Disputes regarding the equalization of Corporate Income Tax revenue and the VAT Taxable Base (DPP) are among the most frequent audit findings. In the case of PT HI v. DGT, the Tax Court Panel of Judges issued a landmark decision affirming the superiority of transactional evidence over the equalization methodology.
The core of the dispute stems from the DGT's correction of PT HI's Corporate Income Tax revenue totaling Rp1.53 billion, which was then allocated to the November 2016 VAT Period. The DGT's corrections were based on three methods: (1) Cash Flow Testing, (2) Correction of Business Revenue (cfm Appendix A2 of the VAT Return (Return), and (3) Correction of Business Revenue (cfm General Ledger (GL). The Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) argued that the differences found using the three methods were due to unreported deliveries (income) by the taxpayer, thus subject to VAT.
PT HI disputed the DGT's methodology. First, the taxpayer argued that the DGT's Cash Flow Test was erroneous because it included non-sales receipts (such as bank interest, exchange rate differences, and journal reversals) as VAT objects. Second, the correction related to returns (Appendix A2) was deemed inconsistent because the DGT compared the VAT return data (net after returns) with the Output Tax Return data (gross before returns), which is purely VAT data and irrelevant for corporate income tax purposes. Third, the GL correction was refuted because the transactions were proven to be sales discounts and sales returns (reducing the DPP), not increasing business turnover.
The panel of judges ruled on this case solely based on the evidentiary assessment at trial. Based on the Cash Flow Test, the panel partially upheld the taxpayer's objections. The taxpayer successfully demonstrated that Rp495.9 million (of the total disputed Rp523 million in corporate income tax) was non-sales. The panel of judges only upheld the remaining Rp27 million difference, which the taxpayer could not substantiate.
More importantly, the panel of judges overturned all corrections derived from sales returns and ledger data. The panel concluded that the taxpayer successfully demonstrated (through credit notes, returns recapitulations, and journal entries) that the differences were returns and discounts.
Conversely, the panel found that the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) failed to prove the connection between the differences in VAT data and the corporate income tax revenue. This decision (partially upheld) demonstrates that taxpayers who are able to present detailed and accurate transactional evidence (GL, invoices, credit notes) can overturn corrections based solely on equalization methodologies or the Cash Flow Test.
A Comprehensive Analysis and Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here