G.R. No. 215159, July 5, 2022,
♦ Decision, Lopez, [J]
♦ Dissenting Opinion, Caguioa, [J]
♦ Dissent, Lazaro-Javier, [J]


Manila

EN BANC

[ G.R. No. 215159. July 05, 2022 ]

CHEVRON HOLDINGS, INC. (FORMERLY CALTEX ASIA LIMITED), PETITIONER, VS. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.

D E C I S I O N

LOPEZ, M., J.:

The Court will not deny the request for a refund of unutilized input Value-Added Tax (VAT) from zero-rated sales on the basis that the taxpayer does not have "excess" input VAT from the output VAT when the law does not require its compliance with the taxpayer to be entitled to a refund. The Court may not construe a statute that is free from doubt; neither can we impose conditions nor limitations when none is provided for.1

This resolves the Petition for Review on Certiorari2 under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court assailing the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) En Banc's Decision3 dated May 6, 2014, and Amended Decision4 dated October 28, 2014, in CTA EB No. 940, which ordered the refund or issuance of tax credit certificate in favor of Chevron Holdings, Inc. in the amount of P47,409.24, representing unutilized input tax attributable to zero-rated sales for the period from January 1 to December 31, 2006.

ANTECEDENTS

Chevron Holdings is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, United States of America. It is licensed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to transact business in the Philippines as a Regional Operating Headquarter (ROHQ) that will provide the following services to its affiliates, subsidiaries, or branches in the Asia-Pacific, North American, and African Regions: general administration and planning, business planning and coordination, sourcing and procurement of raw materials and components, corporate finance advisory services, marketing control, and sales promotion, training and personnel management, logistics services, research and development services, and product development, technical support and maintenance, data processing and communications, and business development.5 It is registered with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) as a VAT taxpayer.

For the taxable year 2006, Chevron Holdings rendered services to its affiliates in the Philippines and abroad. The services rendered to foreign affiliates were subjected to the zero percent (0%) rate, while those rendered to its Philippine affiliates to the regular twelve percent (12%) rate. It also incurred input taxes on purchases of goods and services concerning these services, as follows:6

Quarter Zero-rated Sales Sales subject to 12% VAT Output tax Purchases Input tax
1st 308,477,292.31 4,687,290.75 469,047.07 138,964,203.52 5,473,352.33
2nd 237,013,773.09 35,386,665.52 3,852,895.48 71,796,630.97 6,843,948.53
3rd 271,095,515.06 28,405,325.59 3,408,639.07 102,044,300.16 7,144,030.57
4th 459,971,366.03 41,180,817.13 4,941,698.06 247,874,770.08 20,690,791.66

The input taxes were allocated proportionately, as follows:

1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Quarter
VAT-able sales 4,687,290.75 35,386,665.52 28,405,325.59 41,180,817.13
Zero-rated sales 308,477,292.31 237,013,773.09 271,095,515.06 459,971,366.03
Total 313,164,583.06 272,400,438.61 299,500,840.65 501,152,183.16
Zero-rated sales / Total sales 98.50% 87.01% 90.52% 91.78%
Multiply by input tax 5,473,352.33 6,843,948.53 7,144,030.57 20,690,791.66
Input tax from zero-rated sales 5,391,252.04 5,954,919.62 6,466,776.47 18,990,008.50

The input taxes attributable to zero-rated sales were not credited against output taxes because of the substantial amounts of input taxes carried forward from the previous quarters. Chevron Holdings declared in its Amended Quarterly VAT Return for the fourth quarter of 2005 the amount of P55,784,357.71 as excess input tax.7

On March 28, 2008, Chevron Holdings filed an administrative claim for refund or issuance of a tax credit certificate on the unutilized input VAT attributable to the sale of services to its foreign affiliates. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) failed to act on the claim; hence, on April 24, 2008, Chevron Holdings filed a Petition for Review before the CTA Division8 (docketed as CTA Case No. 7776) for the refund or credit of excess input VAT for the first quarter of 2006 in the amount of P5,391,252.04. On July 23, 2008, Chevron Holdings again filed a Petition for Review9 (docketed as CTA Case No. 7813) for the refund or credit of P31,411,704.68 excess input VAT for the second to fourth quarters.

The two cases were consolidated, and thereafter, a trial ensued.

Chevron Holdings formally offered the following evidence to prove that it rendered services to non-resident entities engaged in business outside the Philippines: (a) SEC Certificates of Non-Registration of Corporation;10 (b) Service Agreements;11 (c) Memorandum and/or Articles of Association, or Articles/Certificates of Incorporation, or Certificate of Change of Name, Company Profile, Certificate Confirming Incorporation, and printed screenshots of United States (US) SEC website for company filings;12 (c) summary and photocopies of zero-rated official receipts;13 and (d) Monthly and Quarterly VAT Returns for 2006.14 Likewise, it offered the Certificate of Inward Remittance15 dated June 30, 2009 from J.P. Morgan Chase N.A. (JP Morgan), to prove that the services rendered to foreign affiliates were paid for in acceptable foreign currency duly accounted for in accordance with Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) rules and regulations and were inwardly remitted into Chevron Holdings' bank account in the Philippines.

In its Decision16 dated June 6, 2012, the CTA Division denied the two petitions for being prematurely filed. Since the administrative claim for refund was filed on March 28, 2008, the CIR had one hundred twenty (120) days, or until July 26, 2008, to act on the request. Chevron Holdings filed its judicial claim on April 24, 2008, for the first quarter and on July 23, 2008, for the second to fourth quarters. Clearly, both petitions are premature.

Chevron Holdings' Motion for Reconsideration was denied;17 hence, it elevated the matter to the CTA En Banc and docketed as CTA EB No. 940.

On May 6, 2014, the CTA En Banc rendered its Decision18 reversing the CTA Division and partly granting Chevron Holdings' petitions. The CTA En Banc held that the judicial claims were timely filed. Chevron Holdings benefited from the Court's ruling in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. San Roque Power Corporation19 since the administrative and judicial claims were all filed during the period of validity of BIR Ruling No. DA-489-03.20

As regards input VAT attributable to zero-rated sales, the CTA En Banc ruled that only P155,654,748.2221 qualified for VAT zero-rating of sales of services to non-resident foreign affiliate clients under Section 108 (B)(2)22 of the 1997 National Internal Revenue Code, as amended (Tax Code).23 The CTA En Banc held that to be considered as a non-resident foreign corporation doing business outside the Philippines, each entity must be supported by both SEC Certificate of Non-Registration and Certificate or Article of foreign incorporation/association or printed screenshots of the United States (US) SEC website showing the state/province/country where the entity was organized. The CTA En Banc observed that some of the foreign affiliate clients were not adequately supported by these two documents. The CTA En Banc added that VAT official receipts issued to foreign affiliates must have the corresponding foreign currency inward remittances. Sales in the amount of P10,025,869.35 did not have the required inward remittances.

The CTA En Banc ruled that only P9,081,815.0024 was valid input VAT. It disallowed the P774,415.38 for having no supporting VAT invoices or official receipts and the P25,883,884.54 for failure to comply with the invoicing requirements under the Tax Code.

After comparing the reported output taxes from the substantiated input taxes, the CTA En Banc observed that there was no excess input VAT that may be the subject of a claim for refund or tax credit for the second, third, and fourth quarters of 2006, while the excess input tax of P807,609.07 for the first quarter shall be allocated to Chevron Holding's valid zero-rated sales; thus, only P15,085.24 shall be refundable, viz.:25

1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Quarter Total
VAT-able sales 469,047.07 3,852,895.48 3,408,639.07 4,941,698.06 12,672,279.68
Zero-rated sales 1,276,656.14 1,650,503.65 1,860,385.53 4,294,269.68 9,081,815.00
Total (807,609.07) 2,202,391.83 1,548,253.54 647,428.38 3,590,464.68

Valid zero-rated sales 5,762,011.70

Divided by: Declared zero-rated sales 308,477,292.31

Multiplied by excess input VAT 807,609.07

Refundable excess input VAT attributable to valid zero-rated sales 15,085.24

The CTA En Banc ruled that the input tax carry-over of P56,564,096.7726 reported in the Quarterly VAT Return for the first quarter cannot be validly applied against the output tax for the year 2006 because Chevron Holdings failed to present VAT invoices or receipts to prove its existence.

