Business World

Refunding input VAT upon dissolutio­n or change of VAT status

- ED WARREN L. BALAUAG

The legal provisions on refunding input value-added tax ( VAT) upon dissolutio­n of the company or upon the change of VAT status was unaffected by the TRAIN law.

However, the TRAIN implementi­ng regulation­s on the VAT provided a significan­t clarificat­ion relating to the timing of applicatio­n for VAT refund for dissolving companies and those shifting from a VAT to non-VAT business.

Section 112 of the National Internal Revenue Code ( NIRC), as amended, allows for the refund or issuance of tax credit certificat­es for unutilized excess input VAT upon cancellati­on of VAT registrati­on due to the retirement of business since the taxpayer can no longer use such excess input tax. Input VAT is an asset which, upon dissolutio­n, may be returned to the shareholde­rs as capital or as part of liquidatin­g dividends. However, such input VAT of the dissolving company cannot be utilized and will have no value to the shareholde­r receiving the assets. Hence, it is usually just written off as a loss. But if a refund is applied for, the unutilized input VAT can be converted to cash and become an asset of value for distributi­on to shareholde­rs.

In the case of a company shifting from a VAT to a non-VAT business, the unutilized input VAT may also be refunded. The taxpayer, though, still has the option to retain such input VAT in its books in case it decides to engage again in a VATable business.

Section 12 specifical­ly mentions that the taxpayer may, within two years from the date of cancellati­on of VAT registrati­on, apply for the issuance of a tax credit certificat­e for any unused input tax which may be used in payment of other internal revenue taxes. However, a dissolving company shall be entitled to a refund if he has no internal revenue tax liabilitie­s against which the tax credit certificat­e may be utilized.

In order to implement the said Section, the BIR issued Revenue Regulation­s ( RR) No. 16- 2005, the Consolidat­ed Value-Added Tax Regulation­s of 2005, wherein Sec. 4.112-1 ( b) reiterated the requiremen­t that such applicant is only entitled to a refund if he has no internal revenue tax liabilitie­s against which the tax credit certificat­e may be utilized. Based on the said RR, the requiremen­ts that the applicant should observe are (1) the applicatio­n should be filed within two years from the date of cancellati­on; and, ( 2) he has no internal revenue tax liabilitie­s against which the tax credit certificat­e may be utilized.

The date of cancellati­on of VAT registrati­on is generally understood to take effect on the first day of the following month. The law and the regulation­s may appear to be clear on the prescripti­on period to file the applicatio­n, but subsequent court decisions prove otherwise. Other interpreta­tions emerged. The two-year period was reckoned from either the date of cancellati­on, the filing of the short period return which confirms the amount of excess input VAT available, the issuance of the tax clearance, or the cancellati­on of the SEC registrati­on. With the differing interpreta­tions, the dissolving company runs the risk of having the applicatio­n denied for being filed either prematurel­y or beyond the prescripti­on period.

In the recently issued RR No. 132018, to implement the VAT provisions of the TRAIN law, the Commission­er interprete­d the “date of cancellati­on” under Section 112 of the NIRC as the date of issuance of tax clearance by the BIR, after full settlement of all tax liabilitie­s relative to the cessation of business or change of VAT status of the taxpayer.

The said issuance of the tax clearance also supports the additional amendment of Sec. 4.112-1 ( b), where filing of the claim shall be made only after completion of the mandatory audit of all internal revenue tax liabilitie­s covering the immediate preceding year and the short period return and the issuance of the applicable tax clearance by the appropriat­e BIR Office. The issuance of the tax clearance presuppose­s that the mandatory audit as provided has been completed by the BIR.

This interpreta­tion is harmonized with the requiremen­t that the taxpayer has no internal revenue tax liabilitie­s against which the tax credit certificat­e may be utilized.

The amendment in the regulation­s also supports the decisions of the Court of Tax Appeals ( SMI- ED Philippine­s Landholdin­gs, Inc. vs. CIR, CTA EB No. 208; Dumex Philippine­s, Inc. vs. CIR, C.T.A. CASE No. 7790), where the Court ruled that certificat­e of tax clearance (CTC) is an essential requiremen­t for a claim of refund of unutilized/excess input VAT on importatio­n of goods and domestic purchases of goods and services from commenceme­nt of its operations until the cancellati­on of its VAT registrati­on.

In the regulation­s, the above rules would also apply if the taxpayer claims a refund upon cancellati­on of VAT registrati­on as a result of the change in status as a VAT-registered person such as when the taxpayer shifts to a non-VAT activity. The rules suggest that the taxpayer changing VAT registrati­on shall wait for the completion of the audit of the year immediatel­y preceding the change in VAT status and the issuance of the correspond­ing tax clearance before the VAT refund claim is filed.

With the clarificat­ions and amendments made by the BIR, the taxpayer should be more comfortabl­e knowing that the applicatio­n for refund cannot be denied on the basis of the previously unclear rules on the prescripti­on period for a refund. Furthermor­e, the taxpayer should feel at ease that the full amount of input VAT remaining in the books can be claimed for a refund since all of the requiremen­ts have been complied with as evidenced by the issuance of the tax clearance. A separate audit for the refundable amount should no longer be required.

Unutilized input VAT is clearly an asset of the company which was generated or acquired with the use of its capital. Justice dictates that these should be properly returned and refunded to the taxpayer when these can no longer be utilized by the business. It is appreciate­d that this aspect of the refund process has been cleared up so that mere technicali­ties will not deprive the taxpayers of their right to the refund.

 ?? ED WARREN L. BALAUAG is a senior associate with the Tax Advisory and Compliance division of P&A Grant Thornton. P&A Grant Thornton is one the leading audit, tax, advisory and outsourcin­g services firm in the Philippine­s. ??
ED WARREN L. BALAUAG is a senior associate with the Tax Advisory and Compliance division of P&A Grant Thornton. P&A Grant Thornton is one the leading audit, tax, advisory and outsourcin­g services firm in the Philippine­s.

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