The application of Article 4 paragraph (1) letter g of the Income Tax Law (UU PPh), which regulates deemed dividends, is often a crucial conflict issue in tax corrections, especially involving intra-group service transactions with foreign parties (SPLN). The case of PT EI specifically highlights how the Tax Court limits the interpretation by the Director General of Taxes (DJP) in classifying management service fees as deemed dividends, which should have been subjected to WHT Article 26 at the domestic rate of 20%. The DJP asserted this correction due to doubts about the benefit of the services and the potential reduction of the company's profit enjoyed by the affiliate.
The DJP argued that the payment of Management Service Fees to two foreign entities in Singapore and Malaysia was not supported by adequate evidence of service substance, thus classifying the expenditure as a disguised mechanism for distributing profits to parties with special relationships, commonly referred to as deemed dividends. Consequently, WHT Article 26 was deemed payable on this expenditure. On the other hand, the Taxpayer (WP) explicitly rejected this classification. The WP maintained that the expenditure was a legitimate business expense for services actually rendered, and crucially, the service-receiving entities were not direct shareholders of PT EI.
The Tax Court Panel rejected the DJP's argument. In its legal consideration, the Panel referred to the lack of convincing evidence that the service-receiving entities were direct shareholders of the Taxpayer. This decision underscores the importance of the share ownership element in determining a deemed dividend, consistent with the spirit of Article 4(1)g of the UU PPh. Since there was no proven direct share ownership relationship triggering the deemed dividend interpretation, the Panel decided to cancel the entire Tax Base (DPP) for WHT Article 26 related to the Management Service Fee.
This decision has significant implications. First, it provides clearer legal certainty regarding the limits of deemed dividend application. The Tax Court reaffirms that deemed dividend classification cannot be based solely on doubts about the benefit test or profit reduction, but must be supported by evidence of profit distribution disguised through transactions, with the relevant ownership element. Second, this ruling provides an important lesson for Taxpayers to always maintain and demonstrate independent evidence that the affiliated service recipients are not direct shareholders. This case successfully separated a transfer pricing dispute (arm's length principle) from a WHT Article 26 dispute (tax object classification).
This decision establishes an important precedent that restricts the tax authority's discretion in classifying affiliated service charges as deemed dividends. The key to the Taxpayer's success in this dispute was the proof of no direct share ownership relationship with the service recipients, which effectively nullified the legal basis for the DJP's correction under Article 4(1)g of the UU PPh.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here