Friday, January 27, 2012

Pattern of undervaluation | Inquirer Opinion

Pattern of undervaluation | Inquirer Opinion

"x x x.

Just as curious as the wide divergence in the valuations of his real properties in official documents is that Corona was reporting only one condo unit up to 2009. The number rose to four only in his 2010 SALN, and yet his wife bought one in 2004 and a third one in 2008. Maybe the Chief Justice is just as ignorant of the law as many ordinary government employees who leave out from the SALN properties owned by their spouses, in the honest but erroneous belief that since they are not in government, reporting their assets is not required. If ignorance excuses no one, what about the highest magistrate of the land?

There are other items in Corona’s SALNs that cry out for explanations. For one thing, Corona reported that he took out an P11-million cash advance in 2003 from a corporation owned by his wife’s family. He carried this liability (in diminishing amounts) until 2009 when it was down to P3 million. The funny thing is that the corporation, Basa-Guidote Enterprises, was dissolved in 2003. A relative of his wife is asking who approved the loan. And who received the payments since the firm was no more?

During all those years that the Coronas were paying off the loan and acquiring condominiums, Corona was earning not more than P620,000 per annum. His wife was unemployed until 2007 when she was appointed to the board of John Hay Management Corp. Their combined income from 2006 to 2010, based on their tax records, was about P14.35 million. Take away taxes, living expenses and loan payment, and there would be hardly any money left to amortize the condos they bought on installment.

Corona said in his 2010 SALN that they sold two lots to pay off the loans on the Taguig condos. There are records showing they sold those lots for a total of P26 million in 2010. However, Revenue Commissioner Kim Henares said in her testimony on Thursday that the sale of the La Vista lot worth P18 million to Corona’s daughter was fictitious, since the daughter didn’t have the capacity to buy such an expensive property.

Corona’s lawyers say everything will be explained in due time. The nation waits with bated breath."

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