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NIRC
(National Internal Revenue Code)
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SEC. 152. Extent of Supervision
Over Establishments Producing Taxable Output. - The Bureau of Internal
Revenue has authority to supervise establishments where articles subject
to excise tax are made or kept. The Secretary of Finance shall prescribe
rules and regulations as to the mode in which the process of production
shall be conducted insofar as may be necessary to secure a sanitary output
and to safeguard the revenue. SEC. 153. Records to be Kept by Manufacturers; Assessment Based Thereon. - Manufacturers of articles subject to excise tax shall keep such records as required by rules and regulations recommended by the Commissioner and approved by the Secretary of Finance, and such records, whether of raw materials received into the factory or of articles produced therein, shall be deemed public and official documents for all purposes. The records of raw materials kept by such manufacturers may be used as evidence by which to determine the amount of excise taxes due from them, and whenever the amounts of raw material received into any factory exceeds the amount of manufactured or partially manufactured products on hand and lawfully removed from the factory, plus waste removed or destroyed, and a reasonable allowance for unavoidable loss in manufacture, the Commissioner may assess and collect the tax due on the products which should have been produced from the excess. The excise tax due on the
products as determined and assessed in accordance with this Section shall
be payable upon demand or within the period specified therein.
SEC. 154. Premises Subject
to Approval by Commissioner. - No person shall engage in business
as a manufacturer of or dealer in articles subject to excise tax unless
the premises upon which the business is to conducted shall have been approved
by the Commissioner. SEC. 155. Manufacturers to Provide Themselves with Counting or Metering Devices to Determine Production. - Manufacturers of cigarettes, alcoholic products, oil products and other articles subject to excise tax that can be similarly measured shall provide themselves with such necessary number of suitable counting or metering devices to determine as accurately as possible the volume, quantity or number of the articles produced by them under rules and regulations promulgated by the Secretary of Finance, upon recommendation of the Commissioner. This requirement shall be
complied with before commencement of operations. SEC.
156. Labels and Form of Packages. - All articles of domestic manufacture
subject to excise tax and all leaf tobacco shall be put up and prepared
by the manufacturer or producer, when removed for sale or consumption,
in such packages only and bearing such marks or brand as shall be prescribed
in the rules and regulations promulgated by the Secretary of Finance;
and goods of similar character imported into the Philippines shall likewise
be packed and marked in such a manner as may be required.
SEC. 157. Removal of Articles
After the Payment of Tax. - When the tax has been paid on articles
or products subject to excise tax, the same shall not thereafter be stored
or permitted to remain in the distillery, distillery warehouse, bonded
warehouse, or other factory or place where produced. However, upon prior
permit from the Commissioner, oil refineries and/or companies may store
or deposit tax-paid petroleum products and commingle the same with its
own manufactured products not yet subjected to excise tax. Imported petroleum
products may be allowed to be withdrawn from customs custody without the
prepayment of excise tax, which products may be commingled with the tax-paid
or bonded products of the importer himself after securing a prior permit
from the Commissioner: Provided, That withdrawals shall be taxed and accounted
for on a 'first-in, first-out' basis. SEC. 158. Storage of Goods
in Internal-revenue Bonded Warehouses. - An internal-revenue bonded
warehouse may be maintained in any port of entry for the storing of imported
or manufactured goods which are subject to excise tax. The taxes on such
goods shall be payable only upon removal from such warehouse and a reasonable
charge shall be made for their storage therein. The Commissioner, may,
in his discretion, exact a bond to secure the payment of the tax on any
goods so stored. SEC. 159. Proof of Exportation;
Exporter's Bond. - Exporters of goods that would be subject to excise
tax, if sold or removed for consumption in the Philippines, shall submit
proof of exportation satisfactory to the Commissioner, and , when the
same is deemed necessary, shall be required to give a bond prior to the
removal of the goods for shipment, conditioned upon the exportation of
the same in good faith. SEC. 160. Manufacturers' and Importers' Bond. - Manufacturers and importers of articles subject to excise tax shall post a bond subject to the following conditions: (A) Initial Bond. - In case of initial bond, the amount shall be equal to One Hundred thousand pesos (P100,000): Provided, That if after six (6) months of operation, the amount of initial bond is less than the amount of the total excise tax paid during the period, the amount of the bond shall be adjusted to twice the tax actually paid for the period. (B) Bond for the Succeeding Years of Operation. - The bonds for the succeeding years of operation shall be based on the actual total excise tax paid during the period the year immediately preceding the year of operation. Such bond shall be conditioned
upon faithful compliance, during the time such business is followed, with
laws and rules and regulations relating to such business and for the satisfaction
of all fines and penalties imposed by this Code. SEC. 161.Records to be
Kept by Wholesale Dealers. - Wholesale dealers shall keep records
of their purchases and sales or deliveries of articles subject to excise
tax, in such form as shall be prescribed in the rules and regulations
by the Secretary of Finance. These records and the entire stock of goods
subject to tax shall be subject at all times to inspection of internal
revenue officers. SEC. 162. Records to be
Kept by Dealers in Leaf Tobacco. - Dealers in leaf tobacco shall keep
records of the products sold or delivered by them to other persons in
