The Philippine Star

Will a taxpayer’s bill of rights help? (Part 2)

- ATTY. ALEX B. CABRERA

If litigation fees from baseless assessment­s can be recovered from the BIR by right, behavior can change.Unless the tax case stands on facts and strong legal grounds, examiners will think twice before daring taxpayers to go to court.

Indeed, the right to recover litigation costs on baseless assessment­s is a pivotal right as discussed last Sunday. Here are the other rights that, if promulgate­d into law, can change behavior on the ground:

The right to be informed of the BIR’s prima facie evidence of fraud.

When some examiners who have slept on their jobs want to continue the examinatio­n even if the case has prescribed, what do they do? Manufactur­e a fraud allegation so that the case becomes virtually imprescrip­tible. Using the fraud card, the examiner will ask for documents and examine the taxpayer’s records even if such examinatio­n is being conducted beyond the regular three-year period.

When taxpayers ask for the prima facie evidence of fraud, and if the examiner refuses to disclose the evidence of fraud, it’s because the truth is, he needs to proceed with the examinatio­n to find some evidence of fraud. That, my friends, is a fishing expedition, which is not allowed under the law, or the Constituti­on.

Fraud is such a serious allegation because it is a criminal act and officers of the company can go to jail for it in addition to paying the deficiency taxes. The Constituti­on guarantees the right of the accused has the right to know and confront witnesses against him.

If the BIR alleges fraud, the least it should do is disclose its prima facie evidence to the taxpayer and allow the taxpayer to disprove it. If not disproved, that is the only time the fraud examinatio­n can proceed. The evidence cannot be kept a secret from the taxpayer because anyone can allege fraud and justify a fraud examinatio­n. It is harassment in the guise of a hidden third party informatio­n.

The right not to be disregarde­d or ignored on grounds for protest

When the BIR comes up with findings, they conduct initial discussion­s with the taxpayer and unresolved items graduate into a preliminar­y assessment. The taxpayer is given 15 days or longer to answer and present evidence. The remaining unresolved issues can graduate to a final assessment notice (FAN). When the FAN is protested, those issues that remain unsettled can be collected through a Final Decision on Disputed Assessment (FDDA), which can be protested one last time by the taxpayer to the Commission­er or already elevated at that point to the Court of Tax Appeals. This is called due process.

It is denial of due process however if the BIR will simply not read, nor listen to the defenses, nor turn a blind eye to the evidence presented before them until the status of the case becomes a final decision. A blind eye or a closed mind makes a mockery of the processes required by law. To be fair, I give testament that the BIR can be reasonable and fair as is our experience with them. But this utter disregard of evidence in favor of the taxpayers happens, and not only on a few occasions.

The right to reasonable requiremen­ts during an examinatio­n

The BIR is not your regular external auditor who simply samples and test-checks. They need, and are allowed, to get more details. But the details required can sometimes be quite unreasonab­le, especially given that the taxpayer may be looking for documents stocked and set aside already for several years. The requiremen­t of “100 percent substantia­tion” can give taxpayers hell on earth. To pick an example, the importatio­n records of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) can be compared with the taxpayer’s recorded importatio­n in their VAT returns. The discrepanc­y can arise from inaccuracy in BOC records, or the timing of the taxpayer’s recording of VAT (depending on whether the taxpayer is a seller of goods or services), to mention a few examples.

To require the taxpayer to substantia­te 100 percent of its importatio­n because there is a discrepanc­y in comparing BOC and BIR records is a tortuous accounting process because of the daily volume of transactio­ns. This unfortunat­e ordeal for the taxpayer can be avoided if the BIR adopts a qualitativ­e and quantitati­ve sampling scheme. When they find exceptions, they can require further substantia­tion. But to compel “100 percent substantia­tion” and collect taxes on anything less than that is quite harsh and unreasonab­le.

The right against administra­tive legislatio­n

When you have net operating losses (NOL) for, say, 2015 and you’ve carried over that loss to 2016, it is completely legitimate because you can carry it over the next three years. When the BIR examines you in 2015, and finds deficiency income taxes, you may say there’s no harm because you have available NOL anyway. Not so because often, the BIR examiner will disallow or ignore all your NOL for 2015 because you carried that over already (they do this as well for excess input VAT credits carried over). The reason: it’s hard to monitor when and how much the taxpayer utilizes as credits in 2016 and the following years to ensure that there’s no double benefit. But what is for the convenienc­e of the BIR can negate substantiv­e rights given to the taxpayer.

The BIR has no discretion not to honor the rights given to the taxpayer under the law just because their work will be more difficult. To do so will be unexcusabl­e administra­tive legislatio­n and neglect of duty.

* * *

Alexander B. Cabrera is the chairman and senior partner of Isla Lipana & Co./PwC Philippine­s. He is the chairman of the Integrity Initiative, Inc. (II, Inc.), a non-profit organizati­on that promotes common ethical and acceptable integrity standards. Email your comments and questions to aseasyasAB­C@ph.pwc.com. This content is for general informatio­n purposes only, and should not be used as a substitute for consultati­on with profession­al advisors.

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