Tax Declaration for Property Covered Only by Deed of Donation

Philippine Legal Context

I. Introduction

In the Philippines, a tax declaration is often misunderstood as proof of ownership. Many property holders believe that once real property is declared in their name for tax purposes, ownership is already perfected. This is not correct.

A tax declaration is primarily an assessment record issued by the local assessor for purposes of real property taxation. It identifies the declared owner or possessor of real property, describes the property, and states its assessed value. It is useful evidence of possession, claim of ownership, and payment of real property taxes, but it is not, by itself, a title.

This distinction becomes especially important when the property is covered only by a Deed of Donation. A donee may possess a notarized deed showing that the donor donated the property, but the property may still be untitled, unregistered, or still declared for tax purposes in the name of the donor or another person. The practical question then arises: Can the donee obtain a tax declaration in his or her name based only on a Deed of Donation?

The answer is generally yes, subject to compliance with local assessor requirements, payment of transfer taxes, donor’s tax documentation, and the submission of documents proving the validity and effectivity of the donation. However, the issuance of a new tax declaration does not cure defects in ownership, does not substitute for land registration, and does not defeat the rights of true owners, heirs, mortgagees, adverse claimants, or persons with superior title.


II. What Is a Tax Declaration?

A tax declaration is a document maintained by the city or municipal assessor for purposes of imposing real property tax. It commonly contains the following:

  1. The name of the declared owner;
  2. The location of the property;
  3. The property classification, such as residential, agricultural, commercial, industrial, or special;
  4. The land area or improvement details;
  5. The market value and assessed value;
  6. The taxability of the property;
  7. The tax declaration number;
  8. The property identification number, if any; and
  9. References to prior tax declarations.

The tax declaration is connected with the local government’s power to levy and collect real property tax under the Local Government Code. It is not the same as a Transfer Certificate of Title, Original Certificate of Title, or Condominium Certificate of Title issued through the land registration system.

A registered title is evidence of ownership under the Torrens system. A tax declaration is evidence that a person has declared the property for tax purposes and may have paid taxes on it. The two are not legally equivalent.


III. What Is a Deed of Donation?

A Deed of Donation is a contract by which one person, called the donor, gratuitously transfers ownership of property to another, called the donee, who accepts it. In Philippine civil law, donation is not merely a casual act of giving. It is a formal juridical act governed by the Civil Code.

For real property, the donation must generally comply with the following requirements:

  1. The donation must be in a public instrument, meaning it must be notarized;
  2. The deed must specify the property donated and the value of the charges, if any, assumed by the donee;
  3. The acceptance by the donee must be made in the same deed or in a separate public instrument;
  4. If acceptance is in a separate instrument, the donor must be notified in authentic form and this must be noted in both instruments;
  5. The donor must have capacity to donate;
  6. The donee must have capacity to accept;
  7. The donation must not impair the legitime of compulsory heirs;
  8. The property donated must be owned by the donor; and
  9. Taxes and transfer requirements must be complied with.

A Deed of Donation may be valid between the donor and donee, but government offices will still require compliance with tax and transfer procedures before official records are changed.


IV. Can a Tax Declaration Be Transferred Based Only on a Deed of Donation?

Yes, a local assessor may issue a new tax declaration in the name of the donee based on a Deed of Donation, provided the deed is sufficient and the documentary requirements are met.

However, the phrase “covered only by Deed of Donation” can mean different things:

First, the property may be untitled land and the only evidence of transfer is the Deed of Donation. In this case, the assessor may transfer the tax declaration if the donor is the declared owner in the previous tax declaration and the donation documents are accepted.

Second, the property may be titled land, but the title has not yet been transferred. In this case, the assessor may require proof of registration or title transfer, or may require presentation of the owner’s duplicate certificate of title and documents from the Register of Deeds.

Third, the property may be inherited or co-owned property donated by only one heir or co-owner. In that situation, the donation may affect only the donor’s share, unless all co-owners joined in the donation.

Fourth, the property may be covered by an old tax declaration in the name of a deceased person. The assessor may require settlement of estate, extrajudicial settlement, estate tax documents, or proof of authority of heirs before allowing transfer.

