational institutions.

    2. Proprietary or cooperative educational institutions subject to limitations provided by law including

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    a) restriction on dividends

    b) provisions for re-investments.

    g) Tax exemption of grants, endowments, donations or contributions ADE for educational purposes, subject toconditions prescribed by law.

    h) No tax exemption without the concurrence of a majority of all members of Congress.

    i) SC power to review judgments or orders of lower courts in all cases involving Legality of any tax. Impost ortoll, Legality of any penalty imposed in relation thereto.

    INHERENT LIMITATIONS

    NOTES: PUBLIC PURPOSE

    GOVERNMENTAL PURPOSE

    RULE:

    The Legislature is without the power to appropriate revenues for anything but for public purposes.

    RULE:

    Public money can only be spent for a public purpose.

    PUBLIC PURPOSE A purpose affecting the inhabitants of the State or taxing district as a community and notmerely as individuals

    > Public purpose includes not only direct benefits or advantage, it also includes indirect benefits or

    advantage

    TIO vs. VIDEOGRAM

    > It is not the immediate result but the ultimate result that determines, whether the purpose is public ornot

    > It is not the number of persons benefited but it is the character of the purpose that determines thepublic character of such tax law

    > What is not allowed is that if it has no link to public welfare

    > Public purpose is determined by the use to which the tax money is devoted

    > If it benefits the community in general then it is for a public purpose no matter who collects it

    TEST

    1. If the public advantage or benefit is merely incidental in the promotion of a particular enterprise, thatwill render the law INVALID

    2. If what is incidental is the promotion of a private enterprise, the tax law is still for a publicpurpose(VALID)

    > A tax levied for a private, not public purpose constitutes taking of property without due process of lawas it is beyond the powers of the government to impose it.

    > Although private individuals are directly benefited, the tax would still be valid, provided such benefit isonly incidental

    > If what is incidental is the promotion of a private enterprise, as long as there is a link to the publicwelfare, the purpose is still public

    > The test is not as to who receives the money, but the character of the purpose for which it isexpended

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    > Not the immediate result of the expenditure, but rather the ultimate

    > The test that must be applied in determining whether the purpose is public or private

    1) The character of the direct object

    2) The ultimate result not the immediate result

    3) The general welfare for public good

    TEST OF RIGHTFUL TAXATION

    - Proceeds of a tax must be used

    1) for the support of the government

    2) for any of the recognized objects of the government

    3) to promote the welfare of the community

    LEGISLATIVE PREROGATIVE

    RULE: It is Congress which has the power to determine whether the purpose is public or private

    > You can always question the validity of such tax measure on the ground that it is not for a publicpurpose before the courts. But once it is settled that it is for a public purpose, you can no longer inquireon such tax measure

    TAXPAYERS SUIT

    -a case where the act complained of directly involves the illegal disbursement of public funds derivedfrom taxation

    > courts discretion to allow

    > Taxpayers have sufficient interest of preventing the illegal expenditures of money raised by taxation(NOTDONATIONS AND CONTRIBUTIONS)

    > A taxpayer is not relieved from the obligation of paying a tax because of his belief that it is beingmisappropriated by certain officials

    > A taxpayer has no legal standing to question executive acts that do not involve the use of public

    funds. (GONZALES vs. MARCOS)

    LOZADA vs. COMELEC

    > It is only when an act complained of which may include a legislative enactment of a statute, involvesthe illegal expenditure of public money that the so-called taxpayers suit may be allowed.

    CALTEX vs. COA

    > Taxpayers may be levied with a regulatory purpose to provide means for the rehabilitation andstabilization of a threatened industry which is affected with the public interest as to be within the policepower of the State.

    > A law imposing burdens may be both a tax measure and an exercise of the police power in whichcase the license fee may exceed the necessary expenses of police surveillance and regulation.

    REQUISITES FOR A TAXPAYERS PETITION

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    1) That money is being extracted and spent in violation of specific constitutional protections againstabuses of legislative power

    2) That public money is being deflected to any improper purpose

    3) That the petitioner seeks to restrain respondents from wasting public funds through the enforcement ofan invalid or unconstitutional law.

    KILOS BAYAN vs. GUINGONA

    > The Supreme Court has discretion whether or not to entertain taxpayers suit and could brush asidelack of locus standi

    CONCEPTS RELATIVE TO PUBLIC PURPOSE

    1) Inequalities resulting from the singling out of one particular class for taxation or exemption infringe noconstitutional limitation

    It is inherent in the power to tax that the legislature is free to select the subject of taxation

    2) An individual taxpayer need not derive direct benefits from the tax

    The paramount consideration is the welfare of the greater portion of the population

    3) Public purpose is continually expanding. Areas formerly left to private initiative now loose theirboundaries and may be undertaken by the government, if it is to meet the increasing social challengesof the times

    4) Public purpose is determined at the time of enactment of the tax law and not at the time ofimplementation

    NOTES: INTERNATIONAL COMITY

    - Based on tradition, practice or custom

    DOCTRINE OF INCORPORATION

    > The Philippines adopts the generally accepted principles of international law as part of the law of theland

    > If a tax law violates certain principles of international law, then it is not only invalid but alsounconstitutional

    GROUNDS FOR TAX EXEMPTION OF FOREIGN GOVERNMENT PROPERTY

    1) Sovereign equality of States

    2) Usage among States

    3) Immunity from suit of a State

    NOTES: NON-DELEGATION OF THE POWER TO TAX

    GENERAL RULE:

    - The power of taxation is peculiarly and exclusively legislative, therefore, it may not be delegated

    EXCEPTIONS:

    1) Delegation to the President

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    2) Delegation to local government units

    3) Delegation to administrative units

    POWERS WHICH CANNOT BE DELEGATED

    1) Determination of the subjects to be taxed

    2) Purpose of the tax

    3) Amount or rate of the tax

    4) Manner, means and agencies of collection

    5) Prescription of the necessary rules with respect thereto

    DELEGATION TO THE PRESIDENT

    > Congress may authorize, by law, the President to fix, within specified limits and subject to suchlimitations and restrictions as it may impose

    1) Tariff rates

    2) Import and export quotas

    3) Tonnage and wharfage dues

    4) Other duties and import within the national development program of the government

    > There must be a law authorizing the President to fix tariff rates

    > The delegation of power must impose limitations and restrictions and specify the minimum as well asthe maximum tariff rates.

