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    CIR v. PINEDA

    GR No. L-22734, September 15, 1967

    21 SCRA 105

    FACTS: Atanasio Pineda died, survived by his wife, Felicisima Bagtas, and 15 children, the

    eldest of whom is Atty. Manuel Pineda. Estate proceedings were had in Court so that the estatewas divided among and awarded to the heirs. Atty Pineda's share amounted to about P2,500.00.After the estate proceedings were closed, the BIR investigated the income tax liability of the

    estate for the years 1945, 1946, 1947 and 1948 and it found that the corresponding income tax

    returns were not filed. Thereupon, the representative of the Collector of Internal Revenue filedsaid returns for the estate issued an assessment and charged the full amount to the inheritance

    due to Atty. Pineda who argued that he is liable only to extent of his proportional share in the

    inheritance.

    ISSUE: Can BIR collect the full amount of estate taxes from an heir's inheritance.

    HELD: Yes. The Government can require Atty. Pineda to pay the full amount of the taxesassessed.

    The reason is that the Government has a lien on the P2,500.00 received by him from the estate as

    his share in the inheritance, for unpaid income taxes for which said estate is liable. By virtue of

    such lien, the Government has the right to subject the property in Pineda's possession to satisfythe income tax assessment. After such payment, Pineda will have a right of contribution from his

    co-heirs, to achieve an adjustment of the proper share of each heir in the distributable estate.

    All told, the Government has two ways of collecting the tax in question. One, by going after allthe heirs and collecting from each one of them the amount of the tax proportionate to the

    inheritance received; and second, is by subjecting said property of the estate which is in the

    hands of an heir or transferee to the payment of the tax due. This second remedy is the very

    avenue the Government took in this case to collect the tax. The Bureau of Internal Revenueshould be given, in instances like the case at bar, the necessary discretion to avail itself of the

    most expeditious way to collect the tax as may be envisioned in the particular provision of the

    Tax Code above quoted, because taxes are the lifeblood of government and their prompt andcertain availability is an imperious need.

    VERA v. FERNANDEZ

    GR No. L-31364 March 30, 1979

    89 SCRA 199

    FACTS: The BIR filed on July 29, 1969 a motion for allowance of claim and for payment of

    taxes representing the estate's tax deficiencies in 1963 to 1964 in the intestate proceedings of

    Luis Tongoy. The administrator opposed arguing that the claim was already barred by the statute

    of limitation, Section 2 and Section 5 of Rule 86 of the Rules of Court which provides that allclaims for money against the decedent, arising from contracts, express or implied, whether the

    same be due, not due, or contingent, all claims for funeral expenses and expenses for the last

    sickness of the decedent, and judgment for money against the decedent, must be filed within thetime limited in the notice; otherwise they are barred forever.

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    ISSUE: Does the statute of non-claims of the Rules of Court bar the claim of the government for

    unpaid taxes?

    HELD: No. The reason for the more liberal treatment of claims for taxes against a decedent's

    estate in the form of exception from the application of the statute of non-claims, is not hard tofind. Taxes are the lifeblood of the Government and their prompt and certain availability areimperious need. (CIR vs. Pineda, 21 SCRA 105). Upon taxation depends the Government ability

    to serve the people for whose benefit taxes are collected. To safeguard such interest, neglect or

    omission of government officials entrusted with the collection of taxes should not be allowed tobring harm or detriment to the people, in the same manner as private persons may be made to

    suffer individually on account of his own negligence, the presumption being that they take good

    care of their personal affairs. This should not hold true to government officials with respect to

    matters not of their own personal concern. This is the philosophy behind the government'sexception, as a general rule, from the operation of the principle of estoppel.

    CIR v. CA, CITY TRUST BANKING CORP.

    GR No. 86785, November 21, 1991234 SCRA 348

    FACTS: Respondent corporation Citytrust filed a refund of overpaid taxes with the BIR by

    which the latter denied on the ground of prescription. Citytrust filed a petition for review beforethe CTA. The case was submitted for decision based solely on the pleadings and evidence

    submitted by the respondent because the CIR could not present any evidence by reason of the

    repeated failure of the Tax Credit/Refud Division of the BIR to transmit the records of the case,as well as the investigation report thereon, to the Solicitor General. CTA rendered the decision

    ordering BIR to grant the respondent's request for tax refund amounting to P 13.3 million.

