The Tax Court Panel granted the entire appeal of PT. FEI concerning a Corporate Income Tax (CIT) dispute for the 2017 Tax Year. This decision affirms that a discrepancy found through a CIT-VAT reconciliation does not automatically prove the existence of income, especially when DGT fails to meet its burden of proof.
The dispute originated from a CIT Revenue correction for the 2017 Tax Year amounting to USD 175,249.00, imposed by DGT. The correction was based on the results of a reconciliation test between the Revenue data reported in the CIT Return and the Tax Base (DPP) data reported in the periodic VAT Returns.
During the dispute, the DGT argued that the discrepancy constituted unreported income by PT FEI. DGT detailed the finding as Commission Income (USD 17.00) and 2018 Income for which Tax Invoices had been issued in the 2017 VAT Returns (USD 175,232.00). DGT also highlighted the difference in explanations provided by PT FEI between the objection and appeal stages.
Conversely, PT FEI strongly refuted the entire correction. PT FEI argued that the discrepancy found by DGT was not income. PT FEI contended that the difference arose purely from administrative errors, primarily the issuance of excess or duplicate Tax Invoices (amounting to USD 163,310.91), along with other components such as timing differences in recognition. PT FEI admitted that new data and supporting documents (including proof of duplicate invoices) were only discovered after the objection process was completed, thus a detailed and accurate refutation could only be presented at the appeal level.
The Tax Court Panel focused its legal consideration on the fulfillment of the burden of proof. The Panel referred to the provisions of Article 12 paragraph (3) of the General Tax Provisions and Procedures Law (UU KUP), which states that DGT can only make a correction if they obtain evidence that the Tax Return submitted by the Taxpayer is incorrect. In this case, DGT was deemed to have shifted the burden of proof to the PT FEI based solely on the reconciliation discrepancy.
According to the Tax Court Panel's opinion, DGT should have first proven that the reconciliation discrepancy truly constituted an additional economic capacity or income for PT FEI, as stipulated in Article 4 paragraph (1) of the Income Tax Law. The Panel found that DGT failed to provide sufficient evidence regarding the source and details of said income. Conversely, PT FEI was deemed to have successfully proven—through supporting documents presented in the hearing—that the difference arose purely from administrative errors (duplicate invoices) and timing differences.
This decision becomes important jurisprudence affirming that the CIT-VAT reconciliation method is merely a plausibility testing tool and not definitive proof of unreported income. The tax authority's failure to prove the substance of its correction findings, beyond just presenting the reconciliation difference, results in the annulment of the correction.
Based on these considerations, the Tax Court Panel granted PT FEI's entire appeal and annulled the Revenue correction of USD 175,249.00. This decision upholds the supremacy of the principle placing the burden of proof on the tax authority (per Article 12 paragraph (3) of the GTL Law) and demonstrates the critical importance for Taxpayers to maintain robust documentation to refute auditor findings.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here