Juridical Review of Land Dispute Decisions in the Administrative Court
of Yogyakarta
Erna Sri Wibawanti
1
, Takariadinda Diana Etika
1
and Ahmad Prakarsa Surya Sanjaya
1
1
Janabadra University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Keywords:
Land Dispute, Administrative Court.
Abstract:
The results showed that land disputes handled by the Yogyakarta State Administrative Court, 11 from 12
lawsuits, when it is viewed from the subjects (Plaintiffs and Defendants), the one who sued were individuals
and only one is a Private Legal Entity, while the defendant is the Head of the Land Office and Village Chief.
Most of the objects of the dispute are the Land Certificates , the Decree of Giving Rights and the silence of
the officials (negative fictitious). This negative fictitious dispute object no longer exists after the Act No. 30
of 2014, because the provisions regarding negative fiction have been changed to positive fictitious provisions.
However, because fictitious positive State Administrative decisions are relatively less published than negative
fictions, even positive fictional claims to the State Administrative Court are less frequent. Until this research
was conducted, there was no land suit that consisted of Positive Fictitious decisions that entered the Yogyakarta
Administrative Court. The basis of the land dispute lawsuit at the Yogyakarta State Administrative Court is
generally because the Plaintiff feels aggrieved because of the object of material disability, formal disability,
and a violation of the Principles of Good Governance. The form of judges’ decisions in land disputes at State
Administrative Court is Court is mostly ”NO” (Niet OnvarkelijkVerklaard, which is 6 cases in 12 cases. This
happened because the lawsuit registered was often made in such a way by the Advocates, as if it should be
examined up to the point of the case. After examining the subject matter, through verification and examination
of witnesses, it was discovered that the exception was the object of the dispute.
1 INTRODUCTION
According to the Ombudsman member for Agrarian
and Agriculture, Alamsyah Saragih, (kompas.com,
2018) community reports related to land are included
in the category of the five highest public reports.
Complaints related to land reached 14 (fourteen) per-
cent of all public reports received by the Ombudsman.
Of the total reports related to the land, 23 percent are
land conflicts or disputes.
It is undeniable that land disputes, judging from
the juridical aspect alone, are not simple solutions.
In a case, it often involves several agencies, which
are directly or indirectly related to the problem or dis-
pute. Need the same concept and perception to pro-
duce a solid and fair solution for those who demand
justice. Without intending to generalize, it appears
that an understanding of the concepts and perceptions
underlying the resolution of land disputes in Indone-
sia is still very deficient, which is disadvantageous
to justice seekers. (Istijab, 2018) In fact, according
to S.F.Marbun in (Syaha, 2016), philosophically the
purpose of establishing a State Administrative Court
(PTUN) is to provide protection for individual rights
and community rights, so that accord, balance and
harmony is achieved between individual interests and
the interests of the community or the public interest.
According to Aju Putrijanti (Putrijanti and
Leonard, 2019), the role of the State Administrative
Court is increasingly important to enforce the jus-
tice function which is carried out together with the
supervisory function. Supervision of the running of
the government needs to be done and improved, so
that it can realize good governance. The supervision
function by State Administrative Court is important to
guarantee the protection and fulfillment of the rights
as citizens, and the enforcement of state administra-
tive law within the legal state framework. Administra-
tive law enforcement in several fields does not seem
to work according to the existing conditions.
Like disputes in other fields, there are two ways of
resolving land disputes that are common in Indone-
sia, namely through nonlitigation channels and litiga-
tion channels. How the competence of the Court, es-
Wibawanti, E., Etika, T. and Sanjaya, A.
Juridical Review of Land Dispute Decisions in the Administrative Court of Yogyakarta.
