Cir Vs CA, Cta, GCL Retirement Plan
Cir Vs CA, Cta, GCL Retirement Plan
MELENCIO-HERRERA, J.:
This case is said to be precedent setting. While the amount involved is insignificant, the Solicitor General avers that
there are about 85 claims of the same nature pending in the Court of Tax Appeals and Bureau of Internal Revenue
totalling approximately P120M.
Petitioner, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, seeks a reversal of the Decision of respondent Court of Appeals,
dated August 27, 1990, in CA-G.R. SP No. 20426, entitled "Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. GCL Retirement
Plan, represented by its Trustee-Director and the Court of Tax Appeals," which affirmed the Decision of the latter
Court, dated 15 December 1986, in Case No. 3888, ordering a refund, in the sum of P11,302.19, to the GCL
Retirement Plan representing the withholding tax on income from money market placements and purchase of treasury
bills, imposed pursuant to Presidential Decree No. 1959.
There is no dispute with respect to the facts. Private Respondent, GCL Retirement Plan (GCL, for brevity) is an
employees' trust maintained by the employer, GCL Inc., to provide retirement, pension, disability and death benefits to
its employees. The Plan as submitted was approved and qualified as exempt from income tax by Petitioner
Commissioner of Internal Revenue in accordance with Rep. Act No. 4917. 1
In 1984, Respondent GCL made investsments and earned therefrom interest income from which was witheld the
fifteen per centum (15%) final witholding tax imposed by Pres. Decree No. 1959, 2 which took effect on 15 October
1984, to wit:
Date Kind of Investment Principal Income Earned 15% Tax
ACIC
12/05/84
10/22/84
11/19/84
11/23/84
12/05/84
COMBANK
P11,302.19
Market
Placement
P236,515.32
P8,751.96
234,632.75
9,815.89
225,886.51
10,629.22
344,448.64
17,313.33
324,633.81
15,077.44
Treasury
Bills
P1,312.66
1,472.38
1,594.38
2,597.00
2,261.52
2,064.15
On 15 January 1985, Respondent GCL filed with Petitioner a claim for refund in the amounts of P1,312.66 withheld by
Anscor Capital and Investment Corp., and P2,064.15 by Commercial Bank of Manila. On 12 February 1985, it filed a
second claim for refund of the amount of P7,925.00 withheld by Anscor, stating in both letters that it disagreed with the
collection of the 15% final withholding tax from the interest income as it is an entity fully exempt from income tax
as provided under Rep. Act No. 4917 in relation to Section 56 (b) 3 of the Tax Code.
The refund requested having been denied, Respondent GCL elevated the matter to respondent Court of Tax Appeals
(CTA). The latter ruled in favor of GCL, holding that employees' trusts are exempt from the 15% final withholding tax
on interest income and ordering a refund of the tax withheld. Upon appeal, originally to this Court, but referred to
respondent Court of Appeals, the latter upheld the CTA Decision. Before us now, Petitioner assails that disposition.
It appears that under Rep. Act No. 1983, which took effect on 22 June 1957, amending Sec. 56 (b) of the National
Internal Revenue Code (Tax Code, for brevity), employees' trusts were exempt from income tax. That lawprovided:
Sec. 56 Imposition of tax. (a) Application of tax. The taxes imposed by this Title upon individuals
shall apply to the income of estates or of any kind of property held in trust, including
xxx xxx xxx
(b) Exception. The tax imposed by this Title shall not apply to employees' trust which forms a part
of a pension, stock bonus or profit-sharing plan of an employer for the benefit of some or all of his
employees (1) if contributions are made to trust by such employer, or employees, or both, for the
purpose of distributing to such employees the earnings and principal of the fund accumulated by the
trust
in
accordance
with
such
plan, . . .
On 3 June 1977, Pres. Decree No. 1156 provided, for the first time, for the withholding from the interest on bank
deposits at the source of a tax of fifteen per cent (15%) of said interest. However, it also allowed a specific exemption
in its Section 53, as follows:
Sec. 53. Withholding of tax at source.
xxx xxx xxx
(c) Withholding tax on interest on bank deposits. (1) Rate of withholding tax. Every bank or
banking institution shall deduct and withhold from the interest on bank deposits (except interest paid
or credited to non-resident alien individuals and foreign corporations), a tax equal to fifteen per cent of
the said interest: Provided, however, That no withholding of tax shall be made if the aggregate amount
of the interest on all deposit accounts maintained by a depositor alone or together with another in any
one bank at any time during the taxable period does not exceed three hundred fifty pesos a year or
eighty-seven pesos and fifty centavos per quarter. For this purpose, interest on a deposit account
maintained by two persons shall be deemed to be equally owned by them.