Fifth, the donor may have had only possessory rights or a tax declaration, not registered ownership. In that case, the donee may acquire only whatever rights the donor had.

Thus, the Deed of Donation can be a basis for transfer of tax declaration, but its effect depends on the donor’s actual rights over the property.


V. Legal Effect of a Tax Declaration in the Donee’s Name

When a tax declaration is issued in the name of the donee, the donee becomes the person recognized by the local assessor as the declared owner for real property tax purposes. This has several practical effects:

  1. The donee may pay real property taxes in his or her own name;
  2. The donee may use the tax declaration as supporting evidence of possession or claim of ownership;
  3. The donee may present it in applications for utilities, permits, agricultural support, zoning clearances, or local transactions;
  4. The donee may use it as part of the documentary chain for future sale, donation, settlement, or titling;
  5. The local government may issue tax bills and tax clearances in the donee’s name.

However, it does not mean that ownership is conclusively established. A tax declaration is not indefeasible title. It does not validate a void donation. It does not erase the rights of persons with better ownership. It does not convert untitled land into titled land. It does not prevent litigation over ownership, possession, partition, succession, or fraud.

In disputes, courts may consider tax declarations as evidence, especially when accompanied by long possession and payment of taxes. But standing alone, they are usually not decisive proof of ownership.


VI. Requirements Commonly Needed to Transfer Tax Declaration After Donation

Requirements vary among local government units, but the donee is commonly asked to submit the following:

  1. Notarized Deed of Donation;
  2. Acceptance of Donation, if not already included in the deed;
  3. Valid government IDs of donor and donee;
  4. Tax identification numbers of donor and donee;
  5. Previous tax declaration;
  6. Updated real property tax clearance;
  7. Certificate authorizing registration or tax clearance from the Bureau of Internal Revenue, where applicable;
  8. Proof of payment of donor’s tax or BIR confirmation of exemption, if applicable;
  9. Official receipts for transfer tax paid to the local treasurer;
  10. Documentary stamp tax proof, where applicable;
  11. Certified true copy of title, if the property is titled;
  12. Sketch plan, survey plan, or lot plan, if required;
  13. Barangay certification or certificate of landholding, especially for untitled or rural property;
  14. Affidavit of ownership or possession, if required by the assessor;
  15. Special power of attorney, if processed by a representative;
  16. Marriage certificate, if the donation involves conjugal or community property;
  17. Death certificate and settlement documents, if the donor or prior declared owner is deceased;
  18. Secretary’s certificate or board resolution, if a corporation is involved.

The assessor may also conduct an ocular inspection, verify boundaries, check existing declarations, and determine whether the property has improvements that must be separately declared.


VII. Donor’s Tax and BIR Requirements

A donation of real property may be subject to donor’s tax. Before a transfer is recognized by other offices, the Bureau of Internal Revenue may require the filing of donor’s tax return and payment of the proper tax, unless the transaction is exempt or otherwise treated under special rules.

The BIR process is important because local assessors and Registers of Deeds often require BIR documentation before updating records. For titled property, registration of the deed with the Register of Deeds generally requires a tax clearance or certificate authorizing registration. For untitled property, local assessors may still ask for proof that the tax obligations connected with the donation have been addressed.

The donee should not assume that a notarized donation is enough. Tax compliance is a separate step.

Failure to handle donor’s tax and related requirements may lead to penalties, surcharges, interest, refusal of transfer, or later questions about the transaction.


VIII. Local Transfer Tax

Apart from national taxes, the local government may impose a local transfer tax on transfers of ownership of real property. Donations are commonly treated as transfers for this purpose.

Payment is usually made to the city or municipal treasurer where the property is located. The treasurer may require the Deed of Donation, tax declaration, real property tax clearance, BIR documents, and computation basis.

After payment, the treasurer issues an official receipt or transfer tax receipt. This is usually submitted to the assessor as part of the requirements for issuing a new tax declaration.


IX. Real Property Tax Clearance

Before the tax declaration is transferred, the local government will usually require proof that real property taxes are paid up to date. This is commonly shown through a real property tax clearance issued by the local treasurer.