DOI: 10.5220/0009879001010108
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Applied Science, Engineering and Social Sciences (ICASESS 2019), pages 101-108
ISBN: 978-989-758-452-7
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
101
pecially the State Administrative Court, in handling
land disputes is still unclear to the public, so that
land claims that are registered with the State Admin-
istrative Court are forced to be unacceptable because
of the plaintiffs ignorance of the competence of the
State Administrative Court in handling land cases,
so also happened in the Yogyakarta Administrative
Court.
Based on this background, the problem in this re-
search is a land dispute handled by the Yogyakarta
State Administrative Court, the basis of the claim of
the plaintiffs in a land dispute at the Yogyakarta State
Administrative Court, as well as a judge’s decision in
resolving land disputes at the Yogyakarta State Ad-
ministrative Court.
2 METHOD
The research was conducted by having normative le-
gal research with a legal case study approach in the
form of a State Administrative Court Decision regard-
ing land disputes. The research data was obtained by
reviewing the decisions of the State Administrative
Court, also supported by data from interviews with
Yogyakarta State Administrative Court Judges and
various laws and regulations and other legal material
relating to land disputes and the State administrative
judicature. The data obtained were analyzed using a
qualitative descriptive method to obtain a clear pic-
ture relating to land disputes in the Yogyakarta State
Administrative Court.
3 DISCUSSION
3.1 Land Disputes Handled by the
Yogyakarta State Administrative
Court
Based on the results of the study, it was obtained data
from the research object in the form of an incraacht
decision that has permanent legal force and has en-
tered the legal archives, for the period 1 January 2014
to 31 December 2018 there were a number of 12 land
dispute decisions. In 2014 there were 4 (four) dis-
putes, in 2015 there were 3 (three) disputes, in 2017
there were 4 (four) disputes, whereas in 2018 there
were 1 (one) dispute that had been decided by the Yo-
gyakarta State Administrative Court. The location of
the 12 (twelve) disputes included: Yogyakarta City
5 (five) disputes, 4 (four) disputes occurred in Sle-
man Regency, 2 (two) disputes occurred in Bantul Re-
gency, 1 (one) dispute occurred in Gunungkidul Re-
gency.
Land disputes handled by the Yogyakarta State
Administrative Court are divided into 2 (two), namely
from the side of the Subject of the Dispute and the
Object of the dispute.
Referring from the subject of land disputes in
Yogyakarta Administrative Court which became the
plaintiffs, most (11 of 12 lawsuits) are individual or
person, only 1 (one) plaintiff is a legal entity, namely
PT. Papua Regional Development Bank. Even though
the plaintiff is an individual, there are a number of
lawsuits with more than one plaintiff. While most
of the defendants were the Head of the Land Office,
namely the Yogyakarta City Land Office 5 claims, the
Sleman District Land Office, 3 (three) claims of the
Head Office of Bantul Regency 2 (two) claims, the
Head of the Land Office of Gunungkidul Regency, 2
(two) two) claim and Head of Caturtunggal Village
Besides the main defendant, in several cases there was
also defendant II, as Defendants of the Reconvention.
Based on the object, land disputes that enter the
Yogyakarta State Administrative Court include:
a. Certificate of Land Rights, either in the form of
a Right of Ownership Certificate, Right to Build
(HGB), Right to Use and Management Right. The
land certificate which is part of the State Admin-
istration Decree on the other hand is also an ac-
knowledgment of the rights of the state to citi-
zens regarding ownership of land, sothere is also
a civil law dimension. It can clearly be said that
the certificate in this case stand in two legal en-
vironments namely the State Administrative Law
and Civil Law. Therefore, if there is a dispute over
the land certificate, the authority to adjudicate can
be carried out by the Administrative Court and the
General Court, depending on the absolute author-
ity of each court in accordance with the applicable
laws and regulations.
