G.R. No. 207140. January 30, 2023
G.R. No. 207140. January 30, 2023
G.R. No. 207140. January 30, 2023
DECISION
M.V. LOPEZ, J : p
A claim for exemption from real property tax (RPT), whether full or partial, does not deal with the
authority and power of the local assessor to impose the assessment or the local treasurer to collect the tax. 1
The issue of exemption that pertains to the reasonableness or correctness of the assessment is a question of
fact that administrative agencies should resolve. Therefore, compliance with the "payment under protest"
requirement in Section 252 (a) 2 of the Local Government Code (LGC) 3 is mandatory. Otherwise, the local
treasurer will not act on the protest, and the Local Board of Assessment Appeals (LBAA) will have no authority
to take cognizance of the appeal. HTcADC
We apply this dictum in the Petition for Review 4 under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court assailing the Court of
Tax Appeals (CTA) En Banc's Decision 5 dated November 29, 2012 and Resolution 6 dated April 22, 2013 in CTA
EB No. 850, which affirmed the Central Board of Assessment Appeals' (CBAA) Decision 7 in CBAA Case No. L-93.
The CBAA upheld the LBAA's August 14, 2008 Judgment 8 that declared National Power Corporation (NPC) liable
to pay the Municipality of Norzagaray, Bulacan real property taxes in the amount of PHP18,475,003.20 for the
properties listed in the Land Assessment covering the period from January 1, 1997 to December 31, 2006, and
PHP113,960,000.00 for the properties listed in the Machineries Assessment for the period from January 1, 1996
to December 31, 2005.
ANTECEDENTS
NPC, a government-owned and controlled corporation (GOCC), is the owner and operator of Angat Hydro-
Electric Power Plant located at Hilltop, San Lorenzo, Norzagaray, Bulacan.
On December 12, 2006, NPC received from the Municipal Assessor of the Municipality of Norzagaray a
Notice of Assessment 9 for RPT for January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2005, for the following properties (referred
to herein as Machineries Assessment): CAIHTE
ARP No. Classification Description Basic Tax SEF Tax Tax Due
Total tax due for the period covering January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2005 13,960,000.00
On December 14, 2006, NPC received another Notice of Assessment 10 for RPT covering January 1, 1997
to December 31, 2006, as follows (referred to herein as Land Assessment): aScITE
As the parties failed to settle amicably, NPC questioned the assessment before the LBAA of Bulacan,
assigning two errors. 11 First, the properties listed in the Machineries Assessment are exempt from RPT under
Section 234 (c) 12 of the LGC because these are actually, directly, and exclusively used in generating and
transmitting electricity. Second , the assessor erroneously assigned a higher assessment level to the land, i.e.,
40%, and not 10%, which is the rate prescribed for GOCCs under Sectio 218 (d) 13 of the LGC.
In its Answer, 14 the Municipal Assessor admitted a mistake in assigning 40% for the land and sent a new
Notice of Assessment 15 to NPC on February 8, 2007, using the 10% assessment level on special classes of
properties under Section 2.D.17, paragraph (d) of the Provincial Revenue Code of Bulacan. The revised RPT due
for the Land Assessment covering the period of January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2005 shall be
PHP18,475,003.20 16 and PHP2,733,248.00 17 for January 1, 2006 to December 31, 2006. Further, the assessor
posited that the hearing on the Machineries Assessment should be deferred until NPC had paid the assessment
under protest.
Meanwhile, the Provincial Government of Bulacan invoked Section 216 18 of the LGC as the basis of NPC's
liability for RPT on the machineries. 19 The properties are structures wherein RPT could be properly imposed.
Also, the petition should be dismissed for lack of certification against non-forum shopping.
In its Reply/Comment, 20 NPC countered that it was not required to pay the tax under protest following
the Court's ruling in Ty v. Hon. Trampe . 21 In that case, the Court ruled that the requirement of payment under
protest in the LGC does not apply when the petitioner is questioning the authority and power of the assessor,
acting solely and independently, to impose the assessment and of the treasurer to collect the tax. Here, NPC
was questioning the very authority and power of the Municipal Assessor to impose RPT on the properties of
NPC, which are exempt from the tax. NPC added that the Land Assessment was still erroneous. The Sanggunian
concerned did not pass an ordinance on the fair market value of the "special classes of properties" as
mandated by Sections 212 22 and 215 23 of the LGC. 24 DETACa
NPC appealed to the CBAA, 29 insisting that it is not liable to pay RPT. The machineries are actually,
directly, and exclusively used in the generation or transmission of electric power. Regarding Land Assessment,
NPC posited that the local assessor issued a Notice of Assessment 30 dated June 1, 2007, limiting NPC's liability
to PHP6,485,422.60. It was, therefore, erroneous for the LBAA to still order NPC to pay the original amount of
PHP18,475,003.20.
The CBAA dismissed NPC's appeal on August 26, 2010. 31 In upholding the assessment, the CBAA ruled
that NPC failed to prove that the machineries were actually, directly, and exclusively used for generating and
transmitting electric power. At any rate, the dam and its auxiliaries are multi-purpose, and the other
properties are either water conveyance structures, or utilized for preventive maintenance, periodic
check-ups and repairs, and as safety measures, thus, negating the requirements of actuality and
exclusivity in use. The CBAA further found the structures are used for retention, conservation, diversion,
utilization, as well as management and control of water in different aspects, and used for
irrigation, flood control and water supply system for the Greater Manila Area. 32 In all, the properties
perform functions other than power generation and transmission. Thus:
WHEREFORE, this Board holds and concludes that the petition for tax exemption has no factual and
legal basis, hence DENIED. The appeal therefore is DISMISSED, the assessments of the eleven (11) subject
properties upheld, and the [D]ecision of the LBAA is AFFIRMED.
HEITAD
SO ORDERED. 33
Unsuccessful at reconsideration, 34 NPC filed a Petition before the CTA En Banc, docketed as CTA Case No.
