The tax dispute involving PT SAK (initials) originated from the adjustment of the VAT Base (DPP) regarding the disposal of five units of tanker truck fixed assets. The Directorate General of Taxation (DGT) applied Article 16D of the VAT Law, arguing that these vehicles are Taxable Goods (BKP) for which the Input Tax should have been creditable upon acquisition. Conversely, the Taxpayer insisted that these yellow-plated tanker trucks constitute public transportation facilities, which are excluded from the VAT object under Article 4A paragraph (3) letter j of the VAT Law, thus their sale should be exempt from tax.
The core of this legal conflict lies in the evidentiary qualification of "Public Transportation Services." The Respondent (DGT) made the correction upon discovering that the Taxpayer's primary business activity is the palm oil processing industry, not a transportation service provider. Factually, the trucks were utilized for the internal mobilization of the company’s own CPO. The Petitioner argued that the "yellow plate" status automatically grants a non-VAT object facility in accordance with PMK 80/2012, and claimed that Input Tax was never credited because the trucks were perceived as acquisitions for non-taxable supplies.
In its legal considerations, the Board of Judges emphasized that the yellow plate status on registration documents (STNK/BPKB) is merely a police administrative prerequisite and not the sole evidence of public transportation service qualification under tax law. The Board referred to sectoral regulations, namely the LLAJ Law and PP 74/2014, which require a Special Goods Transportation Implementation Permit for public transport companies. Since the Petitioner failed to provide such a permit and admitted that the yellow plate was used solely for subsidized fuel access, the trucks were deemed supporting assets for the main business (non-public transport). Consequently, the Input Tax on these trucks is legally "creditable" (even if the Taxpayer factually chose not to credit it), thereby fulfilling the requirements of Article 16D.
This decision carries significant implications for business players in the plantation and logistics sectors. The Board of Judges underlined the principle that VAT imposition on asset disposal (Article 16D) heavily depends on the legality of the taxpayer as a public transport provider, rather than just the vehicle's plate color. For Taxpayers, the failure to prove a valid transportation business license results in the loss of VAT exemption facilities, leading to a substantial output tax burden when assets are divested.
Conclusion The Board of Judges rejected the Petitioner's appeal as trial facts showed the vehicles were used for private interests and were not supported by a valid public transportation business license. The disposal of these fixed assets was declared a valid VAT object under Article 16D.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here