If taxes are unpaid, the donee may need to settle arrears, penalties, and interest. In practice, even if the unpaid taxes accrued before the donation, the local government may still require settlement before issuing updated records because the tax attaches to the property.

For this reason, donees should check tax arrears before accepting donation of land.


X. Donation of Titled Property vs. Untitled Property

A. Titled Property

If the donated property is covered by a Torrens title, the proper process is not limited to changing the tax declaration. The Deed of Donation should also be registered with the Register of Deeds so that title may be transferred to the donee.

A title transfer generally involves:

  1. Execution and notarization of the Deed of Donation;
  2. Payment or settlement of donor’s tax and other BIR requirements;
  3. Payment of local transfer tax;
  4. Registration with the Register of Deeds;
  5. Issuance of a new title in the donee’s name;
  6. Transfer of tax declaration with the assessor.

For titled land, a tax declaration in the donee’s name without transfer of title may create a discrepancy. The title may still show the donor as registered owner while the tax declaration shows the donee as declared owner. This does not defeat the title. The registered title remains the stronger evidence.

B. Untitled Property

If the donated property is untitled, there may be no certificate of title to transfer. In such cases, the tax declaration, deed, possession, survey documents, and other evidence become more important.

The donee may request transfer of tax declaration based on the Deed of Donation if the donor was the previous declared owner. However, the donee should understand that ownership of untitled land may still be challenged. The tax declaration does not guarantee that the land is alienable and disposable, privately owned, free from claims, or capable of registration.

For untitled land, additional due diligence is essential, including checking:

  1. Whether the land is public or private;
  2. Whether it is alienable and disposable;
  3. Whether other persons possess or claim it;
  4. Whether it overlaps with titled land;
  5. Whether it is covered by agrarian reform restrictions;
  6. Whether it is ancestral domain, forest land, foreshore, road lot, river easement, or government property;
  7. Whether the donor has long, open, continuous, exclusive, and notorious possession;
  8. Whether the donor’s tax declaration has a credible history.

XI. Donation of Improvements Only

Sometimes the Deed of Donation covers only the house, building, or improvement, and not the land. In that case, the assessor may issue or transfer a tax declaration for the improvement only.

This commonly happens when a person owns a house on land owned by someone else. The tax declaration for the building may be in one person’s name, while the land tax declaration or title is in another person’s name.

The donee should verify whether the donation covers:

  1. Land only;
  2. Building only;
  3. Land and building;
  4. Trees, plants, or agricultural improvements;
  5. Possessory rights only;
  6. Rights and interests over a co-owned property.

The wording of the deed matters. A vague donation may create future disputes.


XII. Donation by a Married Donor

If the donor is married, the nature of the property must be determined. The property may be exclusive property of the donor, conjugal partnership property, or absolute community property.

If the property is conjugal or community property, donation by only one spouse may be defective unless the other spouse consents or joins in the deed. A local assessor may require the spouse’s signature or proof that the property is exclusive.

For example, if the tax declaration is in the husband’s name but the property was acquired during marriage, the assessor may still require the wife’s consent or participation. The name appearing in the tax declaration does not automatically determine the property regime.


XIII. Donation by an Heir or Co-owner

A donor can donate only what he or she owns. If the donor is merely one of several heirs or co-owners, the donation may cover only the donor’s ideal or undivided share, not the entire property.

Problems arise when a tax declaration is in the name of “Heirs of X,” but only one heir executes a Deed of Donation. Unless the other heirs also donate or authorize the transfer, the assessor may refuse to transfer the entire declaration to the donee.

If the donation covers only a share, the assessor may require subdivision, partition, or annotation of co-ownership. The donee may become a co-owner with the other heirs, not sole owner of the whole property.


XIV. Donation by a Parent to a Child

Donation from parent to child is common in the Philippines. It is often used as an estate planning device, especially for family homes, agricultural lands, or ancestral property.

However, a parent cannot freely donate all property if it prejudices compulsory heirs. Donations may be reduced if they impair legitime. A child who receives donated property may later have to account for it in the settlement of the donor’s estate, depending on whether the donation is treated as an advance on inheritance or not.