850 (CBAA Case No. L-93). 35
NPC averred that the CBAA erred in ordering it to pay the amount of PHP18,475,003.20 for the Land
Assessment and not PHP6,485,422.60 only based on the amended assessment issued by the Municipality of
Norzagaray. Further, the properties listed in the Machineries Assessment were actually, directly, and exclusively
used for electricity generation, pollution control, and environmental protection; hence, they are exempt from
RPT. 36
THE RULING OF THE CTA
On November 29, 2012, the CTA En Banc issued the assailed Decision denying NPC's Petition. The CTA
noted that the Municipality of Norzagaray amended the statement of account for the Land Assessment due to
NPC to PHP6,485,422.60. However, NPC's failure to first pay the tax rendered its protest without any effect.
Thus, NPC's appeal to the LBAA was prematurely filed. The CTA cited National Power Corporation v. Province of
Quezon, 37 where the Court ruled that protest questioning the reasonableness or correctness of the amount of
assessment must be preceded by paying the tax under protest. Without a valid protest, the assessor cannot
validly act on the protest. Consequently, the appellate authority of the LBAA cannot be invoked. 38
The CTA added that the premature filing of a Petition with the LBAA violates the doctrine of exhaustion of
administrative remedies. NPC's cause of action is not yet ripe for judicial determination and must be denied for
lack of cause of action. 39 The CTA En Banc disposed:
WHEREFORE, the instant Petition for Review is hereby DENIED for lack of merit and for lack of
cause of action. The assailed decision and order of the CBAA dated August 26, 2010 and October 14, 2011,
respectively, in CBAA Case No. L-93 entitled "National Power Corporation [v.] The Local Board of
Assessment Appeals of the Province of Bulacan and the Province of Bulacan, the Municipality of
Norzagaray, Bulacan, and Gloria P. Sta. Maria, Municipal Assessor of Norzagaray, Bulacan," are hereby
AFFIRMED.
Accordingly, petitioner National Power Corporation is directed to pay respondent Municipality of
Norzagaray, Bulacan, its tax liabilities amounting to [PHP]18,475,003.20 over the "Land Assessments,"
covering January 01, 1997 to December 31, 2006.
Also, for the period beginning January 01, 1996 to December 31, 2005, the amount of
[PHP]113,960,000.00 should also be paid by petitioner to Municipality of Norzagaray, Bulacan, over the
"Machineries Assessment." aDSIHc
SO ORDERED. 40
The CTA En Banc denied NPC's motion for reconsideration on April 22, 2013. It ruled that the compliance
by NPC with a condition precedent and the exhaustion of administrative remedies are issues which are relevant
and interrelated with the issues raised in the Petition. The CTA has the authority to rule on them even though
they are not presented as issues by the parties. The CTA reiterated that a protest of an assessment based on
tax exemption is a question of the reasonableness or correctness of the assessment and must comply with the
requirement of payment under protest under Section 252 of the LGC, 41 viz.:
WHEREFORE, the Motion for Reconsideration dated December 18, 2012 filed by petitioner [NPC], is
hereby DENIED, for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED. 42
Respondents filed their Comment 48 on the Petition on December 23, 2013, essentially reiterating the CTA
En Banc's discussion. NPC submitted a Reply 49 insisting that payment under protest is not required.
Subsequently, in compliance with this Court's Resolution 50 dated August 27, 2014, the parties submitted
their respective Memoranda. 51
On June 10, 2020, this Court required the parties "to MOVE IN THE PREMISES by informing the Court,
within ten (10) days from notice, of any supervening events or subsequent developments pertinent to the case
which may be of help to the Court in its immediate disposition of the case or may have rendered the case moot
and academic." 52
The OSG filed a Manifestation and Compliance 53 on December 10, 2020, informing this Court that there
were no supervening events or subsequent developments to the case after the issuance of the TRO on
November 25, 2013. The OSG also informed the Court that certain properties 54 enumerated in the Machineries
Assessment were already sold to Korean Water Resources Corporation, now Angat Hydro Corporation.
Whereas, to date, the respondents did not submit their compliance with the Court's Resolution dated June
10, 2020, directing the parties to move in the premises within ten 10 days from notice.
We now resolve.
ISSUES
Parsed from the submission of the parties, the issues before this Court are the following:
1. Whether compliance with the payment under protest requirement in Section 252 of the LGC is a
condition sine qua non to question the assessment of the local assessor before the LBAA?
2. Whether the properties listed in the Machineries Assessment are exempt from RPT?
3. Whether the properties listed in the Land Assessment are exempt from RPT?55
RULING
We deny the Petition. ETHIDa
We disagree. The cases of Ty and Olivarez must be placed in their proper perspective.
The petitioner in Ty v. Trampe questioned before the trial court the increased real estate taxes
imposed by and being collected in Pasig City effective from the year 1994, premised on the legal question
of whether or not Presidential Decree No. 921 (PD 921) was repealed by the LGC. PD 921 required that the
schedule of values of real properties in the Metropolitan Manila area shall be prepared jointly by the city
assessors in the districts created therein; while Section 212 of the LGC stated that the schedule shall be
prepared by the provincial, city or municipal assessors of the municipalities within the Metropolitan Manila
Area for the different classes of real property situated in their respective local government units for
enactment by ordinance of the Sanggunian concerned. The private respondents assailed Ty's act of filing a
prohibition petition before the trial court contending that Ty should have availed first the administrative
remedies provided in the LGC, particularly Sections 252 (on payment under protest before the local
treasurer) and 226 (on appeals to the LBAA).
The Court, through former Chief Justice Artemio Panganiban, declared that Ty correctly filed a
petition for prohibition before the trial court against the assailed act of the city assessor and treasurer. The
administrative protest proceedings provided in Section[s] 252 and 226 will not apply. The protest
contemplated under Section 252 is required where there is a question as to the
reasonableness or correctness of the amount assessed. Hence, if a taxpayer disputes the
reasonableness of an increase in a real property tax assessment, he is required to "first pay the tax" under
protest. Otherwise, the city or municipal treasurer will not act on his protest. Ty however was questioning
the very authority and power of the assessor, acting solely and independently, to impose the assessment
and of the treasurer to collect the tax. These were not questions merely of amounts of the increase in the
tax but attacks on the very validity of any increase. Moreover, Ty was raising a legal question that is
properly cognizable by the trial court; no issues of fact were involved. In enumerating the power of the
LBAA, Section 229 declares that "the proceedings of the Board shall be conducted solely for the purpose of
ascertaining the facts x x x." Appeals to the LBAA (under Section 226) are therefore fruitful only where
questions of fact are involved. cSEDTC
Olivarez v. Marquez , on the other hand, involved a petition for certiorari, mandamus, and prohibition
questioning the assessment and levy made by the City of Parañaque. Olivarez was seeking the annulment
of his realty tax delinquency assessment. Marquez assailed Olivarez' failure to first exhaust administrative
remedies, particularly the requirement of payment under protest. Olivarez replied that his petition was
filed to question the assessor's authority to assess and collect realty taxes and therefore, as held in Ty v.
