The correction of Non-Operating Income (Penghasilan dari Luar Usaha) amounting to Rp12,796,650,277.00 imposed by the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) on PT Rendi Pennata Raya (PT RPR) serves as an important clarification for Taxpayers in the plantation and forestry sectors. This dispute focuses on one crucial issue: Determining the legitimate tax subject for income generated from the sale of timber during land clearing on a Right to Cultivate (HGU) area. The key question is simple: are forestry legality documents sufficient evidence of income receipt, or must it be materially substantiated in the company’s books?
The dispute began when the DGT carried out the correction, arguing that as the HGU holder, PT RPR was the party that should have received the income from the sale of timber resulting from the land clearing. The Tax Authority reinforced its argument by presenting formal evidence such as the Certificate of Legitimate Timber Products (SKSHHK), which listed PT RPR as the sender, and proof of payment for forestry levies (PSDH and DR) registered under the company’s name. However, PT RPR refuted this claim by presenting a defense based on substance of transaction and bookkeeping. The Taxpayer asserted that the income, in essence, belonged to the Land Clearing Contractor, while the inclusion of PT RPR's name in the forestry documents was merely a formal obligation as the HGU holder. PT RPR’s crucial defense rested on the fact that the DGT failed to present material evidence—such as proof of fund transfer or General Ledger entries—showing the receipt of the Rp12.7 billion income into PT RPR's cash flow or books.
The Tax Court Panel of Judges determined that the DGT’s correction was solely based on conclusions drawn from external legality documents (SKSHHK and forestry levy proof), but was not supported by material evidence of the income's receipt by the Taxpayer. The Panel held that a correction based on assumption, without evidence that the Taxpayer genuinely received or enjoyed the income, contradicts the provisions of the Income Tax Law (UU PPh). Given the lack of strong and competent evidence, the Panel of Judges decided to fully grant PT RPR’s appeal and annul the fiscal correction of Rp12.7 billion.
This ruling serves as a vital lesson for Taxpayers that substantive material evidence is far more compelling than the formality of documents. PT RPR’s victory demonstrates that HGU ownership does not automatically designate the company as the tax subject for all land clearing proceeds, particularly if a contractor demonstrably received and recorded the income. Taxpayers must ensure clear agreements and an audit trail to separate formal obligations (like forestry permitting) from the actual receipt of income.
A comprehensive analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here