Facts:
Subsequent to marriage, petitioners engaged in concessions with the government, while his wife started to engage in business as a lumber dealer. From 1949 to 1952, petitioner sold logs to his wife. On the thesis that the sales are null and void, CIR considered the sales by Mrs. Medina as the petitioner’s original sales taxable under the NIRC. Petitioner filed a petition for reconsideration, revealing for the first time the alleged premarital agreement of complete separation of property.
Issue:
Whether or not the sales made by the petitioner to his wife could be considered as his original taxable sales
Held:
It appears that at the time of the marriage between petitioner and his wife, they neither had any property nor business of their own, as to have really urged them to enter into the supposed property agreement. Secondly, the testimony that the separation of property agreement was recorded in the Registry of Property three months before the marriage, is patently absurd, since such a prenuptial agreement could not be effective before marriage is celebrated, and would automatically be cancelled if the union was called off. In the third place, despite their insistence on the existence of the ante nuptial contract, the couple, strangely enough, did not act in accordance with its alleged covenants. It was not until July of 1954 that he alleged, for the first time, the existence of the supposed property separation agreement. Finally, the Day Book of the Register of Deeds on which the agreement would have been entered, had it really been registered as petitioner insists, and which book was among those saved from the ravages of the war, did not show that the document in question was among those recorded therein.
The wife is authorized to engage in business and for the incidents that flow therefrom when she so engages therein. But the transactions permitted are those entered into with strangers, and do not constitute exceptions to the prohibitory provisions of Article 1490 against sales between spouses.
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