Trampe, the exhaustion of administrative remedies was not required. The Court however did not agree
with Olivarez' argument. It found that there was nothing in his petition that supported his claim regarding
the assessor's alleged lack of authority. What Olivarez raised were the following grounds: "(1) some of the
taxes being collected have already prescribed and may no longer be collected as provided in Section 194
of the Local Government Code of 1991; (2) some properties have been doubly taxed/assessed; (3) some
properties being taxed are no longer existent; (4) some properties are exempt from taxation as they
are being used exclusively for educational purposes; and (5) some errors are made in the assessment and
collection of taxes due on petitioners' properties, and that respondents committed grave abuse of
discretion in making the improper, excessive and unlawful the collection of taxes against the petitioner."
The Olivarez petition filed before the trial court primarily involved the correctness of the
assessments, which is a question of fact that is not allowed in a petition for certiorari, prohibition, and
mandamus . Hence, we declared that the petition should have been brought, at the very first instance, to
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the LBAA, not the trial court.
Like Olivarez, Napocor, by claiming exemption from realty taxation, is simply raising a question of
the correctness of the assessment. A claim for tax exemption, whether full or partial, does not
question the authority of local assessor to assess real property tax. This may be inferred from
Section 206 which states that:
xxx xxx xxx
By providing that real property not declared and proved as tax-exempt shall be included in the assessment
roll, the above-quoted provision implies that the local assessor has the authority to assess the property for
realty taxes, and any subsequent claim for exemption shall be allowed only when sufficient proof has been
adduced supporting the claim. Since Napocor was simply questioning the correctness of the assessment, it
should have first complied with Section 252, particularly the requirement of payment under protest.
Napocor's failure to prove that this requirement has been complied with thus renders its administrative
protest under Section 226 of the LGC without any effect. No protest shall be entertained unless the
taxpayer first pays the tax.
It was an ill-advised move for Napocor to directly file an appeal with the LBAA under Section 226
without first paying the tax as required under Section 252. Sections 252 and 226 provide successive
administrative remedies to a taxpayer who questions the correctness of an assessment. Section 226, in
declaring that "any owner or person having legal interest in the property who is not satisfied with the
action of the provincial, city, or municipal assessor in the assessment of his property may x x x appeal to
the Board of Assessment Appeals x x x," should be read in conjunction with Section 252 (d), which states
that "in the event that the protest is denied x x x, the taxpayer may avail of the remedies as provided for
in Chapter 3, Title II, Book II of the LGC [Chapter 3 refers to Assessment Appeals, which includes Sections
226 to 231]. The "action" referred to in Section 226 (in relation to a protest of real property tax
assessment) thus refers to the local assessor's act of denying the protest filed pursuant to Section 252.
Without the action of the local assessor, the appellate authority of the LBAA cannot be invoked. Napocor's
action before the LBAA was thus prematurely filed. 61 (Underscoring supplied, citations omitted) AIDSTE
We reiterated this in National Power Corporation v. The Provincial Treasurer of Benguet. The principles 62
were also applied in Camp John Hay Development Corporation v. Central Board of Assessment Appeals. 63 In
that case, Camp John Hay Development Corporation (CJHDC) was challenging the legality and validity of the
RPT assessment on the ground that it was exempted from paying taxes, national and local, including RPT,
pursuant to Republic Act (RA) No. 7227 64 or the Bases Conversion and Development Act of 1992. CJHDC did
not pay the questioned assessment under protest. The Court explained that the claim of exemption from RPT is
a question of fact that should be resolved at the first instance by the proper administrative bodies and by
paying under protest the tax. Thus:
[A] claim for exemption from payment of real property taxes does not actually question the
assessor's authority to assess and collect such taxes, but pertains to the reasonableness or
correctness of the assessment by the local assessor, a question of fact which should be
resolved, at the very first instance, by the LBAA. This may be inferred from Section 206 of RA No.
7160 or the LGC of 1991 which states that:
xxx xxx xxx
In other words, by providing that real property not declared and proved as tax-exempt shall be
included in the assessment roll, the above-quoted provision implies that the local assessor has the
authority to assess the property for realty taxes, and any subsequent claim for exemption shall be allowed
only when sufficient proof has been adduced supporting the claim.
Therefore, if the property being taxed has not been dropped from the assessment roll,
taxes must be paid under protest if the exemption from taxation is insisted upon. SDAaTC
Accordingly, the CBAA and the CTA En Banc correctly ruled that real property taxes should first be
paid before any protest thereon may be considered. It is without a doubt that such requirement of
"payment under protest" is a condition sine qua non before an appeal may be entertained .
Thus, remanding the case to the LBAA for further proceedings subject to a full and up-to-date payment,
either in cash or surety, of realty tax on the subject properties was proper.
xxx xxx xxx
All told. We go back to what was at the outset stated, that is, that a claim for tax exemption,
whether full or partial, does not question the authority of local assessor to assess real
property tax, but merely raises a question of the reasonableness or correctness of such
assessment, which requires compliance with Section 252 of the LGC of 1991. Such argument
which may involve a question of fact should be resolved at the first instance by the LBAA. 65
(Emphasis supplied, citations omitted)
The foregoing should not be confused with this Court's pronouncement inNational Power Corporation v.
Municipal Government of Navotas, 66 where the only issue is the legality or validity of the assessment — a
question of law that is properly cognizable by the RTC, to wit:
In the case at bar, the claim of petitioner essentially questions the very authority and power of the
Municipal Assessor to impose the assessment and of the Municipal Treasurer to collect the real property
tax with respect to the machineries and equipment located in the Navotas I and II power plants. Certainly,
it does not pertain to the correctness of the amounts assessed but attacks the validity of the assessment
of the taxes itself.