For tax declaration purposes, the assessor may transfer the property to the child if the deed and tax requirements are complete. But family disputes may still arise later, especially where siblings claim that the donation was simulated, forced, excessive, or made when the donor was incapacitated.


XV. Donation Mortis Causa vs. Donation Inter Vivos

A crucial distinction exists between a donation inter vivos and a donation mortis causa.

A donation inter vivos takes effect during the lifetime of the donor. This is the usual donation that can support the transfer of tax declaration while the donor is alive.

A donation mortis causa takes effect upon the donor’s death and is governed by the formalities of wills. If a deed called “Deed of Donation” actually states that the transfer will take effect only after the donor’s death, it may be treated as testamentary in nature. If it does not comply with the formalities of a will, it may be invalid.

Local assessors may not deeply analyze this distinction, but it matters legally. A donee relying on a defective donation mortis causa may face challenges from heirs.


XVI. Effect of Notarization

A Deed of Donation of real property should be notarized. Notarization converts the deed into a public document and makes it acceptable for registration and government processing.

However, notarization does not automatically make a donation valid. It does not prove that the donor owned the property. It does not prove that the donor was not coerced. It does not prove that compulsory heirs were not prejudiced. It does not prove that taxes were paid.

A notarized deed is important, but it is not the end of the inquiry.


XVII. Registration with the Register of Deeds

For titled property, registration with the Register of Deeds is essential to bind third persons and update the Torrens title. A tax declaration transfer should normally follow the title transfer, not replace it.

For untitled property, registration may still be possible in some cases through the registration of instruments affecting unregistered land. However, registration of a deed involving unregistered land does not create title. It merely records the instrument.

A donee should not rely solely on the assessor’s records when the property is titled or registerable.


XVIII. Common Reasons Why the Assessor May Refuse Transfer

A local assessor may refuse to issue a new tax declaration in the donee’s name for any of the following reasons:

  1. The Deed of Donation is not notarized;
  2. The donee’s acceptance is missing;
  3. The donor is not the declared owner in the existing tax declaration;
  4. The property description in the deed does not match the tax declaration;
  5. The area, boundaries, or lot number are inconsistent;
  6. Real property taxes are unpaid;
  7. Transfer tax has not been paid;
  8. BIR documents are missing;
  9. The property is titled but no title transfer documents are presented;
  10. The donor is deceased and estate documents are missing;
  11. The property is co-owned and other co-owners did not consent;
  12. The donor is married and spousal consent is missing;
  13. There is an adverse claim, dispute, or pending case;
  14. The deed covers only a share or improvement, but the applicant seeks transfer of the entire property;
  15. The property overlaps with another declaration;
  16. The assessor requires ocular inspection or survey verification;
  17. The land is government land or has doubtful private ownership.

The assessor’s function is administrative, but the office may decline to alter tax records where documents are incomplete or inconsistent.


XIX. Tax Declaration as Evidence in Court

In litigation, a tax declaration may be presented as evidence of a party’s claim. Payment of real property taxes may support an inference of possession or ownership. Courts often consider tax declarations and tax receipts as relevant evidence.

However, they are usually not conclusive. A tax declaration is weaker than a Torrens title. It may be overcome by better documentary evidence, proof of possession, succession documents, contracts, surveys, or judicial findings.

A person who obtains a tax declaration based on a Deed of Donation should therefore preserve all supporting documents, including:

  1. Original Deed of Donation;
  2. Acceptance document;
  3. Donor’s title or prior tax declaration;
  4. Tax receipts;
  5. BIR documents;
  6. Transfer tax receipts;
  7. Assessor’s certification;
  8. Survey plans;
  9. Possession documents;
  10. Photographs and improvement records;
  11. Barangay certifications;
  12. Affidavits from adjoining owners or witnesses, where appropriate.

XX. Risks in Accepting Property Covered Only by Deed of Donation

A donee should be cautious when the only document offered is a Deed of Donation. The following risks commonly arise:

1. The donor may not be the owner

A person cannot donate what he or she does not own. If the donor merely possessed the property or paid taxes on it, the donee may receive only the donor’s claim, not unquestionable ownership.

