The correction of the VAT Tax Base (DPP) based solely on the gross-up difference of Output Tax in the General Ledger without considering the economic substance of the transaction is the central point of the dispute between PT KGT and the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT). The dispute arose when the Respondent conducted an equalization and found credit mutations in the Output VAT account that were larger than the reporting in the December 2021 VAT Return, leading the Respondent to assume that there was an uncollected delivery of Taxable Goods (BKP) amounting to IDR 9.78 billion.
The core of the conflict in this case lies in the differing interpretations of accounting records. The Respondent used a formal approach, concluding that every credit mutation in the Output VAT account represents a delivery that has occurred as regulated in Article 4 paragraph (1) letter a of the VAT Law. Conversely, the Appellant provided an argumentative reasoning that the difference is not a VAT object because it includes accrual journals for sales where the goods had not been physically delivered, as well as double-entry errors in down payment transactions that did not meet the criteria for the tax due date.
The Board of Judges, in its legal consideration, prioritized the principle of substance over form through a deep evidence examination process. The Board assessed that the source document evidence, such as contracts, invoices, and ledgers presented by the Appellant, legally proved that most of the Respondent's corrections were misidentified accounts and transactions that were not yet ripe to be recognized as deliveries. However, since there was a remaining difference of IDR 415,573,486 that the Appellant could not support with documentation, the Board maintained the correction for that specific amount based on the principle of legal certainty.
The implication of this decision reaffirms that in equalization disputes, the Taxpayer's ability to reconcile accounting data with source documents is the key to victory. This decision serves as an important precedent that tax audit results (LHP) based only on numerical assumptions without tracing the nature of the transaction can be overturned in court. In conclusion, orderly bookkeeping administration and the availability of supporting documents for adjustment journals are crucial when facing equalization-based audits.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here