RELATIONSHIPS and agreements may at times
end on a sour note. And more often, when nothing more can be done,
parties have no better option but to release each other from their
obligations, pick up the pieces, and look forward to move on with
anticipation at restoring the status quo.
Legally, the right to rescind or to nullify
the agreement is an available remedy to the injured party. The wronged
party is entitled to apply with the court for a decree of rescission.
However, the right proceeds from a judicial pronouncement, and not from
the parties’ prerogative to walk-away from the obligation. To enforce
the rescission against the whole world, a binding court decision must be
secured.
Such is the case of two corporations that entered into a contract to buy
and sell real properties. For failure of one of the parties to comply
with its undertakings, a judicial decree to declare the contract void
(or rescission of contract) was secured by the wronged party. Both
parties were directed by the court to return whatever they had received
from each other, with one party returning the purchase price, and the
other party reconveying the titles over the real properties.
Ordinarily, restoration would have meant a mere handing over of wares.
In a twist, title and ownership over the disputed lands had already been
transferred to the buyer. And consequently, to return the disputed
lands to the seller, a Certificate Authorizing Registration (CAR) must
be obtained from the Bureau of Internal Revenue for the cancellation of
titles over the lands and retransfer of the registration to the seller.
For the CAR to be issued, the corresponding taxes, i.e. capital gains
tax and documentary stamp tax, must be paid or a tax exemption ruling
must be obtained.
The gnawing question is whether the reconveyance of the parcels of land
should be exempt from the payment of capital gains tax (CGT) and
documentary stamp tax (DST).
In the affirmative, the BIR favorably granted exemption from payment of
CGT and DST over the reconveyance of the real properties in favor of the
seller. The BIR’s position is underpinned by the principle that
rescission of a contract is tantamount to declaring a contract void from
its inception, as if no contract existed between the parties. In
effect, rescission of a contract would not give rise to a taxable event.
This principle is supported by the argument that first, no income is
realized from a sale or exchange that has been declared void, and
second, the return of the property is not for monetary consideration,
but merely an acknowledgment of the title or ownership of the original
owner of the property.
However, the BIR went a step further to clarify the issue on payment of
DST, and this is where the fine line of distinction is drawn. DST is
levied on the exercise of certain privileges, regardless of the legal
status of the transactions that gave rise to it -- that is, irrespective
of whether the contract was declared void or unenforceable. The
operative impact of the DST is that it is levied upon the issuance of
the specific instrument or document, and not on the legal transaction or
agreement evidenced by the document. Thus, DST previously paid on the
initial transfer of title is no longer refundable by the BIR, a judicial
rescission of the Contract to Buy and Sell notwithstanding.
Perhaps a good lesson that can be culled from this common tale of
relations gone wrong would be for the aggrieved party not to forget to
seek the recovery of whatever taxes and costs that it had to pay to the
BIR in carrying out the original transfer of the property to the
defaulting buyer. This way the aggrieved party is fully restored to its
former status.
After all, life is full of uncertainties. The least that we can do is to
plan ahead, strategize our backup plans, and identify our exit
mechanisms to avoid falling into economic traps and to cushion potential
detrimental effects.
The author is a director at the tax services department of Isla
Lipana & Co., the Philippine member firm of the
PricewaterhouseCoopers global network. Readers may send feedback to ma.teresa.t.ledesma@ph.pwc.com.
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