This document summarizes a tax case between Accenture Inc. and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue regarding Accenture's claim for a tax refund based on zero-rated transactions with foreign corporations. The court ruled that for a transaction to be zero-rated, the recipient of services must be proven to be doing business outside the Philippines. While Accenture provided evidence that its clients were foreign entities, it did not prove the clients were doing business outside the Philippines. Therefore, Accenture's claim for a tax refund failed because it did not meet its burden of proof regarding the qualification of recipients of its services.
This document summarizes a tax case between Accenture Inc. and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue regarding Accenture's claim for a tax refund based on zero-rated transactions with foreign corporations. The court ruled that for a transaction to be zero-rated, the recipient of services must be proven to be doing business outside the Philippines. While Accenture provided evidence that its clients were foreign entities, it did not prove the clients were doing business outside the Philippines. Therefore, Accenture's claim for a tax refund failed because it did not meet its burden of proof regarding the qualification of recipients of its services.
This document summarizes a tax case between Accenture Inc. and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue regarding Accenture's claim for a tax refund based on zero-rated transactions with foreign corporations. The court ruled that for a transaction to be zero-rated, the recipient of services must be proven to be doing business outside the Philippines. While Accenture provided evidence that its clients were foreign entities, it did not prove the clients were doing business outside the Philippines. Therefore, Accenture's claim for a tax refund failed because it did not meet its burden of proof regarding the qualification of recipients of its services.
This document summarizes a tax case between Accenture Inc. and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue regarding Accenture's claim for a tax refund based on zero-rated transactions with foreign corporations. The court ruled that for a transaction to be zero-rated, the recipient of services must be proven to be doing business outside the Philippines. While Accenture provided evidence that its clients were foreign entities, it did not prove the clients were doing business outside the Philippines. Therefore, Accenture's claim for a tax refund failed because it did not meet its burden of proof regarding the qualification of recipients of its services.
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Accenture vs CIR
Petitioner: ACCENTURE, INC.
Respondent: COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE G.R. No. 190102 July 11, 2012 TOPICS: Tax Credit; Non-retroactivity of Rules; No Consumption of Service Abroad; Foreign Corporation doing and not doing business in the Philippines; Burden of Proving in Tax Exemptions; FACTS: Accenture is a corporation engaged in the business of providing management consulting, business strategies development and selling and/or licensing of software. It is duly registered with the BIR as a VAT tax payer or enterprise. Accenture filed with the Department of Finance (DoF) an administrative claim for the refund or the issuance of a Tax Credit Certificate (TCC) based on its unutilized input VAT earned from zero-rated transactions arising from transactions with a foreign corporation engaged in business outside the Philippines evidenced by zero-rated Official Receipt and Billing Statements. Its refund was not acted upon by Department of Finance.
Accenture filed a case against department.
The latter argued, based on Burmeister case, that Accenture was not qualified because it failed to prove that the foreign corporation is not doing business in the Philippines. Accenture counters that Burmeister is not applicable because it was ruled after the present case was filed in court following the non-retroactivity of ruling. It further supported its claim that based on Amex case, there is no need to consume the service abroad in order to be qualified for zero-rating. ISSUE: 1. WON it is necessary that the recipient of the services be "doing business outside the Philippines" for the transaction to be zero-rated. 2. WON Burmeister case may be applied without violating the non-retroactivity of ruling. 3. WON Accentures position that the consumption of service abroad is not necessary. 4. WON Accenture successfully proved that its clients are entities doing business outside the Philippines. RULING: 1. Yes. Recipient of services must be doing business outside the Philippines for the transactions to qualify as zero-rated.
Under the Section 108(b) and of the 102(b) of the 1997
Tax Code, the recipient of services must be doing business outside the Philippines for the transaction to qualify as zero-rated. The Court also upholds the position of the CTA en banc that, because Section 108(B) of the 1997 Tax Code is a verbatim copy of Section 102(b) of the 1977 Tax Code, any interpretation of the latter holds true for the former. 2. Yes. Even though Accentures Petition was filed before Burmeister was promulgated, the pronouncements made in that case may be applied to the present one without violating the rule against retroactive application. When this Court decides a case, it does not pass a new law, but merely interprets a pre-existing one. When this Court interpreted Section 102(b) of the 1977 Tax Code in Burmeister, this interpretation became part of the law from the moment it became effective. It is elementary that the interpretation of a law by this Court constitutes part of that law from the date it was originally passed, since this Court's construction merely establishes the contemporaneous legislative intent that the interpreted law carried into effect. 3. This Court further finds that Accentures reliance on Amex is misplaced. We ruled in Amex that Section 102 of the 1977 Tax Code does not require that the services be consumed abroad to be zero-rated. However, nowhere in that case did this
Court discuss the necessary qualification of the recipient
of the service, as this matter was never put in question. In fact, the recipient of the service in Amex is a non-resident foreign client. The Court explained how the services rendered in Amex were considered to have been performed and consumed in the Philippines, to wit: Consumption is "the use of a thing in a way that thereby exhausts it." Applied to services, the term means the performance or "successful completion of a contractual duty, usually resulting in the performers release from any past or future liability x xx." The services rendered by respondent are performed or successfully completed upon its sending to its foreign client the drafts and bills it has gathered from service establishments here. Its services, having been performed in the Philippines, are therefore also consumed in the Philippines. 4. Accenture has failed to establish that the recipients of its services do business outside the Philippines. The evidence presented by Accenture may have established that its clients are foreign. This fact does not automatically mean, however, that these clients were doing business outside the Philippines. There is no specific criterion as to what constitutes "doing" or "engaging in" or "transacting" business. (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. British Overseas Airways Corporation.)
A taxpayer claiming a tax credit or refund has the burden
of proof to establish the factual basis of that claim. Tax refunds, like tax exemptions, are construed strictly against the taxpayer. Accenture failed to discharge this burden. It alleged and presented evidence to prove only that its clients were foreign entities. However, as found by both the CTA Division and the CTA En Banc, no evidence was presented by Accenture to prove the fact that the foreign clients to whom petitioner rendered its services were clients doing business outside the Philippines. As ruled by the CTA En Banc, the Official Receipts, Intercompany Payment Requests, Billing Statements, Memo Invoices-Receivable, Memo Invoices-Payable, and Bank Statements presented by Accenture merely substantiated the existence of sales, receipt of foreign currency payments, and inward remittance of the proceeds of such sales duly accounted for in accordance with BSP rules, all of these were devoid of any evidence that the clients were doing business outside of the Philippines.
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