131002-1990-Commissioner of Internal Revenue. v. Court of

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FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. L-47421. May 14, 1990.]

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE , petitioner, vs. HON. COURT


OF TAX APPEALS AND MANILA GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB, INC. ,
respondents.

Bito, Misa & Lozada for private respondent.

DECISION

MEDIALDEA , J : p

In Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Manila Hotel Corporation, et al., G.R. No.


83250, September 26, 1989, We overruled a decision of the Court of Tax Appeals
which declared the collection of caterer's tax under Section 191-A of Republic Act No.
6110 illegal because Sec. 42 of House Bill No. 17839, which carries that proviso, was
vetoed by then President Ferdinand E. Marcos when the bill was presented to him and
Congress had not taken any step to override the presidential veto. We held thus:
"The power of the State to impose the 3% caterer's tax is not
debatable. The Court of Tax Appeals erred, however, in holding that the tax
was abolished as a result of the presidential veto of August 4, 1969. It failed
to examine the law then, and up to now, existing on the subject which has
always imposed a 3% caterer's tax on operators of restaurants. Since the
Manila Hotel operates restaurants in its premises, it is liable to pay the tax
provided in paragraph (1), Section 206 of the Tax Code." (Commissioner of
Internal Revenue v. Manila Hotel Corporation and the Court of Tax Appeals,
G.R. No . 83250, September 26, 1989).
The petition now before Us presents an identical question: whether the
presidential veto referred to the entire section or merely to the imposition of 20% tax
on gross receipts of operators or proprietors of restaurants, refreshments parlors,
bars and other eating places which are maintained within the premises or compound
of a hotel, motel or resthouses. Reference to the Manila Hotel case, therefore, might
have been suf cient to dispose of this petition were it not for the position of the CTA
that a chief executive has no power to veto part of an item in a bill; either he vetoes an
entire section or approves it but not a fraction thereof. LLpr