The CTA En Banc disposed:

WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the instant Petition for Review is hereby PARTIALLY GRANTED. The Decision dated June 6, 2012 and Resolution dated September 7, 2012[,] are hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE.

Accordingly, respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue is hereby ORDERED TO REFUND OR ISSUE A TAX CREDIT CERTIFICATE in favor of petitioner Chevron Holdings, Inc. in the amount of Fifteen Thousand Eighty[-]Five Pesos and Twenty Four Centavos ([P]15,085.24) representing unutilized excess input VAT for the first quarter of 2006 which is attributable to its zero-rated sales for the same period.

SO ORDERED.27 (Emphases in the original.)

Chevron Holdings sought reconsideration.28 On October 28, 2014, the CTA En Banc issued an Amended Decision29 reiterating that, on its own, the Certification of Non-Registration of Corporation/Partnership is insufficient to prove that the foreign affiliate was outside the Philippines when the services were rendered. The CTA En Banc observed that Chevron Holdings admitted that the Certificate of Inward Remittance issued by JP Morgan did not reflect the payment of P10,025,869.35; hence, it should be disallowed as a zero-rated sale. The CTA En Banc reconsidered some input taxes that were previously disallowed and disposed of:

WHEREFORE, petitioner's Motion for Partial Reconsideration is hereby PARTIALLY GRANTED. The Decision dated May 6, 2014[,] is hereby AMENDED to reflect the additional amount allowed for refund or issuance of a tax credit certificate in the amount of Forty[-]Seven Thousand Four Hundred Nine and Twenty Four Centavos ([P]47,409.24), representing the unutilized excess input VAT for the first quarter of 2006 which is attributable to its zero-rated sales for the same period.

SO ORDERED.30 (Emphases in the original.)

Unsatisfied, Chevron Holdings filed the instant petition before the Court, raising the following as issues:

I.

WHETHER OR NOT CHEVRON HOLDINGS' SALE OF SERVICES TO ITS FOREIGN AFFILIATES QUALIFY [sic] AS ZERO-RATED.

II.

WHETHER OR NOT THE AMOUNT OF [P]10,025,869.35 WAS INWARDLY REMITTED IN ACCEPTABLE FOREIGN CURRENCY.

III.

WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT EN BANC ERRED IN NOT RECOGNIZING THE EXCESS INPUT VAT CARRIED OVER FROM PREVIOUS QUARTERS TO COVER CHEVRON HOLDINGS' OUTPUT VAT LIABILITY FOR THE YEAR 2006.

IV.

WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT EN BANC ERRED IN DISALLOWING THE REFUND OF CHEVRON HOLDINGS' EXCESS AND UNUTILIZED INPUT VAT IN THE AMOUNT OF [P]24,598,395.58.31

Chevron Holdings insists that sales made to its non-resident foreign affiliates qualify for VAT zero-rating. It proffers that Section 108 (B)(2) of the Tax Code enumerates two (2) kinds of zero-rated customers; those engaged in business; and those not engaged in business in the Philippines. In both cases, the customers must be outside the Philippines when the services were performed. Thus, as long as the taxpayer-claimant proved that its customers were located outside the Philippines when the services were performed, the transaction shall be deemed zero-rated. The fact of doing business abroad is inconsequential. Chevron Holdings avers that for the year 2006, it rendered services to foreign affiliates located outside the Philippines when the services were performed.32

Further, Chevron Holdings repeats that while the Certificate of Inward Remittance does not reflect the payment of P10,025,869.35, the JP Morgan Insight Information Manager Summary/Long Description Reports prove that Chevron Holdings received the inward remittances in acceptable foreign currency. Thus, the P10,025,869.35 amount should be admitted as part of its zero-rated sales.

Anent the disallowance of P55,784,357.71 on excess input taxes carried over from previous quarters, Chevron Holdings argues that the parties already stipulated that Chevron Holdings declared the amount in its Amended Quarterly VAT Return for the fourth quarter of 2005. It was, thus, erroneous for the CTA En Banc to require it to substantiate the amount. Besides, Section 112 (A) of the Tax Code does not require substantiation of carried-over input taxes as a condition for the refund of excess input taxes incurred within the period of the claim.

Chevron Holdings also faults the CTA in charging against the output taxes the validated input taxes and ruling that only if there exist excess input taxes from the output taxes that it may be entitled to a refund. Chevron Holdings avers that the Tax Code allows the taxpayer to refund the unutilized input taxes attributable to zero-rated rates and not apply them against its output tax liabilities.

Finally, Chevron Holdings posits that the CTA En Banc should have allowed the amount of P24,598,395.58 as input VAT because there was no intrinsic evil in not indicating the VAT as a separate item. The CIR previously mandated in Revenue Regulations (RR) No. 8-9933 that the amount appearing on the sales invoice or receipt shall be deemed inclusive of VAT.

Through the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), the CIR merely reiterated the ruling and discussion of the CTA En Banc in its Comment34 dated May 21, 2015. Chevron Holdings filed a Reply on October 28, 2016.35

ISSUES

Essentially, the issues may be summarized as follows: (1) whether the sales rendered to Chevron Holdings' non-resident foreign affiliates qualify for VAT zero-rating under Section 108 (B)(2) of the Tax Code; (2) whether Chevron Holdings is required to substantiate its excess input tax carried-over from the previous quarters in the amount of P55,784,357.71 to be entitled to refund or credit of unutilized input taxes arising from zero-rated sales from January 1 to December 31, 2006; and (3) whether the CTA En Banc properly charged against Chevron Holdings' output tax liabilities the validated input taxes and only when there existed excess input taxes that it allows the refund.

RULING

The petition is partly meritorious.

Under Section 112 (A)36 of the Tax Code, the taxpayer may claim for refund or issuance of tax credit certificate of unutilized input VAT attributable to zero-rated sales subject to the following conditions: (1) the taxpayer is VAT-registered; (2) the taxpayer is engaged in zero-rated or effectively zero-rated sales; (3) the claim must be filed within two (2) years after the close of the taxable quarter when such sales were made; and (4) the creditable input tax due or paid must be attributable to such sales, except the transitional input tax, to the extent that such input tax has not been applied against the output tax.37

It is settled that Chevron Holdings is a VAT-registered taxpayer and that it timely filed the administrative and judicial claims for refund of input tax for the first quarter and second to fourth quarters of 2006. The dispute hinges on the second and fourth requisites.

Chevron Holdings failed to prove that certain services to non-resident foreign affiliate clients qualify for VAT zero-rating under Section 108 (B)(2) of the Tax Code.

Chevron Holdings claims that services rendered to foreign affiliates during 2006 are subject to the zero percent rate under Section 108 (B)(2) of the Tax Code, which states:

Section 108. Value-added Tax on Sale of Services ... — x x x

(B) Transactions Subject to Zero Percent (0%) Rate. — The following services performed in the Philippines by VAT-registered persons shall be subject to [a] zero percent (0%) rate:

x x x x

(2) Services other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraph rendered to a person engaged in business conducted outside the Philippines or to a nonresident person not engaged in business who is outside the Philippines when the services are performed, the consideration for which is paid for in acceptable foreign currency and accounted for in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP); xxx. (Emphases supplied.)

To qualify for VAT zero-rating, Section 108 (B)(2) requires the concurrence of four conditions: first, the services rendered should be other than "processing, manufacturing or repacking of goods;"38 second, the services are performed in the Philippines;39 third, the service-recipient is (a) a person engaged in business conducted outside the Philippines; or (b) a non-resident person not engaged in a business which is outside the Philippines when the services are performed; and, fourth, the services are paid for in acceptable foreign currency inwardly remitted and accounted for in conformity with BSP rules and regulations.40

The first and second requisites are undisputed. As an ROHQ, Chevron Holdings performs services to its affiliates in the Asia-Pacific, North American, and African Regions, such as general administration and planning, business planning and coordination, sourcing and procurement of raw materials and components, corporate finance advisory services, marketing control, and sales promotion, training and personnel management, logistics services, research and development services, and product development, technical support and maintenance, data processing and communications, and business development.41 Certainly, the services it renders in the Philippines are not in the same category as "processing, manufacturing or repacking of goods."

