The tax dispute between PT Sri Trang Lingga Indonesia (PT SLI) and the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) culminated in a debate over the validity of administrative documents in implementing the Indonesia-Thailand Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTA). The core of the dispute focused on the correction of the Article 23/26 Final Income Tax Base (DPP) amounting to IDR 772,815,620.00 regarding management fee payments to an affiliate in Thailand. The DGT issued the correction based on cost equalization, arguing that the Taxpayer failed to submit a DGT Form that met the criteria of PER-25/PJ/2018 during the audit, thus disqualifying them from treaty benefits.
Conversely, PT SLI asserted that the transaction constituted payment for management services, categorized as Business Profits for the recipient in Thailand. Referring to Article 7 of the Indonesia-Thailand DTA, the taxing rights belong to the residence country as the Thai entity does not have a Permanent Establishment (PE) in Indonesia. PT SLI demonstrated that the contested DGT Form was actually available and electronically validated, thereby substantially fulfilling the residency requirements for the foreign tax subject.
The Tax Court Judges, in their legal considerations, emphasized that administrative procedures regulated by the Director General of Taxes Regulation should not restrict or negate Taxpayer rights guaranteed under international treaties (DTA). The judges conducted a thorough examination of the DGT-1 Form evidence presented during the hearing and confirmed that the recipient was a legitimate Thai tax resident. Since the absence of a PE in Indonesia was proven, the service fees should not have been subject to Article 26 Income Tax withholding in Indonesia.
The implications of this decision provide legal certainty that the validity of administrative documents such as the DGT Form must be assessed based on material truth and the substance of the tax subject. This ruling reinforces the principle of pacta sunt servanda in international law, where DTA provisions hold higher standing than domestic administrative implementing rules. For Taxpayers, this victory serves as a vital precedent to ensure timely DGT Form reporting compliance without losing the right to material defense through evidence in court.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here