2. The property may be co-owned

If the donor is one of several heirs, siblings, or family members, the donation may cover only a share.

3. The donation may prejudice heirs

Compulsory heirs may later question the donation if it impairs their legitime.

4. The property description may be defective

A deed with vague boundaries, wrong tax declaration number, or inconsistent area may be difficult to process.

5. The land may be public land

Tax declarations over public land do not convert public land into private property.

6. The donor may lack capacity

If the donor was mentally incapacitated, coerced, defrauded, or under undue influence, the donation may be challenged.

7. Taxes may be unpaid

Unpaid donor’s tax, transfer tax, documentary stamp tax, or real property tax may delay or prevent transfer.

8. The donation may be simulated

A deed may be challenged if it was made to hide a sale, evade taxes, defeat creditors, or deprive heirs.

9. The property may be subject to restrictions

Agrarian reform lands, ancestral lands, socialized housing lots, government-awarded lands, and homestead lands may have restrictions on transfer.

10. The tax declaration may create false confidence

A new tax declaration may make the donee feel secure, but it does not guarantee indefeasible ownership.


XXI. Practical Steps for the Donee

A donee who receives property by donation should generally take the following steps:

  1. Review the Deed of Donation carefully;
  2. Confirm that the donee’s acceptance is included or separately documented;
  3. Verify the donor’s ownership or declared rights;
  4. Check whether the property is titled or untitled;
  5. Obtain a certified true copy of the title, if titled;
  6. Obtain the latest tax declaration;
  7. Secure a real property tax clearance;
  8. Check for unpaid real property taxes;
  9. Determine whether the donor is married and whether spousal consent is needed;
  10. Determine whether the property is inherited or co-owned;
  11. Settle donor’s tax and BIR requirements;
  12. Pay local transfer tax;
  13. Register the deed with the Register of Deeds, if applicable;
  14. Apply for transfer of tax declaration with the assessor;
  15. Keep all receipts, clearances, certifications, and stamped documents;
  16. Consider land titling or registration if the property is untitled and legally registerable.

XXII. Due Diligence Checklist Before Relying on the Donation

Before relying on a tax declaration based only on a Deed of Donation, the donee should ask:

  1. Is the donor alive and legally capable?
  2. Is the Deed of Donation notarized?
  3. Is the acceptance of the donee properly stated?
  4. Does the donor truly own the property?
  5. Is the property titled?
  6. If titled, has the title been transferred?
  7. If untitled, what is the basis of the donor’s ownership?
  8. Is the property private land or public land?
  9. Are the boundaries clear?
  10. Is there an approved survey?
  11. Are real property taxes paid?
  12. Are donor’s tax and transfer tax paid?
  13. Is the donor married?
  14. Is the property conjugal, community, or exclusive?
  15. Are there other heirs or co-owners?
  16. Are there tenants, occupants, or adverse claimants?
  17. Is the property subject to agrarian reform or other transfer restrictions?
  18. Is there any pending case involving the property?
  19. Does the property description in the deed match the assessor’s records?
  20. Has the assessor actually issued the new tax declaration?

XXIII. Special Issue: Can a Donee Sell Property That Has Only a Tax Declaration?

A donee may attempt to sell property after receiving a tax declaration in his or her name. However, the buyer will likely require proof of ownership, not merely proof of tax declaration.

If the land is titled, the buyer will require transfer of title. If the land is untitled, the buyer will examine the deed, prior tax declarations, possession, survey, and other evidence.

A sale based only on a tax declaration carries risk. It may be valid between the parties if the seller truly owns the rights sold, but it may be difficult to register, mortgage, develop, or defend against third-party claims.


XXIV. Special Issue: Can the Donee Use the Tax Declaration to Apply for Title?

A tax declaration may support an application for land registration, but it is not enough by itself. The applicant must prove registrable title or compliance with legal requirements for confirmation of imperfect title, depending on the applicable law and facts.

