The Director General of Taxes (DGT) performed a positive correction on Input Tax (VAT) amounting to IDR 171,805,000 for PT BI due to administrative discrepancies between the shipping entity and the payment recipient in import documents. Although the Taxpayer argued that the economic substance of the transaction was met and the goods were utilized for production, the Tax Court Judges emphasized that disputes involving the material substance of a tax assessment must be resolved through objection and appeal mechanisms, rather than the lawsuit path under Article 23 of the KUP Law.
The conflict centered on differing interpretations regarding the fulfillment of material requirements for documents equivalent to Tax Invoices. The Defendant (DGT) maintained that the mismatch between the shipper and the payment recipient rendered the Import Declaration (PIB) document materially invalid for credit. Conversely, the Plaintiff (PT BI) clarified that Da Sheng was merely an ordering agent, while the actual transaction occurred with Plenty OS Trading. The Plaintiff emphasized that the right to credit tax should not be forfeited as long as the VAT was paid to the state treasury and physical evidence of goods flow was readily available.
The Board of Judges, in their legal consideration, established strict boundaries regarding the absolute competence of the lawsuit procedure. The Judges opined that the substance of the Plaintiff's application essentially challenged the nominal amount of tax in the Underpayment Tax Assessment Notice (SKPKB), which is legally a material dispute. Based on Article 23 paragraph (2) of the KUP Law, the object of a lawsuit should be limited to administrative procedural errors in the issuance of a decree, not the substance of the correction itself. Since the legal path taken was deemed inappropriate (error in objecto), the Judges decided to reject the lawsuit, thereby upholding the VAT Import correction.
This decision carries significant implications for tax practitioners regarding the vital importance of selecting the correct legal remedy. Failure to distinguish between procedural disputes (Lawsuit) and material disputes (Appeal) can result in the loss of access to justice for Taxpayers, even if their substantive position is strong. Administrative discipline in documenting every party involved in import transactions remains a non-negotiable requirement to avoid similar corrections in the future.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here