    FLEXIBLE TARIFF CLAUSE (SEC. 401 TCC)

    - In the interest of national economy, general welfare and/or national security, the President upon therecommendation of the National Economic and Development Authority is empowered:

    1) To increase, reduce or remove existing protective rates of import duty,provided that the increaseshould not be higher than 100% ad valorem

    2) To establish import quota or to ban imports of any commodity

    3) To impose additional duty on all imports not exceeding 10% ad valorem

    DELEGATION TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT UNITS

    > Each local government unit has the power to create its own revenue and to levy taxes, fees andcharges subject to such guidelines and limitations as the Congress may provide (ART X Sec 5)

    > Local government units have no power to further delegate said constitutional grant to raise revenue,because what is delegated is not the enactment or the imposition of a tax, it is the administrativeimplementation

    BASCO vs. PAGCOR

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    > The power of local government units to impose taxes and fees is always subject to the limitationswhich Congress may provide, the former having no inherent power to tax.

    > Municipal corporations are mere creatures of Congress which has the power to create and abolishmunicipal corporations. Congress therefore has the power to control over local government units. IfCongress can grant to a municipal corporation the power to tax certain matters, it can also provide forexemptions or even take back the power

    DELEGATION TO ADMINISTRATIVE AGENCIES

    > For the delegation to be constitutionally valid, the law must be complete in itself and must set forthsufficient standards

    > Certain aspects of the taxing process that are not really legislative in nature are vested inadministrative agencies. In these cases, there really is no delegation, to wit:

    A) power to value property

    B) power to assess and collect taxes

    C) power to perform details of computation, appraisement or adjustments.

    NOTES: EXEMPTION OF GOVERNMENT AGENCIES

    1) Agencies performing governmental functions

    > TAX EXEMPT

    2) Agencies performing proprietary functions

    > SUBJECT TO TAX

    * > The exemption applies only to governmental entities through which the government immediately anddirectly exercises its sovereign powers.

    NDC vs. CEBU CITY

    > Tax exemption of property owned by the Republic of the Philippines refers to the property owned bythe government and its agencies which do not have separate and distinct personality.

    > Those with ORIGINAL CHARTERS (incorporated agencies)

    > Those created by SPECIAL CHARTER(incorporated agencies) are not covered by the exemption

    GOVERNMENT ENTITIES EXEMPT FROM INCOMING TAX

    1) GSIS

    2) SSS

    3) PHIC

    4) PCSO

    5) PAGCOR

    REASON FOR EXEMPTIONS

    1) Government will be taxing itself to raise money for itself.

    2) Immunity is necessary in order that governmental functions will not be impeded.

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    NOTES: TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION

    RULES:

    > Tax laws cannot operate beyond a States territorial limits

    > The government cannot tax a particular object of taxation which is not within its territorial jurisdiction.

    > Property outside ones jurisdiction does not receive any protection of the State

    > If a law is passed by Congress, Congress must always see to it that the object or subject of taxationis within the territorial jurisdiction of the taxing authority

    SITUS OF TAXATION

    Place of taxation

    RULE:

    - The State where the subject to be taxed has a situs may rightfully levy and collect the tax

    > In determining the situs of taxation, you have to consider the nature of the taxes

    Example:

    1) POLL TAX, CAPITATION TAX, COMMUNITY TAX

    > Residence of the taxpayer

    2) REAL PROPERTY TAX OR PROPERTY TAX

    > Location of the property

    > We can only impose property tax on the properties of a person whose residence is in the Philippines.

    EXCEPTIONS TO THE TERRITORIALITY RULE

    A) Where the tax laws operate outside territorial jurisdiction

    1) TAXATION of resident citizens on their incomes derived from abroad

    B) Where tax laws do not operate within the territorial jurisdiction of the State

    1) When exempted by treaty obligations

    2) When exempted by international comity

    SITUS OF TAX ON REAL PROPERTY

    - LEX REI SITUS or where the property is located

    REASON:

    The place where the real property is located gives protection to the real property, hence theproperty or its owner should support the government of that place

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    SITUS OF PROPERTY TAX ON PERSONAL PROPERTY

    - MOBILIA SEQUNTUR PERSONAM

    = movables follow the owner

    = movables follow the domicile of the owner

    RULES:

    1) TANGIBLE PERSONAL PROPERTY

    - Where located, usually the owners domicile

    2) INTANGIBLLE PERSONAL PROPERTY

    G. R. Domicile of the owner

    EXCEPTION: The situs location not domicile

    > Where the intangible personal property has acquired a business situs in another jurisdiction

    * > The principle of Mobilia Sequntur Personam is only for purposes of convenience. It must yield to theactual situs of such property.

    * > Personal intangible properties which acquires business situs here in the Philippines

    1) Franchise which is exercised within the Philippines

    2) Shares, obligations, bonds issued by a domestic corporation

    3) Shares, obligations, bonds issued by a foreign corporation, 85% of its business is conducted in thePhilippines

    4) Shares, obligations, bonds issued by a foreign corporation which shares of stock or bonds acquire situs here

    5) Rights, interest in a partnership, business or industry established in the Philippines

    > These intangible properties acquire business situs here in the Philippines, you cannot apply the principle ofMobilia Sequntur Personam because the properties have acquired situs here.

    SITUS OF INCOME TAX

    A) DOMICILLARY THEORY

    - The location where the income earner resides in the situs of taxation

    B) NATIONALITY THEORY

    - The country where the income earner is a citizen is the situs of taxation

    C) SOURCE RULE

    - The country which is the source of the income or where the activity that produced the income tookplace is the situs of taxation.

    SITUS OF SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY

    > The place where the sale is consummated and perfected

    SITUS OF TAX ON INTEREST INCOME

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    > The residence of the borrower who pays the interest irrespective of the place where the obligationwas contracted

    CIR vs. BOAC

    > Revenue derived by an of-line international carrier without any flight from the Philippines, from ticketsales through its local agent are subject to tax on gross Philippine billings

    SITUS OF EXCISE TAX

    > Where the transaction performed

    HOPEWELL vs. COM. OF CUSTOMS

    > The power to levy an excise upon the performance of an act or the engaging in an occupation doesnot depend upon the domicile of the person subject to the exercise, nor upon the physical location ofthe property or in connection with the act or occupation taxed, but depends upon the place on which theact is performed or occupation engaged in.

