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[CITY OF ILOILO v. REMEDIOS SUN VILLANUEVA](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c2dae?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-12695, Mar 23, 1959 ]

CITY OF ILOILO v. REMEDIOS SUN VILLANUEVA +

DECISION

105 Phil. 337

[ G.R. No. L-12695, March 23, 1959 ]

CITY OF ILOILO, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. REMEDIOS SUN VILLANUEVA AND EUSEBIO VILLANUEVA, DEFENDANTS AND APPELLANTS.

D E C I S I O N

BAUTISTA ANGELO, J.:

Remedios  Sian  Villanueva  and  Eusebio  Villanueva, spouses,  are the owners of  four apartment houses for rent situated in Iloilo City, to wit: the first  house consists of  11  apartments situated at the corner  of  Iznart and Aldeguer Sts.; the second consists of 14 apartments situated at Aldeguer St.; the third consists of 7 apartments situated at the  corner of Aldeguer and J. M.  Basa  Sts.;  and the fourth  consists  of  2 apartments situated  at  the  same place.   Each apartment is occupied by one family and the food for each  is cooked therein.

On September 30, 1946,  the Municipal Board  of  Iloilo City enacted Ordinance No. 86,  amending Ordinance No. 33, wherein the following  was  provided: (1)  tenement house  (casa de  vecindad),  P25 annually; (2)  tenement house partly or wholly engaged in or dedicated to business in the streets of J.  M. Basa, Iznart and Aldeguer, P24 per  apartment;  (3)  tenement  house partly or wholly engaged  in  business  in  any  other streets, P12.00 per apartment.

Pursuant to Ordinance  No. 86, the city sought to collect from the  spouses  an annual  license  tax  fee  of P24 for  each of their 34 apartments,  or the total  sum  of P1,610 allegedly  due during the period  from the fourth quarter  of  1946 to the third quarter of 1948,  plus the sum of  P332  representing 20%  penalty.  The  spouses having refused  to  pay the same, the City of Iloilo filed in the municipal court an  action to recover  the tax and penalty above-mentioned.

Defendant spouses answered the complaint contending that the ordinance under  which  the tax  is  sought  to be collected infringes  the  powers  granted  to  the city by its Charter  and that said ordinance is violative  of the constitutional provision requiring uniformity of taxation upon  the theory that it is oppressive, unreasonable and discriminatory.  Because of the  issue  of  constitutionality raised,  the case was  elevated  to the  Court  of First Instance of Iloilo.

Counsel for both parties submitted a stipulation of  facts, which was  supplemented by an oral admission  of  other facts in  open court.  Thereafter, the court rendered  judgment upholding the legality of the ordinance and ordering defendants  to pay the taxes claimed, with  interest and costs.  Defendants  appealed from  this  decision to the Court  of Appeals,  but this case  was  elevated  to this Court because it involves only questions of law.

It is  clear from the  Charter of Iloilo City that its municipal board is given the power to  impose a license fee upon the owner of any business or occupation established  in  the city in the  exercise of  its police power. This is clearly inferred from paragraph (cc), section 21, of the Charter  (C.A. No. 158), which  provides  that  the municipal board has the express power  (a)  to  regulate any business  or occupation, and (b) to  require  licenses from persons engaged in such  business or occupation in the city.  But in fixing the fee that may be exacted, it becomes important to determine its nature and purpose to ascertain whether the power thus conferred has been properly exercised.   To  this  effect,  it  becomes  equally important to  bear in mind if the  fee  is  imposed either as  a police regulation or purely as a  revenue measure, for the rules that govern its validity are different.  Thus, it has been held that "License fees  for revenue rest upon the taxing power as  distinguished from the police power, and the power of the  municipality  to  exact such  fees must be expressly granted by  charter  or statute and is not to  be  implied from  the conferred power to license and regulate merely"  (Cu Unjieng  vs. Patstone,  42 Phil., 818).

It is therefore imperative to determine  when a license fee is  charged merely  for purposes  of  regulation  and when  for purposes  of  revenue in order to  see if  the power has been exercised within the scope of the express powers granted by the law or statute.  One test formulated by the authorities to attain this objectives is the following: "If the fee is designed to raise substantially more than the cost of the regulation to which it purports to be  an incident, its  purpose is to  raise revenue.  If it  is a fee attached to  a  particular provision for  regulation,  and appears to be imposed to cover the cost of that regulation, and does substantially only  that, then  it is merely  for the  cost-paying  part of a regulatory measure"  (Carter vs. State Tax Commission, 126  A.L.R., 1402).

This Court has also had occasion to lay down certain rules for determining the nature of the license fees that may be imposed on the business or occupation  that may be  established in a  given  place,  and  so that  the same may  guide us in  drawing the  demarcation line  in  the exercise of the power one way or the other,  we will quote hereunder the portions we consider pertinent:
"(1) The first two of  these classes is  based on the  exercise of the police power and, though there is some conflict of authority on this point, the better rule seems to be that^the conferred power to regulate and to issue  such  licenses carries with it the right to fix  a license fee.  It  is well  settled  that  in  the  absence of special authority to impose a  tax for revenue the fee for  this class of licenses may only be  of  a  sufficient  amount to  include the expense of issuing the license  and the  cost of the necessary expense  of direct  regulation but also incidental consequences.

