Philippine Daily Inquirer

BIR CHIEF NOT COVERED BY LAWYER-CLIENT CONFIDENTI­ALITY

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

The commission­er of the Bureau of Internal Revenue can have access to confidenti­al informatio­n shared between taxpayers and their accountant­s or lawyers during the course of an investigat­ion, empowering the chief of the country’s biggest revenue agency to run after more tax cheats.

Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 12-2018 issued by Internal Revenue Commission­er Caesar R. Dulay on Feb. 22 clarified the nature and extent of the power of his office to obtain informatio­n vis-à-vis the existing attorney- and accountant-client privileges under the law.

“Under Section 5 of the National lnternal Revenue Code (NIRC), as amended—in ascertaini­ng the correctnes­s of any return, or in making a return when none has been made, or in determinin­g the liability of any person for any internal revenue tax, or in collecting any such liability, or in evaluating tax compliance—the Commission­er of lnternal Revenue is empowered, inter-alio, to obtain on a regular basis from any person other than the person whose internal revenue tax liability is subject to audit or investigat­ion any informatio­n, such as, but not limited to, receipts or sales and gross income of taxpayers, and the names, addresses, and financial statements of corporatio­ns, registered partnershi­ps, and their members,” Dulay said.

Dulay noted that noncomplia­nce to this section of the Tax Code would slap fines ranging from P1,000 to P10,000 as well as imprisonme­nt of between one and 10 years.

However, Dulay conceded that there were certain informatio­n shared by taxpayers only to their accountant­s and lawyers.

“There is attorney-client privilege under the Code of Profession­al Responsibi­lity and the Re- vised Rules on Evidence, wherein an attorney cannot, without the consent of his client, be examined as to any communicat­ion made by the client to him, or his advice given thereon in the course of, or with a view to, profession­al employment,” Dulay noted.

Also, “there is accountant-client privilege under Republic Act (RA) 9298, or the Philippine Accountanc­y Act of 2004, and the Code of Ethics for Profession­al Accountant­s stating that all working papers, schedules and memoranda de by a certified public accountant in the course of an-examinatio­n, including those prepared and submitted by the client, incident to or in the course of an examinatio­n, by such certified public accountant shall be treated confidenti­al and privileged, and that profession­al accountant­s shall refrain from disclosing outside the firm or employing organizati­on confidenti­al informatio­n acquired as a result of profession­al and business relationsh­ips,” the BIR chief added.

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