    Thus, the gauge of taxability does not depend on the location of the office, but attaches upon the placewhere the respective transaction is perfected and consummated

    CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITATIONS

    I. DUE PROCESS

    > Due process mandates that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without dueprocess of law.

    PEPSI COLA vs. MUN. OF TANAUAN

    - REQUIREMENTS OF DUE PROCESS IN TAXATION

    1) Tax must be for a Public purpose

    2) Imposed within the Territorial jurisdiction

    3) No arbitrariness or oppression in

    A) assessment, and

    B) collection

    DUE PROCESS IN TAXATION DOES NOT REQUIRE

    1) Determination through judicial inquiry of

    A) property subject to tax

    B) amount of tax to be imposed

    2) Notice of hearing as to:

    A) amount of the tax

    B) manner of apportionment

    REQUISITES OF DUE PROCESS OF LAW

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    1) There must be a valid law

    2) Tax measure should not be unconscionable and unjust as to amount to confiscation of property

    3) Tax statute must not be arbitrary as to find no support in the constitution

    > When is deprivation of life, liberty or property done in accordance with due process of law?

    1) If done under authority of a law that is valid or of the constitution itself

    2) After compliance with fair and reasonable methods of procedure prescribed by law.

    > If properties are taxed on the basis of an invalid law, such deprivation is a violation of due process

    REMEDY ask for refund

    > To justify the nullification of a tax law, there must be a clear and unequivocal breach of theconstitution

    > There must be proof of arbitrariness

    INSTANCES WHEN THE TAX LAW MAYBE DECLARED AS UNCONSTITUTIONAL [C, O, N, U]

    1) If it amounts to confiscation of propertywithout due process

    2) If the subject of taxation is outside of the jurisdiction of the taxing state

    3) The law maybe declared as unconstitutional if it is imposed not for a public purpose

    4) If a tax law which is applied retroactively, imposes unjust and oppressive taxes.

    > A tax law which denies a taxpayer a fair opportunity to assert his substantial rights before acompetent tribunal is invalid

    >A taxpayer must not be deprived of his property for non-payment of taxes without

    1) notice of liability

    2) sale of property at public auction

    > The validity of statute maybe contested only by one who will sustain a direct injury in consequence ofits enforcement

    > A violation of the inherent limitations on taxation would contravene the constitutional injunctionsagainst deprivation of property without due process of law

    > There must be proof of arbitrariness, otherwise apply the presumption of constitutionality

    > Due process requires hearing before adoption of legislative rules by administrative bodies ofinterpretative rulings. (Misamis vs. DFA)

    > Compliance with strict procedural requirements must be followed effectively to avoid a collisioncourse between the states power to tax and the individual recognized rights (CIR vs. Algue)

    > The due process clause may correctly be invoked only when there is a clear contravention of inherentor constitutional limitations in the exercise of tax power. (Tan vs. del Rosario)

    > SUBSTATNTIVE DUE PROCESS requires that a tax statute must be within the constitutionalauthority of Congress to pass and that it be reasonable, fair and just

    >PROCEDURAL DUE PROCESS requires notice and hearing or at least an opportunity to be heard

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    II. EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE

    > All persons, all properties, all businesses should be taxed at the same rate

    > prohibits class legislation

    > prohibits undue discrimination

    EQUALITY IN TAXATION (UNIFORMITY)

    >Equality in taxation requires that all subjects or objects of taxation similarly situated should be treatedalike or put on equal footing both on the privilege conferred and liabilities imposed

    > All taxable articles of the same class shall be taxed at the same rate

    > The Doctrine does not require that persons or properties different in fact be treated in law as thoughthere were the same. What it prohibits is class legislation which discriminates against some and favorsothers

    >

    As long as there are rational or reasonable grounds for doing so, Congress may group persons orproperties to be taxed and it is sufficient if all members of the same class are subject to the same rateand the tax is administered impartially upon them.

    REQUISITES OF A VALID CLASSIFICATION (S A G E )

    1) It must be based on substantial distinction

    2) It must apply not only to the present condition, but also to future conditions

    3) It must be germane to the purpose of the law

    4) It must apply equallyto all members of the same class

    SUBSTANTIAL DISTINCTION

    > It must be real, material and not superficial distinction

    > What is not allowed is inequality resulting from singling out of a particular class which violates therequisites of a valid classification

    > There maybe inequality but as long as it does not violate the requisites of a valid classification thatsuch mere inequality is not enough to justify the nullification of a tax law or tax ordinance

    > Taxation is equitable when its burden falls on those better able to pay

    >Although the equal protection clause does not forbid classification, it is imperative that the substantialdifferences having a reasonable relation to the subject of the particular legislation

    > Taxes are uniform and equal when imposed upon all property of the same class or character withinthe taxing authority

    >

    Tax exemptions are not violative of the equal protection clause, as long as there is valid classification.

    TIU vs. CA

    The Constitutional right to equal protection of the law is not violated by an executive order, issuedpursuant to law, granting tax and duty incentives only to business within the secured area of the SubicSpecial Economic Zone and denying them to those who live within the zone but outside such fenced interritory. The Constitution does not require the absolute equality among residents. It is enough that allpersons under like circumstances or conditions are given the same privileges and required to follow thesame obligations. In short, a classification based on valid and reasonable standards does not violate theequal protection clause.

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    We find real and substantial distinctions between the circumstances obtaining inside and thoseoutside the Subic Naval Base, thereby justifying a valid and reasonable classification.

    TWO WAYS EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE CAN BE VIOLATED

    1) When classification is made where there should be none

    ex. When the classification does not rest upon substantial distinctions that make for real difference

    2) When no classification is made where a classification is called for

    ex. When substantial distinctions exist but no corresponding classification is made on the basis thereof

    ORMOC SUGAR CENTRAL vs. CIR

    > If the ordinance is intended to supply to a specific taxpayer and to no one else regardless of whetheror not other entities belonging to the same class are established in the future, it is a violation of theequal protection clause, but if it is intended to apply also to similar establishments which maybe

    established in the future, then the tax ordinance is valid even if in the meantime, it applies to only oneentity or taxpayer for the simple reason that there is so far only one member of the class subject of thetax measure

    UNIFORMITY IN TAXATION

    > The concept of uniformity in taxation implies that all taxable articles or properties of the same classshall be taxed at the same rate.

