Tax authorities frequently utilize accounts receivable flow testing as a primary instrument to determine potential unreported Value Added Tax (VAT). In the dispute between PT SSA and the Directorate General of Taxes, the Board of Judges emphasized that any correction to the VAT Tax Base (DPP) must be founded on concrete material evidence, rather than mere assumptions regarding credit mutations in liability accounts. The core conflict originated when the Respondent made a positive correction of IDR 103,700,000.00 for the May 2018 Tax Period by classifying cash receipts in the Other Payables account as a delivery of Taxable Services (JKP) in the form of consulting services. The Respondent argued that without a formal loan agreement, the inflow of funds from third parties must be considered business turnover subject to VAT under Article 4 paragraph (1) of the VAT Law.
Conversely, the Petitioner strongly refuted this classification, stating that the funds were a bailout loan from the President Director to cover urgent operational needs. Evidence presented during the trial became crucial; the Petitioner submitted comprehensive proof ranging from Petty Cash Vouchers, SGD 10,000 currency exchange slips, to bank transfer records showing the repayment to the Director on the same date.
The Board of Judges, in its legal considerations, provided a resolution by canceling the Respondent's entire correction. The Judges opined that material facts demonstrated the transaction was purely a debt-credit relationship and did not constitute a service delivery. Furthermore, the Board highlighted the Respondent's procedural non-compliance for failing to detail corrections per tax period in the SPHP, which prejudiced the Taxpayer's right to provide an accurate rebuttal.
The implication of this decision serves as an important precedent that although tax authorities have the power to test cash flows, the evidentiary strength of internal documentation such as cash vouchers and general ledgers maintains a strong legal standing before the Board of Judges to overturn unilateral examiner assumptions.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here