Philippine Daily Inquirer

PACQUIAO GETS RELIEF FROM CTA

- By Vince F. Nonato @VinceNonat­oINQ

The Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) has lifted the Bureau of Internal Revenue seizure orders on the assets of boxing great, Sen. Manny Pacquiao, as it directed the BIR to stop its efforts to collect P3.29 billion in taxes while the case remains pending.

Pacquiao’s legal battle, however, is not yet over as it is set to proceed to the trial stage. Pretrial conference of the case is scheduled for Aug. 30.

Citing the BIR’s “violations of rules and irregulari­ties,” the CTA First Division ordered the bureau to “cease and desist” from implementi­ng its final decision on disputed assessment (FDDA) dated May 14, 2013.

The FDDA set at P3.29 billion the final amount of the deficiency tax liabilitie­s imposed on Pacquiao and his wife Jinkee for 2008 and 2009.

In a resolution dated July 27, the CTA also withdrew the tax lien annotated on the titles of the Pacquiaos’ General Santos City properties.

A tax lien prevents the couple from disposing of the property and secures it to satisfy the government’s claim for taxes.

No more bond

Moreover, the CTA spared the billionair­e from the requiremen­t of posting a bond first as a condition for stopping the BIR’s tax collection efforts.

The BIR “utterly failed to comply with necessary requiremen­ts under pertinent laws and issuances” in assessing the cou- ple’s liabilitie­s, read the decision signed by Presiding Justice Roman G. del Rosario and Associate Justices Erlinda P. Uy and Cielito N. Mindaro-Grulla.

Because of the irregulari­ties, the CTA would be “dispensing the required cash deposit or bond provided under Section 11 of the [Republic Act] No. 1125.”

The CTA found “no prima facie evidence of fraud or tax evasion” establishe­d by the BIR during its preliminar­y investigat­ion.

The BIR failed to show that it conducted procedures to verify and determine “the schemes employed and the extent of the fraud” on the Pacquiaos’ part, the court said.

The BIR did not even specify in its May 2, 2012, formal letter of demand (FLD) the “best possible sources” of informatio­n it used in computing their tax underpayme­nts.

Newspaper articles

Documentar­y evidence presented to the CTA showed that the BIR used newspaper and magazine articles to establish that Pacquiao earned income in the United States in the form of guaranteed payouts and his cut of pay-per-view revenues and ticket sales.

The reports were not “corroborat­ed by other more sufficient evidence” and the BIR did not at least confirm the veracity of the articles with the authors, the court said.

The BIR notices were hounded by procedural flaws, too. For one, the FLD was not even addressed to Jinkee despite being held jointly liable with her husband.

The warrants of distraint and/or levy and garnishmen­t—which paved the way for the seizure of the Pacquiaos’ bank accounts—were found to be prematurel­y issued. These were dated July 1, 2013, though the couple received the FDDA only on July 2, 2013.

On giving the couple due process, the BIR failed to prove that a notice of formal conference was issued or even any record to show that the conference actually took place.

Jayson Fernandez, the Pacquiaos’ lawyer, told the BIR in a Jan. 31, 2012, letter that he only learned of the proceeding­s by chance and asked for it to be reschedule­d, but the BIR did not reply.

It failed to show the court the protest letter where the Pacquiaos supposedly admitted that they attended the conference.

The agency also failed to justify why it included the years 1995 to 2006 in the scope of its electronic letter of authority that authorized the tax audit.

Supreme Court

The CTA had to evaluate the validity of the BIR notices after the Supreme Court ruled on April 19, 2016, that when imposing the bond requiremen­t, it should make a preliminar­y determinat­ion of whether the BIR violated the law in its tax collection efforts.

The case reached the Supreme Court because the Pacquiaos questioned the CTA requiremen­t for them to first deposit P3.29 billion in cash or post a P4.948-billion surety bond before the stay order against the garnishmen­t on April 22, 2014, can take effect.

In its April 2016 decision, the high tribunal said the CTA should have conducted a preliminar­y hearing first before imposing the bond requiremen­t.

The Supreme Court reminded the CTA that in case of doubt, the scale should tip in favor of the taxpayer’s right to due process and equal protection.

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Manny Pacquiao

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