    It requires the uniform application and operation, without discrimination, of the tax in every place where

    the subject of the tax is found. It does not, however, require absolute identity or equality under allcircumstances, but subject to reasonable classification.

    EQUITY IN TAXATION

    > The concept of equity in taxation requires that the apportionment of the tax burden be more or less,just in the light of the taxpayers ability to shoulder to tax burden and if warranted, on the basis of thebenefits received from the government. Its cornerstone is the taxpayers ability to pay.

    CRITERIA OF EQUAL PROTECTION

    1) When the laws operate uniformly

    A) on all persons

    B) under similar circumstances

    2)All persons are treated in the same manner

    A) The conditions not being different

    B) Both in privileges conferred and liabilities imposed

    C) Favoritism and preference not allowed

    REYES vs. ALMAZOR

    > Taxation is equitable when its burden falls on those better able to pay

    KAPATIRAN vs. TAN

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    > It is inherent in the power to tax that the state be free to select the subjects of taxation and it hasbeen repeatedly held that inequalities which result from a singling out of one particular class of taxationor exemption infringe no constitutional limitation

    III. FREEDOM OF THE PRESS

    > The press is not exempt from taxation

    > The sale of magazines or newspapers, maybe the subject of taxation

    > What is not allowed is to impose tax on the exercise of an activity which has a connection withfreedom of the press (license fee)

    > If we impose tax on persons before they can deliver or broadcast a particular news or information, that isthe one which cannot be taxed.

    TOLENTINO vs. SEC. OF FINANCE

    > What is prohibited by the constitutional guarantee of free press are laws which single out the press ortarget a group belonging to the press for special treatment or which in any way discriminates againstthe press on the basis of the content of the publication.

    IV. FREEDOM OF RELIGION

    > It is the activity which cannot be taxed

    > activities which have connection with the exercise of religion

    AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIETY vs. MANILA

    > The payment of license fees for the distribution and sale of bibles suppresses the constitutional rightof free exercise of religion.

    JIMMY SWAGGART vs. BOARD OF EQUALIZATION

    > The Free Exercise of Religion Clause does not prohibit imposing a generally applicable sales and usetax on the sale of religious materials by a religious organization.

    > The Sale of religious articles can be the subject of the VAT

    >What cannot be taxed is the exercise of religious worship or activity

    > The income of the priest derived from the exercise of religious activity can be taxed.

    V. NON-IMPAIRMENT CLAUSE

    > The parties to the contract cannot exercise the power of taxation.

    > They cannot agree or stipulate that this particular transaction may be exempt from tax- not allowed(except if government)

    OPOSA vs. FACTORAN

    > Police power prevails over the non-impairment clause

    LA INSULAR vs. MANCHUCA

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    > A lawful tax on a new subject or an increased tax on an old one, does not interfere with a contractor impairs its obligation.

    > The constitutional guarantee of the non-impairment clause can only invoked in the grant oftax exemption.

    RULES:

    1) If the exemption was granted for valuable consideration and it is granted on the basis of a contract.

    > cannot be revoked

    2) If the exemption is granted by virtue of a contract, wherein the government enters into a contract with aprivate corporation

    > cannot be revoked unilaterally by the government

    3) If the basis of the tax exemption is a franchise granted by Congress and under the franchise or the taxexemption is given to a particular holder or person

    > can be unilaterally revoked by the government (Congress)

    > The non-impairment clause applies only to contracts and not to a franchise.

    > The non-impairment clause applies to taxation but not to police power and eminent domain.Furthermore, it applies only where one party is the government and the other, a private individual.

    > As a rule, the obligation to pay tax is based on law. But when, for instance, a taxpayer enters into acompromise with the BIR, the obligation of the taxpayer becomes one based on contract

    PROVINCE OF MISAMIS vs. CAGAYAN ELECTRIC

    > Franchises with magic words, shall be in lieu of all taxesdescriptive of the payment of a franchisetax on their gross earnings are exempt from:

    1) all taxes2) the franchise tax under the NIRC3) the franchise tax under the local tax code

    JUAREZ vs. CA

    > As long as the contract affects the public welfare one way or another so as to require the interferenceof the state, then must the police power be asserted and prevail over the impairment clause

    RULES ON TAX AMNESTY

    > Tax amnesty, like tax exemption, is never favored nor presumed in law and if granted by statute mustbe construed strictly against the taxpayer, who must show compliance with the law.

    >The government is not estopped from questioning the tax liability even if amnesty tax payments werealready received

    REASON: Erroneous application and enforcement of the law by public officers do not block subsequentcorrect application of the statute. The government is never estopped by mistakes or errors by itsagents.

    PP vs. CASTAEDA

    > Defense of tax amnesty, like amnesty, is a personal defense

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    REASON: It relates to the circumstances of a particular accused and not the character of the actscharged in the information

    REPUBLIC vs. IAC

    >In case of doubt, tax amnesty is to be strictly construed against the government

    REASON: Taxes are not construed, for taxes being burdens are not to be presumed beyond what the taxamnesty expressly and clearly declares

    VI. LAW MAKING PROCESS

    A) ONE SUBJECT ONE TITLE RULE

    > Every bill passed by the Congress shall embrace only one subject which shall be expressed in the titlethereof (Sec. 26 (1) ART II)

    B) THREE READING RULE

    > No bill passed by either House shall become a law unless it has passed three readings on separate daysand printed copies thereof in its final form have been distributed to its members three days before its passage,EXCEPT when the President certifies to the necessity of its immediate enactment to meet a public calamity oremergency. (Sec. 26 (2) ART II)

    PHIL. JUDGES ASSOC. vs. PRADO

    > A presidential certification dispenses with the requirement not only of printing but also that of readingthe bill on separate days.

    >It is within the power of a Bicameral Conference Committee to include in its report an entirely newprovision that is not found either in the House Bill or Senate Bill, so long as such amendment isgermane to the subject of the bills before the committee. After all its report was not final but needed theapproval of both houses of Congress to become valid as an act of the legislative department.

    C) ENROLLED BILL DOCTRINE

    G.R. An enrolled copy of a bill is conclusive not only of its provisions but also of its due enactment

    EXCEPTION: In ASTORGA vs. VILLEGAS, the Supreme Court went behind the enrolled bill andconsulted the journal to determine whether certain provisions of a state had been approved by the SenatePresidents admission of a mistake and withdrawal of his signature.

