The Director General of Taxes possesses discretionary authority under Article 36 Paragraph (1) letter b of the KUP Law to cancel incorrect tax assessments, yet its application in litigation often faces boundaries between procedural and material disputes. The case of PT WHC highlights a fatal administrative risk where a Taxpayer makes a tax payment using the Tax ID (NPWP) of a counterparty, which, despite the substance of funds entering the state treasury, still triggers the issuance of a Tax Underpayment Assessment (SKPKB) due to data mismatch in the tax administration system.
The conflict originated when PT WHC received an SKPKB for Final Income Tax Article 4 (2) for the March 2017 period. The Plaintiff argued that the assessment should be canceled because they had fulfilled their payment obligation, although an input error occurred in the billing code using PT NA's NPWP (the counterparty). Conversely, the DGT asserted that the cancellation request could not be granted because, administratively, the payment was not recorded under the Plaintiff's name, thus the assessment was deemed consistent with available data.
The Board of Judges, in its consideration, stated that the Defendant's Decision rejecting the cancellation is a valid object of a lawsuit. However, the Judges provided a crucial emphasis that a Lawsuit via Article 36 of the KUP Law should be aimed at testing the formal aspects or procedures of issuing an assessment, rather than the material merits or tax calculations. The Board viewed the Plaintiff's reasoning regarding the billing input error as a material issue that should have been resolved through the Objection channel under Article 25 of the KUP Law, not through the cancellation Lawsuit mechanism.
This decision reaffirms that the effectiveness of a Lawsuit highly depends on the correct classification of the dispute. The implication for Taxpayers is the vital importance of precision in payment administration (SSP/Billing) and selecting the appropriate legal path; if a dispute concerns the validity of payment substance or calculations, then the Objection and Appeal channels are the only legally recognized ways to correct an assessment's merits. Procedural errors by Taxpayers in choosing a litigation path can lead to the loss of rights to obtain substantial justice in the Tax Court.
'A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here'