Tax authorities frequently reclassify costs deemed non-arm’s length in affiliated transactions as constructive dividends or secondary adjustments. In the dispute between PT TDASI and the Respondent, the core issue centered on Article 26 Income Tax corrections for October 2020, stemming from the reclassification of Intragroup Services (IGS) and intercompany interest expenses.
The conflict intensified as the Petitioner asserted that the counterparties in Singapore, Malaysia, and the UK were not direct shareholders, meaning they could not legally be categorized as dividend recipients under Article 10 of the Tax Treaties. Substantively, the Petitioner presented comprehensive evidence, including Service Agreements, invoices, and Agreed-Upon Procedures (AUP) reports to prove the services were genuinely rendered.
The Board of Judges ruled that since the primary corrections (IGS and interest expenses) in the CIT case had been overturned, the basis for performing a secondary adjustment in the form of dividends was legally void. The Board also found the Petitioner's evidence sufficient to verify transaction existence and compliance with the arm’s length principle. Consequently, the Respondent's corrections were unsustainable.
In conclusion, this decision reaffirms that secondary adjustments are accessory in nature, depending entirely on the validity of the primary correction. For Taxpayers, this victory provides a crucial lesson on the importance of synchronizing arguments between CIT and withholding tax disputes, as well as the vital role of "testable" evidence of service existence.