BAGUIO CITY, Philippines 鈥 The Supreme Court has recently declared that its recognition of the summer capital鈥檚 authority to collect business fees and other taxes from enterprises operating inside Camp John Hay has become final and executory, City Legal Officer Althea Alberto informed the city council on Monday.
According to Alberto, the Supreme Court Second Division, in a Feb. 22, 2023, decision, has ruled that Baguio could regulate businesses and collect taxes inside the 625-hectare former American rest and recreation base land, particularly at the 248-hectare built-up areas that were converted into a special economic zone administered by the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA).
READ: Baguio execs in a quandary over SC ruling on John Hay
The local government received a copy of the high court鈥檚 July 8 decision that dismissed a motion for reconsideration filed by government-owned John Hay Management Corp. (JHMC), a BCDA subsidiary, regarding last year鈥檚 ruling, paving the way for the city to inventory and audit John Hay businesses, and collect outstanding fees, Alberto announced at the council鈥檚 session.
Following a recent meeting with BCDA president Joshua Bingcang, John Hay鈥檚 custodians have started negotiating with Baguio Mayor Benjamin Magalong for a set of guidelines that would harmonize the oversight powers of the city鈥檚 business licensing office and a JHMC 鈥渙ne-stop shop鈥 for business under a draft memorandum of agreement that has not yet been submitted, Alberto said.
Baguio is also collecting its shares from John Hay鈥檚 gross revenues, as well as unremitted shares from rent BCDA was to collect from Camp John Hay Development Corp. (CJHDevco), the consortium owned by businessman Robert John Sobrepe帽a that won the 1996 lease to convert John Hay into a tourism estate.
Data from the City Treasurer鈥檚 Office showed an estimated balance of P168 million in unremitted rental shares, which is in danger of being forfeited because of a 2015 arbitral ruling that voided CJHDevco鈥檚 lease due to many violations. The Supreme Court, sitting en banc in April this year, reinstated the arbitral decision questioned by Sobrepe帽a鈥檚 group.
Inventory
Vice Mayor Faustino Olowan, a lawyer, advised Alberto to 鈥渓et the court help us collect鈥 by petitioning the Supreme Court to immediately grant Baguio access to John Hay鈥檚 books of account before signing any deal with BCDA.
Alberto said the city government needed to enter and identify all businesses operating inside John Hay.
In a 2019 list of locators, JHMC identified 120 businesses operating inside its economic zone, but it said only 85 have contracts with BCDA and JHMC.
Attempts made to enforce Baguio business rules inside John Hay were rebuffed by JHMC as early as 2009. JHMC went to court in 2010 after former Mayor Mauricio Domogan issued notices of violation and stop orders to some of John Hay鈥檚 locators for not securing their regulatory clearances.
According to the 2023 decision penned by Senior Associate Justice Marvic Leonen, the laws and executive directives creating the John Hay Special Economic Zone do not explicitly empower BCDA, nor its estate manager, JHMC, 鈥渢o issue permits or regulate businesses鈥 inside the John Hay property.
鈥淣either can they invoke the powers granted only to the Philippine Economic Zone Authority. Without an express grant by law, respondent鈥檚 (the Baguio government鈥檚) police power prevails. Thus, locators within the John Hay Special Economic Zone not duly registered with the Philippine Economic Zone Authority are liable to pay business permit fees to [the city],鈥 the Supreme Court said.
19 conditions
The high court added: 鈥淥nly business enterprises within the John Hay Special Economic Zone that are registered with the Philippine Economic Zone Authority shall enjoy the tax and duty exemption privileges [provided by law]. All unregistered business enterprises within the John Hay Special Economic Zone shall pay all relevant national and local taxes, duties, and fees as may be imposable under national and local laws.鈥
The 2023 decision also cited BCDA鈥檚 commitment to fulfill 19 conditions set by the Baguio government in 1994 before it endorsed the master development plan for John Hay鈥檚 commercialization.
Aside from honoring Baguio鈥檚 authority to regulate businesses, two of these conditions obligated BCDA to release Baguio鈥檚 3-percent equitable share from the gross income of operations within the John Hay Special Economic Zone (condition 9), and 25 percent of John Hay lease rentals or 30 percent of its net income from operations within the special economic zone, whichever is higher, to be used for development projects (condition 10), the high court said.
鈥淸The Baguio government] did not waive its right to collect its income allocations or to levy its regulatory fees when its Sangguniang Panlungsod (city council) passed Resolution No. 362, series of 1994,鈥 it pointed out.