b. Other decisions relating to the granting of land
rights issued by State Administration Officers in
the ranks of the National Land Agency (BPN),
namely:
1) Letter of the Head of the Sleman Regency
Land Office concerning Termination of Let-
ter C Land Conversion because there is al-
ready a Certificate of Using Rights ( dispute
No.18/G/2017/PTUN.YK)
2) Letter of the Head of the Republic of Indone-
sia National Land Agency concerning House
/ Land Sales and Conferral of Management
Rights.(dispute No.01/G/2018/PTUN.YK)
3) Decree of the Head of the Land Office
ICASESS 2019 - International Conference on Applied Science, Engineering and Social Science
102
District. Sleman regarding Application for
Issuance of Mortgage Certificates (dispute
No.24/G/2017/PTUN.YK
c. The Silence act from State Administrative Court
Officials outside the National Land Agency ranks,
namely:
1) The silent act of the Head of the Caturtung-
gal Village to the request for a sign of support-
ing evidence for the Land Conversion Letter C.
The plaintiff in this case wanted to carry out
his Letter C Land Conversion, and then sub-
mitted a request to the Defendant to sign the
supporting evidence. However, the Defendant
responded by ignoring the request for several
months. The Plaintiff felt disadvantaged be-
cause of being obstructed in his Letter C Land
Conversion process. (Dispute Number 01 / G /
2014 / PTUN.YK)
2) The silent act towards the request to cancel the
write-off of the Plaintiffs name Revocation of
the Plaintiffs name and replaced with the name
of another person in the Plaintiffs Title Certifi-
cate is deemed a procedural defect. The Plain-
tiff submitted a request to the Defendant to can-
cel the write-off, but the Defendant responded
with a silence for months. (Dispute Number 09
/ G / 2014 / PTUN.YK)
The two disputes are similar because they both
have a negative fictitious object of dispute (regulated
in Article 3 UUNo. 5 of 1986 concerning Peratun),
and occurred before the enactment of Law No. 30 of
2014 concerning Government Administration. This
negative fictitious dispute object no longer exists af-
ter the Act No. 30 of 2014, because the provisions
regarding negative fiction have been changed to pos-
itive fictitious provisions. However, because ficti-
tious positive State Administrative decisions are rela-
tively less published than negative fictions, even posi-
tive fictional claims to the State Administrative Court
are less frequent. This is a benefit of the enactment
of Law No. 30 of 2014 because before that, the
lawsuit against the decision of a negative fictional
State Administrative Court dominated the disputes in
the State Administrative Court, not least in the Yo-
gyakarta State Administrative Court.
After the enactment of Law Number 30 Year 2014
Regarding Government Administration, the authority
of the Administrative Court no longer hears a Nega-
tive Fictitious decision, but a Positive Fictitious Deci-
sion. The authority of Administrative Court was ex-
panded, not only to adjudicate th State Administration
dispute which object was in written State Administra-
tion decision. The authority of PTUN includes:
a. Assess the positive fictive TUN decision. If there
is a request from the community members to the
TUN official to issue a TUN decision, but that
has not been implemented until a certain period of
time has passed, then the TUN decision is deemed
to have granted the request.
b. Assess the actual actions or actions taken by gov-
ernment officials;
c. Assess the TUN decision or actions of govern-
ment officials in the executive, judicial, legislative
and other state administration circles;
d. Assess the abuse of authority by government offi-
cials;
e. Assess general government officials’ decisions.
(Putrijanti, 2015)
Article 47 of Law No. 5 of 1986 concerning State
Administrative Court states that the court has the duty
and authority to examine, decide upon and resolve
state administrative disputes. The discussion regard-
ing the authority possessed is closely related to the
object of the dispute that must be examined, decided
upon and resolved. The object of the dispute exam-
ined is the written stipulation issued by the State Ad-
ministration Agency or Officer which contains state
administrative legal actions that are concrete, individ-
ual, final and have legal consequences for a person
or a legal entity. In Article 21 paragraph (1) of Law
Number 30 Year 2014 Regarding Government Ad-
ministration, it states that the court has the author-
ity to accept, examine and decide whether there is
an element of abuse of authority by government of-
ficials. The formulation of the contents of the two
articles is different, which may arise with the thought
that: one, the authority of concerning State Adminis-
trative Court becomes broader, not merely examining,
deciding and resolving state administrative disputes,
but also assessing whether or not there is an element
of abuse of authority by Government Officials. Sec-
ond, that the Court’s decision regarding whether or
not there is abuse of authority can be appealed to the
State Administrative High Court whose decision is fi-
nal and binding. Both of these things are an exten-
sion of the authority of concerning State Administra-
tive Court, that is, not only the number of the admin-
istrative authorities, but also the settlement of state
administrative disputes only. (SANTOSO and SAD-
JIJONO, 2018).