Anent the third requisite, the Court emphasized in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Deutsche Knowledge Services Pte. Ltd.42 that for sales to a non-resident foreign corporation to qualify for zero-rating, the following must be proved: "(1) that their client was established under the laws of a country, not the Philippines or, simply, is not a domestic corporation; and (2) that it is not engaged in trade or business in the Philippines. To be sure, there must be sufficient proof of both of these components: showing not only that the clients are foreign corporations, but also are not doing business in the Philippines."

Therefore, the taxpayer-claimant must present, at the very least, both the SEC Certificates of Non-Registration – to prove that the affiliate is foreign; and the Articles or Certificates of Foreign Incorporation, printed screenshots of US SEC website showing the state/province/country where the entity was organized, or any similar document – to prove the fact of not engaging in trade or business in the Philippines at the time the sales are rendered.43

Here, the CTA En Banc observed that only the following foreign clients were supported by both the SEC Certificates of Non-Registration and the Certificates or Articles of Association or Incorporation or similar document:44

1. Caltex Oil Mauritius, Ltd.

2. Caltex Oil Products Company

3. Caltex Trading Pte, Ltd.

4. Chevron Asia Pacific Pte, Ltd.

5. Chevron Australia Pty., Ltd.

6. Chevron Canada, Ltd.

7. Chevron Global Technology Services

8. Chevron International Exploration Production

9. Chevron Nigeria Limited

10. Chevron Oronite Co.

11. Chevron Products Company

12. Chevron South Africa Pty., Ltd.

13. Chevron Tankers, Ltd.

14. Chevron USA, Inc.

15. Project Resources Company

16. Texaco Netherland BV

Thus, the Court agrees with the observation of the CTA En Banc that some foreign affiliate clients were not adequately supported by these two documents. The Court accords the CTA's factual findings with the utmost respect, if not finality,45 absent any showing of grave abuse of discretion considering that the CTA is in the best position to analyze the documents presented by the parties. We do not find any abuse of discretion here.

As regards the fourth condition, in Intel Technology Philippines, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,46 the Court stressed that the certification of inward remittances proves the fact of payment in acceptable foreign currency and accounted for under the rules and regulations of the BSP. In this case, however, apart from the JP Morgan Reports, which Chevron Holdings readily admitted to being a mere "online application,"47 and VAT zero-rated receipts,48 Chevron Holdings failed to substantiate the inward remittance of the proceeds of P10,025,869.35 sales duly accounted for in conformity with BSP rules. Accordingly, we uphold the disallowance of the amount of P10,025,869.35 as a zero-rated sale.

Chevron Holdings failed to strictly comply with the invoicing requirements under the Tax Code.

The CTA En Banc correctly disallowed P24,598,395.58 as input tax. Section 4.113-1 of RR No. 16-2005,49 in relation to Section 113 (B)(2)50 of the Tax Code, requires the VAT to be separately indicated in the invoice or official receipt, viz.:

Section 4.113-1. Invoicing Requirements. — x x x

(B) Information contained in VAT invoice or VAT official receipt. — The following information shall be indicated in VAT invoice or VAT official receipt: x x x

(2) The total amount which the purchaser pays or is obligated to pay to the seller with the indication that such amount includes the VAT; Provided, That:

(a) The amount of tax shall be shown as a separate item in the invoice or receipt; x x x. (Emphasis supplied.)

Failure to comply with the invoicing requirements is sufficient ground to deny the claim for refund of tax credit.51 The reason for this is simple – only a VAT invoice or official receipt can give rise to input tax; without input tax, there is nothing to refund.52 Therefore, considering that input taxes in the amount of P24,598,395.58 were not shown as a separate item in the invoice or official receipts, these cannot be considered valid input taxes that may be refunded or credited in favor of Chevron Holdings.

Requirements for entitlement to a refund or the issuance of tax credit certificate of unutilized input VAT from zero-rated sales.

The requirements for entitlement to a refund or the issuance of tax credit certificate of unutilized input VAT attributable to zero-rated sales are provided in Section 112 (A) of the Tax Code, which reads:

Section 112. Refunds or Tax Credits of Input Tax. –

(A) Zero-Rated or Effectively Zero-Rated Sales. - Any VAT-registered person, whose sales are zero-rated or effectively zero-rated may, within two (2) years after the close of the taxable quarter when the sales were made, apply for the issuance of a tax credit certificate or refund of creditable input tax due or paid attributable to such sales, except transitional input tax, to the extent that such input tax has not been applied against output tax: Provided, however, That in the case of zero-rated sales under Section 106(A)(2)(a)(1),(2) and (B) and Section 108 (B)(1) and (2), the acceptable foreign currency exchange proceeds thereof had been duly accounted for in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP): Provided, further, That where the taxpayer is engaged in zero-rated or effectively zero-rated sale and also in taxable or exempt sale of goods or properties or services, and the amount of creditable input tax due or paid cannot be directly and entirely attributed to any one of the transactions, it shall be allocated proportionately on the basis of the volume of sales. x x x (Emphases supplied.)

Thus, to be refunded or issued a tax credit certificate, the following must be complied with: (1) the input tax is a creditable input tax due or paid; (2) the input tax is attributable to the zero-rated sales; (3) the input tax is not transitional; (4) the input tax was not applied against the output tax; and (5) in case the taxpayer is engaged in mixed transactions i.e., VAT-able, exempt, and zero-rated sales and the input taxes cannot be directly and entirely attributable to any of these transactions, only the input taxes proportionately allocated to zero-rated sales based on sales volume may be refunded or issued a tax credit certificate.53

The first, second, third, and fifth requisites have been established. Only the amount of P9,081,815.0054 is valid and substantiated creditable input tax, the amount is related to Chevron Holdings' regular and zero-rated sales from January 1 to December 31, 2006, and the input taxes are not transitional. Further, the CTA allocated the validated input taxes to the zero-rated sales based on sales volume.

The dispute lies with the fourth requirement.

The CTA En Banc ruled that the amounts of P3,645,615.75 (input tax carried over from the previous quarter), P52,138,741.96 (transitional input tax), and P779,739.06 (others), or a total of P56,564,096.77, cannot be validly applied against output taxes for the second, third, and fourth quarters because Chevron Holdings failed to present VAT invoices and receipts to prove that these were incurred or paid.55 Thereafter, the CTA charged the substantiated and validated input taxes against the output taxes, and only after finding that there existed excess input taxes from the output taxes did the CTA conclude that Chevron Holdings might be entitled to a refund. It seemed that the tax court required Chevron Holdings to substantiate its prior quarters' excess input taxes so that there would be a sufficient amount to cover its output tax liability, and, only after the output tax had been paid or "covered" that the CTA allowed a refund.

The Court cannot adhere to this view.

A brief review of the principles underlying the Philippine VAT system is in order. The VAT was introduced to the Philippine taxation system in 1987 through Executive Order No. 27356 to simplify tax administration and make the tax system more equitable. Under the Philippine VAT system, it is the end-user of consumer goods or services that ultimately shoulders the tax because the liability is passed on to them by the providers of these goods or services.57 The end-users, in turn, may deduct their VAT liability (or input tax) from the VAT payments they receive from the final consumers (or output VAT).58 One entity's output tax is another person's input tax. This mechanism allows taxpayers to offset the tax they have paid on their purchases of goods and services against the tax they charge on their sales of goods and services. The input-output credit system is consistent with the nature of VAT as a tax levied only on the value-added and to avoid the so-called "tax on tax'' or a cascading effect. Simply put, no tax is imposed on goods or services previously taxed in the chain. The Court explained in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. San Roque Power Corp.,59 to wit:

As its name implies, the Value-Added Tax system is a tax on the value added by the taxpayer in the chain of transactions. For simplicity and efficiency in tax collection, the VAT is imposed not just on the value added by the taxpayer, but on the entire selling price of his goods, properties[,] or services. However, the taxpayer is allowed a refund or credit on the VAT previously paid by those who sold him the inputs for his goods, properties, or services. The net effect is that the taxpayer pays the VAT only on the value that he adds to the goods, properties, or services that he actually sells.

