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[MUNICIPALITY OF COTABATO v. ROMAN R. SANTOS](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c3067?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-12757, May 29, 1959 ]

MUNICIPALITY OF COTABATO v. ROMAN R. SANTOS +

DECISION

105 Phil. 963

[ G.R. No. L-12757, May 29, 1959 ]

MUNICIPALITY OF COTABATO, ET AL., PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLEES, VS. ROMAN R. SANTOS, ET AL., DEFENDANTS AND APPELLANTS.

D E C I S I O N

BAUTISTA ANGELO, J.:

This is an action to collect certain taxes and penalties allegedly due from defendants.  Under the first cause  of action,  plaintiff seeks  to recover  the sum of  P37,530.00 representing the  taxes and  penalties due on defendants' fishponds corresponding to the years 1949, 1950 and the first quarter of 1951, and under the second cause of action, the  sum of P4,111.94 representing the  accumulated  taxes and penalties due  on the improvements made on  the land covered by said fishponds from 1949 to 1950.

Defendants, in their answer, set up  certain  special  defenses among  them being that the ordinance under which the  taxes are sought to be collected is invalid  because it does not bear the approval of the  Secretary of Agriculture and Natural Resources as required by  Section 4 of Act No. 4003,  as amended, nor the approval of the Secretary of  Finance as required  by  laws, After trial,  the  court rendered decision ordering  defendants to pay the taxes prayed for in the complaint.   Defendants appealed to the Court of Appeals.   The case  was certified to this Court on the ground that  it involves purely questions of law.

On February 24,1949, the Municipal Council of Cotabato enacted Ordinance No. 6 to take effect on January 1, 1949. This ordinance was approved on March 28,  1949 by the provincial board  under  its Resolution No.  138,  series of 1949.   In Article I,  Chapter  5, of  said  Ordinance, may be found a paragraph which  imposes an annual tax for the operation of a fish-breeding ground or fishpond at the rate of  P10.00 per  hectare.

On October 8,  1949, the Bureau of Fisheries issued in favor of defendants fishpond permits covering a total area of  1,390 hectares pursuant to the provisions of Act  No, 4003, as amended, After defendants had taken possession of the leased premises, they surrounded them with dikes and converted them  into fishponds.

The first issue raised by appellants refers to the validity of the ordinance in question.  They contend that  it is null and void because  being an ordinance which imposes a tax on fishponds,  it should have  been submitted to the Secretary of  Agriculture  and Natural  Resources for  approval as required by Section  4,  Act No. 4003,  as amended by Republic Act  No. 659,  which provides:
" 'All ordinances,  rules or regulations pertaining  to  fishing or fisheries promulgated or enacted  by provincial  boards,  municipal boards or councils, or municipal district councils  shall be submitted to the Secretary of Agriculture and Natural Resources for approval and shall  have full force and effect unless notice in writing of their disapproval is communicated by the Secretary to the board or council concerned within thirty days  after submission of  the  ordinance, rule, or regulation.'  (As amended by Republic Act No. 659.)
The contention  has  no merit   While the  provision above-quoted refers  to ordinances that may  be approved by  a municipality pertaining to fishing  or fisheries,  the same does not apply to the ordinance in question  for its purpose is not to regulate fishing or the operation of fishpond but merely to impose taxes for purposes of  revenue. In effect, the ordinance imposes a tax on the privilege, business, or occupation of operating a fish-breeding ground or fishpond.  The  law  requiring  the  submission  of  an ordinance to the  Secretary  of Agriculture and  Natural Resources for approval  refers to  ordinances  which prescribe rules relative to fishing or to the operation of fishponds, and  this must be so for  a  careful perusal  of the provisions of the Fisheries Act (Commonwealth  Act No. 4003)  will  disclose that all  its provisions  refer to the promotion, development, propagation and preservation of fish and other aquatic resources.   Not being an ordinance regulating fishing or fishpond, the same  need  not be submitted to the Secretary of Agriculture  and  Natural Resources to be valid, it being sufficient that it be approved by the provincial board  concerned.

On the other hand, it cannot be disputed that the municipality  of Cotabato has the power  to enact the ordinance in question, for, under  Section  1  of Commonwealth Act No. 472, a municipal council is given authority to impose taxes upon any  person engaged in any occupation or business, or exercising privileges in the municipality for purposes of revenue.  The  privilege of operating a fishpond is not one of those cases excepted in the law which are placed beyond the power of a municipal council to tax or levy (Section 3, Commonwealth Act 472). The contention that the ordinance in question comes within the exception provided  for in said Section 3, paragraph (r), which provides that  "Taxes  or fees for  the privilege  of fishing, collecting or gathering  sponges from the sea bottoms or reefs or for prospecting for, sponges in any waters of the Philippines", is untenable for, as already said, said ordinance does not seek to regulate fishing but merely to impose a tax  on the privilege  of operating a fishpond.

It is not  also necessary that the ordinance  be submitted to the Secretary of Finance for approval as counsel contends, because the same does not involve an increase of more than 50 per cent of the original tax (Section 4 [3], Commonwealth Act No. 472). The ordinance is imposing such tax on fishponds for the first time.

The validity of the ordinance is also impugned on the ground that it  imposes a license  fee which is excessive, unreasonable and confiscatory It is contended that such fee is imposed to regulate merely the operation of fishponds and not  for purposes of raising revenue.   This is not correct, for the real  purpose of the ordinance is  to raise revenue as may be gleaned from its title.

We however believe that the assessment on the improvements introduced by defendant on the fishpond has included more than what is  authorized by law. The  improvements as assessed consist of dikes, gates,  bodegas  and guard-houses.  The assessed value of the guard-houses and bodegas  totals  P6,850.00 which  appellants are not now questioning, but they dispute the assessment on the dikes and  gates in this wise: "After the swamps were leased to appellants, the latter cleared the swamps and built dikes, by pushing the soil to form  these  dikes in the same way that paddies are built on lands intended for the cultivation of palay, the only difference being that dikes used in fishponds are relatively much larger  than the dikes  used in ricelands."  We believe this contention to be correct, because those dikes can really be considered as integral parts of the fishponds and  not as independent improvements They cannot be  taxed under the assessment law.  The assessment, therefore, with regard to improvements should be modified by excluding the dikes and gates.

Modified as above indicated, we  affirm the decision appealed from in all other respects,  without pronouncement as to costs.

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

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