The well-established rule is that the allegations in the complaint and the character of the relief
sought determine the nature of an action. Here, it is not disputed that the machineries and equipment are
being used for power generation. The primordial issue, however, is whether these machineries
and equipment are actually, directly and exclusively used by petitioner within the purview of
Section 234 of the LGC, which exempts it from payment of real property taxes, to wit:
xxx xxx xxx
As can be gleaned from the foregoing, the issue is clearly legal given that it involves an
interpretation of the contract between the parties vis-à-vis the applicable laws, i.e., which
entity actually, directly and exclusively uses the subject machineries and equipment. The
answer to such question would then determine whether petitioner is indeed exempt from
payment of real property taxes. Since the issue is a question of law, the jurisdiction was
correctly lodged with the RTC. 67 (Emphasis supplied, citations omitted) acEHCD
Thus, in Capitol Wireless, Inc. v. Provincial Treasurer of Batangas, 68 the Court clarified that when the real
issue involves questions of fact instead of pure questions of law, the case is cognizable by local administrative
bodies like the LBAA and CBAA, which are the proper venues for trying these factual issues. 69
In this case, the authority or power of the municipal assessor to impose RPT on the NPC's properties is not
being questioned. Nothing in the Petition filed with the LBAA supported NPC's claim regarding the assessor's
alleged lack of authority. Instead, the Petition primarily involved factual questions on the correctness of
the assessment based on two grounds: first, the properties listed in the Machineries Assessment are exempt
from RPT because they are actually, directly, and exclusively used for the generation of electricity; second, the
computation of RPT in the Land Assessment is erroneous. The assessment level for the land should be 10%, the
rate prescribed for GOCCs under Section 218 (d) of the LGC. 70 The actual, direct, and exclusive use of the
properties for the exempting purpose requires presenting evidence to the board of assessment appeals, whose
primary duty is to ascertain the facts. 71 Therefore, the administrative procedures for contesting an assessment
under the LGC must be complied with. Sections 252 and 226 of the LGC state:
SECTION 252. Payment under Protest . — (a) No protest shall be entertained unless the
taxpayer first pays the tax. There shall be annotated on the tax receipts the words "paid under
protest." The protest in writing must be filed within thirty (30) days from payment of the tax
to the provincial, city treasurer or municipal treasurer, in the ease of a municipality within
Metropolitan Manila Area, who shall decide the protest within sixty (60) days from receipt.
(b) The tax or a portion thereof paid under protest, shall be held in trust by the treasurer
concerned.
(c) In the event that the protest is finally decided in favor of the taxpayer, the amount or portion
of the tax protested shall be refunded to the Protestant, or applied as tax credit against his existing or
future tax liability.
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(d) In the event that the protest is denied or upon the lapse of the sixty[-]day period
prescribed in subparagraph (a), the taxpayer may avail of the remedies as provided for in
Chapter 3, Title II, Book II of this Code.
SECTION 226. Local Board of Assessment Appeals. — Any owner or person having legal
interest in the property who is not satisfied with the action of the provincial, city or municipal
assessor in the assessment of his property may, within sixty (60) days from the date of receipt
of the written notice of assessment, appeal to the Board of Assessment [A]ppeals of the
province or city by filing a petition under oath in the form prescribed for the purpose, together with copies
of the tax declarations and such affidavits or documents submitted in support of the appeal. EcTCAD
NPC did not pay the tax negating the perfection of its protest to the local assessor. We stress that "[n]o
protest shall be entertained unless the taxpayer first pays the tax." 72 Without a valid protest, therefore, the
LBAA could not have had the authority to act on NPC's appeal. The CTA En Banc was correct in ruling that NPC's
Petition was prematurely filed. NPC failed to exhaust the administrative remedies provided under the LGC.
Even if we accept NPC's argument that it is questioning the legality and validity of the assessment, not
the reasonableness or correctness, NPC filed an action before the wrong court. When the only issue is the
legality or validity of the assessment such as when the local assessor had no authority to impose the
assessment, the trial court shall have jurisdiction. 73 In City of Lapu-Lapu v. Philippines Economic Zone
Authority, 74 the Court laid down guidelines in enforcing a taxpayer's remedies against erroneous or illegal
assessment of RPT:
The proper remedy of a taxpayer depends on the stage in which the local government unit is
enforcing its authority to collect real property taxes. For the guidance of the members of the bench and
the bar, we reiterate the taxpayer's remedies against the erroneous or illegal assessment of real property
taxes.
Exhaustion of administrative remedies under the Local Government Code is necessary in
cases of erroneous assessments where the correctness of the amount assessed is assailed. The
taxpayer must first pay the tax then file a protest with the Local Treasurer within 30 days from date of
payment of tax. If protest is denied or upon the lapse of the 60-day period to decide the protest, the
taxpayer may appeal to the Local Board of Assessment Appeals within 60 days from the denial of the
protest or the lapse of the 60-day period to decide the protest. The Local Board of Assessment Appeals has
120 days to decide the appeal.
If the taxpayer is unsatisfied with the Local Board's decision, the taxpayer may appeal before the
Central Board of Assessment Appeals within 30 days from receipt of the Local Board's decision.
The decision of the Central Board of Assessment Appeals is appealable before the Court of Tax
Appeals En Banc. The appeal before the Court of Tax Appeals shall be filed following the procedure under
Rule 43 of the Rules of Court.
The Court of Tax Appeals' decision may then be appealed before this court through a petition for
review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court raising pure questions of law.
In case of an illegal assessment where the assessment was issued without authority,
exhaustion of administrative remedies is not necessary and the taxpayer may directly resort
to judicial action. The taxpayer shall file a complaint for injunction before the Regional Trial
Court to enjoin the local government unit from collecting real property taxes. SDHTEC
The party unsatisfied with the decision of the Regional Trial Court shall file an appeal, not a petition
f o r certiorari, before the Court of Tax Appeals, the complaint being a local tax case decided by the
Regional Trial Court. The appeal shall be filed within fifteen (15) days from notice of the trial court's
decision.
