Disputes regarding Land and Building Tax (PBB) in the plantation sector often hinge on conflicting interpretations between administrative licensing data and the reality of physical control on the ground. The case of PT. MW (Appellant) against the Directorate General of Taxes (Appellee) serves as a vital precedent on how Article 4 paragraph (1) of the PBB Law must be applied consistently to land objects still in the land acquisition phase or overlapping with community rights.
The core of the conflict began when the Appellee ex-officio determined the land area to be 55,000,000 m2 based on the Plantation Business License for Cultivation (IUP-B) held by the company. The Appellee argued that the entire area within the license coordinates constitutes a single tax object, especially since the Appellant was deemed negligent for the late submission of the SPOP (Tax Object Notification Form). Conversely, the Appellant countered with "Areal Statement" evidence showing that the land actually controlled and planted was far below the IUP area, due to unresolved social constraints and land overlaps.
In its legal considerations, the Board of Judges emphasized that the substance of PBB imposition rests on who actually has the rights, controls, and derives benefits from the land. Although an IUP lists a specific area, it is administrative in nature and does not necessarily reflect the physical control that forms the basis of the tax subject. However, the Board also criticized the Appellant's evidence, which was issued after January 1st (the date the tax becomes due), making the formal legality of such evidence weak for the current tax year.
The resolution adopted by the Board of Judges was to set the land area at 50,000,000 m2. This figure refers to the PBB assessment from the previous year, which the Appellant did not dispute, thus it was considered to reflect the objective conditions recognized by both parties. This decision highlights the importance of consistency in reporting tax object data from year to year and the strengthening of valid physical control evidence at the beginning of the tax year.
The implication of this ruling is a confirmation for Taxpayers in the P3 sector (Plantation, Forestry, Mining) that administrative licenses (IUP/HGU) are not always identical to the PBB tax object area if actual control can be proven otherwise. Nevertheless, compliance in the timely submission of the SPOP remains crucial so that Taxpayers have a strong bargaining position in proving physical data before the tax authorities and the court.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here