Thus, the seller-taxpayer pays to the government only the "excess" of the output VAT from the input VAT or the tax on the value that he adds to the goods and services that he is selling. If the taxpayer had more creditable input taxes60 than output taxes in a given period, the excess shall be carried forward to the succeeding periods and applied against its future output VAT.61

It must be stressed that the taxpayer can charge its input tax only against its output tax.62 The taxpayer cannot ask for a refund of or credit against its other internal revenue tax liabilities the "excess" input tax because the tax is not an excessively collected tax under Section 229 of the Tax Code.63 And, even if the “excess" input tax is in fact "excessively" collected, the person who can file the judicial claim for refund is the person legally liable to pay the input tax, not the person to whom the tax was passed on as part of the purchase price.64 The taxpayer will be entitled to the refund or tax credit of the "excess" and unused input tax only when its VAT registration is cancelled.65

This rule, however, is not absolute. Sections 110 (B) and 112 (A) of the Tax Code read in part below:

Section. 110. Tax Credits. — x x x

(B) Excess Output or Input Tax. — If at the end of any taxable quarter the output tax exceeds the input tax, the excess shall be paid by the VAT-registered person. If the input tax exceeds the output tax, the excess shall be carried over to the succeeding quarter or quarters: Provided, however, That any input tax attributable to zero-rated sales by a VAT-registered person may at his option be refunded or credited against other internal revenue taxes, subject to the provisions of Section 112.66 (Emphasis supplied.)

Section 112. Refunds or Tax Credits of Input Tax. –

(A) Zero-Rated or Effectively Zero-Rated Sales. – Any VAT-registered person, whose sales are zero-rated or effectively zero-rated may, within two (2) years after the close of the taxable quarter when the sales were made, apply for the issuance of a tax credit certificate or refund of creditable input tax due or paid attributable to such sales, except transitional input tax, to the extent that such input tax has not been applied against output tax: x x x. (Emphasis supplied.)

Thus, the input tax attributable to zero-rated sales may, at the option of the VAT-registered taxpayer, be: (1) charged against output tax from regular 12% VAT-able sales, and any unutilized or "excess" input tax may be claimed for refund or the issuance of tax credit certificate; or (2) claimed for refund or tax credit in its entirety. It must be stressed that the remedies of charging the input tax against the output tax and applying for a refund or tax credit are alternative and cumulative. Furthermore, the option is vested with the taxpayer-claimant. It goes without saying that the CTA, and even the Court, may not, on its own, deduct the input tax attributable to zero-rated sales from the output tax derived from the regular twelve percent (12%) VAT-able sales first and use the resultant amount as the basis in computing the allowable amount for refund. The courts cannot condition the refund of input taxes allocable to zero-rated sales on the existence of "excess" creditable input taxes, which includes the input taxes carried over from the previous periods,67 from the output taxes. These procedures find no basis in law and jurisprudence.

We explain.

First, Section 112 (A) of the Tax Code merely requires that the input tax claimed for refund or the issuance of tax credit certificate "has not been applied against [the] output tax[.]" Section 4.112-1 (a) of RR No. 16-2005 states that "[t]he input tax that may be subject of the claim shall exclude the portion of input tax that has been applied against the output tax." In Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Taganito Mining Corp.,68 we held:

x x x Section 112 (A) of the Tax Code of 1997, as amended, states that, "[a]ny VAT-registered person, whose sales are zero-rated or effectively zero-rated may x x x apply for the issuance of a tax credit certificate or refund of creditable input tax due or paid attributable to such sales x x x to the extent that such input tax has not been applied against output tax." This means that input VAT attributable to zero-rated sales may, at the option of the taxpayer, be (a) applied directly against output VAT due on other transactions, or (b) claimed as tax refund/credit. The second option is the only one available for taxpayers whose transactions are 100% zero-rated as it will not have any output VAT against which it may apply its input VAT. It may also be the more favorable option for taxpayers with mixed transactions as the refunded amount will be cash on hand, while the TCC issued may be applied to all national internal revenue taxes (not just limited to output VAT). When the taxpayer avails itself of the second option, it must prove that it has not previously availed itself of the first option. The necessary implication of all this is that input VAT attributable to zero-rated sales is still creditable input VAT, and having the second option available to the taxpayer does not change its nature. (Emphases supplied.)

The law and rules are clear and need no interpretation. The taxpayer only needs to prove non-application or non-charging of the input-VAT subject of the claim. There is nothing in the law and rules that mandate the taxpayer to deduct the input tax attributable to zero-rated sales from the output tax from regular twelve percent (12%) VAT-able sales first and only the "excess" may be refunded or issued a tax credit certificate. To reiterate, these remedies accorded by law to the taxpayer are alternatives. Requiring taxpayers to prove that they did not charge the input tax claimed for refund against the output tax is one thing; requiring them to prove that they have "excess" input tax after offsetting it from output tax is another. The former is essential to the entitlement of the refund under Section 112 (A); the latter is not. The reason is that a taxpayer who enjoyed a lower (or zero) output tax payable because it deducted the input tax from zero-rated sales from the output tax cannot benefit twice by applying for the refund or tax credit of the same input tax used to reduce its output tax liability. Proof of non-charging the input tax subject to the refund or credit against the output tax is to avert double recovery.

The foregoing interpretation is consistent with Section 110 (C) of the Tax Code and Section 4.110-5 of RR No. 16-2005 which prescribe the method for computing the total creditable input tax chargeable against the output tax, viz.:

[Section 110 (C), Tax Code]

(C) Determination of Creditable Input Tax. — The sum of the excess input tax carried over from the preceding month or quarter and the input tax creditable to a VAT-registered person during the taxable month or quarter shall be reduced by the amount of claim for refund or tax credit for value-added tax and other adjustments, such as purchase returns or allowances and input tax attributable to exempt sale.

x x x x (Emphases supplied.)

[Section 4.110-5, RR No. 16-2005

(C) SECTION 4.110-5. Determination of Input Tax Creditable during a Taxable Month or Quarter. — The amount of input taxes creditable during a month or quarter shall be determined in the manner illustrated above by adding all creditable input taxes arising from the transactions enumerated under the preceding subsections of Sec. 4.110 during the month or quarter plus any amount of input tax carried-over from the preceding month or quarter, reduced by the amount of claim for VAT refund or tax credit certificate (whether filed with the BIR, the Department of Finance, the Board of Investments or the BOC) and other adjustments, such as purchases returns or allowances, input tax attributable to exempt sales and input tax attributable to sales subject to final VAT withholding. (Emphases supplied.)

The total creditable input tax is computed as follows:69

Input tax incurred for the quarter xxx
Input tax carried over from the previous quarter xxx
Input tax-deferred on capital goods exceeding 1 million from the previous quarter xxx
Transitional input tax xxx
Presumptive input tax (xxx)
Total Available Input Tax xxx
Less:
Input tax on purchases of capital goods exceeding 1 Million deferred for the succeeding period
(xxx)
Input tax on sale to government closed to expense (xxx)
Input tax allocable to exempt sales (xxx)
VAT claimed for refund or tax credit (xxx)
Total Allowable Input Tax
(xxx)
=======

Thus, before the input tax from zero-rated sales may even form part of the total allowable or creditable input taxes to be charged against the output taxes and undergo the computation of "excess output or input tax" in Section 110 (B), it may already be removed from the formula once the taxpayer opted to claim the entire amount for refund.

These were echoed by Associate Justice Japar B. Dimaampao, opining that "nowhere in Section 112 (A) does it require that the taxpayer must first offset its input tax with any output tax before its claim for refund may prosper. Notably, the word "excess" does not even appear in this section. Instead, what recurs is the refundability of input tax that has not been applied against output tax or that has simply remained unused."

Moreover, the crediting of input taxes, including input tax attributable to zero-rated sales, from the output tax should be discretionary to the taxpayer as it is the taxpayer who is more interested in reducing its output tax payable. In fact, the legislature put a cap70 on the input tax that may be deducted from the output tax to generate cash flow for the government. Therefore, to require entities engaged in zero-rated transactions to charge their input tax from zero-rated sales against their output VAT from regular twelve percent (12%) VAT-able sales would defeat the very object of the tax measure, which is to generate more income for the government.

Second, Congress referred to "any input tax" in the proviso of Section 110 (B) which could mean one, some, or all input tax from zero-rated sales. Had the legislature intended the charging of the input tax attributable to zero-rated sales against the output tax as a preliminary step to the refund or issuance of a tax credit certificate, it would have used the phrase "excess input tax" in the provision.

