The world of tax litigation has recorded an important precedent regarding the accessory nature of Value Added Tax (VAT) disputes in relation to Corporate Income Tax (CIT). Tax Court Decision number PUT-011711.16/2023/PP/M.XXB Year 2025 confirms that a VAT Base (DPP) correction solely based on a CIT business turnover correction must be legally annulled if the primary correction is declared invalid. This case involving PT SJPP serves as a crucial reminder to tax authorities that every correction must have an independent and robust evidentiary basis.
The core of the conflict in this case is rooted in the Respondent's findings, which utilized the accounts receivable test method to determine unreported business turnover. The Respondent concluded that the difference in accounts receivable balances and bank receipts constituted VAT objects that the Petitioner should have collected. However, the Petitioner mounted a fierce defense, arguing that the difference was not from sales but rather promotional claims to suppliers and operational fund injections from shareholders, which accounting-wise do not meet the criteria for a delivery of Taxable Goods (BKP).
In its resolution, the Board of Judges took a highly logical legal step. Given that this VAT correction was a secondary correction, the Board first reviewed the legal status of the business turnover correction in the related CIT dispute. With the fact that the primary material correction had been annulled through Decision Number PUT-011708.15/2023/PP/M.XXB Year 2025, the Board of Judges opined that the Respondent's legal basis for maintaining the VAT correction automatically collapsed. Consequently, the Board decided to grant the Petitioner's appeal in its entirety because there was no longer any legal footing to support the existence of the VAT dispute.
An analysis of this decision shows how vital an integrated evidentiary strategy is between CIT and VAT disputes. This victory implies that Taxpayers must be able to prove the non-taxable nature of every cash flow entering their books. This decision strengthens protection for Taxpayers against automatic corrections that are not supported by evidence of actual goods or services delivery in the field.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here