    ISSUE: Failure of the CIR to present evidence to support the case of the government, should therespondent's claim be granted?

    HELD: Not yet. It is a long and firmly settled rule of law that the Government is not bound bythe errors committed by its agents. In the performance of its governmental functions, the State

    cannot be estopped by the neglect of its agent and officers. Although the Government may

    generally be estopped through the affirmative acts of public officers acting within their authority,their neglect or omission of public duties as exemplified in this case will not and should not

    produce that effect.

    Nowhere is the aforestated rule more true than in the field of taxation. It is axiomatic that the

    Government cannot and must not be estopped particularly in matters involving taxes. Taxes arethe lifeblood of the nation through which the government agencies continue to operate and with

    which the State effects its functions for the welfare of its constituents. The errors of certain

    administrative officers should never be allowed to jeopardize the Government's financial

    position, especially in the case at bar where the amount involves millions of pesos the collectionwhereof, if justified, stands to be prejudiced just because of bureaucratic lethargy. Thus, it is

    proper that the case be remanded back to the CTA for further proceedings and reception of

    evidence.

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    COMMISSIONER v. ALGUE, INC.

    GR No. L-28896, February 17, 1988158 SCRA 9

    FACTS: Private respondent corporation Algue, Inc. filed its income tax returns for 1958 and1959 showing deductions, for promotional fees paid, from their gross income, thus lowering theirtaxable income. The BIR assessed Algue based on such deductions contending that the claimed

    deduction is disallowed because it was not an ordinary, reasonable and necessary expense.

    ISSUE: Should an uncommon business expense be disallowed as a proper deduction in

    computation of income taxes, corollary to the doctrine that taxes are the lifeblood of the

    government?

    HELD: No. Private respondent has proved that the payment of the fees was necessary and

    reasonable in the light of the efforts exerted by the payees in inducing investors and prominent

    businessmen to venture in an xperimental enterprise and involve themselves in a new businessrequiring millions of pesos. This was no mean feat and should be, as it was, sufficiently

    recompensed.

    It is well-settled that taxes are the lifeblood of the government and so should be collected

    without unnecessary hindrance On the other hand, such collection should be made in accordancewith law as any arbitrariness will negate the very reason for government itself. It is therefore

    necessary to reconcile the apparently conflicting interests of the authorities and the taxpayers so

    that the real purpose of taxation, which is the promotion of the common good, may be achieved.But even as we concede the inevitability and indispensability of taxation, it is a requirement in

    all democratic regimes that it be exercised reasonably and in accordance with the prescribed

    procedure. If it is not, then the taxpayer has a right to complain and the courts will then come to

    his succor. For all the awesome power of the tax collector, he may still be stopped in his tracks ifthe taxpayer can demonstrate, as it has here, that the law has not been observed.

    CIR v. YMCA

    GR No. 124043, October 14, 1998

    298 SCRA 83

    FACTS: Private Respondent YMCA--a non-stock, non-profit institution, which conducts various

    programs beneficial to the public pursuant to its religious, educational and charitable objectives--

    leases out a portion of its premises to small shop owners, like restaurants and canteen operators,deriving substantial income for such. Seeing this, the commissioner of internal revenue (CIR)

    issued an assessment to private respondent for deficiency income tax, deficiency expanded

    withholding taxes on rentals and professional fees and deficiency withholding tax on wages.

    YMCA opposed arguing that its rental income is not subject to tax, mainly because of theprovisions of Section 27 of NIRC which provides that civic league or organizations not

    organized for profit but operate exclusively for promotion of social welfare and those organized

    exclusively for pleasure, recreation and other non-profitble businesses shall not be taxed.

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    ISSUE: Is the contention of YMCA tenable?

    HELD: No. Because taxes are the lifeblood of the nation, the Court has always applied thedoctrine of strict in interpretation in construing tax exemptions. Furthermore, a claim of statutory

    exemption from taxation should be manifest and unmistakable from the language of the law on

    which it is based. Thus, the claimed exemption "must expressly be granted in a statute stated in alanguage too clear to be mistaken."

