The dispute centers on the legality of issuing a Tax Collection Letter (STP) for administrative sanctions under Article 14, paragraph (4) of the KUP Law due to the allegedly untimely reporting of Export Declaration (PEB) documents. The tax authority imposed a 2% fine on the Tax Base (DPP), arguing that PEBs issued in February 2019 should have been reported in the February 2019 VAT Return instead of March 2019. This conflict examines the limits of the Director General of Taxation's authority to correct a taxpayer's self-assessment without a formal official assessment mechanism.
The Respondent (DGT) insisted that based on PER-33/PJ/2014, a PEB is a specific document equivalent to a Tax Invoice, thus its reporting must align with the document's issuance period. Conversely, PT H (the Plaintiff) argued that the March 2019 reporting was based on the actual movement of goods and their economic rights, which were limited to sub-contracting services (maklon) rather than the total FOB value. The Plaintiff sought the cancellation of the STP, asserting that no substantial rules were violated that would harm state revenue.
The Board of Judges, in its legal considerations, established a significant precedent regarding the interaction between self-assessment and official assessment. The Board stated that a taxpayer's reporting in a tax return is legally deemed correct unless corrected through a Tax Assessment Letter (SKP). In this case, although an Overpayment Tax Assessment Letter (SKPLB) was issued for February 2019, the Respondent failed to make a correction to move the 40 PEBs to the February period. Without a formal determination via an SKP, the March 2019 reporting remains legally valid, and the criteria for a violation under Article 14, paragraph (4) of the KUP Law are not met.
This decision emphasizes that administrative sanctions cannot be automatically imposed based solely on reporting period differences if the tax authority itself does not establish a different accrual period through an audit. Consequently, legal certainty for taxpayers is protected from formalistic administrative penalties lacking a solid tax assessment basis. Taxpayers are advised to remain consistent in reporting documents equivalent to Tax Invoices to avoid potential disputes in the future.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here