Evidence may include possession, classification of land as alienable and disposable, survey approval, historical tax declarations, and proof that the land is not public, forest, mineral, foreshore, road, or otherwise inalienable land.

The Deed of Donation may help establish how the applicant acquired the property, but the applicant must also prove that the donor had rights capable of transfer.


XXV. Special Issue: Donation of Agricultural Land

Donation of agricultural land may involve additional complications. The property may be covered by agrarian reform laws, tenancy rights, retention limits, or restrictions on transfer.

If the land has been awarded under agrarian reform, transfer may be restricted or void unless allowed by law and approved by the proper agency. A tax declaration transfer will not override agrarian reform restrictions.

The donee should verify with the Department of Agrarian Reform when agricultural land is involved, especially if the land has tenants, farmer-beneficiaries, emancipation patents, certificates of land ownership award, or agricultural tenancy history.


XXVI. Special Issue: Donation of Property to a Corporation, Association, or Church

A donation to a corporation, association, foundation, or religious organization may require additional documentation, including corporate authority to accept the donation.

The assessor may ask for:

  1. Articles of incorporation;
  2. Certificate of registration;
  3. Secretary’s certificate;
  4. Board resolution accepting the donation;
  5. Proof of authority of signatories;
  6. Tax identification number;
  7. BIR documents;
  8. Transfer tax receipt.

If the donee is a religious or charitable institution, tax issues should be carefully reviewed. Exemption from certain taxes is not automatic for every transaction or every property use.


XXVII. Special Issue: Revocation or Reduction of Donation

A donation may be revoked or reduced under certain circumstances, such as ingratitude, non-fulfillment of conditions, birth or appearance of children in cases provided by law, or impairment of legitime.

If a donation is revoked or judicially reduced, the donee’s tax declaration may need to be cancelled or corrected. The assessor will usually require a court order, settlement, cancellation deed, or other legal basis before changing records again.

Thus, even after a tax declaration is issued, the donee’s position may still be affected by later legal proceedings.


XXVIII. Best Practices in Drafting the Deed of Donation

To support transfer of tax declaration, the Deed of Donation should be carefully drafted. It should include:

  1. Complete names, civil status, citizenship, addresses, and tax identification numbers of donor and donee;
  2. Statement of donor’s ownership or rights;
  3. Clear description of the property;
  4. Tax declaration number;
  5. Title number, if any;
  6. Lot number, survey number, area, boundaries, and location;
  7. Statement whether land, building, or both are donated;
  8. Statement of acceptance by the donee;
  9. Statement on delivery of possession;
  10. Statement on who will pay taxes and expenses;
  11. Statement on warranties, if any;
  12. Spousal consent, if needed;
  13. Signatures of donor and donee;
  14. Witnesses;
  15. Notarial acknowledgment.

A vague deed can delay processing and create future litigation.


XXIX. Model Clause for Acceptance

A Deed of Donation should contain a clear acceptance clause. A common formulation is:

“The DONEE hereby accepts this donation and expresses gratitude to the DONOR for the liberality extended, and the DONOR hereby acknowledges such acceptance.”

This clause helps satisfy the civil law requirement that donation of real property must be accepted in the proper form.


XXX. Model Clause for Property Description

The property description should be specific. For example:

“A parcel of residential land located at Barangay ___, Municipality/City of ___, Province of ___, declared for taxation purposes under Tax Declaration No. ___, with an area of ___ square meters, bounded on the North by ___, on the East by ___, on the South by ___, and on the West by ___, together with all improvements existing thereon.”

If titled, include the title number and registered owner. If untitled, avoid language that falsely implies registered ownership.


XXXI. Procedure Before the Assessor

The usual administrative process is as follows:

  1. The donee gathers the deed and supporting documents;
  2. The donee settles BIR requirements;
  3. The donee pays local transfer tax;
  4. The donee secures real property tax clearance;
  5. The donee submits the application to the assessor;
  6. The assessor evaluates the documents;
  7. The assessor may verify the property through records or inspection;
  8. The assessor cancels the old tax declaration or annotates the transfer;
  9. The assessor issues a new tax declaration in the name of the donee;
  10. The donee pays future real property taxes under the new declaration.