The Court of Tax Appeals' decision may then be appealed before this court through a petition for
review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court raising pure questions of law. 75 (Emphasis
supplied, citations omitted)
NPC should have filed an injunction with the RTC and not an appeal under Section 226 of the LGC to the
LBAA.
Despite this, We find it obscure that while the CTA En Banc recognized NPC's failure to comply with the
payment under protest requirement, and ruled that prior payment under protest is condition precedent to file
an appeal with the LBAA, it still affirmed the RPT assessment imposed by the Municipality of Norzagaray against
NPC. The tax court did not explain why the assessment should be upheld. For this reason, We reverse the ruling
of the CTA En Banc. While the non-exhaustion of administrative remedies is not jurisdictional, it renders the
action premature. The claimed cause of action is not ripe for judicial determination; the plaintiff has no cause of
action to ventilate in court. 76 Accordingly, the CTA En Banc should have desisted from ruling on NPC's liability
for real property taxes.
The doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies, however, is a relative one and is flexible
depending on the peculiarity and uniqueness of the factual and circumstantial settings of a case. 77 It may be
disregarded: (1) when to require exhaustion would be unreasonable; 78 or (2) when the issue of non-exhaustion
has been rendered moot, 79 as in this case.
We note that the LBAA did not dismiss NPC's petition despite the lack of prior payment of tax under
protest. Instead, it discussed the factual basis and merits of NPC's claim for exemption. 80 On appeal to the
CBAA, the CBAA conducted hearings and ocular inspections and received documentary evidence and
testimonies of witnesses to determine the factual basis of NPC's claim. It declared NPC liable for RPT on the
Machineries Assessment after finding that the properties are not actually, directly, and exclusively used for
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generating and transmitting electric power. Regarding Land Assessment, the CBAA found the issue "moot and
academic" since "the x x x Municipal Assessor readily admitted that she committed an honest mistake in
assigning a higher assessment level to the lands in question. She immediately rectified the error and revised
the land tax declarations to conform with the prescribed level for GOCC[s] under Section 218 of the LGC which
is 10% to the satisfaction and conformity of the [NPC]." 81 The LBAA and CBAA took it upon themselves to
resolve the merits of the case despite the non-payment of the assessed tax. Thus, to remand the case to the
Boards would be futile. HSAcaE
It may not be amiss to point out also that the Provincial Treasurer of Bulacan already issued a Warrant of
Levy 82 against the properties listed in the Machineries Assessment upon which this Court issued a TRO83 on
November 25, 2013. Further, this case has been dragging for almost ten years since it was filed in 2013,
without a resolution regarding the taxability of the properties used by NPC in its operations. In the
circumstances, we find it proper to give due course to the instant Petition and resolve the substantive issue of
whether the properties listed in the Machineries Assessment and Land Assessment are exempt from RPT.
The properties listed in the Machineries
Assessment are not exempt from real
property tax.
NPC claims exemption from RPT under Section 234 (c) of the LGC, viz.:
SECTION 234. Exemptions from Real Property Tax. — The following are exempted from
payment of the real property tax:
xxx xxx xxx
(c) All machineries and equipment that are actually, directly and exclusively used by local water
districts and government-owned or -controlled corporations engaged in the supply and distribution of
water and/or generation and transmission of electric power[.]
To successfully claim exemption, the claimant must prove that: "(a) the machineries and equipment are
actually, directly, and exclusively used by local water districts and [GOCCs]; and (b) the local water
districts and [GOCCs] claiming exemption must be engaged in the supply and distribution of water and/or the
generation and transmission of electric power." 84
It is undisputed that NPC is a GOCC engaged in power generation and transmission.85 The debate lies on
whether the eleven properties listed in the Machineries Assessment are actually, directly, and exclusively used
in the generation and transmission of electric power.
We rule against the exemption.
Preliminarily, the "machineries and equipment" referred to in Section 234 (c) of the LGC should not be
construed as being confined only within the narrow definition of "machinery" in Article 415 (5) 86 of the New
Civil Code. In determining whether a "machinery" is subject to RPT, the definition provided in Section 199 (o) of
the LGC, in relation to Article 290 (o) of the Rules and Regulations Implementing the LGC, 87 shall prevail, 88 to
wit: AScHCD
SECTION 199. Definition of Terms. — When used in this Title, the term:
xxx xxx xxx
(o) "Machinery" embraces machines, equipment, mechanical contrivances, instruments,
appliances or apparatus which may or may not be attached, permanently or temporarily, to the real
property. It includes the physical facilities for production, the installations and appurtenant service
facilities, those which are mobile, self-powered or self-propelled, and those not permanently attached to
the real property which are actually, directly, and exclusively used to meet the needs of the
particular industry, business or activity and which by their very nature and purpose are
designed for, or necessary to its manufacturing, mining, logging, commercial, industrial or agricultural
purposes[.] (Emphasis supplied)
ARTICLE 290. Definition of Terms. —
xxx xxx xxx
(o) Machinery embraces machines, equipment, mechanical contrivances, instruments,
appliances or apparatus, which may or may not be attached, permanently or temporarily to the real
property.
Physical facilities for production, installations and appurtenant service facilities, those which are
mobile, self-powered, or self-propelled and those not permanently attached to the real property shall be
classified as real property provided that:
(1) They are actually, directly, and exclusively used to meet the needs of the particular
industry, business, or activity; and
(2) By their very nature and purpose are designed for, or necessary to manufacturing,
mining, logging, commercial, industrial, or agricultural purposes.
