In the context of tax disputes, the reporting obligation for Output Value Added Tax (VAT) is often targeted by the tax authority (fiskus) through cross-equalization with Withholding Tax (PPh) Article 23 data recorded in the Directorate General of Tax (DGT) system. The case of PT CJLSI in Decision Number PUT-014728.16/2020/PP/M.XIA Year 2025 serves as a crucial case study affirming that questionable formal data must yield to the substance of the transaction. The fiskus (Tax Collector) corrected the VAT Tax Base (DPP) by Rp959,639,313, assuming unrecorded service delivery, based solely on a discrepancy in the PPh Article 23 withholding slip data from a third party (PT Cemindo Gemilang) that mistakenly listed the Applicant's Tax ID (NPWP).
The core conflict in this dispute lies in the validity of the PPh Article 23 cross-check data. The Tax Collector maintained the correction because the data remained recorded in the DGT's Apportal application, and the Applicant failed to present formal evidence of the PPh Article 23 SPT amendment from the counterparty. Conversely, the Applicant refuted the claim by presenting its General Ledger, synchronized output tax invoices, and most crucially, a sworn statement from PT Cemindo Gemilang explicitly admitting that listing the Applicant's NPWP was an administrative error. The statement clarified that the service delivery transaction was actually performed by another vendor.
The Tax Court Judges decided to grant the appeal in its entirety for this item. The legal consideration of the Judges fundamentally stated that the Tax Collector's correction was merely indicative and lacked strong supporting evidence, particularly concerning the flow of funds. The Judges ruled that the Tax Collector failed to prove any cash flow or money received by the Applicant from PT Cemindo Gemilang related to the transaction. By giving credence to the Applicant's accounting substance evidence and the third party's admission of error, the Judges rejected the Tax Collector's correction.
This decision has significant implications: the mechanism for equalizing PPh Article 23 and VAT data cannot be used as the sole absolute basis for correction if the Taxpayer can present stronger evidence of substance (such as cash flow and the General Ledger). For Taxpayers, this emphasizes the importance of proactively reconciling cross-check data and immediately obtaining supporting documentation (such as a sworn statement of error) from counterparties, even if an amendment to the counterparty’s SPT is not possible. This ruling sets a strong precedent that prioritizes material truth over the formality of system data.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here