This ruling clearly underscores the importance of strong evidentiary principles in Value Added Tax (VAT) disputes, particularly regarding corrections to the Taxable Basis (DPP) for the transfer of fixed assets. The case involving PT SH centers on the correction of the DPP for the transfer of fixed assets amounting to Rp3,216,901,474.
The Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) suspected the sale of assets for which VAT had not been collected due to a discrepancy in the book value of the assets in the Audited Financial Statements that the taxpayer could not fully explain. PT SH, on the other hand, argued that the majority of the discrepancy in asset value was due to write-offs (destruction) due to damage or deterioration, not sales. PT SH presented evidence in the form of Excel data detailing the destroyed or damaged assets and an internal proposal for asset write-offs, enabling PT SH to demonstrate in court that the assets actually sold had been reported for VAT. There was no evidence of cash flow or goods flow to support the correction of the asset write-offs.
During the audit and objection, the DGT upheld the correction because the taxpayer failed to provide a valid Asset Destruction Report. However, the Tax Court Panel of Judges reviewed this approach. According to the Panel, pursuant to Article 29 paragraph (2) of the General Provisions and Tax Procedures Law (KUP), the burden of proof rests with the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) to demonstrate the delivery of Taxable Goods (BKP) subject to VAT. Corrections based on calculating differences in asset book values without any concrete evidence in the form of cash flow or goods flow proving the sale of BKP are an inappropriate and speculative approach. Therefore, the Tax Court granted the appellant's appeal in full.
The implications of this ruling are significant. It sets an important precedent that limits the authority of Tax Auditors to correct Output VAT based solely on assumptions or reconciliation results unsupported by physical transaction evidence. Taxpayers now have a stronger legal basis to reject corrections to the VAT DPP on Fixed Assets, provided they can demonstrate that the difference in asset value was caused by a write-off (not a sale), through adequate internal documentation. This ruling emphasizes the importance of internal documentation, but crucially, the need for tax corrections to be based on concrete evidence, not a one-sided interpretation of accounting data.
A comprehensive analysis and the Tax Court's ruling on this dispute are available here.