867 Phil. 717; 117 OG No. 13, 4043 (March 29, 2021)
CAGUIOA, J:
WHEREFORE, foregoing considered, judgment is hereby rendered in favor of [DPWH] condemning the [Disputed Property], free from all liens and encumbrances for the purpose of implementing the construction [of the Project] from NLEX to McArthur Highway, Valenzuela City, and vesting unto [DPWH] the title to the property so described for such public use or purpose.The RTC's award of just compensation represented the sum of the replacement cost of the following improvements built on the Disputed Property, as alleged by DPWH in the Expropriation Complaint:
[DPWH) is directed to issue [a] manager's check in the amount of Five Hundred Five Thousand Three Hundred Seventy-Four Pesos and Seventy-One Centavos (Php 505,374.71), representing the total valuation of the improvements located on the [Disputed Property], in the name of [Spouses Bunsay] and to deposit the same [with] the Office of the Clerk of Court, Regional Trial Court, Valenzuela City within fifteen (15) days from receipt of this Resolution.
As consequential damages, [DPWH] is further directed to pay the value of the [CGT] and other taxes necessary for the transfer of the [Disputed Property] in [DPWH's) name.
[Spouses Bunsay are] hereby directed to tum-over the owner's duplicate certificate of title to [DPWH].
After [the] parties have complied x x x, the Register of Deeds of Valenzuela City is directed to effect the transfer of ownership of the [Disputed Property] to [DPWH] and to issue the corresponding certificate of title X X X.
SO ORDERED.[12] (Emphasis supplied)
[1. A] one-storey residential house (semi-concrete) with x x x [f]ence and [s]teel [g]ate, the replacement cost of which is valued at Three Hundred Thirty Thousand Six Hundred Four Pesos and Thirty-Five Centavos (Php 330,604.35); andDPWH filed a Motion for Partial Reconsideration (MPR), praying that the award corresponding to the replacement cost of improvements, and equivalent value of CGT and other transfer taxes be deleted.[14]
[2. A] one[-]storey residential house (concrete) with upper concrete slab, the replacement cost of which is valued at One Hundred Seventy-Four Thousand Seven Hundred Seventy Pesos and Thirty-Six Centavos (Php 174,770.36).[13]
[With respect to] the aspect of payment of [CGT] and other transfer tax, the [RTC] finds the argument of [DPWH] that it has been ordered to pay [CGT] and other transfer taxes to be misplaced and misleading.Aggrieved, DPWH filed the present Petition via Rule 45 of the Rules of Court on March 4, 2013.
The [RTC] did not order [DPWH] to pay the [CGT] and other transfer taxes. What was ordered of [DPWH] is to pay the consequential damages constituting the value [of CGT] and other transfer taxes.[16] (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
SEC. 6. Proceedings by commissioners.- Before entering upon the performance of their duties, the commissioners shall take and subscribe an oath that they will faithfully perform their duties as commissioners, which oath shall be filed in court with the other proceedings in the case. Evidence may be introduced by either party before the commissioners who are authorized to administer oaths on hearings before them, and the commissioners shall, unless the parties consent to the contrary, after due notice to the parties to attend, view and examine the property sought to be expropriated and its surroundings, and may measure the same, after which either party may, by himself or counsel, argue the case. The commissioners shall assess the consequential damages to the property not taken and deduct from such consequential damages the consequential benefits to be derived by the owner from the public use or purpose of the property taken, the operation of its franchise by the corporation or the carrying on of the business of the corporation or person taking the property. But in no case shall the consequential benefits assessed exceed the consequential damages assessed, or the owner be deprived of the actual value of his property so taken. (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)In Republic v. Court of Appeals,[20] the Court explained that consequential damages may be awarded to the owner if, as a result of the expropriation, the remaining portion not so expropriated suffers from an impairment or decrease in value.[21]
We likewise rule that the RTC committed a serious error when it directed the Republic to pay respondents consequential damages equivalent to the value of the capital gains tax and other taxes necessary for the transfer of the subject property.The Court's ruling in Spouses Salvador is clear -CGT may not be awarded in the form of consequential damages since the term assumes a fixed definition in the context of expropriation proceedings; it is limited to the impairment or decrease in value of the portion which remains with the affected owner after expropriation.
"Just compensation [is defined as] the full and fair equivalent of the property sought to be expropriated. x x x The measure is not the taker's gain but the owner's loss. [The compensation, to be just,] must be fair not only to the owner but also to the taker."
In order to determine just compensation, the trial court should first ascertain the market value of the property by considering the cost of acquisition, the current value of like properties, its actual or potential uses, and in the particular case of lands, their size, shape, location, and the tax declarations thereon. If as a result of the expropriation, the remaining lot suffers from an impairment or decrease in value, consequential damages may be awarded by the trial court, provided that the consequential benefits which may arise from the expropriation do not exceed said damages suffered by the owner of the property.