To be sure, the lawmakers had contemplated the input tax attributable to zero-rated sales as an amount that will be refunded or credited and not offset against the output tax. During the September 7, 1993 hearing of the House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means on House Bills No. 10693 and 10694 relatives to the passage of Republic Act (RA) No. 771671 or the Expanded VAT Law, the body had the occasion to discuss the distinction between the input tax from regular twelve percent (12%) VAT-able sales and zero-rated sales:

HON. FIGUEROA: I would like to ask the BIR if the VAT input taxes are refundable. Because it seems that we are confused in that issue. To my understanding, input taxes as far as VAT is concerned, are not refundable. They are only creditable against tax liability.

Whereas, in the case of that mining industry which claims the refund of taxes paid, I think, it is an exemption given by BOI. I think it is a tax credit given by BOI as far as our Incentives Act is concerned.

MR. FRIANEZA: Ordinarily, Your Honor, value-added tax can only be tax credited or refunded for input tax credits that are attributable to export sales or effective zero-rated transaction. Ordinarily, they are not given as refund or tax credit in that form.

What is allowed in ordinary transactions is that taxes paid or VAT paid on your purchases of capital equipment, supplies, raw materials, and services, can be claimed as a credit against your output tax. Ordinarily. That is the only allowable credit that is given under the law.

x x x x

THE CHAIRMAN. But supposing the input fax exceeds the output tax. That will be a problem.

MR. FRIANEZA. In the ordinary transactions, not exporters or zero[-]rated transactions. When the input tax exceeds that output tax as when you, for example, bought a big equipment and therefore your VAT paid at Customs is quite big and it is more than what your output tax is for the period, then that excess of input tax can be carried over to the next taxable period, monthly period or quarter.

x x x x

THE CHAIRMAN. For how long? That will be ...

MR. FRIANEZA. There's no limit. There is no limit, Your Honor.

THE CHAIRMAN. That will be a credit owed by the government.72 (Emphases supplied.)

Later, it was emphasized that applying for a refund or tax credit is a "right or privilege" of the taxpayer engaged in zero-rated transactions:

MR. FRIANEZA. The matter of tax credits, Your Honor, is ... if we will ... because basically, essentially, the value[-]added tax is a process of output and input tax. And what ... the input tax, we call that a credit against the output tax. Now, but [sic] if we are referring to the tax credits which are in excess of the VAT payable per return, they are taken cared [sic] of by the process of the filing of the return. So when a taxpayer files the return, then from his output tax, meaning the 10% [now 12%] of his gross sales, the input tax for which he is entitled to are automatically deducted from the output tax and we call this the input tax.

Now, there are tax credits, however, that are given to the taxpayers because their gross sales is [sic] subject to zero[-] rate ... zero[-] rated, like in the case of exports. The export sales do not bear any kind of tax. But, the law gives to the exporters the right or the privilege to recover whatever was paid at prior stages to the point of exports. And that is one of the reason [sic], Your Honor, why the value[-]added tax was adopted in 1988, to boost the export industry.73 (Emphasis supplied.)

Then, much later during the Bicameral Conference Committee on the Disagreeing Provisions of House Bill Nos. 3705 and 3555 and Senate Bill No. 1950, which became RA No. 9337,74 Senator Ralph G. Recto explained how the input VAT from zero-rated sales works, to wit:

REP. TEVES. Mr. Chairman, how do you differentiate the 0% exempt? The zero (0) means it is a zero-rated VAT, Value Added Tax which you can get a refund[,] or is it just a mere exempt because there's a lot of difference between exempt and zero (0)?

MR. BONOAN. Yes. I understand the Senate made the zero (0) rating on the theory that these are akin to export sales. So, would that be accurate, Senator Recto?

CHAIRMAN RECTO. Yes, only with respect to international passengers and international cargo similar to how other countries have a VAT system with regard to airlines.

REP. TEVES. So, they can collect input VAT. They can get a refund of input VAT.

MR. BONOAN. They would be able to in the case of a 0% output VAT if they incur input VAT of any amount.

REP. TEVES. We can discuss that later.

CHAIRMAN RECTO. Yes, only ratably to their international sales[,] not on their domestic sales.75 (Emphases supplied.)

x x x x

CHAIRMAN RECTO. If I can explain [to] Congressman Villafuerte, how this will operate, as far as Senate is concerned, is this: Total gross sales of an airline company, if 80% of the gross sales was [sic] used for international, then the 80% is immediately refundable. If 20% of his gross sales, which is domestic, by way of cargo or passengers, then the 20% is subject now to creditable VAT on a quarterly basis. So, it's ratably. Now, it's easier for the BIR as well to collect. For example, in this case, as far as the zero-rating for exclusively an international transport, let's say, those service providers of Lufthansa, Cathay Pacific, I think who provide service with them, let's say, Macro Asia, maliwanag ngayon under the Senate version that these people are zero-rated. Maliwanag ngayon because right now, hindi maliwanag iyan under the Tax Code.

REP. VILLAFUERTE. What happens to the Philippine Airlines plane that flies to domestic and then ...

CHAIRMAN RECTO. Again, let me reiterate, Congressman Villafuerte, the entire gross sales for that month or for that quarter of Philippine Airlines if 80% is attributable to international passenger and international cargo, then it is 80% of his VAT input is refundable, is zero-rated.

REP. VILLAFUERTE. Yeah, but you are not applying exclusively then.

CHAIRMAN RECTO. Now, for domestic[,] because we are VATing domestic passenger and domestic cargo.

REP. VILLAFUERTE. No, no, no. It says here "exclusively"...

CHAIRMAN RECTO. Yes, but there is another provision Congressman Villafuerte that says here that transport of passengers and cargo by air or sea to foreign countries is zero-rated. There is another provision that will apply to that.

REP. VILLAFUERTE. Zero-rated. But what I'm trying to say is that you are not applying the word "exclusively" to a particular vessel or airplane, you know. It is the used that you are saying, but can be done both ways, domestic and foreign or international, even if that plane is used for both.

CHAIRMAN RECTO. That's right. That's ratably.

REP. VILLAFUERTE. So, in other words, that particular airplane will not forgo the zero VAT even if used domestically.

CHAIRMAN RECTO. If you uses [sic] it domestically ...

REP. VILLAFUERTE. And also internationally.

CHAIRMAN RECTO then you cannot get a refund. The portion, again, let me reiterate...

REP. VILLAFUERTE. The portion on foreign only.

CHAIRMAN RECTO. Yes, that's right.76 (Emphases supplied.)

If the Congress intended the crediting of input tax against the output tax as a condition precedent to the refund or issuance of a tax credit certificate, they could have stressed this during the deliberations. They did not. Instead, it was clarified that when the taxpayer is engaged in both regular and zero-rated transactions, as in Chevron Holdings' case, the ratable portion allocable to zero-rated sales is "immediately refundable" or creditable.

Third, to call the refundable input tax in Section 110 (B), in relation to Section 112 (A), "excess" input tax is a misnomer since what is being applied for a refund or tax credit is the unutilized or unused input VAT from zero-rated sales. As a matter of fact, there is no "excess" input tax attributable to zero-rated sales as there is no related output tax from which the input tax may be charged against. For context, in zero-rated transactions, the tax rate is set at zero percent.77 Consequently, the seller charges zero output tax. However, the seller may have incurred input taxes from its purchases of goods and/or services related to its sales.78 The input taxes previously charged by suppliers remain unutilized or unused until charged against the output tax from the non-zero-rated sale transactions in the same quarter that the input taxes were incurred79 or applied for a refund or the issuance of tax credit certificate within two (2) years from the close of the taxable quarter when the related sales were made.80

The Court is not unaware that in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Seagate Technology (Philippines),81 we implied, that only the excess input tax allocable to zero-rated sales against the output tax may be refunded or issued a tax credit certificate.82 The pronouncement made in that case should not, however, be considered binding as a precedent as the issue was limited to the entitlement of a PEZA-registered enterprise to refund of unutilized input VAT paid on capital goods purchased. Whether the taxpayer may refund the entire input tax attributable to zero-rated sales and not only the "excess" of the total creditable input taxes from the output tax was never raised as an issue. The Court’s statement is, at best, merely an obiter dictum – an opinion expressed by a court upon some question of law, which is not necessary to the decision of the case before it. It is a remark made, or opinion expressed by a judge, in his decision upon a cause, "by the way," that is, incidentally or collaterally, and not directly upon the question before him, or upon a point not necessarily involved in the determination of the cause, or introduced by way of illustration, or analogy or argument.83