    VII. PARDONING POWER OF THE PRESIDENT

    > The President has the power to grant reprieves, commutations and pardons and remit fines andforfeitures after conviction by final judgment. (Sec. 19, ART VII)

    NATURE OF TAX AMNESTY

    A general pardon or intentional overlooking by the state of its authority to impose penalties on personsotherwise guilty of evasion or violation of a revenue or tax law

    - absolute forgiveness or waiver to collect

    VIII. NO IMPRISONMENT FOR NON-PAYMENT OF POLL TAX

    - No person shall be imprisoned for debt or non-payment of poll tax (Sec. 20 ART III)

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    > The non-imprisonment rule applies to non-payment of poll tax which is punishable only by asurcharge, but not to other violations like falsification of community tax certificate or non-payment ofother taxes

    POLL TAX tax of fixed amount imposed upon residents within a specific territory regardless of citizenship,business or profession

    Ex. Community tax

    IX. TAXATION SHALL BE UNIFORM AND EQUITABLE

    - The rule of taxation shall be uniform and equitable. The Congress shall evolve a progressive system of

    taxation. (Sec. 28 (1) ART VI)

    UNIFORMITY

    - means that all taxable articles kinds of property of the same class shall be taxed at the same rate

    > A tax is uniform when it operates with the same force and effect in every place where the subject of itis found

    EQUITABILITY

    > Taxation is said to be equitable when its burden falls on those better able to pay

    X. CONGRESS SHALL EVOLVE A PROGRESSIVE SYSTEM OF TAXATION

    PROGRESSIVITY

    > Taxation is progressive when its rate goes up depending on the sources of the person affected

    SYTEMS OF TAXATION

    1) PROPORTIONAL TAXATION

    - where the tax increases or decreases in relation to the tax bracket

    2) PROGRESSIVE or GRADUATED SYSTEM

    - where the tax increases as the income of the taxpayer goes higher

    3) REGRESSIVE SYSTEM

    - where the tax decreases as the income of the taxpayer increases

    PROGRESSIVITY IS NOT REPUGNANT TO UNIFORMITY and EQUALITY

    A) Uniformity does not require the things which are not different be treated in the same manner

    B) Differentiation, which is not arbitrary and conforms to the dictates of justice and equity is allowed.Progressivity is one way of classification.

    C) The State has the inherent right to select subjects of taxation

    TOLENTINO vs. SEC. OF FINANCE

    > RA 7716 (EVAT), does not violate the constitutional mandate that Congress shall evolve aprogressive system of taxation

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    > The Constitution does not really prohibit the imposition of indirect taxes, which like the VAT, areregressive. The constitutional provision means simply that indirect taxes shall be minimized.

    > The mandate to Congress is not to prescribe, but to evolve, a progressive system of taxation

    > Resort to indirect taxes should be minimized but not to be avoided entirely because it is difficult, if notimpossible to avoid them by imposing such taxes according to the taxpayers ability to pay.

    XI. ORIGIN OF REVENUE, TARIFF or TAX BILLS

    All appropriation, revenue or tariff bills, bills authorizing increase of the public debt, bills of localapplication, and private bills shall originate exclusively in the House of Representatives, but the Senate maypropose or concur with amendments. (Section 24, Article VI)

    RULE:

    - It is not the revenue statute but the revenue bill which is required by the constitution to originateexclusively in the House of Representatives

    REASON:

    - To insist that a revenue statute and not only the bill which initiated the legislative process culminating in

    the enactment of the law must substantially be the same as the House bill would be to deny theSenates power not only to concur with amendments but also to propose amendments. It would beto violate the co-equality of legislative power of the two houses of Congress and in fact make the Housesuperior to the Senate. (Tolentino vs. Sec. of Finance)

    > The Constitution simply requires that there must be that initiative coming from the House ofRepresentatives relative to appropriation, revenue and tariff bills.

    >The Constitution does not also prohibit the filing in the Senate of a substitute bill in anticipation of itsreceipt of the bill from the House, as long as action by the Senate is withheld until receipt of said bill(Tolentino vs. Sec. of Finance)

    XII. PRESIDENTIAL VETO

    > The President shall have the power to veto any particular item or items in an appropriation, revenueor tariff bill, but the veto shall not affect the item or items to which he does not object (Sec. 27 (2), ARTVI)

    XIII. TARIFF POWER OF THE PRESIDENT

    The Congress may, by law, authorizing the President to fix within specific limits, and subject to suchlimitations and restrictions as it may impose, tariff rates, import and export quotas, tonnage andwharfage dues, the other duties or imports within the framework of the national development programof the Government (Sec. 28 (2), ART VI)

    REQUISITES:

    1) There must be a law passed by Congress authorizing the President to impose tariff rates and other fees.

    2) Under the law, there must be limitations and restrictions on the exercise of such power

    3) The taxes that may be imposed by the President are limited to:

    A) Tariff rates

    B) Import and export quotas

    C) Tonnage and wharfage dues

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    D) Other duties (customs duties)

    4) The imposition of these tariff and duties must be within the framework of the National Developmentprogram of the government

    > Congress may not pass a law authorizing the President to impose income tax, donors tax, and othertaxes which are not in the nature of customs duties.

    > The Constitution allows only the imposition by the President of these custom duties

    XIV. TAX EXEMPTION OF REAL PROPERTY

    Charitable institutions, churches and personages or convents appurtenant thereto, morgues, non-profitcemeteries and all lands, buildings and improvements, actually directly and exclusively used forreligious, charitable, or educational purposes shall be exempt from taxation. (Sec. 28 (3) ART VI)

    APPLICATION:

    > The exemption only covers property taxes and not other taxes

    TEST OF EXEMPTION:

    > It is the USE of the property and not ownership of the property

    ABRA VALLEY COLLEGE vs. AQUINO (162 SCRA 106)

    > The exemption does not only extend to indispensable facilities but also covers incidental facilitieswhich are reasonably necessary to the accomplishment of said purpose

    > A property leased by the owner to another who uses it exclusively for religious purposes is exemptfrom property tax, but the owner is subject to income tax or rents received.

