Business World

Tax refund requiremen­ts: Are they ever enough?

- EDELWEISS CHUA

Is the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) inclined to approve refund claims? At a time where the government’s budget is dedicated to reviving the economy after the COVID-19 pandemic, granting tax refunds would put the agency in a pickle. However, rejecting such refund applicatio­ns due to these considerat­ions would be arbitrary on the part of the BIR.

The rules are clear. For tax refunds of unutilized excess creditable expanded withholdin­g tax (CWT), three essential conditions must be met: (i) the timeliness of the refund applicatio­n, (ii) the fact of withholdin­g is establishe­d, and (iii) that the income upon which the taxes were withheld was included in the return of the recipient/ claimant. To prove that these three conditions were satisfied, the refund applicatio­n should be accompanie­d by complete documentar­y support for the BIR’s verificati­on.

Since claims for refund are construed strictly against the taxpayer and in favor of the government, the documents supporting a CWT refund applicatio­n are carefully scrutinize­d by the BIR. In Merck Sharp & Dohme (I.A.) LLC - Philippine Branch vs. Commission­er of Internal Revenue (CTA Case No. 9803, 25 June 2021), the BIR alleged that the instant claim for tax refund is tainted with procedural infirmity due to the taxpayer’s failure to submit complete documents in support of its administra­tive claim for refund. According to the BIR, taxpayers must prove compliance with both Revenue Memorandum Order (RMO) No. 53-98 and Revenue Regulation­s (RR) No. 2-2006 to support the validity of their claim for unutilized CWT.

In relation to the aforementi­oned RMO and RR, the BIR particular­ly insisted that the submission of proof of actual remittance is indispensa­ble in claims for refund or issuance of a tax credit certificat­e for unutilized excess CWT for purposes of proving the CWT withheld.

With the BIR holding firm on the requiremen­ts, what would count as sufficient evidence in proving tax refund claims?

RMO No. 53-98 prescribes the documents that a taxpayer is required to submit to the BIR upon audit of his tax liabilitie­s, as well as the different mandatory audit reporting requiremen­ts to be prepared, submitted and attached to a tax audit docket by a Revenue Office. On the other hand, RR No. 2-06 prescribes the mandatory attachment­s of the Summary Alphalist of Withholdin­g Agents of Income Payments Subjected to Tax Withheld as Source (SAWT) to tax returns with claimed tax credits due to CWT at source.

The Tax Court ruled that the non-submission of the documents enumerated in RMO No. 5398 should not result in an outright denial of the tax refund claim. It is not fatal to the claim for refund since the RMO is merely a guide to revenue officers as to what documents they may require taxpayers to present during an audit. Nothing stated in the issuance would show that it was intended as a benchmark in determinin­g the completene­ss of the submitted documents to support a taxpayer’s claim for tax refund.

What is more critical is that the taxpayer should be able to establish the fact of withholdin­g through a copy of the withholdin­g tax statement duly issued by the payor (withholdin­g agent) to the payee, showing the amount paid and the amount of tax withheld therefrom.

The Tax Court cited the case of Commission­er of Internal Revenue vs. Philippine National Bank (G.R. No. 180290, 29 September 2014) where the Supreme Court clarified that the certificat­e of creditable tax withheld at source (BIR Form 2307) is the competent proof to establish the fact that taxes were withheld, and upon presentati­on of a withholdin­g tax certificat­e complete in its relevant detail and with a written statement that it was made under the penalties of perjury, the burden of evidence shifts to the Commission­er of Internal Revenue to examine.

Further, contrary to the BIR’s claim that the proof of actual remittance should be submitted, the aforementi­oned Supreme Court case clarified that proof of actual remittance of the withholdin­g tax is not a prerequisi­te to claim a refund of unutilized tax credits, since it is the payor-withholdin­g agent, and not the payee-refund claimant who is vested with the responsibi­lity of withholdin­g and remitting income taxes.

Similar to this instant case, taxpayers are generally intent on presenting adequate proof of their claim for refund. However, if the BIR were to demand undue requiremen­ts, refund claims at the administra­tive level would naturally result in a denial. As taxpayers are keen to recover their losses, I hope that the BIR would conscienti­ously evaluate submitted documents for refund applicatio­ns. At the end of the day, both the government and the taxpayer are on the same boat in seeking to revive the economy.

The views or opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessaril­y represent those of Isla Lipana & Co. The content is for general informatio­n purposes only, and should not be used as a substitute for specific advice.

 ?? ?? EDELWEISS CHUA is an assistant manager at the Tax Services department of Isla Lipana & Co., the Philippine member firm of the PwC network. edelweiss.chua@pwc.com
EDELWEISS CHUA is an assistant manager at the Tax Services department of Isla Lipana & Co., the Philippine member firm of the PwC network. edelweiss.chua@pwc.com

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