The Tax Court Decision in the CML case provides an interesting example of a tax dispute that illustrates how issues of business substance, third-party administrative errors, and procedural aspects of appeals intersect and ultimately determine the final outcome of the case. This dispute is not only related to discrepancies in export data arising from errors in the completion of customs documents, but also concerns corrections to business turnover based on bank account mutations as well as the recognition of direct costs that should follow the recognition of revenue.
The dispute originated from the discovery of discrepancies in export data between PEE/PEB documents recorded in the Customs and Excise system and the transaction data submitted by the Taxpayer. During the audit process, CML conducted clarification with the Customs Brokerage Service Provider (PPJK), namely PT MJP, in relation to PEE Number 099421 dated 10 March 2017. The PPJK acknowledged that there had been an error in inputting the export transaction data, which resulted in discrepancies between the customs data and the data held by the Taxpayer, while the Taxpayer asserted that the export transactions had substantively and genuinely occurred.
In addition to the export issue, the DGT made additional corrections to local business turnover based on the inflow of funds into the Taxpayer’s bank accounts, consisting of cash deposits amounting to IDR 52,593,198,673 and receipts of funds from various parties as well as bank mutations with TI codes amounting to IDR 32,874,029,571, bringing the total inflow to IDR 85,467,228,244. The DGT was of the view that all such inflows constituted local supplies which, in principle, were subject to Value Added Tax (VAT).
In the final discussion of the audit results, the Taxpayer agreed that the amount of IDR 85,467,228,244 constituted local supplies. The Taxpayer and the DGT also agreed that such supplies were supplies of marine products classified as strategic goods and therefore exempt from VAT. Nevertheless, the Taxpayer disagreed if the correction to the local sales was not accompanied by the recognition of directly related costs or Cost of Goods Sold (COGS), basing its argument on the matching cost against revenue principle.
The Panel of Judges upheld the correction to COGS arising from the correction to business turnover based on the inflow of funds into the Taxpayer’s bank accounts. The Panel’s consideration was not based on a rejection of the matching cost against revenue principle, but rather on the fact that the COGS correction had from the outset not constituted a disputed item between the Taxpayer and the DGT, and therefore fell outside the scope of the Panel’s examination, resulting in the appeal against such correction being rejected.
This decision demonstrates that even where a Taxpayer has strong substantive arguments, the outcome of a dispute is still heavily determined by the accuracy in formulating the object of dispute. This case underscores that in tax litigation, procedural precision is just as important as the strength of substantive arguments, as the matching cost against revenue principle will not be examined if the related cost correction does not constitute a disputed item from the outset.
Comprehensive and Complete Analysis of This Dispute is Available Here