BIR Kim Henares versus Manny Pacquiao and the People of the Philippines. Obviously, Kim Henares got knocked down by just first round in DOJ ring fight.
The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) is set to look into  the bank accounts of dead people to reach their target collection goal of ₱50  billion by 2016.
BIR Commissioner Kim Henares said they will take advantage  of a loophole in the Bank Secrecy Law to check taxable inheritance and boost  estate tax collections from about P1 billion a year to an average of ₱12.5  billion.
An estate tax is a tax on the right of any given deceased  person to transmit wealth to heirs. It is imposed on a given heir's inherited  estate or assets if the value of the estate exceeds an exclusion limit set by  law. 
Republic Act 1405 or the Philippine Law on the Secrecy of  Bank Deposits meanwhile states that accounts cannot be disclosed by banks and  may not be examined except upon written permission of the depositor or if the money  involved is the subject of litigation. Henares explained that bank accounts  owned by the deceased are not protected by the law on bank secrecy because  obviously, they have passed away. Heirs of the deceased can claim to enjoy bank  secrecy either because technically, they don't own the assets of their deceased  relative yet. 
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"The BIR wants everyone to become rich, so that we can  collect more taxes. If you die, and you're rich, you pay more estate tax,"  Henares said.
Finance Secretary Cesar Purisma meanwhile said the low,  static level of current estate tax collections contradicts rising property and  stock prices. 
Purisima also urged inheritors to amend their estate tax  declaration and payments before they are caught. The government is set to  investigate estate tax payments over the last five years he said.
BIR  Kim Henares versus Manny Pacquiao and the People of the Philippines
Obviously,  Kim Henares got knock down by just first round in DOJ ring fight.
DOJ  junks tax case vs Pacquiao
The Department of Justice (DOJ) has junked the case filed  by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) against boxing champion and Sarangani  Rep. Manny Pacquiao.
In an eight-page resolution, the DOJ called it absurd to  hold Pacquiao liable for neglecting to obey a BIR subpoena which he did not  receive at all.
The DOJ agreed with the respondent that there was no valid  service of the subpoena duces tecum upon him.
The Justice Department said the allegation of BIR Officer,  Abdul Jalil J. Taratingan, that he personally delivered the subpoena in General  Santos City, received by a certain Jocelyn Nebria, is contrary to Revenue  Memorandum Order No. 88-2010 which requires for a personal service to the  person being summoned.
"It is only upon refusal of the person being summoned to  receive the subpoena that a substituted service can be availed," said the DOJ.
The DOJ ruled that since there was no refusal on the part  of Pacquiao to receive the subpoena, the BIR case is irregular and ineffectual.
"The service of summons is, indeed, a vital and  indispensable ingredient of due process. Such denial of respondent's vital  right constitutes a serious infirmity in the proceedings which led to the  filing of this case against him," the DOJ said in its resolution.
Pacquiao's legal counsel, Atty. Abraham G. Espejo,  expressed his gratitude to the DOJ.
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"Congressman Pacquiao is and will continue to be a law abiding  Filipino citizen," said Espejo.
The BIR has accused Pacquiao of violating Section 266 of  Republic Act 8424, otherwise known as the National Internal Revenue Code of the  Philippines.
BIR regional director Rozil Lozares claimed that Pacquiao  snubbed the bureau's summons to present his tax records to the agency. -  ANC and ABS-CBN  News

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