Tambunting Vs CIR

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Republic of the Philippines

SUPREME COURT
Manila

FIRST DIVISION

G.R. No. 179085 January 21, 2010

TAMBUNTING PAWNSHOP, INC., Petitioner,


vs.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent.

- - - - MISSING PART - - - 1

Petitioner protested the assessment.2 As the protest merited no response, it filed


a Petition for Review 3 with the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) pursuant to Section
228 of the National Internal Revenue Code,4 raising the following arguments:

A. Pawnshops are not subject to Value Added Tax pursuant to Section 108
of the National Internal Revenue Code.5

B. Petitioner properly withheld and remitted to the respondent the correct amount
of expanded withholding tax for taxable year 1999.6

C. Petitioner has already paid the assessed amount of ₱14,398.38 [sic],


representing deficiency withholding tax on compensation, thus, assessment on
withholding on compensation must be cancelled.7

D. Petitioner's pawn tickets are not subject to documentary stamp tax pursuant to
existing laws and jurisprudence.8 (emphasis and underscoring in the original)

The First Division of the CTA ruled that petitioner is liable for VAT and documentary
stamp tax but not for withholding tax on compensation and expanded withholding
tax.9 Thus it disposed:

WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Petition for Review is PARTIALLY GRANTED.


Respondent's assessments for deficiency Expanded Withholding Tax and Withholding
Tax on Compensation for the taxable year 1999, in the amounts of Twenty One
Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty Three and 75/100 Pesos (P21,723.75) and Sixty
Seven Thousand Two Hundred One and 55/100 Pesos (P67,201.55), respectively, are
hereby CANCELLED and SET ASIDE. However, the assessments for deficiency Value-
Added Tax and Documentary Stamp Tax are hereby AFFIRMED.

Accordingly, petitioner is ORDERED TO PAY the respondent the amount of Three


Million Fifty Five Thousand Five Hundred Sixty Four and 34/100 Pesos (P3,055,564.34)
and Four Hundred Six Thousand Ninety Two and 500/100 Pesos (P406,092.50)

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representing deficiency Value-Added Tax and Documentary Stamp Tax, respectively,
for the taxable year 1999, plus 20% delinquency interest from February 18, 2003 up to
the time such amount is fully paid pursuant to Section 249 (c) of the 1997 NIRC.

SO ORDERED.10 (emphasis in the original; underscoring supplied)

Petitioner's Motion for Partial Reconsideration11 having been denied,12 it filed a Petition
for Review13 before the CTA En Banc which dismissed14 it as it did petitioner's Motion
for Reconsideration.15

Hence, the present Petition for Review on Certiorari. 16

To petitioner, a pawnshop is not enumerated as one of those engaged in "sale or


exchange of services"17 in Section 108 of the National Internal Revenue Code.18 Citing
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Michel J. Lhuillier Pawnshops, Inc., 19 it contends
that the nature of the business of pawnshops does not fall under "service" as defined
under the Legal Thesaurus of William C. Burton, viz:

accommodate, administer to, advance, afford, aid, assist, attend, be of use, care for,
come to the aid of, commodere, comply, confer a benefit, contribute to, cooperate,
deservire, discharge one's duty, do a service, do one's bidding, fill an office, forward,
furnish aid, furnish assistance, give help, lend, aid, minister to, promote, render help,
servire, submit, succor, supply aid, take care of, tend, wait on, work for. 20

The petition is in part meritorious.

On the issue of whether pawnshops are liable to pay VAT, the Court, in First Planters
Pawnshop, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 21 held:

In fine, prior to the [passage of the] EVAT Law [in 1994], pawnshops were treated as
lending investors subject to lending investor's tax. Subsequently, with the Court's ruling
in Lhuillier, pawnshops were then treated as VAT-able enterprises under the general
classification of "sale or exchange of services" under Section 108 (A) of the Tax Code of
1997, as amended. R.A. No. 9238 [which was passed in 2004] finally classified
pawnshops as Other Non-bank Financial Intermediaries.

The Court finds that pawnshops should have been treated as non-bank financial
intermediaries from the very beginning, subject to the appropriate taxes provided by
law, thus -

• Under the National Internal Revenue Code of 1977, pawnshops should have
been levied the 5% percentage tax on gross receipts imposed on bank and non-
bank financial intermediaries under Section 119 (now Section 121 of the Tax
Code of 1997);

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• With the imposition of the VAT under R.A. No. 7716 or the EVAT Law,
pawnshops should have been subjected to the 10% VAT imposed on banks and
non-bank financial intermediaries and financial institutions under Section 102 of
the Tax Code of 1977 (now Section 108 of the Tax Code of 1997);

• This was restated by R.A. No. 8241, 24 which amended R.A. No. 7716,
although the levy, collection and assessment of the 10% VAT on services
rendered by banks, non-bank financial intermediaries, finance companies, and
other financial intermediaries not performing quasi-banking functions, were made
effective January 1, 1998;

• R.A. No. 8424 or the Tax Reform Act of 1997 26 likewise imposed a 10% VAT
under Section 108 but the levy, collection and assessment thereof were again
deferred until December 31, 1999;