    > Real property purchased by any religious sect to be used exclusively for religious purposes aresubject to the tax on the transfer of ownership or of title to real property (also if donated- donors tax)

    > Property held for future use is not tax exempt

    XV. LAW GRANTING TAX EXEMPTIONS

    No law granting any tax exemptions shall be passed without the concurrence of a majority of allmembers of the Congress (Sec. 28 (4) ART VI)

    RULES ON VOTE REQUIREMENT

    1) Law granting any tax exemption

    > absolute majority

    2) Law withdrawing any tax exemption

    > Relative majority

    > Tax exemption, amnesties, refunds are considered in the nature of tax exemptions

    > A law granting such needs approval of the absolute majority of the Congress

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    XVI. NO USE OF PUBLIC MONEY OR PROPERTY FOR PUBLIC PURPOSES

    > No public money or property shall be appropriated, applied, paid, or employed, directly or indirectly,for the use, benefit, or support of any sect, church, denomination, sectarian, institution or system ofreligion, or of any priest, preacher, minister or other religious teacher or dignitary as such, EXCEPTwhen such priest, preacher, minister or dignitary is assigned to the armed forces, or to any penalinstitution, or government orphanage or leprosarium as such (Sec. 29 (2) ART VI)

    > Public property may be leased to a religious group provided that the lease will be totally under thesame conditions as that to private persons (amount of rent)

    > Congress is without power to appropriate funds for a private purpose.

    XVII. TAX LEVIED FOR SPECIAL PURPOSES

    All money collected or any tax levied for a special purpose shall be treated as a special fund and paid out forsuch purpose only. If the purpose for which a special fund was created has been fulfilled or abandoned, thebalance, if any, shall be transferred to the general funds of the Government. (Sec. 29 (3) ART VI)

    > If a President of the Philippines spent a special fund for a general purpose, he can be charged withculpable violation of the Constitution.

    XVIII. SUPREME COURTS POWER OF REVIEW

    The Supreme Court shall have the power to review, revise, reverse, modify or affirm on appeal or certiorari, allcases involving the legality of any tax imposed, assessment, or toll, or any penalty imposed in relation thereto.(Sec. 5 (2B) ART VIII)

    > Congress cannot take away from the Supreme Court the power given to it by the Constitution as thefinal arbiter of the tax cases.

    XIX. DELEGATED AUTHORITY TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT UNITS

    Each local government unit shall have the power to create its own sources of revenues and to levy taxes,

    fees, and charges subject to such guidelines and limitations as the Congress may provide, consistent with thebasic policy of local autonomy. Such taxes, fees, charges shall have exclusivity to the local government. (Sec.5, ART X)

    LIMITATIONS ON POWER TO TAX (L.G.U.)

    1) It is subject to such guidelines and limitations provided by Congress.

    2) It must be consistent with the basic policy of local autonomy.

    3) Such taxes, fees, and charges shall accrue exclusively to the local government.

    RULES: NATIONAL GOVT vs. LGU

    IMPOSITION OF TAXES

    1) The National Government may impose local taxes on articles or subjects which are within the territorialjurisdiction of the local government unit.

    2) The Local Government unit cannot impose tax on the national government.

    > You can only tax those articles, which are within your jurisdiction

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    SEC. 6, ART X

    local government units shall have a just share, as determined by law, in the national taxes which shall beautomatically released to them.

    XX. TAX EXEMPTIONS OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS

    All revenues and assets of non-stock, non-profit educational institutions used actually, directly, andexclusively for educational purposes shall be exempt from taxes and duties.(Sec. 4 (3) ART XIV)

    REQUISITES FOR EXEMPTION:

    1) It must be a private educational institution

    2) It must be non-stock and non-profit

    3) Its assets (property) and revenues (income) must be used actually, directly and exclusively for educationalpurposes

    RULES:

    1) If the first requisite is absent (meaning, its a government educational institution), it is nonetheless exemptfrom income tax

    2) If the second requirement is absent (meaning, it is stock and profit) as long as the third requirement ispresent, it is nonetheless exempt from real estate tax

    3) If the third requirement is absent, as long as it is non-stock and non-profit, it is nonetheless exempt fromincome tax

    4) If the third requirement is absent, but it is private and non-profit, it is subject to income tax, but at thepreferential rate of ten percent (10%)

    > Under the present tax code, for a private educational institution to be exempt from the payment ofincome tax, all it has to be is non-stock and non-profit. However, a governmental educational institutionis exempt from income tax without any condition

    EXEMPTION DOES NOT EXTEND TO:1) Income derived by these educational institutions from their property, real or personal, and2) From activities conducted by them for profit regardless of the disposition made on such income

    MANILA POLO CLUB vs. CTA

    > Proceeds of the sale of real property by the Roman Catholic church is exempt from income taxbecause the transaction was an isolated one

    ST. PAUL HOSPITAL of ILOILO vs. CIR

    > Income derived from the hospital pharmacy, dormitory and canteen was exempt from income taxbecause the operation of those entities was merely incidental to the primary purpose of the exemptcorporation

    > Where the educational institution is private and non-profit (but a stock corporation) it issubject to income tax but at the preferential rate of ten percent (10%)

    REQUISITES for APPLICATION of 10% PREFERENTIAL RATE1) It is private;2) It has permit to operate from the DECS, or CHED or TESDA;3) It is non-profit;4) Its gross income from unrelated trade or business must not exceed fifty percent (50%) of its total grossincome from all sources.

    10% PREFERENTIAL TAX RATE DOES NOT APPLY TO THE FOLLOWING:

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    1) Passive incomes derived by the educational institution (subject to final income tax) and

    2) Where the educational institution is engaged in unrelated trade, business or other activity, and the grossincome from such unrelated trade, business or other activities exceeds fifty percent (50%) of the total grossincome derived by the school from all sources

    > Where a donation is made in favor of an educational institution pursuant to sports competition andtournaments, the donor is exempt from the payment of donors tax

    CIR vs. CA (298 SCRA 83)

    > Income derived by YMCA from leasing out a portion of its premises to small shop owners, likerestaurant and canteen operators, and from parking fees collected from non-members are taxableincome

    YMCA is not an educational institution

    XXI. TAX EXEMPTION OF DONATIONS for EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES

    > Subject to conditions prescribed by law, all grants endowments, donations, or contributions usedactually, directly and exclusively for educational purposes shall be exempt from tax. (Sec. 4 (4) ART

    XIV)

    XXII. NO EXPOST FACTO LAW PROHIBITION IN TAXATION

    FERNANDEZ vs. FERNANDEZ

    > The prohibition against ex post facto laws applies only to criminal laws and not to those that concern

    civil matters

    Our tax laws are civil in nature

    > The collection of interest on taxes is not penal in nature and the ex post facto law prohibition does notapply to it.

