PLDT sought a tax refund of over 23 million pesos in withholding taxes it remitted to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) after terminating employees in 1995 and paying them separation benefits. The Court of Tax Appeals denied PLDT's claim, finding that PLDT failed to sufficiently prove that the terminated employees received separation pay or that taxes were withheld from and remitted to the BIR. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding that (1) PLDT bore the burden of proving each employee received income and taxes were withheld, and (2) PLDT needed to show the income payments were declared on tax returns and establish the fact of withholding through withholding statements, neither of which PLD
PLDT sought a tax refund of over 23 million pesos in withholding taxes it remitted to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) after terminating employees in 1995 and paying them separation benefits. The Court of Tax Appeals denied PLDT's claim, finding that PLDT failed to sufficiently prove that the terminated employees received separation pay or that taxes were withheld from and remitted to the BIR. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding that (1) PLDT bore the burden of proving each employee received income and taxes were withheld, and (2) PLDT needed to show the income payments were declared on tax returns and establish the fact of withholding through withholding statements, neither of which PLD
PLDT sought a tax refund of over 23 million pesos in withholding taxes it remitted to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) after terminating employees in 1995 and paying them separation benefits. The Court of Tax Appeals denied PLDT's claim, finding that PLDT failed to sufficiently prove that the terminated employees received separation pay or that taxes were withheld from and remitted to the BIR. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding that (1) PLDT bore the burden of proving each employee received income and taxes were withheld, and (2) PLDT needed to show the income payments were declared on tax returns and establish the fact of withholding through withholding statements, neither of which PLD
PLDT sought a tax refund of over 23 million pesos in withholding taxes it remitted to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) after terminating employees in 1995 and paying them separation benefits. The Court of Tax Appeals denied PLDT's claim, finding that PLDT failed to sufficiently prove that the terminated employees received separation pay or that taxes were withheld from and remitted to the BIR. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding that (1) PLDT bore the burden of proving each employee received income and taxes were withheld, and (2) PLDT needed to show the income payments were declared on tax returns and establish the fact of withholding through withholding statements, neither of which PLD
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PLDT VS.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
G. .R. No. 157264/ 31 January 2008 Facts: In 1995, PLDT terminated several rank-and-file, supervisory and executive employees due to redundancy. In compliance with labor law requirements, it paid them separation and other benefits. As employer and withholding agent, it deducted from the separation pay withholding taxes in the total amount of P23,707,909.20 which it remitted to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR). On November 20, 1997, PLDT filed with the BIR a claim for tax credit or refund of the P23,707,909.20,alleging that the separation pay received by the employees are exempt from payment of income tax in accordance with Section 28(b)(7)(B) of the 1977 National Internal Revenue Code. As the BIR took no action on its claim, PLDT filed a claim for judicial refund before the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA). CIR,on the other hand, averred that PLDT failed to show proof of payment of separation pay and remittance of the alleged withheld taxes. The CTA denied PLDTs claim ruling that it failed to sufficiently prove that the terminated employees received separation pays and that taxes were withheld therefrom and remitted to the BIR. It was found that the cash salary vouchers [with respect to the rank-and- file] for the final/terminal pay did not have acknowledgement receipts. Thus, it was held to be good only as proofs of authorization for payment and not actual payment. Neither that proofs of payment could be derived from the Summary of Gross Compensation and Tax Withheld for 1995, which PLDT submitted to support its claim, because it enumerated the amounts of income taxes withheld on per district/area basis. And while there was a certification [pursuant to CTA circular 1-95) from SGV that it had been able to trace the remittance, the documents from which said finding was made were not submitted. Issues: (1). Is PLDT entitled to the refund? (2). is it essential to prove that the employees received the income payments as part of gross income and the fact of withholding? Held: (1). Tax refunds, like tax exemptions, are construed strictly against the taxpayer and liberally in favor of the taxing authority, and the taxpayer bears the burden of establishing the factual basis of his claim for a refund. Under then Section 28 (b) (7)(B) [NOW Section 32(B)6(b)] of the NIRC, it is incumbent on PLDT as a claimant for refund on behalf of each of the separated employees to show that each employee did x x x reflect in his or its own return the income upon which any creditable tax is required to be withheld at the source. Only when there is an excess of the amount of tax so withheld over the tax due on the payees return can a refund become possible. (2). A taxpayer must thus do two things to be able to successfully make a claim for the tax refund: (a) declare the income payments it received as part of its gross income and (b) establish the fact of withholding. Claims for tax credit or refund of income tax deducted and withheld on income payments shall be given due course only when it is shown on the return that the income payment received was declared as part of the gross income and the fact of withholding is established by a copy of the statement duly issued by the payer to the payee (BIR Form No. 1743.1) showing the amount paid and the amount of tax withheld therefrom. While SGV, the auditing firm hired by PLDT. certified that it had "been able to trace the remittance of the withheld taxes summarized in the C[ash] S[alary] V[ouchers] to the Monthly Remittance Return of Income Taxes Withheld for the appropriate period covered by the final payment made to the concerned executives, supervisors, and rank and file staff members of PLDT,"27 the same cannot be appreciated in PLDT's favor as the courts cannot verify such claim. While the records of the case contain the Alphabetical List of Employee from Whom Taxes Were Withheld for the year 1995 and the Monthly Remittance Returns of Income Taxes Withheld for December 1995, the documents from which SGV "traced" the former to the latter have not been presented. Failure to present these documents is fatal to PLDT's case