Machinery which are of general purpose use including but not limited to office equipment,
typewriters, telephone equipment, breakable or easily damaged containers (glass or cartons),
microcomputers, facsimile machines, telex machines, cash dispensers, furniture and fixtures, freezers,
refrigerators, display cases or racks, fruit juice or beverage automatic dispensing machines which are not
directly and exclusively used to meet the needs of a particular industry, business or activity shall not be
considered within the definition of machinery under this Rule. (Emphasis supplied)
Petitioner is correct in claiming that the phrase pertaining to physical facilities for production is
comprehensive enough to include the road equipment and mini haulers as actually, directly, and
exclusively used by respondent to meet the needs of its operations in palm oil production. Moreover,
"mini-haulers are farm tractors pulling attached trailers used in the hauling of seedlings during planting
season and in transferring fresh palm fruits from the farm [or] field to the processing plant within the
plantation area." The indispensability of the road equipment and mini haulers in transportation
makes it actually, directly, and exclusively used in the operation of respondent's business . 92
(Emphasis supplied, citations omitted)
In Lung Center of the Philippines v. Quezon City, 93 this Court declared:
"Exclusive" is defined as possessed and enjoyed to the exclusion of others; debarred from participation or
enjoyment; and "exclusively" is defined, "in a manner to exclude; as enjoying a privilege exclusively." If
real property is used for one or more commercial purposes, it is not exclusively used for the
exempted purposes but is subject to taxation. The words "dominant use" or "principal use" cannot
be substituted for the words "used exclusively" without doing violence to the Constitutions and the law.
Solely is synonymous with exclusively . 94 (Emphasis supplied, citations omitted)
Here, the Municipality of Norzagaray assessed NPC for RPT on the: (1) main dam, (2) spillway with three
taintor steel gates, (3) diversion canals, (4) tailrace tunnel, (5) penstock, (6) auxiliary draft tube gates with
frames and guiderails, (7) draft tube gates and hoists, (8) power tunnel, (9) power intake structure, (10) surge
tunnel, and (11) power intake service and bulkhead gates. The CBAA described the use and function of these
properties, as follows: 95
A. The Main Dam (ARP/Tax Declaration No. 00180)
It is an immovable massive wall of earth and rockfill with an inclined earthcore with a height of 131
meters and length of 568 meters. Its structural design and operational use is not in any way connected to
power generation and transmission. Its main purpose is to receive, hold and impound water coming
from the Angat and Umiray rivers besides water from run-offs and rain water in a gigantic reservoir. In turn
this big body of water is used primarily to irrigate the agricultural lands of Central Luzon, provide
domestic water supply system for Metro Manila and neighboring towns thru the MWSS, and to generate
hydroelectric power. AcICHD
On the other hand, the power intake structures (TD No. 00188), the draft tube gates and hoists (TD
No. 00190) are primarily used as safety and preventive mechanisms during repairs and maintenance,
periodic and emergency check-ups, by controlling the amount of water in the units, taking water in or
letting water out (dewatering) in order that the aforementioned civil works can be done.
xxx xxx xxx
[NPC] presented the well-experienced and knowledgeable Plant Manager of the Angat Hydroelectric
Power Plant himself in the person of Eng. Rodolfo German. Unfortunately for [NPC], the testimony of Eng.
German tends to favor more for the cause of the appellee. In several instances in the course of his
testimony, [NPC]'s witness stated that the questioned properties are "structures." The witness testified
that these structures are used for retention, conservation, diversion, utilization, as well as
management and control of water in different aspects.
The testimony failed to show the actual and direct use of the properties to the exempting
purpose. Equally damning is the admission that these facilities are also used for irrigation, flood
control and water supply system for the Greater Manila Area. This negates the "exclusively used"
requisite to fall under the prescribed exempting manner. Nowhere in the whole testimony of Eng. German
was it mentioned, much more given emphasis that those properties are machineries actually, directly, and
exclusively used for generation and transmission of electric power.
xxx xxx xxx
[The LBAA of the Province of Bulacan's] witness likewise testified convincingly that the dam
complex, being a multi-purpose facility, can and is performing other functions like providing
water for irrigation, flood control and mitigation, and more importantly, the source of potable
water, aside from, and at a lesser extent, power generation . This means that the dam and its
components and appurtenances are not being used solely and exclusively for power generation. The
witness likewise quoted and cited authorities and references to bolster his conclusion.
While both elucidated that the subject properties are indeed vital, essential, and necessary for
power generation, still they are not being used actually, directly and exclusively for the
exempting purpose that is generation and transmission of electric power. x x x.
xxx xxx xxx
Simply put, this Board finds that the Angat hydroelectric facility, owned and operated by [NPC]
consists of two groups or components. One group is the conservation and hydraulic structures subject of
this appeal being assessed and taxed by appellee. The other consists of the machines and equipment that
are the ones actually, directly, and exclusively used for power generation and transmission. The latter
group is made up of the water turbines, water pumps, generators, transformers, transmitters, etc., were
exempted and excluded from the assessments by the [LBAA of the Province of Bulacan]. TAIaHE
The roles played by these two groups/components elucidate the kind of property they are and their
actual usage in the general scheme of the multi-purpose facility, to wit:
The main dam holds and retains the water from the Angat and Umiray rivers storing the
water in a big reservoir. Water is released through a series of tunnel like pipelines of varying
sizes and diameters. All these underground concrete and/or steel pipelines are firmly and
permanently attached/embedded in the soil. This water conveyance system starts with the
reservoir releasing water to a big power tunnel.
The power tunnel splits into penstocks. One penstock delivers water to the main units of the power
station and the other to the auxiliary units. The volume of water running down from the penstocks turns
the water turbines in the main and auxiliary units. The water turbines then convert mechanical energy to
electric energy by the use of the power generators. The transformers stabilize the electric current, and
thru the transmitter deliver the electricity produced to the power lines.
The water used at the power station main and auxiliary units to turn the water turbines is released
thru the tailrace tunnels downstream, connected to surge tunnels. These open surge tunnels are used to
drain and divert surface run-off water, likewise and more importantly, to ventilate the tailrace, thus
preventing pressure to build up. The used water coming from the main power units passing thru the
tailrace and surge tunnels is channeled to the Bustos Dam for irrigation purposes by the National Irrigation
Administration (NIA). The used water from the auxiliary units is conveyed to the MWSS facilities at Ipo Dam
for Greater Manila Area's domestic supply.
It can be gleaned that this series of interconnected concretized and/or steel lined tunnels
and canals, all rendered permanent and immobilized being buried underground or imbedded in
the soil are all water conveyance structures. All of them have nothing to do with direct and
actual power generation and transmission.
The power intake structures together with the draft tube gates are used more for taking
water in or letting water out mostly during periodic and/or emergency inspections and check-
up, likewise repair and maintenance. All these are of reinforced concrete or steel plate welded gates.