    DOUBLE TAXATION

    > Taxing same property twice when it should be taxed but once. Taxing the same person twice by the

    same jurisdiction over the same thing.

    Also known as duplicate taxation

    PEPSI COLA vs. CITY OF BUTUAN

    > There is no constitutional prohibition against double taxation in the Philippines. It is something notfavored but is permissible, provided that the other constitutional requirements is not thereby violated

    KINDS OF DOUBLE TAXATION

    1) DIRECT DOUBLE TAXATION

    - Double taxation in the objectionable or prohibited sense

    - Same property is taxed twice

    REQUISITES:

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    A) The same property is taxed twice when it should only be taxed once;

    B) Both taxes are imposed on the same property or subject matter for the same purpose;

    C) Imposed by the same taxing authority;

    D) Within the same jurisdiction;

    E) During the same period; and

    F) Covering the same kind or character of tax

    2) INDIRECT DOUBLE TAXATION

    - Not legally objectionable

    - If taxes are not of the same kind, or the imposition are imposed for different taxing authority and thismay involve the same subject matter

    EXAMPLES:

    A) The taxpayers warehousing business although carried on in relation to the operation of its sugar central is adistinct and separate taxable business

    B) A license tax may be levied upon a business or occupation although the land or property used in connectiontherewith is subject to property tax

    C) Both a license fee and a tax may be imposed on the same business or occupation for selling the samearticle and this is not in violation of the rules against double taxation

    D) When every bottle or container of intoxicating beverages is subject to local tax and at the same time thebusiness of selling such product is also subject to liquors license

    E) A tax imposed on both on the occupation of fishing and of the fishpond itself

    F) A local ordinance imposes a tax on the storage of copra where it appears that the finished productsmanufactured out of the copra are subject to VAT

    MEANS EMPLOYED TO AVOID DOUBLE TAXATION

    1) Tax deductions

    2) Tax credits

    3) Provide for exemption

    4) Enter into treatise with other states

    5) Allowance on the principle of reciprocity

    TAX CREDIT

    -An amount allowed as a deduction of the Philippine Income tax on account of income taxes paid orincurred to foreign countries. It is given to a taxpayer in order to provide a relief from too onerous aburden of taxation in case where the same income is subject to a foreign income tax and the PhilippineIncome tax.

    WHO CAN CLAIM TAX CREDIT

    1) Citizens of the Philippines

    2) Domestic corporations

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    CITY OF BAGUIO vs. DE LEON

    > The argument against double taxation may not be invoked where one tax is imposed by the state andthe other imposed by the city, it being widely recognized that there is nothing inherently obnoxious inthe requirement that license fees or taxes be exacted with respect to the same occupation, calling oractivity by both the state and a political subdivision thereof. And where the statute or ordinance inquestion applies equally to all persons, firms and corporations placed in a similar situation, there is noinfringement of the rule on equality.

    VILLANUEVA vs. CITY OF ILOILO

    > An ordinance imposing a municipal tax on tenement houses was challenged because the ownersalready pay real estate taxes and also income taxes under the NIRC. The Supreme Court held thatthere was no double taxation. The same tax may be imposed by the National Government as well asthe local government. There is nothing inherently obnoxious in the exaction of license fees or taxes withrespect to the same occupation, calling or activity by both the state and a political subdivision thereof.Further, a license tax may be levied upon a business or occupation although the land used inconnection therewith is subject to property tax.

    DOCTRINES ON DOUBLE TAXATION

    1) Direct Double Taxation (DDT) is not allowed because it amounts to confiscation of property without dueprocess of law

    2) You can question the validity of double taxation if there is a violation of the Equal protection clause orEquality or Uniformity of Taxation

    3) All doubts as to whether double taxation has been imposed should be resolved in favor of the taxpayer

    ESCAPE FROM TAXATION

    BASIC FORMS OF ESCAPE FROM TAXATION1) SHIFTING2) CAPITALIZATION

    3) TRANSFORMATION4) AVOIDANCE5) EXEMPTION6) EVASION

    I. SHIFTING

    - Shifting is the transfer of the burden of a tax by the original payer or the one on whom the tax wasassessed or imposed to someone else

    - Process by which such tax burden is transferred from statutory taxpayer to another without violating thelaw

    > It should be borne in mind that what is transferred is not the payment of the tax, but the burden of thetax

    > Only indirect taxes may be shifted; direct taxes cannot be shifted

    WAYS OF SHIFTING THE TAX BURDEN

    1) FORWARD SHIFTING

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    - When the burden of the tax is transferred from a factor of production through the factors ofdistribution until it finally settles on the ultimate purchaser or consumer.

    Example:

    - Manufacturer or producer may shift tax assessed to wholesaler, who in turn shifts it to the retailer, whoalso shifts it to the final purchaser or consumer

    2) BACKWARD SHIFTING

    - When the burden of the tax is transferred from the consumer or purchaser through the factors ofdistribution to the factors of production

    Example:

    - Consumer or purchaser may shift tax imposed on him to retailer by purchasing only after the price isreduced, and from the latter to the wholesaler, or finally to the manufacturer or producer

    3) ONWARD SHIFTING

    -When the tax is shifted two or more times either forward or backward

    Example:

    - Thus, a transfer from the seller to the purchaser involves one shift; from the producer to the wholesaler,then to retailer, we have two shifts; and if the tax is transferred again to the purchaser by the retailer,we have three shifts in all.

    Impact and Incidence of Taxation

    Impact of taxation is the point on which a tax is originally imposed. In so far as the law is concerned, thetaxpayer is the person who must pay the tax to the government. He is also termed as the statutory

    taxpayer-the one on whom the tax is formally assessed. He is the subject of the tax

    Incidence of taxation is that point on which the tax burden finally rests or settle down. It takes placewhen shifting has been effected from the statutory taxpayer to another.

    Statutory Taxpayer

    The Statutory taxpayer is the person required by law to pay the tax or the one on whom the tax isformally assessed. In short, he or she is the subject of the tax.