• The levy, collection and assessment of the 10% VAT was further deferred by
R.A. No. 8761 until December 31, 2000, and by R.A. No. 9010, until December
31, 2002;

• With no further deferments given by law, the levy, collection and assessment of
the 10% VAT on banks, non-bank financial intermediaries, finance companies,
and other financial intermediaries not performing quasi-banking functions were
finally made effective beginning January 1, 2003;

• Finally, with the enactment of R.A. No. 9238 in 2004, the services of banks,
non-bank financial intermediaries, finance companies, and other financial
intermediaries not performing quasi-banking functions were specifically
exempted from VAT, 28 and the 0% to 5% percentage tax on gross receipts on
other non-bank financial intermediaries was reimposed under Section 122 of the
Tax Code of 1997.

At the time of the disputed assessment, that is, for the year 2000, pawnshops were not
subject to 10% VAT under the general provision on "sale or exchange of services" as
defined under Section 108 (A) of the Tax Code of 1997, which states: "'sale or
exchange of services' means the performance of all kinds of services in the Philippines
for others for a fee, remuneration or consideration . . . ." Instead, due to the specific
nature of its business, pawnshops were then subject to 10% VAT under the category of
non-bank financial intermediaries[.]

Coming now to the issue at hand - Since petitioner is a non-bank financial intermediary,
it is subject to 10% VAT for the tax years 1996 to 2002; however, with the levy,
assessment and collection of VAT from non-bank financial intermediaries being
specifically deferred by law, then petitioner is not liable for VAT during these tax years.
But with the full implementation of the VAT system on non-bank financial intermediaries
starting January 1, 2003, petitioner is liable for 10% VAT for said tax year.
And beginning 2004 up to the present, by virtue of R.A. No. 9238, petitioner is no longer

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liable for VAT but it is subject to percentage tax on gross receipts from 0% to 5%, as the
case may be. (emphasis and underscoring supplied)

In light of the foregoing ruling, since the imposition of VAT on pawnshops, which are
non-bank financial intermediaries, was deferred for the tax years 1996 to 2002,
petitioner is not liable for VAT for the tax year 1999.

In dodging liability for documentary stamp tax on its pawn tickets, petitioner argues that
such tickets are neither securities nor printed evidence of indebtedness. 22 The argument
fails.

Section 195 of the National Internal Revenue Code provides:

Section 195. On every mortgage or pledge of lands, estate or property, real or personal,
heritable or movable, whatsoever, where the same shall be made as a security for the
payment of any definite and certain sum of money lent at the time or previously due and
owing or forborne to be paid, being payable, and on any conveyance of land, estate, or
property whatsoever, in trust or to be sold, or otherwise converted into money which
shall be and intended only as security, either by express stipulation or otherwise, there
shall be collected a documentary stamp tax x x x. (underscoring supplied)

Construing this provision vis a vis pawn tickets, the Court held in Michel J. Lhuillier
Pawnshop, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue:

x x x A D[ocumentary] S[tamp] T[ax] is an excise tax on the exercise of a right or


privilege to transfer obligations, rights or properties incident thereto. x x x

xxxx

Pledge is among the privileges, the exercise of which is subject to DST. A pledge may
be defined as an accessory, real and unilateral contract by virtue of which the debtor or
a third person delivers to the creditor or to a third person movable property as security
for the performance of the principal obligation, upon the fulfillment of which the thing
pledged, with all its accessions and accessories, shall be returned to the debtor or to
the third person. This is essentially the business of pawnshops which are defined under
Section 3 of Presidential Decree No. 114, or the Pawnshop Regulation Act, as persons
or entities engaged in lending money on personal property delivered as security for
loans.

xxxx

Section 3 of the Pawnshop Regulation Act defines a pawn ticket as follows:

"Pawn ticket" is the pawnbrokers' receipt for a pawn. It is neither a security nor a printed
evidence of indebtedness."

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True, the law does not consider said ticket as an evidence of security or indebtedness.
However, for purposes of taxation, the same pawn ticket is proof of an exercise of a
taxable privilege of concluding a contract of pledge. There is therefore no basis in
petitioner's assertion that a DST is literally a tax on a document and that no tax may be
imposed on a pawn ticket.23 (emphasis and underscoring supplied)1avvphi1

With respect to petitioner's argument against liability for surcharges and interest - that it
was in good faith in not paying documentary stamp taxes, it having relied on the rulings
of respondent CIR and the CTA that pawn tickets are not subject to documentary stamp
taxes24 - the Court finds the same meritorious.

It is settled that good faith and honest belief that one is not subject to tax on the basis of
previous interpretations of government agencies tasked to implement the tax law are
sufficient justification to delete the imposition of surcharges and interest.25

WHEREFORE, the petition is IN PART GRANTED. The May 24, 2007 Decision of the
Court of Tax Appeals is AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATION that the assessment
deficiency value-added taxes for the taxable year 1999 and for surcharges and
delinquency interest on deficient Value-Added Tax and Documentary Income Tax are
SET ASIDE.

SO ORDERED.

CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES


Associate Justice

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