(2) Treatment of bank deposit interest. The interest income shall be included in the gross income in
computing the depositor's income tax liability in according with existing law.
(3) Depositors enjoying tax exemption privileges or preferential tax treatment. In all cases where
the depositor is tax-exempt or is enjoying preferential income tax treatment under existing laws, the
withholding tax imposed in this paragraph shall be refunded or credited as the case may be upon
submission to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue of proof that the said depositor is a tax-exempt
entity or enjoys a preferential income tax treatment.
xxx xxx xxx
This exemption and preferential tax treatment were carried over in Pres. Decree No. 1739, effective on 17 September
1980, which law also subjected interest from bank deposits and yield from deposit substitutes to a final tax of twenty
per cent (20%). The pertinent provisions read:
Sec. 2. Section 21 of the same Code is hereby amended by adding a new paragraph to read as
follows:
Sec. 21. Rates of tax on citizens or residents.
xxx xxx xxx
Interest from Philippine Currency bank deposits and yield from deposit substitutes
whether received by citizens of the Philippines or by resident alien individuals, shall
be subject to the final tax as follows: (a) 15% of the interest on savings deposits, and
(b) 20% of the interest on time deposits and yield from deposit substitutes, which
shall be collected and paid as provided in Sections 53 and 54 of this Code. Provided,
That no tax shall be imposed if the aggregate amount of the interest on all Philippine
Currency deposit accounts maintained by a depositor alone or together with another
in any one bank at any time during the taxable period does not exceed Eight Hundred
Pesos (P800.00) a year or Two Hundred Pesos (P200.00) per quarter. Provided,
further, That if the recipient of such interest is exempt from income taxation, no tax
shall be imposed and that, if the recipient is enjoying preferential income tax
treatment, then the preferential tax rates so provided shall be imposed (Emphasis
supplied).
Sec. 3. Section 24 of the same Code is hereby amended by adding a new subsection (cc) between
subsections (c) and (d) to read as follows:
(cc) Rates of tax on interest from deposits and yield from deposit substitutes.
Interest on Philippine Currency bank deposits and yield from deposit substitutes
received by domestic or resident foreign corporations shall be subject to a final tax on
the total amount thereof as follows: (a) 15% of the interest on savings deposits; and
(b) 20% of the interest on time deposits and yield from deposit substitutes which shall
be collected and paid as provided in Sections 53 and 54 of this Code. Provided, That
if the recipient of such interest is exempt from income taxation, no tax shall be
imposed and that, if the recipient is enjoying preferential income tax treatment, then
the preferential tax rates so provided shall be imposed (Emphasis supplied).
Sec. 9. Section 53(e) of the same Code is hereby amended to read as follows:
Se. 53(e) Withholding of final tax on interest on bank deposits and yield from deposit
substitutes.
(1) Withholding of final tax. Every bank or non-bank financial intermediary shall
deduct and withhold from the interest on bank deposits or yield from deposit
substitutes a final tax equal to fifteen (15%) per cent of the interest on savings
deposits and twenty (20%) per cent of the interest on time deposits or yield from
deposit substitutes: Provided, however, That no withholding tax shall be made if the
aggregate amount of the interest on all deposit accounts maintained by a depositor
alone or together with another in any one bank at any time during the taxable period
does not exceed Eight Hundred Pesos a year or Two Hundred Pesos per quarter. For
this purpose, interest on a deposit account maintained by two persons shall be
deemed to be equally owned by them.
(2) Depositors or placers/investors enjoying tax exemption privileges or preferential
tax treatment. In all cases where the depositor or placer/investor is tax exempt or
is enjoying preferential income tax treatment under existing laws, the withholding tax
imposed in this paragraph shall be refunded or credited as the case may be upon
submission to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue of proof that the said depositor,
or placer/investor is a tax exempt entity or enjoys a preferential income tax treatment.
Subsequently, however, on 15 October 1984, Pres. Decree No. 1959 was issued, amending the aforestated provisions
to read:
Sec. 2. Section 21(d) of this Code, as amended, is hereby further amended to read as follows:
(d) On interest from bank deposits and yield or any other monetary benefit from
deposit substitutes and from trust fund and similar arrangements. Interest from
Philippine Currency Bank deposits and yield or any other monetary benefit from
deposit substitutes and from trust fund and similar arrangements whether received by
citizens of the Philippines, or by resident alien individuals, shall be subject to a 15%
final tax to be collected and paid as provided in Sections 53 and 54 of this Code.