    In direct taxes, the statutory taxpayer is the one who shoulders the burden of the tax while in indirecttaxes, the statutory taxpayer is the one who pay the tax to the government but the burden can be

    passed to another person or entity.

    Relationship between impact, shifting, and incidence of a tax

    The impactis the initial phenomenon, the shiftingis the intermediate process, and the incidence is theresult. Thus, the impact in a sales tax (i.e. VAT) is on the seller (manufacturer) who shifts the burden tothe customer who finally bears the incidence of the tax.

    Impact is the imposition of the tax; shifting is the transfer of the tax; while incidence is the setting orcoming to rest of the tax.

    II. CAPITALIZATION

    - Reduction is the price of the taxed object equal to the capitalized value of future taxes on the propertysold

    > This is a special form of backward shifting, where the burden of future taxes which the buyer mayhave to pay is shifted back to the seller in the form of reduction in the selling price

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    III. TRANSFORMATION

    - The manufacturer in an effort to avoid losing his customers, maintains the same selling price andmargin of profit, not by shifting the tax burden to his customers, but by improving his method ofproduction and cutting down or other production cost, thereby transforming the tax into or earn throughthe medium of production.

    IV. TAX AVOIDANCE

    - Also known as tax minimization

    - not punished by law

    - Tax avoidance is the exploitation of the taxpayer of legally permissible alternative tax rates or methodsof assessing taxable property or income in order to avoid or reduce tax liability

    DELPHERS TRADERS CORP vs. IAC (157 SCRA 349)

    > The Supreme Court upheld the estate planning scheme resorted to by the Pacheco family inconverting their property to shares of stock in a corporation which they themselves owned andcontrolled. By virtue of the deed of exchange, the Pacheco co-owners saved on inheritance taxes. TheSupreme Court said the records do not point anything wrong and objectionable about this estateplanning scheme resorted to. The legal right of the taxpayer to decrease the amount of what otherwisecould be his taxes or altogether avoid them by means which the law permits cannot be doubted.

    Example:

    Following the holding period rule in capital gains transaction, by postponing the sale of the capital assetuntil after twelve months from date of acquisition you can reduce the tax on the capital gains by 50%

    V. TAX EXEMPTION

    Tax Exemption

    It is the grant of immunity to particular persons or corporations or to persons or corporations of aparticular class from a tax which persons and corporations generally within the same state or taxingdistrict are obliged to pay. It is an immunity or privilege; it is freedom from a financial charge or burdento which others are subjected.

    Exemption is allowed only if there is a clear provision there for.

    It is not necessarily discriminatory as long as there is a reasonable foundation or rational basis.

    Exemptions are not presumed, but when public property is involved, exemption is the rule and taxationis the exemption.

    Rationale for granting tax exemptions

    Its avowed purpose is some public benefit or interests which the lawmaking body considers sufficient tooffset the monetary loss entailed in the grant of the exemption.

    The theory behind the grant of tax exemptions is that such act will benefit the body of the people. It is

    not based on the idea of lessening the burden of the individual owners of property.

    Grounds for granting tax exemptions

    1) May be based on contract. In such a case, the public, which is represented by the government is supposedto receive a full equivalent therefor, i.e. charter of a corporation.

    2) May be based on some ground of public policy, i.e., to encourage new industries or to foster charitableinstitutions. Here, the government need not receive any consideration in return for the tax exemption.

    3) May be based on grounds of reciprocity or to lessen the rigors of international double or multiple taxation

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    Note: Equity is not a ground for tax exemption. Exemption is allowed only if there is a clear provision therefor.

    Nature of tax exemption

    1) It is a mere personal privilege of the grantee.

    2) It is generally revocable by the government unless the exemption is founded on a contract which is contract

    which is protected from impairment.

    3) It implies a waiver on the part of the government of its right to collect what otherwise would be due to it, andso is prejudicial thereto.

    4) It is not necessarily discriminatory so long as the exemption has a reasonable foundation or rational basis.

    5) It is not transferable except if the law expressly provides so.

    Kinds of tax exemption according to manner of creation

    1) Express or affirmative exemption

    When certain persons, property or transactions are, by express provision, exempted from all certaintaxes, either entirely or in part.

    2) Implied exemption or exemption by omissionWhen a tax is levied on certain classes of persons, properties, or transactions without mentioning the

    other classes.

    Every tax statute makes exemptions because of omissions.

    No tax exemption by implication

    It must be expressed in clear and unmistakable language

    CALTEX vs. COA

    > In claiming tax exemption, the burden of proof lies upon the claimant

    It cannot be created by mere implication

    It cannot be presumed that you are entitled to tax exemption

    You must prove it

    RULE:

    - Taxation is the rule and exemption is the exception

    PROPERTY TAX GOVERNMENT PROPERTY

    > Properties owned by the government whether in their proprietary or governmental capacity areexempt from real estate tax

    TEST:

    - OWNERSHIP

    > Once established that it belongs to the government, the nature of the use of the property whetherproprietary or sovereign becomes immaterial.

    > Exemption of public property from taxation does not extend to improvements therein made byoccupants or claimants at their own expense.

    KINDS OF TAX EXEMPTIONS ACCORDING TO SCOPE OR EXTENT

    1) TOTAL

    - When certain persons, property or transactions are exempted, expressly or impliedly from all taxes

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    2) PARTIAL

    - When certain persons, property or transactions are exempted, expressly or impliedly from certain taxes,either entirely or in part.

    3) There can be no simultaneous exemptions under two laws, when one grants partial exemption while othergrants total exemption.

    Does provision in a statute granting exemption from all taxes include indirect taxes?

    NO. As a general rule, indirect taxes are not included in the grant of such exemption unless it isexpressly stated.

    Nature of power to grant tax exemption

    1) National government

    The power to grant tax exemptions is an attribute of sovereignty for the power to prescribe who or whatpersons or property shall not be taxed.

    It is inherent in the exercise of the power to tax that the sovereign state be free to select the subjects oftaxation and to grant exemptions therefrom.

    Unless restricted by the Constitution, the legislative power to exempt is as broad as its power to tax.

    2) Local governments

    Municipal corporations are clothed with no inherent power to tax or grant tax exemptions. But the momentthe power to impose a particular tax is granted, they also have the power to grant exemption therefrom unlessforbidden by some