    DAVAO GULF LUMBER CORP v. CIRGR No. 117359, July 23, 1998

    293 SCRA 77

    FACTS: Republic Act No. 1435 entitles miners and forest concessioners to the refund of 25% ofthe specific taxes paid by the oil companies, which were eventually passed on to the user--the

    petitioner in this case--in the purchase price of the oil products. Petitioner filed before respondent

    Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) a claim for refund in the amount representing 25% ofthe specific taxes actually paid on the above-mentioned fuels and oils that were used by

    petitioner in its operations. However petitioner asserts that equity and justice demands that the

    refund should be based on the increased rates of specific taxes which it actually paid, as

    prescribed in Sections 153 and 156 of the NIRC. Public respondent, on the other hand, contendsthat it should be based on specific taxes deemed paid under Sections 1 and 2 of RA 1435.

    ISSUE: Should the petitioner be entitled under Republic Act No. 1435 to the refund of 25% ofthe amount of specific taxes it actually paid on various refined and manufactured mineral oils

    and other oil products, and not on the taxes deemed paid and passed on to them, as end-users, by

    the oil companies?

    HELD: No. According to an eminent authority on taxation, "there is no tax exemption solely on

    the ground of equity." Thus, the tax refund should be based on the taxes deemed paid. Because

    taxes are the lifeblood of the nation, statutes that allow exemptions are construed strictly againstthe grantee and liberally in favor of the government. Otherwise stated, any exemption from the

    payment of a tax must be clearly stated in the language of the law; it cannot be merely implied

    therefrom.

    MARCOS II v. CA

    GR No. 120880, June 5, 1997293 SCRA 77

    FACTS: Bongbong Marcos sought for the reversal of the ruling of the Court of Appeals to grant

    CIR's petition to levy the properties of the late Pres. Marcos to cover the payment of his taxdelinquencies during the period of his exile in the US. The Marcos family was assessed by the

    BIR, and notices were constructively served to the Marcoses, however the assessment were not

    protested administratively by Mrs. Marcos and the heirs of the late president so that they becamefinal and unappealable after the period for filing of opposition has prescribed. Marcos contends

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    that the properties could not be levied to cover the tax dues because they are still pending probate

    with the court, and settlement of tax deficiencies could not be had, unless there is an order by the

    probate court or until the probate proceedings are terminated.

    ISSUE: Is the contention of Bongbong Marcos correct?

    HELD: No. The deficiency income tax assessments and estate tax assessment are already finaland unappealable -and-the subsequent levy of real properties is a tax remedy resorted to by the

    government, sanctioned by Section 213 and 218 of the National Internal Revenue Code. This

    summary tax remedy is distinct and separate from the other tax remedies (such as Judicial Civilactions and Criminal actions), and is not affected or precluded by the pendency of any other tax

    remedies instituted by the government.

    The approval of the court, sitting in probate, or as a settlement tribunal over the deceased is not

    a mandatory requirement in the collection of estate taxes. It cannot therefore be argued that theTax Bureau erred in proceeding with the levying and sale of the properties allegedly owned by

    the late President, on the ground that it was required to seek first the probate court's sanction.

    There is nothing in the Tax Code, and in the pertinent remedial laws that implies the necessity ofthe probate or estate settlement court's approval of the state's claim for estate taxes, before the

    same can be enforced and collected.

    On the contrary, under Section 87 of the NIRC, it is the probate or settlement court which is

    bidden not to authorize the executor or judicial administrator of the decedent's estate to deliverany distributive share to any party interested in the estate, unless it is shown a Certification by

    the Commissioner of Internal Revenue that the estate taxes have been paid. This provision

    disproves the petitioner's contention that it is the probate court which approves the assessmentand collection of the estate tax.

    REYES v. ALMANZORGR Nos. L-49839-46, April 26, 1991

    196 SCRA 322

    FACTS: Petitioners JBL Reyes et al. owned a parcel of land in Tondo which are leased and

    occupied as dwelling units by tenants who were paying monthly rentals of not exceeding P300.

    Sometimes in 1971 the Rental Freezing Law was passed prohibiting for one year from itseffectivity, an increase in monthly rentals of dwelling units where rentals do not exceed three

    hundred pesos (P300.00), so that the Reyeses were precluded from raising the rents and from

    ejecting the tenants. In 1973, respondent City Assessor of Manila re-classified and reassessed the

    value of the subject properties based on the schedule of market values, which entailed anincrease in the corresponding tax rates prompting petitioners to file a Memorandum of

    Disagreement averring that the reassessments made were "excessive, unwarranted, inequitable,

    confiscatory and unconstitutional" considering that the taxes imposed upon them greatly

    exceeded the annual income derived from their properties. They argued that the income approachshould have been used in determining the land values instead of the comparable sales approach

    which the City Assessor adopted.

