The Tax Court's decision on the lawsuit filed by PT FI affirms the superiority of the VAT Law over internal contracts. The Panel of Judges rejected the lawsuit regarding penalties under Article 14(4) of the KUP Law, stating that the VAT taxable event occurs upon the submission of goods to the courier (PP 1/2012), not upon the issuance of the Goods Receipt Report (BAPPB).
This case originated from PT FI's lawsuit against the Director General of Taxes' (DGT) decision, which rejected the request for cancellation of a Tax Collection Letter (STP) for the April 2016 VAT period. The STP billed penalty fines amounting to IDR 98.9 million due to the issuance of Tax Invoices deemed not timely.
The core conflict of the dispute was the differing interpretations of the "VAT taxable event." The Respondent (DGT) argued that VAT is chargeable, and the Tax Invoice must be issued at the time of submission of movable Taxable Goods, specifically when the goods are handed over to a courier or freight forwarder. The legal basis was Article 17 paragraph (3) letter a number 3 of Government Regulation (PP) Number 1 of 2012. The DGT asserted that a sales contract (private law) cannot override the provisions of the Tax Law (lex generalis).
Conversely, PT FI argued that the issuance of the Tax Invoices was not late. According to the sales contract with PT Telkom Akses, the right to invoice only arose after the BAPPB was signed by the buyer. PT FI based its action on Article 17 paragraph (3) letter a number 4 of PP Number 1 of 2012, which links the time of submission to "when the price of the Taxable Goods is recognized as receivables or income" in accordance with accounting principles.
The Panel of Judges rejected all of the PT FI 's arguments. The Panel confirmed the Respondent's position that VAT is chargeable upon the submission of goods to the courier (per number 3 of PP 1/2012), not upon the recognition of receivables (number 4). The Panel affirmed that internal agreements (BAPPB) cannot defer tax obligations stipulated by law. Because PT FI was proven to have only issued Tax Invoices after the BAPPB was issued (long after the goods were shipped), the penalty fine for late issuance of Tax Invoices was deemed valid and legally grounded.
This decision has significant implications for taxpayers. It is emphasized that taxpayers cannot use internal administration or commercial agreements (BAPPB) as reasons to delay issuing Tax Invoices. PT FI must decouple the process of issuing commercial invoices (for billing) from the issuance of Tax Invoices (for VAT liability), where the Tax Invoice must be issued at the earliest moment defined by the VAT Law, which is the date of the Delivery Order/DO.
The PT FI case serves as a crucial confirmation that compliance with the timing of Tax Invoice issuance (upon physical submission to the courier) is absolute and cannot be negotiated through commercial contracts.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here