In the world of corporate taxation, the line between legitimate business expenses and profit distribution often becomes a fierce battleground. This is what PT AAC, a palm oil plantation company based in Sanggau, West Kalimantan, experienced. They had to face the Director General of Taxes (DJP) in a dispute that questioned the essence of their business transactions with an affiliated company.
This story began when the Sanggau Primary Tax Office (KPP) conducted a tax audit. In August 2022, the tax authority issued an Underpaid Tax Assessment Letter (SKPKB) for Article 23 Income Tax for the April 2020 Tax Period.
The core issue was simple yet had a significant impact: The tax authority did not recognize the "Management Service" payments made by PT Agro Abadi Cemerlang to its affiliate, PT Genting Plantations Nusantara (GPN).
Through the lens of the tax authority, payments worth hundreds of millions of Rupiah were considered to lack strong evidence of the service's existence.
Consequently, the tax authority viewed the outgoing funds not as a management service fee (taxed at 2%), but as a Hidden Dividend. The consequence? The tax rate skyrocketed from 2% to 15%, resulting in significant underpaid tax.
During the trial, the Respondent (DJP) launched sharp arguments. They insisted that PT AAC failed to prove that the management services were actually performed (rendered).
The tax authority highlighted several points:
PT AAC did not remain silent. They brought evidence to the court to refute the allegation of a "hidden dividend."
They explained that as a plantation company, they needed operational support provided by GPN based on a valid contract agreement since 2017. The services provided were not fictitious but covered crucial aspects such as:
PT AAC's Legal Counsel asserted that this transaction was at arm's length and provided real economic benefits for the plantation's operations in West Kalimantan.
They argued that labeling this payment as a dividend was mistaken because PT GPN was not a shareholder of PT AAC.
The Panel of Judges at the Tax Court examined this dispute carefully. The key to PT Agro's victory lay in consistency and proof of existence.
The judges found an interesting fact: This Article 23 Income Tax dispute was essentially "piggybacking" on the main dispute concerning Corporate Income Tax for 2020. In the Corporate Income Tax dispute, which was examined separately, the Panel of Judges had already decided that the management service fee was proven to exist and could be deducted from gross income.
The judges were of the opinion that:
In the end, the gavel was struck in favor of PT AAC. The Tax Court decided to grant the appeal in its entirety.
The Respondent's decision that changed the management service into a dividend was revoked. The transaction status was restored as a Management Service with an
Article 23 Income Tax rate of 2%, not 15%. Consequently, the originally disputed underpaid tax bill now became Nil.
Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court's Decision on This Dispute is Available Here