While it is true that "the determination of the amount of just compensation is within the court's discretion, it should not be done arbitrarily or capriciously. [Rather,] it must [always] be based on all established rules, upon correct legal principles and competent evidence." The court cannot base its judgment on mere speculations and surmises.
In the present case, the RTC deemed it "fair and just that x x x whatever is the value of the [CGT] and all other taxes necessary for the transfer of the subject property to the [Republic] are but consequential damages that should be paid by the latter." x x x
xxxx
This is clearly an error. It is settled that the transfer of property through expropriation proceedings is a sale or exchange within the meaning of Sections 24(D) and 56(A)(3) of the National Internal Revenue Code, and profit from the transaction constitutes capital gain. Since [CGT] is a tax on passive income, it is the seller, or respondents in this case, who are liable to shoulder the tax.
In fact, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), in BIR Ruling No. 476-2013 dated December 18, 2013, has constituted the DPWH as a withholding agent tasked to withhold the 6% final withholding tax in the expropriation of real property for infrastructure projects. Thus, as far as the government is concerned, the [CGT] in expropriation proceedings remains a liability of the seller, as it is a tax on the seller's gain from the sale of real property.
Besides, as previously explained, consequential damages are only awarded if as a result of the expropriation, the remaining property of the owner suffers from an impairment or decrease in value. In this case, no evidence was submitted to prove any impairment or decrease in value of the subject property as a result of the expropriation. More significantly, given that the payment of [CGT] on the transfer of the subject property has no effect on the increase or decrease in value of the remaining property, it can hardly be considered as consequential damages that may be awarded to respondents.[24] (Emphasis and underscoring supplied while those in the original omitted)
SEC. 5. Standards for the Assessment of the Value of the Land Subject of Expropriation Proceedings or Negotiated Sale. - In order to facilitate the determination of just compensation, the court may consider, among other well-established factors, the following relevant standards:CGT, being a tax on passive income, is imposed by the National Internal Revenue Code on the seller as a consequence of the latter's presumed income from the sale or exchange of real property. Notably however, the transfer of real property by way of expropriation is not an ordinary sale contemplated under Article 1458[26] of the Civil Code. Rather, it is akin to a "forced sale" or one which arises not from the consensual agreement of the vendor and vendee, but by compulsion of law.[27] Unlike in an ordinary sale wherein the vendor sets and agrees on the selling price, the compensation paid to the affected owner in an expropriation proceeding comes in the form of just compensation determined by the court.
(a) The classification and use for which the property is suited;
(b) The developmental costs for improving the land;
(c) The value declared by the owners;
(d) The current selling price of similar lands in the vicinity;
(e) The reasonable disturbance compensation for the removal and/or demolition of certain improvements on the land and for the value of improvements thereon;
(f) The size, shape or location, tax declaration and zonal valuation of the land;
(g) The price of the land as manifested in the ocular findings, oral as well as documentary evidence presented; and
(h) Such facts and events as to enable the affected property owners to have sufficient funds to acquire similarly situated lands of approximate areas as those required from them by the government, and thereby rehabilitate themselves as early as possible. (Emphasis supplied)
x x x [J]ust compensation in expropriation cases is defined "as the full and fair equivalent of the property taken from its owner by the expropriator. The Court repeatedly stressed that the true measure is not the taker's gain but the owner's loss. The word 'just' is used to modi1fy the meaning of the word 'compensation' to convey the idea that the equivalent to be given for the property to be taken shall be real, substantial, full and ample."[29] (Emphasis supplied)To recall, Section 6, Rule 67 of the Rules of Court mandates that "in no case shall x x x the owner be deprived of the actual value of his property so taken."[30] Since just compensation requires that real, substantial, full and ample equivalent be given for the property taken, the loss incurred by the affected owner necessarily includes all incidental costs to facilitate the transfer of the expropriated property to the expropriating authority, including the CGT, other taxes and fees due on the forced sale. These costs must be taken into consideration in determining just compensation in the same way these costs are factored into the selling price of real property in an arm's length transaction. Notably, the value of the expropriated property, as declared by the affected owner, and the current selling price of similar lands are factors listed under Section 5 of RA 8974.
ART. 1458. By the contract of sale one of the contracting parties obligates himself to transfer the ownership of and to deliver a determinate thing, and the other to pay therefor a price certain in money or its equivalent.[27] See Hospicio de San Jose De Barili, Cebu City v. Department of Agrarian Reform, 507 Phil. 585, 597- 598 (2005) in reference to expropriation of lands under agrarian reform.
xxxx