Title
Board of Assessment Appeals vs. Manila Electric Co.
Case
G.R. No. L-15334
Decision Date
Jan 31, 1964
Meralco's steel towers, used for high-voltage transmission, were deemed "poles" exempt from real property tax and classified as personal property, requiring a refund by Quezon City's treasurer.
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Case Summary (G.R. No. L-15334)

Procedural Posture

Quezon City’s City Assessor declared Meralco’s steel transmission towers subject to real property tax by tax declarations (Nos. 31992 and 15549). The Board of Assessment Appeals required Meralco to pay P11,651.86 for taxes for 1952–1956; Meralco paid under protest and filed for review in the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA). The CTA canceled the tax declarations and ordered refund of the amount paid; denial of reconsideration followed, and the petition for review to the Supreme Court ensued.

Facts Found by the Trial/Lower Court

Meralco generates power at Botocan Falls and transmits it to Manila via high-voltage lines supported by steel towers. Three inspected towers in Quezon City were described as metal frameworks of multiple steel bars/strips joined by bolts to a square metal frame; no concrete foundations were present—towers rested on adobe or soft soil, and their legs were bolted (thus removable). The towers support five high-voltage wires via cross-arms and insulators. Meralco constructed 40 such towers on its land in Quezon City.

Questions Presented

  1. Whether the steel supports/towers constitute “poles” exempted from taxation under paragraph 9 of the franchise (Act No. 484).
  2. If not within the exemption, whether the towers are real property subject to real property tax under the Civil Code definition of immovables.
  3. Whether the CTA erred in ordering the City Treasurer of Quezon City to refund the taxes where the city itself was not made a party.

Relevant Statutory Texts and Definitions

  • Act No. 484, Part Two, par. 9 (franchise tax exemption): grantee liable for taxes on real estate, buildings, plant (excluding poles, wires, transformers, and insulators), machinery and personal property as others pay; and grantee expressly exempted from taxes and assessments upon “privileges, earnings, income, franchise, and poles, wires, transformers, and insulators.”
  • Civil Code, Art. 415 (immovable property): includes (1) land, buildings, roads, and constructions of all kinds adhered to the soil; (3) everything attached to an immovable in a fixed manner such that separation would break or deteriorate the object; (5) machinery, receptacles, instruments or implements intended by the owner of the tenement for an industry or works on the land and which directly meet the needs of such industry or works.
  • Dictionary/ordinary meaning: “pole” defined to include upright standards of wood or metal used to support something (Webster).

Court’s Interpretation of “Poles” and Scope of the Franchise Exemption

The Court adopted a functional and purposive construction of “poles” in the franchise exemption provision. The term is not to be restricted by material, shape, location, or the character of electric current; instead, the critical criterion is the use to which the structure is dedicated — namely, supporting or carrying electric transmission wires. The Court relied on ordinary dictionary definitions and persuasive authority from U.S. decisions (cited in the decision) where courts treated steel transmission towers interchangeably with poles for statutory and practical purposes. Because Meralco’s steel supports are frameworks whose sole function is to support high-voltage transmission wires, they fall within the meaning of “poles” as used in Act No. 484 and thus are expressly exempted from taxation under the franchise provision.

Court’s Analysis on Whether the Towers Are Real Property

The Court analyzed the Civil Code’s categories of immovable property and concluded the steel towers do not qualify as immovable for purposes of real property taxation:

  • They are not “constructions of all kinds adhered to the soil” (Art. 415(1)) because the towers are not fixed, immovable buildings or constructions adhered to the land. The factual finding that the towers are bolted to a metal frame and can be dismantled by unscrewing bolts supports mobility.
  • They are not “everything attached...in a fixed manner” (Art. 415(3)) because separation can be effected without breaking the material or causing deterioration of the thing to which they are attached.
  • They are not “machinery...intended by the owner of the tenement for an industry or works which may be carried in a building or on a piece of land” (Art. 415(5)) because the towers are not machinery or implements intended as part of an industry on the land; they serve to convey power from plant to consumers, not to perform an industry upon the land where they stand.

Given these points, the towers are personal property rather than immovable property and therefore not subject to real property tax in the manner assessed by the City Assessor.

Ruling on the Refund Against the City Treasurer

The Court rejected the contention that the CTA erred by directing the refund

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