    ISSUE: Is the approach on tax assessment used by the City Assessor reasonable?

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    HELD: No. The taxing power has the authority to make a reasonable and natural classification

    for purposes of taxation but the government's act must not be prompted by a spirit of hostility, orat the very least discrimination that finds no support in reason. It suffices then that the laws

    operate equally and uniformly on all persons under similar circumstances or that all persons must

    be treated in the same manner, the conditions not being different both in the privileges conferredand the liabilities imposed.Consequently, it stands to reason that petitioners who are burdened by the government by its

    Rental Freezing Laws (then R.A. No. 6359 and P.D. 20) under the principle of social justice

    should not now be penalized by the same government by the imposition of excessive taxespetitioners can ill afford and eventually result in the forfeiture of their properties.

    PHIL. BANK OF COMMUNICATIONS v. CIRGR No. 112024, January 28, 1999

    302 SCRA 250

    FACTS: Petitioner PBCom filed its first and second quarter income tax returns, reported profits,

    and paid income taxes amounting to P5.2M in 1985. However, at the end of the year PBCom

    suffered losses so that when it filed its Annual Income Tax Returns for the year-ended December

    31, 1986, the petitioner likewise reported a net loss of P14.1 M, and thus declared no tax payablefor the year. In 1988, the bank requested from CIR for a tax credit and tax refunds representing

    overpayment of taxes. Pending investigation of the respondent CIR, petitioner instituted a

    Petition for Review before the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA). CTA denied its petition for taxcredit and refund for failing to file within the prescriptive period to which the petitioner belies

    arguing the Revenue Circular No.7-85 issued by the CIR itself states that claim for overpaid

    taxes are not covered by the two-year prescriptive period mandated under the Tax Code.

    ISSUE: Is the contention of the petitioner correct? Is the revenue circular a valid exemption to

    the NIRC?

    HELD: No. The relaxation of revenue regulations by RMC 7-85 is not warranted as it disregards

    the two-year prescriptive period set by law.

    Basic is the principle that "taxes are the lifeblood of the nation." The primary purpose is togenerate funds for the State to finance the needs of the citizenry and to advance the common

    weal. Due process of law under the Constitution does not require judicial proceedings in tax

    cases. This must necessarily be so because it is upon taxation that the government chiefly relies

    to obtain the means to carry on its operations and it is of utmost importance that the modesadopted to enforce the collection of taxes levied should be summary and interfered with as little

    as possible.

    From the same perspective, claims for refund or tax credit should be exercised within the time

    fixed by law because the BIR being an administrative body enforced to collect taxes, itsfunctions should not be unduly delayed or hampered by incidental matters.

    PHIL. GUARANTY CO., INC. v. CIR

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    GR No. L-22074, April 30, 1965

    13 SCRA 775

    FACTS: The petitioner Philippine Guaranty Co., Inc., a domestic insurance company, entered

    into reinsurance contracts with foreign insurance companies not doing business in the country,

    thereby ceding to foreign reinsurers a portion of the premiums on insurance it has originallyunderwritten in the Philippines. The premiums paid by such companies were excluded by thepetitioner from its gross income when it file its income tax returns for 1953 and 1954.

    Furthermore, it did not withhold or pay tax on them. Consequently, the CIR assessed against the

    petitioner withholding taxes on the ceded reinsurance premiums to which the latter protested theassessment on the ground that the premiums are not subject to tax for the premiums did not

    constitute income from sources within the Philippines because the foreign reinsurers did not

    engage in business in the Philippines, and CIR's previous rulings did not require insurance

    companies to withhold income tax due from foreign companies.

    ISSUE: Are insurance companies not required to withhold tax on reinsurance premiums ceded to

    foreign insurance companies, which deprives the government from collecting the tax due fromthem?

