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Obillos Vs CIR

The petitioners inherited two lots from their father and held them as co-owners for over a year before reselling them. They treated the profit from the sale as capital gains and paid the corresponding taxes. However, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue later required them to pay higher corporate income taxes, claiming they had formed an unregistered partnership. The petitioners contested this assessment. The court ruled that the petitioners were merely co-owners and their single transaction of jointly purchasing and reselling the lots did not constitute a partnership, as they did not intend to form one nor conduct ongoing business. The division of profits was incidental to dissolving their temporary co-ownership over the lots.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
159 views2 pages

Obillos Vs CIR

The petitioners inherited two lots from their father and held them as co-owners for over a year before reselling them. They treated the profit from the sale as capital gains and paid the corresponding taxes. However, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue later required them to pay higher corporate income taxes, claiming they had formed an unregistered partnership. The petitioners contested this assessment. The court ruled that the petitioners were merely co-owners and their single transaction of jointly purchasing and reselling the lots did not constitute a partnership, as they did not intend to form one nor conduct ongoing business. The division of profits was incidental to dissolving their temporary co-ownership over the lots.

Uploaded by

George Habacon
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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FACTS: Jose Obillos, Sr. completed payment to Ortigas & Co., Ltd. on two lots.

The next day he transferred his rights to his four children, the petitioners, to enable them to build their residences. The company sold the two lots to petitioners. The Torrens titles issued to them would show that they were co-owners of the two lots. After having held the two lots for more than a year, the petitioners resold them to the Walled City Securities Corporation and Olga Cruz Canda They treated the profit as a capital gain and paid an income tax on one-half thereof. One day before the expiration of the five-year prescriptive period, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue required the four petitioners to pay corporate income tax on the total profit in addition to individual income tax on their shares thereof as well as 50% fraud surcharge and as 42% accumulated interest. Not only that. He considered the share of the profits of each petitioner in the sum of P33,584 as a " taxable in full (not a mere capital gain of which is taxable) and required them to pay deficiency income taxes. Thus, the petitioners are being held liable for deficiency income taxes and penalties on their profit in addition to the tax on capital gains already paid by them. The Commissioner acted on the theory that the four petitioners had formed an unregistered partnership or joint venture.The petitioners contested the assessments. Issue: Whether or not the petitioners formed an unregistered partnership or joint venture Held: No the petitioners were merely co-owners. It is an error to consider the petitioners as having formed a partnership under article 1767 of the Civil Code simply because they allegedly contributed P178,708.12 to buy the two lots, resold the same and divided the profit among themselves. To regard the petitioners as having formed a taxable unregistered partnership would result in oppressive taxation and confirm the dictum that the power to tax involves the power to destroy. That eventuality should be obviated. As testified by Jose Obillos, Jr., they had no such intention. They were co-owners pure and simple. To consider them as partners would obliterate the distinction between a co-ownership and a partnership. The petitioners were not engaged in any joint venture by reason of that isolated transaction. Their original purpose was to divide the lots for residential purposes. If later on they found it not feasible to build their residences on the lots because of the high cost of construction, then they had no choice but to resell the same to dissolve the coownership. The division of the profit was merely incidental to the dissolution of the co-ownership which was in the nature of things a temporary state. Article 1769(3) of the Civil Code provides that "the sharing of gross returns does not of itself establish a partnership, whether or not the persons sharing them have a joint or common right or interest in any property from which the returns are derived". There must be an unmistakable intention to form a partnership or joint venture.*

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