Justice for good-faith buyers is the core of the dispute between PT BJ and the Directorate General of Taxation (DGT) regarding the correction of Input Tax worth IDR 96.8 million. This case dissects the limitations of a buyer's administrative responsibility regarding the validity of Tax Invoice Serial Numbers (NSFP) issued by sellers within a tax information system that is closed to the public.
The conflict centered on the Respondent's correction after discovering that the Input Tax Invoices credited by PT BJ used NSFPs issued before the official notification date of the serial numbers by the DGT. The Respondent insisted that, formally, these were "Incomplete Tax Invoices" under Article 13, paragraph (9) of the VAT Law, thus forfeiting the right to credit by law, regardless of the transaction's reality.
In contrast, PT BJ provided solid material evidence in the form of cash flows and goods flows to demonstrate that the transactions were genuine. PT BJ argued that as a buyer, they lacked the means to verify whether the NSFP provided by the seller matched the allocation date granted by the DGT to that specific seller. Administrative failures on the seller's side should not eliminate the constitutional rights of a buyer who has fulfilled their VAT payment obligations.
The Board of Judges provided a clarifying resolution, stating that Article 13, paragraph (5) of the VAT Law had been physically satisfied. The judges emphasized that as long as evidence of VAT payment and goods delivery is proven, the buyer is protected by the principle of good faith. The discrepancy between the NSFP and the DGT's system allocation is purely an administrative negligence of the seller, which is beyond the buyer's control.
The implication of this decision reinforces that legal certainty and material justice must take precedence over administrative formalities that are impossible for taxpayers to fulfill. This decision serves as an important precedent for companies to maintain meticulous documentation of goods and money flows as a final defense against formalistic tax invoice corrections.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here