These facilities instead of generating power actually cut down power production by closing the supply of
water to the main and auxiliary units where the turbines and generators are located. The process called
"dewatering" empties the chambers of water in order that inspection, check-ups, maintenance and repairs
can be done during these standard procedures. There is a cessation of operation or what they call a "shut
down" during these activities. These auxiliary components therefore play a role other than power
generation, just like the spillways, taintor gates, and diversion canals are used for flood
mitigation and/or prevention, and as safeguards and preventive measures to protect the
integrity of the dam, and not for power generation and transmission. 96 (Emphasis supplied) ICHDca
Accordingly, NPC is liable for real property tax on the properties listed in the Machineries Assessment
from January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2005 in the amount of PHP113,960,000.00.
The properties listed in the Land
Assessment are not exempt from real
property tax.
NPC's claim for exemption from RPT on the Land Assessment because it is a "government instrumentality"
is misplaced. For one, NPC admitted that it is a GOCC duly organized under and by virtue of RA No. 6395. 105
The parties never disputed NPC's status as a GOCC.
Next, a GOCC is defined as "any agency organized as a stock or non-stock corporation, vested with
functions relating to public needs whether governmental or proprietary in nature, and owned by the
Government directly or through its instrumentalities either wholly, or, where applicable as in the case of stock
corporations, to the extent of at least fifty-one percent of its capital stock." 106 NPC is a wholly-owned stock
corporation 107 organized to "undertake the development of hydroelectric generation of power and the
production of electricity from nuclear, geothermal and other sources, as well as the transmission of electric
power on a nationwide basis." 108 In National Power Corporation v. City of Cabanatuan, 109 this Court
categorically ruled that the exemption from local taxes of NPC, as a GOCC, had been repealed by Section 193
of the LGC. 110 Therefore, it is incumbent upon the NPC to point to some provisions of the LGC that expressly
exempt it from local taxes.
Under Sections 216 and 218 of the LGC, all lands, buildings, and other improvements owned and used by
GOCCs rendering essential public services in the generation and transmission of electric power are classified as
special classes of real property subject to a 10% assessment level. TCAScE
The CTA En Banc observed that on June 1, 2007, the Municipality of Norzagaray issued an amended
statement of account for the Land Assessment, such that the RPT due on the lands shall be PHP6,485,422.60.
111 The revised RPT due on the lands was confirmed in another letter dated July 12, 2007.112 Thus, We Uphold
the assessment for real property tax on the lands listed in the Land Assessment covering January 1, 1996 to
December 31, 2006 in the reduced amount of PHP6,485,422.60.
ACCORDINGLY, the Petition for Review is DENIED. The Court of Tax Appeals En Banc's Decision dated
November 29, 2012 and Resolution dated April 22, 2013 in CTA EB No. 850 are SET ASIDE. National Power
Corporation is liable to PAY the Municipality of Norzagaray, Bulacan real property tax over the Machineries
Assessment for the period from January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2005 in the amount of PHP113,960,000.00
and over the Land Assessment covering the period of January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2006 in the amount of
PHP6,485,422.60.
Footnotes
1. Camp John Hay Development Corporation v. Central Board of Assessment Appeals, 718 Phil. 543, 566 (2013) [Per J.
Perez, Second Division].
2. SECTION 252. Payment Under Protest — (a) No protest shall be entertained unless the taxpayer first pays the tax.
There shall be annotated on the tax receipts the words "paid under protest." The protest in writing must be filed
within thirty (30) days from payment of the tax to the provincial, city treasurer or municipal treasurer, in the ease
of a municipality within Metropolitan Manila Area, who shall decide the protest within sixty (60) days from receipt.
3. Republic Act No. 7160, "Local Government Code of 1991," effective January 1, 1992.
5. Id. at 43-59. Penned by Presiding Justice Ernesto D. Acosta, with the concurrence of Associate Justices Juanito C.
Castañeda, Jr., Lovell R. Bautista, Erlinda P. Uy. Caesar A. Casanova, Esperanza R. Fabon-Victorino, Cielito N.
Mindaro-Grulla, and Amelia R. Cotangco-Manalastas. Associate Justice Olga Palanca-Enriquez, on leave.
6. Id. at 62-68. Penned by Associate Justice Esperanza R. Fabon-Victorino, with the concurrence of Associate Justices
Juanito C. Castañeda, Jr., Lovell R. Bautista, Erlinda P. Uy, Caesar A. Casanova, Cielito N. Mindaro-Grulla, and
Amelia R. Cotangco-Manalastas. Presiding Justice Roman G. Del Rosario took no part.
7. CBAA records, Folder 1, pp. 145-164. Signed by Chairman Cesar S. Gutierrez; Angel P. Palomares and Rafael O.
Cortes, Members.
8. LBAA records, Folder 3, pp. 84-87. Signed by Chairman Atty. Ramon C. Sampana; Pros. Sinforoso T. Roque, Jr. and
Engr. Romeo S. Castro, Members.
12. SEC. 234. Exemptions from Real Property Tax. — The following are exempted from payment of the real
property tax:
(c) All machineries and equipment that are actually, directly and exclusively used by local water districts and
government-owned or -controlled corporations engaged in the supply and distribution of water and/or generation
and transmission of electric power[.]
13. SEC. 218. Assessment Levels. — The assessment levels to be applied to the fair market value of real property to
determine its assessed value shall be fixed by ordinances of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan. Sangguniang
[P]anlungsod or Sangguniang [B]ayan of a municipality within the Metropolitan Manila Area, at the rates not
exceeding the following:
(d) On Special Classes: The assessment levels for all lands, buildings, machineries and other improvements:
Cultural 15%
18. SECTION 216. Special Classes of Real Property. — All lands, buildings, and other improvements actually,
directly and exclusively used for hospitals, cultural, or scientific purposes, and those actually, directly and
exclusively used for hospitals, cultural, or scientific purposes, and those owned and used by local water districts,
and government-owned or -controlled corporations rendering essential public services in the supply and
distribution of water and/or generation and transmission of electric power shall be classified as special.