    HELD: No. The power to tax is an attribute of sovereignty. It is a power emanating from

    necessity. It is a necessary burden to preserve the State's sovereignty and a means to give thecitizenry an army to resist an aggression, a navy to defend its shores from invasion, a corps of

    civil servants to serve, public improvement designed for the enjoyment of the citizenry and those

    which come within the State's territory, and facilities and protection which a government issupposed to provide. Considering that the reinsurance premiums in question were afforded

    protection by the government and the recipient foreign reinsurers exercised rights and privileges

    guaranteed by our laws, such reinsurance premiums and reinsurers should share the burden of

    maintaining the state.The petitioner's defense of reliance of good faith on rulings of the CIR requiring no withholding

    of tax due on reinsurance premiums may free the taxpayer from the payment of surcharges or

    penalties imposed for failure to pay the corresponding withholding tax, but it certainly would notexculpate it from liability to pay such withholding tax. The Government is not estopped from

    collecting taxes by the mistakes or errors of its agents.

    PHILEX MINING CORP. v. CIR

    GR No. 125704, August 28, 1998

    294 SCRA 687

    FACTS: Petitioner Philex Mining Corp. assails the decision of the Court of Appeals affirming

    the Court of Tax Appeals decision ordering it to pay the amount of P110.7 M as excise tax

    liability for the period from the 2nd quarter of 1991 to the 2nd quarter of 1992 plus 20% annualinterest from 1994 until fully paid pursuant to Sections 248 and 249 of the Tax Code of 1977.

    Philex protested the demand for payment of the tax liabilities stating that it has pending claims

    for VAT input credit/refund for the taxes it paid for the years 1989 to 1991 in the amount of

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    P120 M plus interest. Therefore these claims for tax credit/refund should be applied against the

    tax liabilities.

    ISSUE: Can there be an off-setting between the tax liabilities vis-a-vis claims of tax refund of the

    petitioner?

    HELD: No. Philex's claim is an outright disregard of the basic principle in tax law that taxes arethe lifeblood of the government and so should be collected without unnecessary hindrance.

    Evidently, to countenance Philex's whimsical reason would render ineffective our tax collection

    system. Too simplistic, it finds no support in law or in jurisprudence.To be sure, Philex cannot be allowed to refuse the payment of its tax liabilities on the ground

    that it has a pending tax claim for refund or credit against the government which has not yet been

    granted.Taxes cannot be subject to compensation for the simple reason that the government and

    the taxpayer are not creditors and debtors of each other. There is a material distinction between atax and debt. Debts are due to the Government in its corporate capacity, while taxes are due to

    the Government in its sovereign capacity. xxx There can be no off-setting of taxes against the

    claims that the taxpayer may have against the government. A person cannot refuse to pay a taxon the ground that the government owes him an amount equal to or greater than the tax being

    collected. The collection of a tax cannot await the results of a lawsuit against the government.

    NORTH CAMARINES LUMBER CO., INC. v. CIR

    GR No. L-12353, September 30, 1960

    109 PHIL 511

    FACTS: The petitioner sold more than 2M boardfeet of logs to General Lumber Co. with the

    agreement that the latter would pay the sales taxes. The CIR, upon consultation officially advised

    the parties that the bureau interposes no objection so long as the tax due shall be covered by asurety. General Lumber complied, but later failed, with the surety, to pay the tax liabilities, and

    so the respondent collector required the petitioner to pay thru a letter dated August 30, 1955.

    Twice did the petitioner filed a request for reconsideration before finally submitting the deniedrequest for appeal before the Court of Tax Appeals. The CTA dismissed the appeal as it was

    clearly filed out of time. The petitioner had consumed thirty-three days from the receipt of the

    demand, before filing the appeal. Petitioner argued that in computing the 30-day period inperfecting the appeal the letter of the respondent Collector dated January 30, 1956, denying the

    second request for reconsideration, should be considered as the final decision contemplated in

    Section 7, and not the letter of demand dated August 30, 1955.

    ISSUE: Is the contention of the petitioner tenable?

    HELD: No. This contention is untenable. We cannot countenance that theory that would make

    the commencement of the statutory 30-day period solely dependent on the will of the taxpayerand place the latter in a position to put off indefinitely and at his convenience the finality of a tax

    assessment. Such an absurd procedure would be detrimental to the interest of the Government,

    for "taxes are the lifeblood of the government, and their prompt and certain availability is animperious need."

