G.R. No. L-26862 - Republic vs. Philippine Rabbit Bus Lines, Inc.
Manila
EN BANC
G.R. No. L-26862 March 30, 1970
REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES,plaintiff-appellant,
vs.
PHILIPPINE RABBIT BUS LINES, INC.,defendant-appellee.
Office of the Solicitor General Antonio P. Barredo, Assistant Solicitor General Pacifico P. de Castro and Solicitor Enrique M. Reyes for plaintiff-appellant.
Angel A. Sison for defendant-appellee.
FERNANDO,J.:
The right of a holder of a backpay certificate to use the same in the payment of his taxes has been recognized by law.
The complaint of plaintiff-appellant Republic of the Philippines was filed on January 17, 1963 alleging that defendant-appellee, as the registered owner of two hundred thirty eight (238) motor vehicles, paid to the Motor Vehicles Office in Baguio the amount of P78,636.17, corresponding to the second installment of registration fees for 1959, not in cash but in the form of negotiable certificate of indebtedness, the defendant being merely an assignee and not the backpay holder itself. The complaint sought the payment of such amount with surcharges plus the legal rate of interest from the filing thereof and a declaration of the nullity of the use of such negotiable certificate of indebtedness to satisfy its obligation. The answer by defendant-appellee, filed on February 18, 1963, alleged that what it did was in accordance with law, both the Treasurer of the Philippines and the General Auditing Office having signified their conformity to such a mode of payment. It sought the dismissal of the complaint.
After noting the respective theories of both parties in its pleadings, the lower court, in its decision, stated that the issue before it "is whether or not the acceptance of the negotiable certificates of indebtedness tendered by defendant bus firms to and accepted by the Motor Vehicles Office of Baguio City and the corresponding issuance of official receipts therefor acknowledging such payment by said office is valid and binding on plaintiff Republic."
In the decision now on appeal, the lower court, after referring to a documentary evidence introduced by plaintiff-appellant continued: "From the evidence adduced by defendant bus firm, it appears that as early as August 28, 1958, the National Treasurer upon whom devolves the function of administering the Back Pay Law (Republic Act 304 as amended by Republic Act Nos. 800 and 897), in his letter to the Chief of the Motor Vehicles Office who in turn quoted and circularized same in his Circular No. 5 dated September 1, 1958, to draw the attention thereto of all Motor Vehicle Supervisors, Registrars and employees ..., had approved the acceptance of negotiable certificates of indebtedness in payment of registration fees of motor vehicles with the view that such certificates 'should be accorded with the same confidence by other governmental instrumentalities as other evidences of public debt, such as bonds and treasury certificates'. Significantly, the Auditor General concurred in the said view of the National Treasurer."
The argument of plaintiff-appellant that only the holders of the backpay certificates themselves could apply the same to the payment of motor vehicle registration fees did not find favor with the lower court. Thus, "[Plaintiff] Republic urges that defendant bus firm being merely an assignee of the negotiable certificates of indebtedness in question, it could not use the same in payment of taxes. Such contention, this Court believes, runs counter to the recitals appearing on the said certificates which states that 'the Republic of the Philippines hereby acknowledges to (name) or assigns ...', legally allowing the assignment of backpay rights."
It therefore, as above noted, rendered judgment in favor of defendant-appellee "upholding the validity and efficacy" of such payment made and dismissing the complaint. Hence this appeal which, on the decisive legal issue already set forth at the outset, we find meritorious.
1. If a registration fee were a tax, then what was done by defendant-appellee was strictly in accordance with law and its nullity, as sought by plaintiff-appellant Republic of the Philippines, cannot be decreed. But is it? The answer to that question is decisive of this controversy. A tax refers to a financial obligation imposed by a state on persons, whether natural or juridical, within its jurisdiction, for property owned, income earned, business or profession engaged in, or any such activity analogous in character for raising the necessary revenues to take care of the responsibilities of government.
As distinguished from other pecuniary burdens, the differentiating factor is that the purpose to be subserved is the raising of revenue. A tax then is neither a penalty that must be satisfied or a liability arising from contract.
The registration fee which defendant-appellee had to pay was imposed by Section 8 of the Revised Motor Vehicle Law.
Any vestige of any doubt as to the correctness of the above conclusion should be dissipated by Republic Act No. 5448.
It may further be stated that a statute is meaningful not only by what it includes but also by what it omits. What is left out is not devoid of significance.ℒαwρhi৷As observed by Frankfurter: "An omission at the time of enactment, whether careless or calculated, cannot be judicially supplied however much later wisdom may recommend the inclusion.
2. In the brief for plaintiff-appellant Republic of the Philippines, filed by the then Solicitor General, now Justice Antonio P. Barredo, the principal error imputed to the trial court is its failure to hold that the Back Pay Law prohibits an assignee, as is defendant-appellee, from using certificates of indebtedness to pay their taxes. In view of the conclusion reached by us that the liability of defendant-appellee under the Motor Vehicle Act does not arise under the taxing power of the state, there is no need to pass upon this particular question.
3. The Republic of the Philippines, in its brief, likewise assigned as error the failure of the lower court to hold that estoppel does not lie against the government for mistakes committed by its agents. As could be discerned from an excerpt of the decision earlier referred to, the lower court was impressed by the fact that the national treasurer to whom it correctly referred as being vested with the function of administering the backpay law did in a communication to the Motor Vehicles Office approve the acceptance of negotiable certificate of indebtedness in payment of registration fees, a view with which the Auditor General was in concurrence. The appealed decision likewise noted: "By the testimonies of Pedro Flores, the then Registrar of the Motor Vehicles Office of Baguio City and Casiano Catbagan, the Cashier of the Bureau of Public Highways in the same city, defendant bus firm has undisputedly shown that, after the said certificates of indebtedness were properly indorsed in favor of the Motor Vehicles Office of Baguio City and accepted by the Bureau of Public Highways on May 29, 1959, it was duly and properly issued official receipts ... acknowledging full payment of its registration fees for the second installment of 1959 of its 238 vehicles, and that the Bureau of Public Highways, thru its collecting and disbursing officer, was validly and regularly authorized to receive such payment."
Thus did the lower court, as pointed out by the then Solicitor General, conclude that the government was bound by the mistaken interpretation arrived at by the national treasurer and the auditor general. It would consider estoppel as applicable. That is not the law. Estoppel does not lie. Such a principle dates back toAguinaldo de Romero v. Director of Lands,
WHEREFORE,the decision of November 24, 1965 is reversed and defendant-appellee ordered to pay the sum of P78,636.17. With costs against defendant-appellee.
Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, J.B.L., Dizon, Makalintal, Zaldivar, Teehankee and Villamor, JJ., concur.
Castro, J., concurs in the result.
Barredo, J., took no part.
Footnotes