The tax dispute involving PT Sari Dumai Oleo (SDO) highlights the complexity of applying secondary adjustments in affiliated transactions, where tax authorities recharacterize export price differences as constructive dividends. Under the Income Tax Law, any excess payment influenced by a special relationship can be categorized as a dividend subject to a 20% withholding tax under Article 26. The central legal issue in this case is whether an adjustment to operating revenue in Corporate Income Tax can automatically serve as the basis for issuing an Article 26 tax assessment without material proof of actual dividend flow to shareholders.
The conflict originated when the Respondent (DGT) made a positive adjustment to SDO's RBDPO export sales prices to Apical Malaysia using MPOB market data. The DGT argued that the lower export prices resulted in profits shifting abroad, which were then deemed constructive dividends. Conversely, SDO strongly countered this argument, stating that the Malaysian buyer was not a direct or indirect shareholder; therefore, the definition of a "dividend" under the Indonesia-Malaysia Tax Treaty (DTA) was not met. Furthermore, SDO emphasized that the DGT's comparability analysis was legally flawed as it failed to perform necessary delivery point adjustments (FOB).
The Board of Judges, in their legal considerations, adopted a logical and consistent stance regarding the hierarchy of the dispute. Given that this Article 26 tax correction was a derivative impact (secondary adjustment) of the Corporate Income Tax dispute, the Board first examined the validity of the primary adjustment. In the related decision, the Board had already overturned the revenue correction because the CUP method used by the DGT was proven incomparable. Consequently, the Board of Judges ruled that the primary foundation for the constructive dividend had collapsed, leaving the Article 26 correction without a solid legal basis to be maintained.
The implications of this decision provide legal certainty for taxpayers that secondary adjustments cannot stand alone if the primary adjustment is annulled by the court. This case also reinforces the vital importance of accurate comparability analysis within Transfer Pricing Documentation (TP Doc). The ruling serves as a reminder to tax authorities that recharacterizing income as dividends must be based on material evidence of capital ownership, rather than a mere price discrepancy in commercial transactions between group entities.
In conclusion, SDO's victory in this dispute affirms the mutatis mutandis principle in tax litigation. Successfully dismantling Transfer Pricing arguments at the Corporate Income Tax level automatically secures the taxpayer's position against additional tax exposure at the withholding level. Taxpayers are advised to ensure that every transfer price determination is supported by a comprehensive functional, asset, and risk analysis to avoid the risk of chain adjustments in the future.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here