Difference between revisions of "Court of Tax Appeals of the Philippines"
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|{{Wp|Corazon Ferrer–Flores}} | |{{Wp|Corazon Ferrer–Flores}} | ||
{{Birth date and age| | {{Birth date and age|1957|8|22}}<br />Corazon Gonzales Ferrer | ||
|{{Wp|Associate Justice of the Court of Tax Appeals|Associate Justice}} | |{{Wp|Associate Justice of the Court of Tax Appeals|Associate Justice}} | ||
|[[University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Civil Law|UST]] | |[[University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Civil Law|UST]] |
Revision as of 01:14, 5 August 2023
The Court of Tax Appeals (Template:Lang-fil[1]) is the special court of limited jurisdiction, and has the same level with the Court of Appeals. The court consists of 8 Associate Justices and 1 Presiding Justice. The Court of Tax Appeals is located on Agham Road, Diliman, Quezon City in Metro Manila.
History
The Court of Tax Appeals was originally created by virtue of Republic Act. No. 1125 (R.A.1125) which was enacted on June 16, 1954, composed of three (3) Judges with Mariano B. Nable as the first Presiding Judge. With the passage of Republic Act Number 9282 (R.A. 9282) on April 23, 2004, the CTA became an appellate Court, equal in rank to the Court of Appeals. Under Section 1 of the new law, the Court is headed by a Presiding Justice and assisted by five (5) Associate Justices. They shall have the same qualifications, rank, category, salary, emoluments and other privileges, be subject to the same inhibitions and disqualifications and enjoy the same retirement and other benefits as those provided for under existing laws for the Presiding Justice and Associate Justices of the Court of Appeals. A decision of a division of the CTA may be appealed to the CTA en banc, and the latter's decision may further be appealed by verified petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court.
On June 16, 2019, the Court celebrated its 65th Founding Anniversary.
Expanded jurisdiction
On June 12, 2008, Republic Act Number 9503 (R.A. 9503) was enacted and took effect on July 5, 2008. This enlarged the organizational structure of the CTA by creating a Third Division and providing for three additional justices. Hence, the CTA is now composed of one Presiding Justice and eight Associate Justices. The CTA may sit en banc or in three divisions with each division consisting of three justices. The CTA, as one of the courts comprising the Philippine Judiciary, is under the supervision of the Supreme Court of the Philippines.
Previously, only decision, judgment, ruling or inaction of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Commissioner of Customs, the Secretary of Finance, the Secretary of Trade and Industry, or the Secretary of Agriculture, involving the National Internal Revenue Code and the Tariff and Customs Code on civil matters are appealable to the Court of Tax Appeals. The expanded jurisdiction transferred to the CTA the jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Courts and the Court of Appeals over matters involving criminal violation and collection of revenues under the National Internal Revenue Code and Tariff and Customs Code. It also acquired jurisdiction over cases involving local and real property taxes which used to be with the Regional Trial Court and the Court of Appeals.
2008 organizational expansion
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on June 12, 2008, signed into law Republic Act 9503 (An Act Enlarging the Organizational Structure of the Court of Tax Appeals, Amending for the Purpose Certain Sections of the Law Creating the Court of Tax Appeals, and for Other Purposes), which added three more members (and one more division) to the court. The new law was enacted "to expedite disposition of tax-evasion cases and increase revenues for government to fund social services, food, oil and education subsidies and infrastructure."[2]
Incumbent justices
The Court of Tax Appeals consists of a Presiding justice and eight associate justices. Among the current members of the Court, Maria Belen Ringpis-Liban is the longest-serving justice, with a tenure of 11 years, 182 days; the most recent justice to enter the court is [[Lanee Cui-David|Corazon Ferrer–Flores]], whose tenure began on October 11, 2022.
Justice
(Birth info) |
Office | Law School | Appointing President | Date of Appointment
Length of service |
Date of Retirement (70 years old)[3] | Replacing |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Roman G. Del Rosario
|
Presiding Justice | UP | B. Aquino III | March 13, 2013
(11 years, 258 days) |
October 10, 2025 | Acosta |
Maria Belen Ringpis-Liban
( |
Senior Associate Justice | UP | B. Aquino III | May 28, 2013
(11 years, 182 days) |
February 25, 2027 | Palanca-Enriquez |
Catherine Manahan
|
Associate Justice | UP | Duterte | December 8, 2016
(7 years, 354 days) |
January 2, 2026 | Cotangco-Manalastas |
Jean Marie Bacorro-Villena
|
Associate Justice | Arellano | July 12, 2019(5 years, 137 days) | March 19, 2043 | Bautista | |
Maria Rowena Modesto-San Pedro
|
Associate Justice | UP | August 21, 2034 | Casanova | ||
Marian Ivy Reyes-Fajardo
|
Associate Justice | Ateneo | August 27, 2021
(3 years, 91 days) |
August 21, 2045 | Fabon-Victoriano | |
Lanee Cui-David
|
Associate Justice | UE | November 24, 2021
(3 years, 2 days) |
April 1, 2038 | Mindaro-Grulla | |
Corazon Ferrer–Flores
|
Associate Justice | UST | Marcos Jr. | October 11, 2022
(2 years, 46 days) |
August 22, 2027 | Castañeda Jr. |
Piñera-Uy |
Divisions
Role | First Division | Second Division | Third Division |
---|---|---|---|
Chairperson | R. Del Rosario | M. Ringpis-Liban | C. Manahan |
Members | M. Reyes-Fajardo L. Cui-David |
J. Bacorro-Villena C. Ferrer-Flores |
M. Modesto-San Pedro C. Ferrer-Flores^ |
Roll of Justices
see: List of Justices of the Court of Appeals