The Tax Court once again emphasized the crucial role of demonstrating economic substance in transfer pricing disputes, particularly those involving recharacterization that leads to a Withholding Tax (WHT) Article 26 correction stemming from a secondary adjustment or deemed dividend. This specific case centers on a WHT Article 26 correction related to the payment of Network Processing Fee (NWPF) by PT MI to a foreign affiliate, which the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) initially claimed was royalty and subsequently reclassified a portion as a deemed dividend. The correction was based on the premise that the NWPF paid exceeded the arm’s length principle and was essentially consideration for the use of intangible assets, rather than legitimate service fees.
The core conflict in this case revolved around whether the NWPF should be categorized as service fees, whose arm's length nature was tested using the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM), or whether it should be recharacterized as a royalty, potentially triggering a secondary correction as a deemed dividend. The DGT argued that the taxpayer failed to substantiate the details of the service and deemed the payment an effort to shift profits to the affiliated entity. Consequently, the excess payment was treated as a deemed dividend under Article 18 paragraph (3) of the Income Tax Law. On this deemed dividend, the DGT imposed WHT Article 26 at the domestic rate of 20%.
The taxpayer, however, consistently refuted the correction by presenting Transfer Pricing Documentation (Local File) that clearly demonstrated NWPF was a payment for comprehensive, active, and essential services, such as authorization, clearing, and transaction settlement. The payment was not for the right to use Intellectual Property (IP). The taxpayer stressed that the transaction price had met the Arm’s Length Principle (ALP).
In its legal considerations, the Tax Court adopted a stance favorable to the taxpayer. The panel was convinced that the taxpayer had successfully proven the substance of the services underlying the NWPF. The Court found that the DGT lacked sufficient evidence to disregard the legal form of the contract and recharacterize the transaction. With the rejection of the primary correction (recharacterization into royalty), the legal basis for the secondary correction that treated the overpayment as a deemed dividend (which formed the object of WHT Article 26) was automatically nullified.
The Tax Court’s decision to Grant the appeal in its entirety and revoke the WHT Article 26 correction carries significant implications. This ruling reaffirms that the DGT cannot solely rely on assumptions or internal benchmarks to perform recharacterization and secondary adjustments. Taxpayers engaging in intra-group service transactions must be supported by robust Transfer Pricing Documentation and detailed Functional Analysis to prove that the payments are indeed for services, and not disguised profit distributions. The decision establishes an important precedent in WHT Article 26 litigation related to transfer pricing, where the validity of the primary correction is the absolute key to sustaining the secondary correction.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here