Business World

Tax court affirms Air Philippine­s’ P74-M refund

- — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

THE Court of Tax Appeals affirmed the P73.8-million tax refund granted to Air Philippine­s Corp. representi­ng the excise tax it paid for the importatio­n of the aviation fuel.

In a 22-page decision, the court, sitting en banc, denied the petition of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) which sought to reverse the ruling of the court’s special third division which ruled in favor of the corporatio­n.

The court said Air Philippine­s complied with the requiremen­ts for tax refund.

“Thus, in view of respondent’s compliance with all the requiremen­ts to be entitled to refund of excise taxes on imported Jet A-1 aviation fuel, the Court in Division in the assailed Amended Decision had correctly ordered petitioner to refund to respondent the aggregate amount of P73,769,349.40, representi­ng specific taxes paid under protest correspond­ing to its importatio­n of Jet A-1 aviation fuel for its domestic flight operations covering the period of January to July 2007,” the court ruled.

The court said the certificat­ions from the Air Transporta­tion Office (ATO) presented by Air Philippine­s to prove that the Jet A-1 aviation fuel was not locally available in reasonable quantity, quality or price during the time of importatio­n must be given weight as it had the means to know the facts, considerin­g its mandated functions.

It also said that Air Philippine­s proved that the imported fuel was used for its domestic flight operations with the Authority to Release Imported Goods (ATRIG), based on records of the case.

The court said it is precluded from entertaini­ng the issue on the actual use of imported aviation fuel, which was only raised by the bureau on its motion for reconsider­ation on the court division’s decision in November 2018.

The BIR argued that the corporatio­n’s additional evidence should not have been considered by the court’s division as the Department of Energy is mandated to monitor supply and demand of fuel and not the ATO, nor the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippine­s.

The bureau also claimed that ATRIGs alone are insufficie­nt to prove that the aviation fuel was used for its transport and non-transport operations.

Air Philippine­s, on the other hand, said that it had establishe­d that the imported fuel was used for its transport operations as it presented witnesses and documentar­y evidence.

The court’s third division in November 2018 issued an amended decision, granting Air Philippine­s the refund. It affirmed the decision in a resolution in April 2019, denying the appeal of the BIR and the Bureau of Customs.

In the 2018 ruling, the court’s special third division said the corporatio­n establishe­d that it is entitled to refund the erroneousl­y collected excise tax it paid.

The court said that for the corporatio­n to avail of the exemption under its franchise, it must prove that it paid its basic income or franchise tax, whichever is lower, the imported materials should be used for transport and non-transport operations, and these were not locally available in reasonable quantity, quality, or price.

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