such manner as may be prescribed in the rules and regulations by the Secretary
of Finance, such records to be at all times subject to inspection of internal
revenue officers. SEC. 163. Preservation
of Invoices and Stamps. - All dealers whosoever shall preserve, for
the period prescribed in Section 235, all official invoices received by
them from other dealers or from manufacturers, together with the fractional
parts of stamps affixed thereto, if any, and upon demand, shall deliver
or transmit the same to any interval revenue officer. SEC. 164. Information to be Given by Manufacturers, Importers, Indentors, and Wholesalers of any Apparatus or Mechanical Contrivance Specially for the Manufacture of Articles Subject to Excise Tax and Importers, Indentors, Manufacturers or Sellers of Cigarette Paper in Bobbins, Cigarette Tipping Paper or Cigarette Filter Tips. - Manufacturers, indentors, wholesalers and importers of any apparatus or mechanical contrivance specially for the manufacture of articles subject to tax shall, before any such apparatus or mechanical contrivance is removed from the place of manufacture or from the customs house, give written information to the Commissioner as to the nature and capacity of the same, the time when it is to be removed, and the place for which it is destined, as well as the name of the person by whom it is to be used; and such apparatus or mechanical contrivance shall not be set up nor dismantled or transferred without a permit in writing from the Commissioner. A written permit from the
Commissioner for importing, manufacturing or selling of cigarette paper
in bobbins or rolls, cigarette tipping paper or cigarette filter tips
is required before any person shall engage in the importation, manufacture
or sale of the said articles. No permit to sell said articles shall be
granted unless the name and address of the prospective buyer is first
submitted to the Commissioner and approved by him. Records, showing the
stock of the said articles and the disposal thereof by sale of persons
with their respective addresses as approved by the Commissioner, shall
be kept by the seller, and records, showing stock of said articles and
consumption thereof, shall be kept by the buyer, subject to inspection
by internal revenue officers. SEC.
165. Establishment of Distillery Warehouse. - Every distiller, when
so required by the Commissioner, shall provide at his own expense a warehouse,
and shall be situated in and constitute a part of his distillery premises
and to be used only for the storage of distilled spirits of his own manufacture
until the tax thereon shall have been paid; but no dwelling house shall
be used for such purpose. Such warehouse, when approved by the Commissioner,
is declared to be a bonded warehouse, and shall be known as a distillery
warehouse. SEC. 166. Custody of Distillery
or Distillery Warehouse. - Every distillery or distillery warehouse
shall be in the joint custody of the revenue inspector, if one is assigned
thereto, and of the proprietor thereof. It shall be kept securely locked,
and shall at no time be unlocked or opened or remain unlocked or opened
unless in the presence of such revenue inspector or other person who may
be designated to act for him as provided by law. SEC. 167. Limitation on
Quantity of Spirits Removed from Warehouse. - No distilled spirits
shall be removed from any distillery, distillery warehouse, or bonded
warehouse in quantities of less than fifteen (15) gauge liters at any
one time, except bottled goods, which may be removed by the case of not
less than twelve (12) bottles. SEC. 168. Denaturing Within
Premises. - For purposes of this Title, the process of denaturing
alcohol shall be effected only within the distillery premises where the
alcohol to be denatured is produced in accordance with formulas duly approved
by the Bureau of Internal Revenue and only in the presence of duly designated
representatives of said Bureau. SEC. 169. Recovery of Alcohol
for Use in Arts and Industries. - Manufacturers employing processes
in which denatured alcohol used in arts and industries is expressed or
evaporated from the articles manufactured may, under rules and regulations
to be prescribed by the Secretary of Finance, upon recommendation of the
Commissioner, be permitted to recover the alcohol so used and restore
it again to a condition suitable solely for use in manufacturing processes.
SEC. 170. Requirements
Governing Rectification and Compounding of Liquors. - Persons engaged
in the rectification or compounding of liquors shall, as to the mode of
conducting their business and supervision over the same, be subject to
all the requirements of law applicable to distilleries: Provided, That
where a rectifier makes use of spirits upon which the excise tax has been
paid, no further tax shall be collected on any rectified spirits produced
exclusively therefrom: Provided, further, That compounders in the manufacture
of any intoxicating beverage whatever, shall not be allowed to make use
of spirits upon which the excise tax has not been previously paid.
SEC. 171. Authority of Internal Revenue Officer in Searching for Taxable Articles. - Any internal revenue officer may, in the discharge of his official duties, enter any house, building or place where articles subject to tax under this Title are produced or kept, or are believed by him upon reasonable grounds to be produced or kept, so far as may be necessary to examine, discover or seize the same. He may also stop and search
any vehicle or other means of transportation when upon reasonable grounds
he believes that the same carries any article on which the excise tax
has not been paid. SEC. 172. Detention of Package Containing Taxable Articles. - Any revenue officer may detain any package containing or supposed to contain articles subject to excise tax when he has good reason to believe that the lawful tax has not been paid or that the package has been or is being removed in violation of law, and every such package shall be held by such officer in a safe place until it shall be determined whether the property so detained is liable by law to be proceeded against for forfeiture; but such summary detention shall not continue in any case longer than seven (7) days without due process of law or intervention of the officer to whom such detention is to be reported.
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