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    LUTZ v. ARANETAGR No. L-7859, December 22, 1955

    98 PHIL 148

    FACTS: Plaintiff Walter Lutz, in his capacity as judicial administrator of the intestate estate ofAntionio Ledesma, sought to recover from the CIR the sum of P14,666.40 paid by the estate as

    taxes, under section 3 of the CA 567 or the Sugar Adjustment Act thereby assailing its

    constitutionality, for it provided for an increase of the existing tax on the manufacture of sugar,alleging that such enactment is not being levied for a public purpose but solely and exclusively

    for the aid and support of the sugar industry thus making it void and unconstitutional. The sugar

    industry situation at the time of the enactment was in an imminent threat of loss and needed to be

    stabilized by imposition of emergency measures.

    ISSUE: Is CA 567 constitutional, despite its being allegedly violative of the equal protection

    clause, the purpose of which is not for the benefit of the general public but for the rehabilitationonly of the sugar industry?

    HELD: Yes. The protection and promotion of the sugar industry is a matter of public concern, it

    follows that the Legislature may determine within reasonable bounds what is necessary for itsprotection and expedient for its promotion. Here, the legislative discretion must be allowed to

    fully play, subject only to the test of reasonableness; and it is not contended that the means

    provided in the law bear no relation to the objective pursued or are oppressive in character. Ifobjective and methods are alike constitutionally valid, no reason is seen why the state may not

    levy taxes to raise funds for their prosecution and attainment. Taxation may be made the

    implement of the state's police power.

    GOMEZ v. PALOMAR

    GR No. L-23645, October 29, 196825 SCRA 827

    FACTS: Petitioner Benjamin Gomez mailed a letter at the post office in San Fernando,Pampanga. It did not bear the special anti-TB stamp required by the RA 1635. It was returned to

    the petitioner. Petitioner now assails the constitutionality of the statute claiming that RA 1635

    otherwise known as the Anti-TB Stamp law is violative of the equal protection clause because it

    constitutes mail users into a class for the purpose of the tax while leaving untaxed the rest of thepopulation and that even among postal patrons the statute discriminatorily grants exemptions.

    The law in question requires an additional 5 centavo stamp for every mail being posted, and no

    mail shall be delivered unless bearing the said stamp.

    ISSUE: Is the Anti-TB Stamp Law unconstitutional, for being allegedly violative of the equal

    protection clause?

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    HELD: No. It is settled that the legislature has the inherent power to select the subjects of

    taxation and to grant exemptions. This power has aptly been described as "of wide range and

    flexibility." Indeed, it is said that in the field of taxation, more than in other areas, the legislaturepossesses the greatest freedom in classification. The reason for this is that traditionally,

    classification has been a device for fitting tax programs to local needs and usages in order to

    achieve an equitable distribution of the tax burden.The classification of mail users is based on the ability to pay, the enjoyment of a privilege andon administrative convenience. Tax exemptions have never been thought of as raising revenues

    under the equal protection clause.

    PUNSALAN v. MUN. BOARD OF CITY OF MANILA

    GR No. L-23645, October 29, 1968

    95 PHIL 46

    FACTS: The plaintiffs--two lawyers, medical practitioner, a dental surgeon, a CPA, and a

    pharmacist--sought the annulment of Ordinance No.3398 of the City of Manila which imposes amunicipal occupation tax on persons exercising various professions in the city and penalizes

    non-payment of the tax, contending in substance that this ordinance and the law authorizing it

    constitute class legislation, are unjust and oppressive, and authorize what amounts to double

    taxation. The burden of plaintiffs' complaint is not that the professions to which theyrespectively belong have been singled out for the imposition of this municipal occupation tax,

    but that while the law has authorized the City of Manila to impose the said tax, it has withheld

    that authority from other chartered cities, not to mention municipalities.

    ISSUE: Does the law constitute a class legislation? Is it for the Court to determine which

    political unit should impose taxes and which should not?

    HELD: No. It is not for the courts to judge what particular cities or municipalities should be

    empowered to impose occupation taxes in addition to those imposed by the National

    Government. That matter is peculiarly within the domain of the political departments and thecourts would do well not to encroach upon it. Moreover, as the seat of the National Government

    and with a population and volume of trade many times that of any other Philippine city or

    municipality, Manila, no doubt, offers a more lucrative field for the practice of the professions,so that it is but fair that the professionals in Manila be made to pay a higher occupation tax than

    their brethren in the provinces.