BAT argues that it enjoys legislative protection. The BIR
says it does not, although the Department of Finance concurs with BAT that it
does.
It will be recalled that the BIR Legal Service affirmed the
findings of the Large Taxpayers Service of the bureau stating that Pall Mall
cigarettes - imported or locally produced - should pay an excise tax of P25 per
pack.
BAT may find it useful to read the annexes which list the
brands presumably entitled to legislative protection.
It is unfortunate for BAT and La Suerte that legislative
protection is given to brands introduced in the market between Jan. 1, 1997 to
the end of that year.
On the other hand, the Pall Mall brands were introduced in
the market as early as 2004. Being so, the brands may be subject to
reclassification although the BIR earlier established that the imported kind is
slapped a tax of P25 per pack.
The purpose of reclassification is precisely to remove the
anomaly of having two rates on the same brands. If the tax of P25 per pack is
classified downwards, there will be a violation of the law prohibiting downward
classification.
BAT may not be allowed to violate that law. That is why it is
threatening the BIR with legal action.
Bunag sticks to his guns
The legality of not allowing a downward classification did
not end with the opinion of the Legal Service of the BIR. Then commissioner
Mario Bunag confirmed the excise tax on locally produced Pall Mall should be
similar or the same as the tax imposed on the imported type.
The decision of Bunag follows the tax principle that
whichever is higher is what the taxpayer should pay even when one is imported
and the other is locally-produced. The whole point is there has been a
classification that put the imported Pall Mall in the higher category of P25 per
pack.
Cutting that down to P6.25 is effectively downward
classification. There should be no ifs buts about that. But there are, according
to BAT. Disappointed over what it might have thought as a bird in hand, it is
now threatening the BIR with a suit.
Private representations or orders have been made to Bunag to
change his recommendations. The same was done to Commissioner Hefti. Neither of
them would budge an inch.
Who do we uphold now pending decision of the Court? Two BIR
commissioners or the DoF which is obviously accommodating BAT with a lower tax
rate on its Pall Mall brands?
There is more to this than meets the eye.