Sec. 3. Section 24(cc) of this Code, as amended, is hereby further amended to read as follows:
(cc) Rates of tax on interest from deposits and yield or any other monetary benefit
from deposit substitutes and from trust fund and similar arrangements. Interest on
Philippine Currency Bank deposits and yield or any other monetary benefit from
deposit substitutes and from trust fund and similar arrangements received by
domestic or resident foreign corporations shall be subject to a 15% final tax to be
collected and paid as provided in Section 53 and 54 of this Code.
Sec. 4. Section 53 (d) (1) of this code is hereby amended to read as follows:
Sec. 53 (d) (1). Withholding of Final Tax. Every bank or non-bank financial
intermediary or commercial. industrial, finance companies, and other non-financial
companies authorized by the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue deposit
substitutes shall deduct and withhold from the interest on bank deposits or yield or
any other monetary benefit from deposit substitutes a final tax equal to fifteen per
centum(15%) of the interest on deposits or yield or any other monetary benefit from
deposit substitutes and from trust fund and similar arrangements.
It is to be noted that the exemption from withholding tax on interest on bank deposits previously extended by Pres.
Decree No. 1739 if the recipient (individual or corporation) of the interest income is exempt from income taxation, and
the imposition of the preferential tax rates if the recipient of the income is enjoying preferential income tax treatment,
were both abolished by Pres. Decree No. 1959. Petitioner thus submits that the deletion of the exempting and
preferential tax treatment provisions under the old law is a clear manifestation that the single 15% (now 20%) rate is
impossible on all interest incomes from deposits, deposit substitutes, trust funds and similar arrangements, regardless
of the tax status or character of the recipients thereof. In short, petitioner's position is that from 15 October 1984 when
Pres. Decree No. 1959 was promulgated, employees' trusts ceased to be exempt and thereafter became subject to
the final withholding tax.
Upon the other hand, GCL contends that the tax exempt status of the employees' trusts applies to all kinds of taxes,
including the final withholding tax on interest income. That exemption, according to GCL, is derived from Section 56(b)
and not from Section 21 (d) or 24 (cc) of the Tax Code, as argued by Petitioner.
The sole issue for determination is whether or not the GCL Plan is exempt from the final withholding tax on interest
income from money placements and purchase of treasury bills required by Pres. Decree No. 1959.
We uphold the exemption.
To begin with, it is significant to note that the GCL Plan was qualified as exempt from income tax by the Commissioner
of Internal Revenue in accordance with Rep. Act No. 4917 approved on 17 June 1967. This law specifically provided:
Sec. 1. Any provision of law to the contrary notwithstanding, the retirement benefits received by
officials and employees of private firms, whether individual or corporate, in accordance with a
reasonable private benefit plan maintained by the employer shall be exempt from all taxes and shall
not be liable to attachment, levy or seizure by or under any legal or equitable process whatsoever
except to pay a debt of the official or employee concerned to the private benefit plan or that arising
from liability imposed in a criminal action; . . . (emphasis ours).
In so far as employees' trusts are concerned, the foregoing provision should be taken in relation to then Section 56(b)
(now 53[b]) of the Tax Code, as amended by Rep. Act No. 1983, supra, which took effect on 22 June 1957. This
provision specifically exempted employee's trusts from income tax and is repeated hereunder for emphasis:
Sec. 56. Imposition of Tax. (a) Application of tax. The taxes imposed by this Title upon
individuals shall apply to the income of estates or of any kind of property held in trust.
xxx xxx xxx
(b) Exception. The tax imposed by this Title shall not apply to employee's trust which forms part of
a pension, stock bonus or profit-sharing plan of an employer for the benefit of some or all of his
employees . . .
The tax-exemption privilege of employees' trusts, as distinguished from any other kind of property held in trust, springs
from the foregoing provision. It is unambiguous. Manifest therefrom is that the tax law has singled out employees'
trusts for tax exemption.
And rightly so, by virtue of the raison de'etre behind the creation of employees' trusts. Employees' trusts or benefit
plans normally provide economic assistance to employees upon the occurrence of certain contingencies, particularly,
old age retirement, death, sickness, or disability. It provides security against certain hazards to which members of the
Plan may be exposed. It is an independent and additional source of protection for the working group. What is more, it
is established for their exclusive benefit and for no other purpose.
