Quezon City, Section 3 of Which Provides
Quezon City, Section 3 of Which Provides
Quezon City, Section 3 of Which Provides
FACTS: Quezon City Council enacted Ordinance No. SP-2095, S-2011, or the Socialized Housing Tax of
Quezon City, Section 3 of which provides:
SECTION 3. IMPOSITION. A special assessment equivalent to one-half percent (0.5%) on the assessed
value of land in excess of One Hundred Thousand Pesos (Php100,000.00) shall be collected by the City
Treasurer which shall accrue to the Socialized Housing Programs of the Quezon City Government.
“Effective for five (5) years, the Socialized Housing Tax (SHT) shall be utilized by the Quezon City
Government for the following projects: (a) land purchase/land banking; (b) improvement of
current/existing socialized housing facilities; (c) land development; (d) construction of core houses,
sanitary cores, medium-rise buildings and other similar structures; and (e) financing of public-private
partnership agreement of the Quezon City Government and National Housing Authority (NHA) with the
private sector. “
On the other hand, Ordinance No. SP-2235, S-20135 was enacted on December 16, 2013 and took effect
ten days after when it was approved by respondent City Mayor.6 The proceeds collected from the
garbage fees on residential properties shall be deposited solely and exclusively in an earmarked special
account under the general fund to be utilized for garbage collections.7 Section 1 of the Ordinance set
forth the schedule and manner for the collection of garbage fees:
The collection of the garbage fee shall accrue on the first day of January and shall be paid
simultaneously with the payment of the real property tax, but not later than the first quarter
installment.8 In case a household owner refuses to pay, a penalty of 25% of the garbage fee due, plus an
interest of 2% per month or a fraction thereof, shall be charged. ChanRoblesVi
Petitioner Ferrer claims that the annual property tax is an ad valorem tax, a percentage of the assessed
value of the property, which is subject to revision every three (3) years in order to reflect an increase in
the market value of the property. The SHT and the garbage fee are actually increases in the property tax
which are not based on the assessed value of the property or its reassessment every three years; hence,
in violation of Sections 232 and 233 of the LGC.rtualawlibrary
2. In the subject ordinance imposing garbag collection fee, the rates of the imposable fee depend
on land or floor area and whether the payee is an occupant of a lot, condominium, social housing
project or apartment. For easy reference, the relevant provision is again quoted below:
The rates being charged by the ordinance are unjust and inequitable: a resident of a 200 sq. m. unit in a
condominium or socialized housing project has to pay twice the amount than a resident of a lot similar
in size; unlike unit occupants, all occupants of a lot with an area of 200 sq. m. and less have to pay a
fixed rate of Php100.00; and the same amount of garbage fee is imposed regardless of whether the
resident is from a condominium or from a socialized housing project.
Indeed, the classifications under Ordinance No. S-2235 are not germane to its declared purpose of
"promoting shared responsibility with the residents to attack their common mindless attitude in over-
consuming the present resources and in generating waste." Instead of simplistically categorizing the
payee into land or floor occupant of a lot or unit of a condominium, socialized housing project or
apartment, respondent City Council should have considered factors that could truly measure the
amount of wastes generated and the appropriate fee for its collection. Factors include, among others,
household age and size, accessibility to waste collection, population density of the barangay or district,
capacity to pay, and actual occupancy of the property. R.A. No. 9003 may also be looked into for
guidance. Under said law, WM service fees may be computed based on minimum factors such as types
of solid waste to include special waste, amount/volume of waste, distance of the transfer station to the
waste management facility, capacity or type of LGU constituency, cost of construction, cost of
management, and type of technology. With respect to utility rates set by municipalities, a municipality
has the right to classify consumers under reasonable classifications based upon factors such as the cost
of service, the purpose for which the service or the product is received, the quantity or the amount
received, the different character of the service furnished, the time of its use or any other matter which
presents a substantial difference as a ground of distinction.