Instead, the case of Atlas Consolidated Mining and Development Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue84 is more apt. In that case, we affirmed the CTA's denial of the taxpayer's application for refund on the ground that it failed to prove that the input tax subject of the refund was not applied against any of its output tax liability.85 We held that:

x x x when claiming tax refund/credit, the VAT-registered taxpayer must be able to establish that it does have refundable or creditable input VAT, and the same has not been applied against its output VAT liabilities — information which are [sic] supposed to be reflected in the taxpayer's VAT returns. Thus, an application for tax refund/credit must be accompanied by copies of the taxpayer's VAT return/s for the taxable quarter/s concerned. (Emphasis supplied.)86

In the present case, the independent auditor's Report87 showed that the amount subject to the refund, i.e., P36,802,956.72, was not applied against Chevron Holdings's output tax liabilities, to wit:

3. We have ascertained and verified that the total amount of valid unutilized input VAT were [sic] recognized in the books as input taxes, reported in the monthly/quarterly VAT Returns (BIR Form 2550M and 2550Q) for the period of January to December 2006 and were not applied against output tax. We have noted that the amount of claim was not carried over to the succeeding VAT returns beginning April 2008 and thereafter since this was when it was determined by the Company's management that the excess input tax attributable to zero-rated sales/receipts amounting to Thirty[-]Six Million Eight Hundred Two Thousand Nine Hundred Fifty-Six and 72/100 Pesos (P36,802,956.72) would not be utilized against output tax in the succeeding periods. x x x. (Emphasis supplied.)88

As in ordinary civil cases, a claim for refund or tax credit necessitates only the preponderance-of-evidence threshold.89 Chevron Holdings proved its entitlement by preponderant evidence.

Fourth, that the taxpayer failed to prove that it had sufficient creditable input taxes90 to cover or "pay" its output tax liability in a given period, hence, there is no refundable "excess" input tax, which is an issue distinct, separate, and independent from a claim for refund or issuance of tax credit certificate of unutilized input VAT attributable to zero-rated sales. For one, the taxpayer-claimant is not asking to refund the ''excess'' creditable input taxes from the output tax. To be sure, the "excess" input tax may only be carried over to the succeeding period and cannot be refunded.91 But, on the other hand, the taxpayer is asking to refund the unutilized or unused input tax from zero-rated sales.

Next, the substantiation of input taxes that can be credited against the output tax is an issue relevant to the assessment for potential deficiency output VAT liability.ℒαwρhi৷ In turn, it is not for the CTA and the Court to determine and rule in a judicial claim for refund under Section 112 (A) of the Tax Code that the taxpayer had insufficient or unsubstantiated input taxes to cover its output tax liability. This is for the BIR to determine in an administrative proceeding for assessment of deficiency taxes.

It is true, in several cases,92 the Court has ruled that it will not grant a refund if the taxpayer has pending tax liability to the government because "[t]o award the refund despite the existence of deficiency assessment is an absurdity and a polarity in conceptual effects"93 and that "to grant the refund without determination of the proper assessment and the tax due would inevitably result in a multiplicity of proceedings or suits."94 We explained in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of Appeals, to wit:95

x x x If the deficiency assessment should subsequently be upheld, the Government will be forced to institute anew a proceeding for the recovery of erroneously refunded taxes which recourse must be filed within the prescriptive period of ten years after [the] discovery of the falsity, fraud[,] or omission in the false or fraudulent return involved. This would necessarily require and entail additional efforts and expenses on the part of the Government, impose a burden on a drain of government funds, and impede or delay the collection of much-needed revenue for governmental operations.

Thus, to avoid multiplicity of suits and unnecessary difficulties or expenses, it is both logically necessary and legally appropriate that the issue of the deficiency tax assessment against Citytrust be resolved jointly with its claim for [the] tax refund, to determine once and for all in a single proceeding the true and correct amount of tax due or refundable.96

But in these cases, the taxpayer's liability for deficiency taxes is related to and intertwined with the resolution of the claim for refund. Such a situation is not present here. The records do not show that Chevron Holdings is delinquent for output VAT or that it is being assessed for deficiency output tax in the first, second, third, and fourth quarters of the taxable year 2006.

All told, it was erroneous for the CTA to charge the validated and substantiated input taxes against Chevron Holdings' output taxes first and use the resultant amount as the basis for computing the allowable amount for refund. The CTA also erred in requiring Chevron Holdings to substantiate its excess input tax carried over from the previous quarter as it is not a requirement for entitlement to a refund of unused or unutilized input VAT from zero-rated sales.

We reiterate that although the burden of proof to establish entitlement to a refund is on the taxpayer-claimant, the Court has consistently held that once the minimum statutory requirements have been complied with, the claimant should be considered to have successfully discharged their burden to prove its entitlement to the refund.97 After the claimant has successfully established a prima facie right to the refund by complying with the requirements laid down by law,98 the burden is shifted to the opposing party, i.e., the BIR, to disprove such claim. Otherwise, we would unduly burden the taxpayer-claimant with additional requirements which have no statutory nor jurisprudential basis.99 In the present case, Chevron Holdings sufficiently proved compliance with all the requisites for entitlement to a refund or credit of unutilized input tax allocable to zero-rated sales under Section 112 (A) of the Tax Code.

Computation of refundable input tax attributable to zero-rated sales when the taxpayer-claimant is engaged in mixed transactions.

The manner of apportionment of the input tax is provided in Section 4.110-4 of RR No. 16-2005, as amended by RR No. 4-2007,100 as follows:

SEC. 4.110-4. Apportionment of Input Tax on Mixed Transactions. — x x x

[2. If any input tax cannot be directly attributed to either a VAT taxable or VAT-exempt transaction, the input tax shall be pro-rated to the VAT taxable and VAT-exempt transactions and only the ratable portion pertaining to transactions subject to VAT may be recognized for input tax credit.]

Illustration: ERA Corporation has the following sales during the month:

Sale to private entities subject to 12% ₱100,000.00
Sale to private entities subject to 0% 100,000.00
Sale of exempt goods 100,000.00
Sale to gov't. subjected to 5% final VAT Withholding 100,000.00
Total Sales for the month ₱400,000.00

The following input taxes were passed on by its VAT suppliers:

Input tax on taxable goods 12% ₱5,000.00
Input tax on zero-rated sales 3,000.00
Input tax on sale of exempt goods 2,000.00
Input tax on sale to government 4,000.00
Input tax on depreciable capital good not attributable to any specific activity (monthly amortization for 60 months) 20,000.00

x x x x

B. The input tax attributable to zero-rated sales for the month shall be computed as follows:

Input tax directly attributable to zero-rated sale—  P3,000.00
Ratable portion of the input tax not directly attributable to any activity:
Taxable sales (0%)
Total Sales
x Amount of input tax not directly attributable to any activity
₱100,000.00
₱ 400,000.00
X ₱20,000.00
— 5,000.00
Total input tax attributable to zero-rated sales for the month ₱ 8,000.00

Thus, the refundable input VAT is computed by getting the percentage of valid zero-rated sales over total reported sales (taxable, zero-rated, and exempt) multiplied by the properly substantiated input taxes not directly attributable to any of the transactions.