The tax advantage in Rep. Act No. 1983, Section 56(b), was conceived in order to encourage the formation and
establishment of such private Plans for the benefit of laborers and employees outside of the Social Security Act.
Enlightening is a portion of the explanatory note to H.B. No. 6503, now R.A. 1983, reading:
Considering that under Section 17 of the social Security Act, all contributions collected and payments
of sickness, unemployment, retirement, disability and death benefits made thereunder together with
the income of the pension trust are exempt from any tax, assessment, fee, or charge, it is proposed
that a similar system providing for retirement, etc. benefits for employees outside the Social Security
Act be exempted from income taxes. (Congressional Record, House of Representatives, Vol. IV, Part.
2, No. 57, p. 1859, May 3, 1957; cited in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Visayan Electric Co., et
al., G.R. No. L-22611, 27 May 1968, 23 SCRA 715); emphasis supplied.
It is evident that tax-exemption is likewise to be enjoyed by the income of the pension trust. Otherwise, taxation of
those earnings would result in a diminution accumulated income and reduce whatever the trust beneficiaries would
receive out of the trust fund. This would run afoul of the very intendment of the law.
The deletion in Pres. Decree No. 1959 of the provisos regarding tax exemption and preferential tax rates under the old
law, therefore, can not be deemed to extent to employees' trusts. Said Decree, being a general law, can not repeal by
implication a specific provision, Section 56(b) now 53 [b]) in relation to Rep. Act No. 4917 granting exemption from
income tax to employees' trusts. Rep. Act 1983, which excepted employees' trusts in its Section 56 (b) was effective
on 22 June 1957 while Rep. Act No. 4917 was enacted on 17 June 1967, long before the issuance of Pres. Decree
No. 1959 on 15 October 1984. A subsequent statute, general in character as to its terms and application, is not to be
construed as repealing a special or specific enactment, unless the legislative purpose to do so is manifested. This is
so even if the provisions of the latter are sufficiently comprehensive to include what was set forth in the special act
(Villegas v. Subido, G.R. No. L-31711, 30 September 1971, 41 SCRA 190).
Notably, too, all the tax provisions herein treated of come under Title II of the Tax Code on "Income Tax." Section 21
(d), as amended by Rep. Act No. 1959, refers to the final tax on individuals and falls under Chapter II; Section 24 (cc)
to the final tax on corporations under Chapter III; Section 53 on withholding of final tax to Returns and Payment of Tax
under Chapter VI; and Section 56 (b) to tax on Estates and Trusts covered by Chapter VII, Section 56 (b), taken in
conjunction with Section 56 (a), supra, explicitly excepts employees' trusts from "the taxes imposed by this Title."
Since the final tax and the withholding thereof are embraced within the title on "Income Tax," it follows that said trust
must be deemed exempt therefrom. Otherwise, the exception becomes meaningless.
There can be no denying either that the final withholding tax is collected from income in respect of which employees'
trusts are declared exempt (Sec. 56 [b], now 53 [b], Tax Code). The application of the withholdings system to interest
on bank deposits or yield from deposit substitutes is essentially to maximize and expedite the collection
of income taxes by requiring its payment at the source. If an employees' trust like the GCL enjoys a tax-exempt status
from income, we see no logic in withholding a certain percentage of that income which it is not supposed to pay in the
first place.
Petitioner also relies on Revenue Memorandum Circular 31-84, dated 30 October 1984, and Bureau of Internal
Revenue Ruling No. 027-e-000-00-005-85, dated 14 January 1985, as authorities for the argument that Pres. Decree
No. 1959 withdrew the exemption of employees' trusts from the withholding of the final tax on interest income. Said
Circular and Ruling pronounced that the deletion of the exempting and preferential tax treatment provisions by Pres.
Decree No. 1959 is a clear manifestation that the single 15% tax rate is imposable on all interest income regardless of
the tax status or character of the recipient thereof. But since we herein rule that Pres. Decree No. 1959 did not have
the effect of revoking the tax exemption enjoyed by employees' trusts, reliance on those authorities is now misplaced.
WHEREFORE, the Writ of Certiorari prayed for is DENIED. The judgment of respondent Court of Appeals, affirming
that of the Court of Tax Appeals is UPHELD. No costs.
SO ORDERED.