22. SECTION 212. Preparation of Schedule of Fair Market Values. — Before any general revision of property
assessment is made pursuant to the provisions of this Title, there shall be prepared a schedule of fair market
values by the provincial, city and the municipal assessors of the municipalities within the Metropolitan Manila Area
for the different classes of real property situated in their respective local government units for enactment by
ordinance of the sanggunian concerned. The schedule of fair market values shall be published in a newspaper of
general circulation in the province, city or municipality concerned, or in the absence thereof, shall be posted in the
provincial capitol, city or municipal hall and in two (2) other conspicuous public places therein.
23. SECTION 215. Classes of Real Property for Assessment Purposes. — For purposes of assessment, real
property shall be classified as residential, agricultural, commercial, industrial, mineral, or special. The city or
municipality within the Metropolitan Manila Area, through their respective Sanggunian, have the power to classify
lands as residential, agricultural, commercial, industrial, mineral, timberland, or special in accordance with their
zoning ordinances.
27. PROVIDING FOR THE ADMINISTRATION OF LOCAL FINANCIAL SERVICES IN METROPOLITAN MANILA, CREATING LOCAL
TREASURY AND ASSESSMENT DISTRICTS THEREIN, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES, April 12, 1976.
28. LBAA records, Folder 3, p. 86.
34. CTA records, pp. 67-75. Signed by Chairman Ofelia A. Marquez, and Rafael O. Cortes and Roberto D. Geotina as
Members. The dispositive portion of the Order dated October 14, 2011 reads:
WHEREFORE, in view of the above considerations, petitioner-appellant's [NPC] Motion for Reconsideration, for
lack of merit, is hereby DENIED.
(o) "Machinery" embraces machines, equipment, mechanical contrivances, instruments, or apparatus which may
or may not be attached, permanently or temporarily, to the real property. It includes the physical facilities for
production, the installations and appurtenant service facilities, those which are mobile, self-powered or self-
propelled, and those not permanently attached to the real property which are actually, directly, and exclusively
used to meet the needs of the particular industry, business or activity and which by their very nature and purpose
are designed for, or necessary to its manufacturing, mining, logging, commercial, industrial or agricultural
purposes[.]
54. The excluded properties are the main dam, spillway, and diversion tunnels. See id. at 318-319.
56. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Yumex Philippines Corporation, G.R. No. 222476, May 5, 2021 [Per C.J.
Gesmundo, First Division]; and Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Lancaster Philippines, Inc., 813 Phil. 622, 639
(2017) [Per J. Martires, Second Division].
59. See Rules of Court, Rule 10, Section 5, which applies suppletorily to the Revised Rules of the Court of Tax Appeals.
SECTION 5. Amendment to conform to or authorize presentation of evidence. — When issues not raised by the
pleadings are tried with the express or implied consent of the parties, they shall be treated in all respects as if
they had been raised in the pleadings. Such amendment of the pleadings as may be necessary to cause them to
conform to the evidence and to raise these issues may be made upon motion of any party at any time, even after
judgment; but failure to amend does not affect the result of the trial of these issues. If evidence is objected to at
the trial on the ground that it is not within the issues made by the pleadings, the court may allow the pleadings to
be amended and shall do so with liberality if the presentation of the merits of the action and the ends of
substantial justice will be subserved thereby. The court may grant a continuance to enable the amendment to be
made.
60. 624 Phil. 738 (2010) [Per J. Brion, Special Second Division].
64. AN ACT ACCELERATING THE CONVERSION OF MILITARY RESERVATIONS INTO OTHER PRODUCTIVE USES, CREATING
THE BASES CONVERSION AND DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY FOR THIS PURPOSE, PROVIDING FUNDS THEREFOR AND
FOR OTHER PURPOSE. Approved: March 13, 1992.
65. Camp John Hay Development Corporation v. Central Board of Assessment Appeals, supra note 63 at 560-566.
73. See City of Lapu-Lapu v. Philippine Economic Zone Authority, 748 Phil. 473, 524-533 (2014) [Per J. Leonen, Second
Division]; National Power Corporation v. Municipal Government of Navotas, supra note 66 at 754-756; Dr. Olivares
v. Mayor Marquez, 482 Phil. 183, 188-192 (2004) [Per J. Austria-Martinez, Second Division], and Ty v. Hon.
Trampe, supra note 21 at 100-102.
74. Supra.
75. City of Lapu-Lapu v. Philippine Economic Zone Authority, supra note 73 at 533-535.
76. Hon. Carale v. Hon. Abarintos, 336 Phil. 126, 135 (1997) [Per J. Davide, Jr., Third Division].
77. Province of Zamboanga del Norte v. Court of Appeals, 396 Phil. 709, 718 (2000) [Per J. Pardo, First Division]; and
Paat v. Court of Appeals , 334 Phil. 146, 153 (1997) [Per J. Torres, Jr., Second Division].
78. Province of Zamboanga del Norte v. Court of Appeals, supra at 718-719; and Paat v. Court of Appeals , supra at 153.
79. Province of Zamboanga del Norte v. Court of Appeals, supra at 719.
84. National Power Corporation v. Province of Quezon, 610 Phil. 456, 474 (2009).
5) Machinery, receptacles, instruments or implements intended by the owner of the tenement for an industry or
works which may be carried on in a building or on a piece of land, and which tend directly to meet the needs of
the said industry or works[.]
87. Administrative Order No. 270, entitled "PRESCRIBING THE IMPLEMENTING RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE LOCAL
GOVERNMENT CODE OF 1991," February 21, 1992.
88. Manila Electric Company v. The City Assessor of Lucena City, 765 Phil. 605 (2015) [Per J. Leonardo-de Castro, First
Division], cited in Provincial Assessor of Agusan del Sur v. Filipinas Palm Oil Plantation, Inc., 796 Phil. 547, 568
(2016) [Per J. Leonen, Second Division].
89. Supra.
98. 605 Phil. 357 (2009) [Per J. Austria-Martinez, Third Division], cited in National Power Corporation v. Province of
Pangasinan, G.R. No. 210191, March 4, 2019, 894 SCRA 508, 525-526 [Per J. J. Reyes Jr., Second Division].
99. Id. at 371.
102. Cyanamid Philippines, Inc. v. Court of Appeals , 379 Phil. 689, 703 (2000) [Per J. Quisumbing, Second Division].