"(3)  The fee in the third class of  cases,  those for revenue purposes, is, perhaps, not a  license fee  properly speaking  but  is generally so termed.  It rest upon the taxing power as distinguished from the  police  power,  and the  power of the municipality  to exact such fees must be expressly granted by charter or statute and is  not to be implied from the conferred power  to license and regulate merely."  (Cu Unjieng vs. Patstone, supra.)
It can therefore be said that  in order  that  a license fee may be considered  merely as a  regulatory measure, it must be  only "of  a sufficient amount to include the expenses of issuing the license and the cost of the necessary inspection or police surveillance,  taking into  account not only the expense of  direct regulation but also incidental consequences."   On  the  other hand,  if the  fee  charged is a revenue measure, the power  to exact  such fee "must be  expressly granted by charter or  statute and is  not to be  implied from the  conferred  power to license  and regulate  merely."

A cursory reading of  the  ordinance in question would at once reveal that the  license fees  charged therein are not merely  for regulation but for revenue,  because the fee of P24 per  annum  charged therein for every apartment  far exceeds "the expense  of  issuing the  license", plus "the cost of inspection  or  police surveillance",  and other incidental expenses.  Thus, for the first house which consists of 11  apartments, the defendants would have to pay a  license  fee  of  P264  annually;  for the  second house which consists  of 14  apartments, the fee would be  P308 annually; for  the third house which consists of  14 apartments,  the fee  would be  P308 annually; for the third house which consists of 7 apartments, and the fourth which consists  of 2  apartments, the fee  would be P216  annually.  All in  all,  defendants  would  have to pay a license  tax fee  amounting  to P888  per annum. This, in addition to the fees that may be exacted from many other residents similarly situated,  would  constitute a sizeable sum  of revenue which would engross the coffers of the City.  These fees  cannot therefore  be considered as merely for regulation purposes as contended.

It is however claimed that even if  the fees exacted in the ordinance be considered as taxes for purposes of revenue still their exaction may be justified because the same comes within the  power granted to the city by its Charter.  And in that advocacy the city invokes section  21, paragraph j, of the Charter, which gives the  city the power  "To  tax, fix  the  license fee  for,  and regulate  hotels,  restaurants, refreshment  parlors,  cafes,  lodging  houses,   boarding houses,  livery  garages, public  warehouses,  pawnshops, theaters, cinematographs."   The city claims that a tenement house can  be  considered as one belonging to the group of  hotels,  lodging houses,  or  boarding houses therein enumerated.

We disagree. As may be  seen from the definition of each establishment hereunder quoted, a tenement house is different from  a hotel, lodging house, or  boarding house. These are different business enterprises.  They have  been established for different purposes.  And it is preposterous to contend that a tenement house may be considered as included in the clause  "other  establishments   likely to endanger public safety  or  give  rise  to  conflagration or explosions" mentioned  in the Charter, for as  to  them the power given  to the  city  is merely to  fix  their location to  protect the safety of the public, and not  to  impose  a license fee  or tax.
"A hotel is a place for the accommodation of travelers with food and  lodging."   (Judell vs. Goldfield Realty  Co., 108 P. 455, 457)

" 'Lodging houses' is the term applied to  houses containing furnished apartments which are let out by the week  or  by  the month, without meals, or with breakfast simply."  (Cromwell vs. Stephens, N.Y., 2 Daly, 15, 25, 3 Abb. Prac. 26, 35, Cited in Vol. 25,  Words and Phrases, p. 583)

"A boarding house  is not in common parlance1 or in  legal meaning, every private house  where one or more boarders are  kept occasionally only and upon special considerations.  But  it  is a  quasi-public house, where  boarders  are generally and  habitually kept, and which is held out and known as a  place of entertainment of that kind."  (Cady vs. Mcdowell, 1 Lans. N.Y. 486, State vs. MacRae 170  N.C.  712, 86 S.E.,  1039;  Friedrich Music House  vs. Harris, 200 Mich.  421, 166 N. W. 869 L.R.A. 1918D, 400.)

"A tenement  house is any house or building, or portion thereof, which is  rented,  leased, let, or hired  out  to be occupied,  or is occupied,  as  the  home  or residence of  three  families or  more living independently of each other and  doing  their cooking  in the premises,  or by more than two families upon any floor, so  living and  cooking,  but  having a common right in the halls, stairways, yards, water-closets,  or privies,  or  some  of  them."   (Webster's New  International Dictionary,  2nd  Ed., p. 2601.)
It is well-settled that a  municipal  corporation, unlike. a sovereign state, is clothed  with  no inherent  power of taxation.   "The charter or  statute  must plainly show an intent  to confer that power  or the  municipality  cannot assume it.   And the power when granted is to be construed strictissimi juris.   Any doubt  or  ambiguity  arising out of the term used in granting that power must be resolved against the municipality.  Inferences, implications, deductions all these have  no place in the interpretation of the  taxing  power of  a municipal corporation." (Icard vs.  City  of Baguio, 83 Phil., 870;  46 Off. Gaz.  11  Sup., 320; Medina vs. City of Baguio, 91  Phil., 854; 48 Off.  Gaz., [11] 4769; Yu vs. City of Lipa, 99 Phil., 975; 54 Off. Gaz., [13] 4055.  And it not appearing that the power to tax owners of tenement houses is one among those clearly and expressly granted to the City of Iloilo by its Charter, the exercise  of such power cannot be assumed and hence the ordinance in question is ultra vires insofar as it taxes a tenement house such as those belonging to defendants.

Wherefore, the decision  appealed from is reversed.   The complaint is  dismissed, without  costs.

Paras, C. J., Bengzon, Padilla, Montemayor, Reyes, A., Labrador, and Endencia, JJ., concur.

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