
Roxas y Cia vs Court of Tax Appeals
23 SCRA 276
Facts:
Don Pedro Roxas
and Dona Carmen Ayala, Spanish subjects, transmitted to their grandchildren by
hereditary succession several properties. To manage the above-mentioned
properties, said children, namely, Antonio Roxas, Eduardo Roxas and Jose Roxas,
formed a partnership called Roxas y Compania. At the conclusion of the WW2, the
tenants who have all been tilling the lands in Nasugbu for generations expressed
their desire to purchase from Roxas y Cia. the parcels which they actually
occupied. For its part, the Government, in consonance with the constitutional
mandate to acquire big landed estates and apportion them among landless tenants
farmers, persuaded the Roxas brothers to part with their landholdings.
Conferences were held with the farmers in the early part of 1948 and finally
the Roxas brothers agreed to sell 13,500 hectares to the Government for
distribution to actual occupants for a price of P2,079,048.47 plus P300,000.00
for survey and subdivision expenses. It turned out however that the Government
did not have funds to cover the purchase price, and so a special arrangement
was made for the Rehabilitation Finance Corporation to advance to Roxas y Cia.
the amount of P1,500,000.00 as loan. Collateral for such loan were the lands
proposed to be sold to the farmers. Under the arrangement, Roxas y Cia. allowed
the farmers to buy the lands for the same price but by installment, and
contracted with the Rehabilitation Finance Corporation to pay its loan from the
proceeds of the yearly amortizations paid by the farmers.
The CIR demanded
from Roxas y Cia the payment of deficiency income taxes resulting from the
inclusion as income of Roxas y Cia. of the unreported 50% of the net profits
for 1953 and 1955 derived from the sale of the Nasugbu farm lands to the
tenants, and the disallowance of deductions from gross income of various
business expenses and contributions claimed by Roxas y Cia. and the Roxas brothers.
For the reason that Roxas y Cia. subdivided its Nasugbu farm lands and sold
them to the farmers on installment, the Commissioner considered the partnership
as engaged in the business of real estate, hence,100% of the profits derived
there from was taxed. The Roxas brothers protested the assessment but inasmuch
as said protest was denied, they instituted an appeal in the CTA which
sustained the assessment. Hence, this appeal.
Issue:
Is Roxas y Cia
liable for the payment of deficiency income for the sale of Nasugbu farmlands?
Ruling:
NO. The proposition of the CIR cannot be
favorably accepted in this isolated transaction with its peculiar circumstances
in spite of the fact that there were hundreds of vendees. Although they paid
for their respective holdings in installment for a period of 10 years, it would
nevertheless not make the vendor Roxas y Cia. a real estate dealer during the
10-year amortization period. It should be borne in mind that the sale of the
Nasugbu farm lands to the very farmers who tilled them for generations was not
only inconsonance with, but more in obedience to the request and pursuant to
the policy of our Government to allocate lands to the landless. It was the
bounden duty of the Government to pay the agreed compensation after it had
persuaded Roxas y Cia. to sell its haciendas, and to subsequently subdivide
them among the farmers at very reasonable terms and prices. However, the
Government could not comply with its duty for lack of funds. Obligingly, Roxas
y Cia. shouldered the Government's burden, went out of its way and sold lands
directly to the farmers in the same way and under the same terms as would have
been the case had the Government done it itself. For this magnanimous act, the
municipal council of Nasugbu passed a resolution expressing the people's
gratitude. In fine, Roxas y Cia. cannot be considered a real estate dealer for
the sale in question. Hence, pursuant to Section 34 of the Tax Code the lands
sold to the farmers are capital assets, and the gain derived from the sale
thereof is capital gain, taxable only to the extent of 50%
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