Herein private respondent, Manila Golf & Country Club, Inc. is a non-stock
corporation. True, it maintains a golf course and operates a clubhouse with a lounge,
bar and dining room, but these facilities are for the exclusive use of its members and
accompanied guests, and it charges on cost-plus-expense basis. As such, it claims it
should have been exempt from payment of privilege taxes were it not for the last
paragraph of Section 191-A of R.A. No. 6110, otherwise known as the "Omnibus Tax
Law." Section 191-A reads:
"Sec. 191-A. Caterer. — A caterer's tax is hereby imposed as follows:
"(1) On proprietors or operators of restaurants, refreshment parlors
and other eating places, including clubs, and caterers, three per cent of their
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gross receipts.
"(2) On proprietors or operators of restaurants, bars, cafes and other
eating places, including clubs, where distilled spirits, fermented liquors, or
wines are served, three per cent of their gross receipts from sale of food or
refreshments and seven per cent of their gross receipts from sale of distilled
spirits, fermented liquors or wines. Two sets of commercial invoices or
receipts serially numbered in duplicate shall be separately prepared and
issued, one for sale of refreshments served, and another for each sale of
distilled spirits, fermented liquors or wines served, the originals of the
invoices or receipts to be issued to the purchaser or customer.
"(3) On proprietors or operators of restaurants, refreshment parlors,
bars, cafes and other eating places which are maintained within the
premises or compound of a hotel, motel, resthouse, cockpit, race track, jai-
alai, cabaret, night or day club by means of a connecting door or passage
twenty per cent of their gross receipts.
"Where the establishments are operated or maintained by clubs of
any kind or nature (irrespective of the disposition of their net income and
whether or not they cater exclusively to members or their guests) the keepers
of the establishments shall pay the corresponding tax at the rate xed
above." (Emphasis ours)
Republic Act No. 6110 took effect on September 1, 1969. By this virtue,
petitioners assessed the club xed taxes as operators of golf links and restaurants,
and also percentage tax (caterer's tax) for its sale of foods and fermented
liquors/wines for the period covering September 1969 to December 1970 in the
amount of P32,504.96. The club protested claiming the assessment to be without
basis because Section 42 was vetoed by then President Marcos. The veto message
reads:
"MALACAÑANG
Manila
August 4, 1969
"Gentlemen of the House
of Representatives:
"I have the honor to inform you that I have this day signed H.B. No.
17839, entitled:
'AN ACT AMENDING CERTAIN
PROVISIONS OF THE NATIONAL INTERNAL
REVENUE CODE, AS AMENDED'
"Pursuant to the provisions of Section 20-(3), Article VI, of the
Constitution, however, I have vetoed the following items in this bill:
xxx xxx xxx
pp. 44, SEC. 42. Inserting a new Section 191-A which imposes a caterer's tax
of three percent of the gross receipts of proprietors or operators of
restaurants, refreshment parlors and other eating places; three percent of
gross receipts from sale of food or refreshment and seven percent on gross
receipts from the sale of distilled spirits, fermented liquors or wines, on
proprietors or operators of restaurants, bars, cafes and other eating places,
including clubs, where distilled spirits, fermented liquors, or wines are served;
and twenty percent of gross receipts on proprietor or operators of
restaurants, refreshment parlors, bars, cafes and other eating places
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maintained within the premises or compound of a hotel, motel, resthouse,
cockpit, race track, jai-alai, cabaret, night or day club, or which are accessible
to patrons of said establishments by means of a connecting door or
passage.
'The burden of taxation will be shifted to the consuming public.
'The development of hotels, essential to our tourist industry, may be
restrained considering that a big portion of hotel earnings comes from food
sale. . . .'
"This bill, H.B. No. 17839, has become Republic Act No. 6110.
"Respectfully,
"(SGD.) FERDINAND E. MARCOS"
[Emphasis ours]
The protestation of the club was denied by the petitioner who maintains that
Section 42 was not entirely vetoed but merely the words "hotels, motels, resthouses"
on the ground that it might restrain the development of hotels which is essential to the
tourism industry. This in fact was the position of the House Ways and Means
Committee which reported, to wit:
"When Congress decided to split Section 191 into two parts, one
dealing with contractors, and the other dealing with those who serve food
and drinks, the intention was to classify and to improve. While the Congress
expanded the coverage of both 191 and 191-A, it also provided for certain
exemptions. The veto message seems to object to certain additions to 191-
A. What additions are objectionables can be gleaned from the reasons given:
a general reason that this sort of tax is passed on to the consuming public,
and a particular reason that hotel developments, so essential to the tourist
industry, may be restrained. These reasons have been taken together in the
interpretations of the veto message and the deletions of such enterprises as
are connected with the tourist industry has therefore been recommended.
"To interpret the veto message otherwise would result in the
exemption of entities already subject of tax. This would be absurd. Where
the Congress wanted to exempt, it was so provided in the bill. While the
President may veto any item or items in a revenue bill, the constitution does
not give him the power to repeal an existing tax. (2nd Indorsement dated
December 9, 1969, Chairman on Ways and Means, Sixth Congress of the
Republic of the Phil.) (Exhs. 14, p. 85, B.I.R. rec.)." (pp. 20-21, Rollo)
It was by reason of this interpretation of the Committee that R.A. No. 6110 was
published in Volume 66, No. 18, p. 4531 of the Of cial Gazette (May 4, 1970) in such a
way that Section 191-A was included in the text save for the words "hotels, motels
resthouses."
As already mentioned, the Court of Tax Appeals, upon petition by the club,
sustained the latter's position reasoning that the veto message was clear and
unquali ed, as in fact it was con rmed three years later, after much controversy, by the
Office of the President, thus:
"Mr. Antero M. Sison, Jr.
San Martin Building, 1564,
A. Mabini, P.O. Box 2288
Manila, Philippines
"Dear Sir:
"With reference to your letter dated July 14, 1972, we wish to inform
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you that Section 42 (which contains Sec. 191-A) of House Bill No. 17839,
now R.A. 6110 was one of the Sections vetoed by the President in his veto
message dated August 4, 1969, vetoing certain sections of the said revenue
bill.
Very Truly Yours,
"(SGD.) IRINEO T. AGUIRRE, JR.
Presidential Staff Assistant"
(p. 49, Rollo)
As mentioned earlier, We have already ruled that the presidential veto referred
merely to the inclusion of hotels, motels and resthouses in the 20% caterer's tax
bracket but not to the whole section. But, as mentioned earlier also, the CTA opined
that the President could not veto words or phrases in a bill but only an entire item.
Obviously, what the CTA meant by "item" was an entire section. We do not agree. But
even assuming it to be so, it would also be to petitioner's favor. The ineffectual veto by
the President rendered the whole section 191-A as not having been vetoed at all and it,
therefore, became law as an unconstitutional veto has no effect, whatsoever. (See
Bolinao Electronics Corp. v. Valeria, No. L-20740, June 30, 1964, 11 SCRA 486). Cdpr

However, We agree with then Solicitor General Estelito Mendoza and his
associates that inclusion of hotels, motels and resthouses in the 20% caterer's tax
bracket are "items" in themselves within the meaning of Sec. 20(3), Art. VI of the 1935
Constitution which, therefore, the President has the power to veto. An "item" in a
revenue bill does not refer to an entire section imposing a particular kind of tax, but
rather to the subject of the tax and the tax rate. In the portion of a revenue bill which
actually imposes a tax, a section identi es the tax and enumerates the persons liable
therefor with the corresponding tax rate. To construe the word "item" as referring to
the whole section would tie the President's hand in choosing either to approve the
whole section at the expense of also approving a provision therein which he deems
unacceptable or veto the entire section at the expense of foregoing the collection of
the kind of tax altogether. The evil which was sought to be prevented in giving the
President the power to disapprove items in a revenue bill would be perpetrated
rendering that power inutile (See Commonwealth ex rel. Elkin v. Barnett, 199 Pa. 161,
55 LRA 882 [1901]). LibLex

ACCORDINGLY, the petition is GRANTED and the decision of the Court of Tax
Appeals in CTA Case No. 2630 is set aside. Section 191-A of RA No. 6110 is valid and
enforceable and, hence, the Manila Golf & Country Club Inc. is liable for the amount
assessed against it.
SO ORDERED
Narvasa, Cruz and Griño-Aquino, JJ., concur.
Gancayco, J., is on leave.

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