The CTA En Banc found that only P155,654,748.22101 qualified for VAT zero-rating of sales of services to foreign affiliates.ℒαwρhi৷ Out of the total reported input VAT of P40,152,123.09 attributable to both twelve percent (12%) VAT-able and zero-rated transactions, only P9,081,815.00102 was substantiated with VAT official receipts and invoices. Thus:

Valid zero-rated sales Valid input taxes not directly attributable to any activity
First Quarter ₱ 5,762,011.70 ₱ 1,276,656.14
Second Quarter 4,669,743.23 1,650,503.65
Third Quarter 66,091,331.71 1,860,385.53
Fourth Quarter 79,131,661.58 4,294,269.68
Total ₱ 155,654,748.22 ₱ 9,081,815.00

Accordingly, Chevron Holdings is entitled to the refund of unutilized input tax allocable to its zero-rated sales for January 1 to December 31, 2006, in the total amount of P1,140,381.22,103 computed as follows:

First Quarter Second Quarter Third Quarter Fourth Quarter
Valid zero-rated sales 5,762,011.70 4,669,743.23 66,091,331.71 79,131,661.58
Divided by: Total reported sales 313,164,583.06 272,400,438.61 299,500,840.65 501,152,183.16
Multiplied by: Valid input tax not directly attributable to any activity 1,276,656.14 1,650,503.65 1,860,385.53 4,294,269.68
Input tax attributable to zero-rated sales 23,489.59 28,294.48 410,534.26 678,062.88
TOTAL ₱1,140,381.22

Claims for the tax refund, like tax exemptions, are construed strictissimi juris against the taxpayer. However, when the claim for refund has a clear legal basis and is sufficiently supported by evidence, as in the present case, then the Court shall not hesitate to grant the refund.104

FOR THESE REASONS, the Petition for Review on Certiorari is PARTLY GRANTED. The Court of Tax Appeals En Banc's Decision dated May 6, 2014, and Amended Decision dated October 28, 2014, in CTA EB No. 940 are AFFIRMED with MODIFICATIONS. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue is ordered to refund, or in the alternative, issue a tax credit certificate in favor of Chevron Holdings, Inc. in the total amount of One Million One Hundred Forty Thousand Three Hundred Eighty-One Pesos and 22/100 (P1,140,381.22), representing unutilized input tax attributable to zero-rated sales for the period of January 1 to December 31, 2006.

SO ORDERED.

Gesmundo, C.J., Leonen, SAJ., Hernando, Inting, Zalameda, Gaerlan, Rosario, J. Lopez, Dimaampao, Marquez, Kho, Jr., and Singh, JJ., concur.

Caguioa and Lazaro-Javier, JJ., see dissent.



Footnotes

1 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philex Mining Corp., G.R. No. 230016, November 23, 2020.

2 Rollo, pp. 3-55.

3 Id. at 70-110. Penned by Associate Justice Lovell R. Bautista, with the concurrence of Presiding Justice Roman G. Del Rosario and Associate Justices Juanito C. Castañeda, Jr., Erlinda P. Uy, Cesar A. Casanova, Esperanza R. Fabon-Victorino, Cielito N. Mindaro-Grulla, Amelia R. Cotangco-Manalastas, and Ma. Belen M. Ringpis-Liban.

4 Id. at 111-125. Presiding Justice Roman G. Del Rosario and Associate Justice Amelia R. Cotangco­-Manalastas on leave.

5 Id. at 82.

6 Id. at 276.

7 Id. at 119, 489.

8 See id. at 277. Raffled to the CTA Second Division.

9 Id. Raffled to the CTA First Division.

10 See id. at 252-260.

11 See id. at 260-261.

12 See id. at 266-268.

13 See id. at 263.

14 See id. at 263-264.

15 See id. at 268.

16 Id. at 274-290. Penned by Associate Justice Ernesto D. Acosta, with the concurrence of Associate Justice Esperanza R. Fabon-Victorino, Associate Justice Erlinda P. Uy wrote her Separate Opinion, see id. at 291-295. The dispositive portion of the Decision reads:

WHEREFORE, the instant Petition for Review docketed as CTA Case No. 7776 and Petition for Review docketed as CTA Case No. 7813 are hereby DENIED for having been prematurely filed and are DISMISSED for lack of cause of action. The other issues raised become moot and academic.

SO ORDERED. Id. at 290. (Emphases in the original.)

17 Id. at 337-342; Associate Justice Erlinda P. Uy was on Official Business. The dispositive portion of the Resolution dated September 7, 2012 reads:

WHEREFORE, premises considered, [Chevron Holdings'] "Motion for Reconsideration" is hereby DENIED for lack of merit.

SO ORDERED. Id. at 342. (Emphasis in the original.)

18 Id. at 70-110.

19 703 Phil. 310, 377-378 (2013). In that case, the Court, while upholding Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Aichi Forging Company of Asia, Inc. (Aichi) [646 Phil. 710, 719 (2010)], recognized an exception to the mandatory and jurisdictional character of the 120-day period: taxpayers who relied on BIR Ruling DA-489-03, issued on December 10, 2003, until its reversal in Aichi on October 6, 2010, are shielded from the vice of prematurity.

20 The ruling expressly stated that "a taxpayer-claimant need not wait for the lapse of the 120-day period before it could seek judicial relief with the CTA by way of a Petition for Review." N.B. This rule was nullified in Aichi, promulgated on October 6, 2010. Aichi emphasized that the failure to await the decision of the CIR or the lapse of 120-day period prescribed in Section 112 (C) of the Tax Code amounted to a premature filing.

21 Rollo, pp. 89-90, out of the P1,276,557,946.49 sales reported. The P155,654,748.22 valid zero-rated sales is broken down as follows:

First Quarter P5,762,011.70
Second Quarter P4,669,743.23
Third Quarter P66,091,331.71
Fourth Quarter P79,131,661.58
Total P 155,654,748.27

22 SEC. 108. Value-added Tax on Sale of Services and Use or Lease or Properties. – x x x

B) Transactions Subject to Zero Percent (0%) Rate. - The following services performed in the Philippines by VAT-registered persons shall be subject to zero percent (0%) rate:

(1) Processing, manufacturing or repacking goods for other persons doing business outside the Philippines which goods are subsequently exported, where the services are paid for in acceptable foreign currency and accounted for in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP);

(2) Services other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraph, rendered to a person engaged in business conducted outside the Philippines or to a nonresident person not engaged in business who is outside the Philippines when the services are performed, the consideration for which is paid for in acceptable foreign currency and accounted for in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) x x x

23 Republic Act No. 8424, December 11, 1997, as amended by the Value Added Tax (VAT) Reform Act. Republic Act No. 9337, May 24, 2005.

24 Id. at 12, out of the P40,152,123.09 input tax reported. The P9,081,815.00 is broken down as follows:

First Quarter P1,276,656.14
Second Quarter P1,650,503.65
Third Quarter P1,860,385.53
Fourth Quarter P4,294,269.68
Total P9,081,815.00

25 Id. at 93.

26 The sum of P3,645,615.75 (Input Tax Carried Over from Previous Quarter), P52,138,741.96 (Transitional Input Tax) and P779,739.06 (Others), see id. at 93.

27 Id. at 94-95.

28 Id. at 126-160.

29 Id. at 111-125.

30 Id. at 123-124.

31 Id. at 15-16.

32 Id. at 13-21.

33 RR No. 8-99 was issued on May 11, 1999. It provides penalties for violation of the requirement that output tax on sale of goods and services should not be separately indicated in the sales invoice or official receipt. The amount appearing in the sales invoices/receipts is thus deemed inclusive of the Value-Added Tax due thereon. The penalty for violation of the said requirement is a fine of not less than One Thousand Pesos (P1,000) but not more than Fifty Thousand Pesos (P50,000), and imprisonment of not less than two (2) years but not more than four (4) years.

34 Rollo, pp. 542-567.

35 Id. at 586-631.

36 SEC. 112. Refunds or Tax Credits of Input Tax. —

(A) Zero-Rated or Effectively Zero-Rated Sales. — Any VAT-registered person, whose sales are zero-rated or effectively zero-rated may, within two (2) years after the close of the taxable quarter when the sales were made, apply for the issuance or a tax credit certificate or refund of creditable input tax due or paid attributable to such sales, except transitional input tax, to the extent that such input tax has not been applied against output tax: Provided, however, That in the case of zero-rated sales under ... Section 108(B)(1) and (2), the acceptable foreign currency exchange proceeds thereof had been duly accounted for in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP): Provided, further, That where the taxpayer is engaged in zero-rated or effectively zero-rated sale and also in taxable or exempt sale of goods or properties or services, and the amount of creditable input tax due or paid cannot be directly and entirely attributed to any one of the transactions, it shall be allocated proportionately on the basis of the volume of sales.

