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[EUGENIO BUENAVENTURA v. COLLECTOR OP INTERNAL REVENUE](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ce304?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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50 Phil. 875

[ G.R. No. 22175, November 13, 1924 ]

EUGENIO BUENAVENTURA, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. THE COLLECTOR OP INTERNAL REVENUE, DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

ROMUALDEZ, J.:

The Collector of  Internal Revenue collected from  the herein plaintiff  Eugenio  Buenaventura, who paid  under protest,  the  sum  of  ?596.04, being 1 per cent on sales from the year 1920 to the third quarter of 1922 (P472.03); a penalty of 25 per cent for delinquency (P118.01) and the fixed tax C-l  (P6).  The Collector based his action  on section 1459 of the  Administrative Code.

Eugenio Buenaventura claims exemption from said tax under  the provisions  of  paragraph (a) of section 1457 of the Administrative Code and instituted this action for the recovery of said sum from the Collector, plus Pl,500 as damages.

After  trial, the  Court  of First Instance of Manila found that the  plaintiff was not entitled to recover said sums and dismissed the action  without costs.

The appellant appeals from said judgment and  makes various assignments of error.

The facts  are that the plaintiff bought fish and  resold it in the Quinta Market of Manila, his sales fluctuating from Pl5 to P30 per day.  During a certain period he sold fish to the Hotel  de Francia, the value of which ranged from P10 to P20 daily, and on  one or two extraordinary occasions he sold said hotel fish worth between P80 and P90.

The question presented for our consideration  in the assignments of error, simmers down to whether or not the plaintiff  is exempt from  the tax provided for in paragraph (a)  of section 1457  of the Administrative Code in force, the text  of which is as follows:
"Persons engaged in  public market places  in the sale of food products at retail, and other small merchants whose gross quarterly  sale  do not exceed two hundred pesos."
Of the two classes of vendors  exempt under this paragraph, namely,  first, the vendors  of  food products, and second, merchants whose  quarterly  sales do  not  exceed P200, the plaintiff alleges that he belongs to the first. Let us see if such is the case.  There is no question that the plaintiff is engaged  in the sale of food products in a public  market.   The main point in question is whether or not the sales thus made by him were at  retail.  If they were, all of the conditions enumerated in the law for his exemption, in accordance with paragraph  (a) of section 1457 of the Administrative Code above quoted, were present.

This section does not define a retail sale; but  upon referring to the definition of words  and phrases  given  in section 1465, which is within the same chapter and section of this  Code, we find there  that the difference between wholesale and retail trading in the case of wines, liquors and  fermented drinks is made  to  depend, disjunctively, either upon the amount of each sale, or upon the latter's character,  or if  it  is  for  resale,  as may  be  seen  from paragraphs (f),  (g),  (h), (i), (j) and  (k).

We also observe that when not dealing  with wines,  liquors or  drinks, the  quantity of each  sale is not taken into  consideration, but  that  in  the  case  of leaf tobacco (paragraph [m]  of  said section  1465) what is taken into consideration is the character of each sale, or whether  or not the sale  is made  "to persons who are  not registered dealers in  leaf tobacco or manufacturers  of cigars,  cigarettes or manufactured tobacco."

Finally, we find in these definitions of said section 1465 of the Administrative Code that when dealing with peddlers of general merchandise, the text of the law says:

"Whether a peddler is a wholesale peddler or a retail peddler of a  particular commodity,  shall  be determined from the definitions of wholesale dealer and retail dealer, as above  given,  in  connection  with  the  particular commodity peddled.   A wholesale peddler of manufactured tobacco is one who  sells for the purpose of resale." (Section 1465, subsection [n], last paragraph, Administrative Code.) Interpreting this  last provision, it may  be said that a wholesale peddler of general merchandise other than wines, liquors and fermented drinks, is one who sells merchandise for resale.

As may be seen, the distinguishing characteristic which the  law takes into account  in  differentiating between a wholesaler and a retailer, except in the case of wines, liquors and fermented drinks, is the  character of the  sale, that is, whether or not it is for resale.

Applying this view to the phrase "sale of food products at retail in public markets," used in paragraph (a) of section 1457 of the Administrative Code, invoked by the plaintiff, it  may  be said, following the intention  of the law, that the sales of fish here in question made by said plaintiff in the public market must be considered to have been made at wholesale if they were for resale, and, at retail  if they were not  made for resale.

It has not been proved that said sales of fish made by the plaintiff were  for  resale.  Even  the isolated case of those made to the  Hotel de Francia cannot be considered as transactions for resale of fish, because it has not been proved, nor is it probable, that said hotel, as such, although it supplies food for payment  and among it fish,  cannot be said or considered to be a reseller of fish.

For the purpose, then, of the interpretation  of paragraph (a) of section 1457 of the Administrative  Code, we are of the opinion and so hold that the sales of fish made by the plaintiff to the Hotel de Francia cannot be considered as sales for resale and, therefore, must be held to be sales at retail.

We hold that in view of the facts contained in the record and in  accordance with the spirit of the law found in the Administrative Code, the herein plaintiff, in the sale of the fish in question,, was and is exempt from the tax provided in section 1457 of the Administrative  Code.

The judgment appealed from is reversed and  it is ordered that  the  defendant  return  to the plaintiff the sum  of P596.04, the subject-matter  of this action, without express finding  as to costs.   So ordered.

Johnson, Street,  Malcolm, Avanceña,  and  Ostrand, JJ.concur.





D I S S E N T I N G :



VILLAMOR, J.

In my opinion the judgment appealed  from  should be affirmed for the reason that the plaintiff himself admits that his  sales exceed P200 quarterly.





D I S S E N T I N G :



JOHNS, J, 

I  dissent.   The judgment of the lower  court  should be affirmed.

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