Actual procedure may vary by city or municipality.


XXXII. Limits of the Assessor’s Action

The assessor’s issuance of a tax declaration is administrative. It is not a judicial declaration of ownership. The assessor does not finally decide ownership disputes.

If there is serious conflict between claimants, the assessor may refuse to transfer the declaration or may require the parties to settle the matter in court. The assessor may also rely on existing records until a court order, registered instrument, or sufficient proof is presented.

A person aggrieved by an assessor’s action may pursue available administrative or judicial remedies, depending on the issue involved.


XXXIII. Common Misconceptions

Misconception 1: “The tax declaration proves I own the land.”

It is evidence of a claim, but not conclusive proof of ownership.

Misconception 2: “A Deed of Donation automatically transfers the tax declaration.”

The deed is a basis for transfer, but taxes, clearances, and assessor requirements must still be complied with.

Misconception 3: “If the assessor transfers the declaration, nobody can question me.”

Other persons with better rights may still challenge the donation or ownership.

Misconception 4: “Untitled land with a tax declaration is already private property.”

Not necessarily. Public land cannot become private merely through tax declaration.

Misconception 5: “Donation is tax-free because no money was paid.”

Donation may still be subject to donor’s tax and other taxes or fees.

Misconception 6: “A parent can donate all property to one child without consequences.”

Compulsory heirs may have rights that can affect excessive donations.


XXXIV. Remedies When the Assessor Refuses Transfer

If the assessor refuses to transfer the tax declaration, the donee should first ask for the specific reason and list of missing documents. The problem may be administrative and curable.

Possible steps include:

  1. Submit missing BIR documents;
  2. Pay unpaid real property taxes;
  3. Correct the deed through a supplemental or corrective instrument;
  4. Obtain spousal consent;
  5. Secure authority from co-owners or heirs;
  6. Settle the estate of a deceased prior owner;
  7. Register the deed with the Register of Deeds;
  8. Submit a survey or technical description;
  9. Resolve adverse claims;
  10. Seek legal advice and, if necessary, judicial relief.

If the refusal is based on a genuine ownership dispute, the assessor is usually not the proper forum for resolving the underlying ownership issue.


XXXV. Practical Example

Suppose a father donates an untitled residential lot to his daughter. The property is declared for tax purposes in the father’s name. The Deed of Donation is notarized and includes the daughter’s acceptance. The father is alive, the property taxes are updated, and there are no other claimants appearing in the assessor’s records.

The daughter may apply for transfer of the tax declaration by submitting the deed, prior tax declaration, tax clearance, proof of payment of donor’s tax or BIR documents, local transfer tax receipt, identification documents, and other documents required by the assessor.

If approved, the assessor issues a new tax declaration in the daughter’s name. The daughter may then pay real property taxes in her own name.

However, if the land is actually co-owned with the father’s siblings, the daughter’s tax declaration may later be challenged. If the land is public land, the tax declaration does not make it private. If the father donated all his property and prejudiced other compulsory heirs, the donation may be questioned after his death.


XXXVI. Conclusion

A Deed of Donation can be a valid basis for transferring a tax declaration in the Philippines, especially where the donor is the existing declared owner and the donee complies with tax and documentary requirements. The new tax declaration is useful and often necessary for real property tax purposes, possession records, local transactions, and future dealings with the property.

But a tax declaration is not title. It does not conclusively prove ownership, cure a defective donation, defeat co-owners or heirs, validate transfer of public land, or replace registration with the Register of Deeds for titled property.

The safest approach is to treat the tax declaration as one part of a larger legal process. The donee should verify the donor’s ownership, ensure the donation is properly accepted and notarized, settle donor’s tax and transfer tax, update real property tax payments, register the deed where appropriate, and preserve all supporting documents.

In property matters, especially involving untitled land or family donations, the key principle is simple: a tax declaration may support a claim, but it should never be mistaken for absolute proof of ownership.

This article is general legal information for the Philippine setting and should be reviewed against the specific documents and local assessor requirements involved.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.