37 Silicon Phil., Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 654 Phil. 492, 504 (2011).

38 SEC. 108 (B)(1) reads:

(B) Transactions Subject to Zero Percent (0%) Rate. — The following services performed in the Philippines by VAT-registered persons shall be subject to zero percent (0%) rate:

(1) Processing, manufacturing or repacking goods for other persons doing business outside the Philippines which goods are subsequently exported, where the services are paid for in acceptable foreign currency and accounted for in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP); x x x. (Emphasis supplied.)

39 See Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. American Express International, Inc., 500 Phil. 586, 597 (2005) and Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Burmeister and Wain Scandinavian Contractor Mindanao, Inc., 541 Phil. 119, 135-136 (2007).

40 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Deutsche Knowledge Services Pte. Ltd., G.R. No. 234445, July 15, 2020.

41 Rollo, p. 82.

42 Supra note 39.

43 See id.

44 Rollo, p. 87.

45 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Traders Royal Bank, 756 Phil. 175, 191-192 (2015); Hitachi Global Storage Technologies Phil. Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 648 Phil. 425, 432 (2010).

46 550 Phil. 751, 780 (2007).

47 Rollo, p. 29.

48 See id. at 88.

49 CONSOLIDATED VALUE-ADDED TAX REGULATIONS OF 2005, September 1, 2005.

50 SEC. 113. Invoicing and Accounting Requirement for VAT-registered Persons. — x x x.

(B) Information Contained in the VAT Invoice or VAT Official Receipt. — The following information shall be indicated in the VAT invoice or VAT official receipt: x x x

(2) The total amount which the purchaser pays or is obligated to pay to the seller with the indication that such amount includes the value-added tax: Provided, That:

(a) The amount of the tax shall be shown as a separate item in the invoice or receipt; xxx. (Emphasis supplied.)

51 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philex Mining Corporation, G.R. No. 230016, November 23, 2020; Eastern Telecommunications Phil., Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 693 Phil. 464, 472 (2012).

52 Id. at Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philex Mining Corporation.

53 See Southern Power Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 675 Phil. 732, 736-737 (2011).

54 Rollo, pp. 92-93.

55 Id. at 93, 120.

56 Entitled "ADOPTING A VALUE-ADDED TAX," July 25, 1987.

57 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Magsaysay Lines, Inc., 529 Phil. 64, 72 (2006).

58 See Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Magsaysay Lines, Inc., Id.

59 Supra note 19 at 367.

60 See SEC. 110 (C), Tax Code and Section 4.110-5, RR No. 16-2005.

[SEC. 110(C), Tax Code]

(C) Determination of Creditable Input Tax. — The sum of the excess input tax carried over from the preceding month or quarter and the input tax creditable to a VAT-registered person during the taxable month or quarter shall be reduced by the amount of claim for refund or tax credit for value-added tax and other adjustments, such as purchase returns or allowances and input tax attributable to exempt sale. xxx.

[Section 4.110-5, RR No. 16-2005

SEC. 4.110-5. Determination of Input Tax Creditable during a Taxable Month or Quarter. — The amount of input taxes creditable during a month or quarter shall be determined in the manner illustrated above by adding all creditable input taxes arising from the transactions enumerated under the preceding subsections of SEC. 4.110 during the month or quarter plus any amount of input tax carried-over from the preceding month or quarter, reduced by the amount of claim for VAT refund or tax credit certificate (whether filed with the BIR, the Department of Finance, the Board of Investments or the BOC) and other adjustments, such as purchases returns or allowances, input tax attributable to exempt sales and input tax attributable to sales subject to final VAT withholding.

61 See SEC. 110 (B), Tax Code, as amended by RA No. 9361. See also supra note 19 at 350.

62 See Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. San Roque Power Corp., id. at 351-352.

63 Id. at 353.

64 Id. 365-366.

65 The cancellation of VAT registration is due to retirement from or cessation of business, or due to changes in or cessation of status under SEC. 106 (C) of the Tax Code. See SEC. 112 (C), Tax Code and Section 4.112-1, RR No. 16-2005.

66 As amended by Republic Act No. 9361, Entitled "AMENDMENT TO SECTION 110 (B) OF THE NIRC OF 1997," December 13, 2006.

67 See SEC. 110 (C), Tax Code and Section 4.110-5, RR No. 16-2005. See also Line 20, BIR Form No. 2550-Q, Quarterly Value-Added Tax Return, February 2007 (ENCS).

68 G.R. Nos. 219630-31 & 219635-36, December 7, 2021.

69 See Lines 20 to 24, BIR Form No. 2550-Q, Quarterly Value-Added Tax Return, February 2007 (ENCS).

70 Under Republic Act No. 9337, entitled, "VALUE-ADDED TAX (VAT) REFORM ACT," the total input tax that may be credited in every quarter shall not exceed seventy percent (70%) of the output VAT. N.B. The 70% cap was removed in Republic Act No. 9361, entitled "AMENDMENT TO SECTION 110 (B) OF NIRC OF 1997.

71 Entitled "EXPANDED VALUE-ADDED TAX (VAT) LAW," approved on May 5, 1994 and published in "Malaya" and the "Philippine Times Journal" on May 12, 1994 and in "Manila Bulletin" on June 5, 1994 and in the Official Gazette, Vol. 90 No. 31 page 4489 on August 1, 1994.

72 House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means, September 7, 1993, pp. 59-61.

73 House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means, November 5, 1993, p. 9.

74 Entitled "VALUE-ADDED TAX (VAT) REFORM ACT," July 1, 2005.

75 Bicameral Conference Committee on the Disagreeing Provisions of HB Nos. 3705 & 3555 and SB No. 1950 Re: Value Added Tax Bills, April 15, 2005, pp. 48-49.

76 Bicameral Conference Committee on the Disagreeing Provisions of HB Nos. 3705 & 3555 and SB No. 1950 Re: Value Added Tax Bills, April 15, 2005, pp. 71-74.

77 See Sections 106 (A) (2) and 108 (B), Tax Code.

78 See Section 110 (A), Tax Code.

79 See Sections 110 (B) and (C), Tax Code.

80 See Section 112 (A), Tax Code.

81 491 Phil. 317 (2005).

82 Id. at 333. The Decision reads in part:

If at the end of a taxable quarter the output taxes charged by a seller are equal to the input taxes passed on by the suppliers, no payment is required. It is when the output taxes exceed the input taxes that the excess has to be paid. If, however, the input taxes exceed the output taxes, the excess shall be carried over to the succeeding quarter or quarters. Should the input taxes result from zero-rated or effectively zero-rated transactions or from the acquisition of capital goods, any excess over the output taxes shall instead be refunded to the taxpayer or credited against other internal revenue taxes. (Emphasis supplied.)

83 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philex Mining Corp., G.R. No. 230016, November 23, 2020.

84 655 Phil. 499 (2011).

85 Id. at 509.

86 Id. at 509-510.

87 Rollo, pp. 492-503.

88 Id. at 501.

89 AT&T Communications Services Philippines, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 640 Phil. 613, 617-618 (2010); citing Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Mirant Pagbilao Corp., 586 Phil. 712, 725 (2008).

90 See Lines 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24, BIR Form No. 2550-Q, Quarterly Value-Added Tax Return, February 2007 (ENCS).

91 Section 4.110-7 of RR No. 16-2005. See also Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. San Roque Power Corp., supra note 19 at 350-351.

92 See Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of Appeals, 304 Phil. 518, 526 (1994), quoted in Air Canada v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 776 Phil. 119, 164 (2016), Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Toledo Power Company, 774 Phil. 92, 115 (2015), South African Airways v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 626 Phil. 566, 578 (2010).

93 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of Appeals, supra note 89.

94 Id. at 527.

95 304 Phil. 518 (1994).

96 Id. at 527.

97 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philippine National Bank, G.R. No. 212699, March 13, 2019.

98 Winebrenner & Iñigo Insurance Brokers, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 752 Phil. 375, 395 (2015).

99 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philippine National Bank, G.R. No. 212699, March 13, 2019.

100 AMENDING CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF REVENUE REGULATIONS NO. 16-2005, AS AMENDED, OTHERWISE KNOWN AS THE CONSOLIDATED VALUE-ADDED TAX REGULATIONS OF 2005, February 7, 2007.

101 Rollo, pp. 88-90.

102 Id. at 92-91.

103 Id. at 10-12.

104 San Roque Power Corp. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 620 Phil. 554, 583 (2009); Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Philippine Air Lines, Inc., 610 Phil. 392, 405-406 (2009).


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