The dispute began when the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) corrected the Input Tax for the August 2014 tax period amounting to IDR 5,630,585.00 belonging to PT BJ. The tax authority argued that the Tax Invoice received by PT BJ was invalid because it was issued by the seller using a Tax Invoice Serial Number (NSFP) outside the allotment provided by the DGT, and the invoice date preceded the NSFP issuance date. Based on Director General of Taxes Regulation Number PER-24/PJ/2012, the DGT classified the invoice as an Incomplete Tax Invoice which cannot be credited according to Article 9 paragraph (8) letter f of the VAT Law.
PT BJ strongly rejected the correction, arguing that as a buyer, they have no control or obligation to monitor the administrative compliance of the counterparty's serial numbers. PT BJ emphasized that the transaction was genuine (materiality met), the VAT had been paid to the seller, and all minimum requirements for Tax Invoice details in Article 13 paragraph (5) of the VAT Law were fulfilled. PT BJ also referred to the principle of joint liability in Article 16F of the VAT Law, which should protect good-faith buyers as long as they can prove the tax payment.
The Tax Court Panel of Judges provided a consideration focused on the essence of justice for the Taxpayer. The Judges argued that administrative errors such as the use of non-compliant NSFP or dates preceding the NSFP issuance are purely the negligence of the Seller. Since the court facts proved that the delivery of goods actually occurred and the VAT was settled by PT BJ, the essential material and formal requirements were met. The Judges emphasized that the seller's internal administrative irregularities should not eliminate the buyer's right to credit the Input Tax.
This decision has significant implications in providing legal certainty for buyers. Legally, as long as the buyer can prove valid cash and goods flows, technical NSFP errors on the seller's side do not automatically void the right to credit. This reinforces the Taxpayer's position that administrative sanctions for invoice issuance errors should be directed at the issuer (seller), not the recipient (buyer). The decision also reaffirms that the substance of the transaction's truth takes precedence over mere administrative procedures regarding serial numbers that are beyond the buyer's control.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here