14 | TAXATION 1 NOTES (Based on Atty. Aranas’ Syllabus and Lecture) – EH403 S.Y. 2014-2015
If Company S (owned by C 10%, D 10%, E 10%, F 10%, G 60%) sold the vehicle to
Company B (owned by G 60%, H 10%, I 10%, J 10%, K 10%): NOT DEDUCTIBLE
(the same shareholder controls both corporations)
Company S is owned by C 10%, D 10%, E 10%, F 10%, G 60%
Company B is owned by shareholder G 10%, H 10%, I 10%, J 10% and Corporation
XYZ 60%
Shareholders of Corporation XYZ are G 60%, K 10%, L 10%, M 10%, N 10%
In this case, insofar as G is concerned on Company B, he has a direct shareholding of
10% and an indirect shareholding through Corporation XYZ:
Direct ownership 10%
Indirect ownership (60% x 60%) 36%
Total Ownership or shareholding 46%
In this case, the loss is DEDUCTIBLE since ownership, direct and indirect, is not more
than 50%.
Grandfather rule: You don’t just look at the corporate shareholder but you also look at
the individual shareholders of the corporate shareholder to its extent of ownership
Company S is owned by C 10%, D 10%, E 10%, F 10%, G 60%
Company B is owned by shareholder G 10%, H 10%, I 10%, J 10% and Corporation
XYZ 60%
Shareholders of Corporation XYZ are G 99%, K 0.25%, L 0.25%, M 0.25%, N 0.25%
In this case, insofar as G is concerned on Company B, he has a direct shareholding of
10% and an indirect shareholding through Corporation XYZ:
Direct ownership 10.00%
Indirect ownership (99% x 60%) 59.40%
Total Ownership or shareholding 69.40%
In this case, the loss is NOT DEDUCTIBLE since ownership, direct and indirect, is more
than 50%.
Revenue Regulations (RRs) – are issuances signed by the Secretary of Finance, upon
recommendation of the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue that specify, prescribe or define
rules and regulations for the effective enforcement of the provisions of the National Internal
Revenue Code (NIRC) and related statutes.
Revenue Memorandum Circulars (RMCs) – are issuances that publish pertinent and
applicable portions, as well as amplifications, of laws, rules, regulations and precedents issued
by the BIR and other agencies/offices
-this is issued interrelated to other agencies of the government. Example is the issuance of a
resolution by the HULRB which increases the amount of ceiling for the socialized housing. This
has effect on the BIR so far as Value Added Tax (VAT) is concern. BIR will not issue RMO since
the resolution did not come the BIR itself but instead the RMC and it will mention there pursuant
to bla bla.
Revenue Bulletins - refer to preiodic issuances, notices and official announcements of the
Commissioner that consolidate the BIR’s position on certain specific issues of law or
administration in relation to the provisions of the Tax Code, relevant to tax laws and other
issuances for the guidance of the public. These are found in the website (i.e., reminders re:
deadlines of the tax returns)
Revenue Memorandum Order (RMOs) - are issuances that provide directives or
instructions; prescribe guidelines; and outline processes, operations, activities, workflows,
methods and procedures necessary in the implementation of stated policies, goals, objectives,
plans and programs of the Bureau in all areas of operations, except auditing.
-this is issued by the Commissioner of the BIR in relation to a resolution issued by the BIR itself.
Revenue Memorandum Rulings (RMRs) - are rulings, opinions and interpretations of the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue with respect to the provisions of the Tax Code and other tax
laws, as applied to a specific set of facts, with or without established precedents, and which the
Commissioner may issue from time to time for the purpose of providing taxpayers guidance on
tax consequences in specific situations. BIR Rulings, therefore, cannot contravene duly issued
RMRs; otherwise, the Rulings are void ab initio.
-this is broader than the BIR Ruling because this is applicable to all taxpayers.
BIR Rulings - are official position of the Bureau to queries raised by taxpayers and other
stakeholders relative to clarification and interpretation of tax laws.
-if you are a taxpayer and you try to ask for a ruling, whatever is the ruling of the CIR is, is only
applicable to you even though other taxpayers have the same facts as yours. It does not mean
that applicable na sad na sya sa iyaha.