Related to the positive fictitious decision/verdict
(acceptance) as the object of government disputes in
the competence of the State Administrative Court to
test the government’s silence when carrying out duties
and functions based on authority norms can be justi-
fied according to the law or contrary to the laws and
Juridical Review of Land Dispute Decisions in the Administrative Court of Yogyakarta
103
regulations, general basis of good governance and the
principle of good governance. (Setiawan and Hadiat-
modjo, )
Until this research was conducted, there was no
land suit that consisted of Positive Fictitious decisions
that entered the Yogyakarta Administrative Court.
3.2 Basic Lawsuits to the State
Administrative Court
Regarding the reasons that are commonly used as the
basis for filing a State Administration lawsuit is reg-
ulated in Article 53 paragraph (2) of the Law on Ad-
ministrative Law of the State, namely:
a. The State Administration decision sued is con-
trary to the applicable laws and regulations, if:
1) Contrary to the provisions in the laws and regu-
lations which are procedural / formal in nature,
2) Contrary to the provisions in the laws and reg-
ulations that are substantial / material,
3) Issued by unauthorized State Administration
official.
b. The State Administration Decree sued contra-
venes the general principles of good governance.
The legal procedure aspect is one of the important
requirements that must be fulfilled by a decision or
decree issued by a state administration agency or of-
ficial. In Article 53 paragraph (2) a, Law no. 5 of
1986 concerning the Judicial System of State Admin-
istration as amended by Law No. 9 of 2004, one of
the reasons that can be used in a lawsuit is that the
state administration’s decision is contrary to the ap-
plicable laws and regulations. In the explanation of
the article, it is determined that a state administrative
decision can be considered contrary to the applica-
ble laws and regulations if the person concerned (the
decision) contradicts the provisions in the ”procedu-
ral” laws and regulations. Therefore, the legal pro-
cedure aspect is one of the basis for a state admin-
istrative court decision to cancel a certificate of land
rights because the state administrative body or official
has made a legal act issuing a decision or stipulation
due to an error in the nature of ”legal procedure” in
its issuance, it means that the decision of the state ad-
ministration body or official is in conflict with appli-
cable laws. With the discovery of a procedural error,
the court’s rationale in its decision to declare ”null”
(nietig) the decision.(Wahyunadi, 2016)
Besides the procedural aspects, a decision must
also fulfill the material aspects. Although the de-
mands are in principle always the same, the basis of
the lawsuit certainly varies depending on what and
how the case is and the object of the dispute. There-
fore, they must look into the documents of the Law-
suit one by one, the contents of which are also writ-
ten in the copy of the decision. However, there are
similarities in all the grounds of the lawsuit, namely
‘because the Plaintiff feels that his interests were im-
paired by the State Administration Decree issued by
the Defendant’
If it is viewed from the grounds of a land suit
filed with State Administrative Court of Yogyakarta,
it is mostly related to the issuance of certificates
and requests for revocation of certificates, on various
grounds: the defendant exceeds authority, the data
in the certificate issued is legally flawed due to er-
ror in persona, because the head of the land office
is inaccurate in listing rights subjects, the defendant
violated the General Principles of Good Governance
(AAUPB) especially the principle of expediency, le-
gal certainty and the principle of accuracy. Besides
that, the lawsuit that entered PTUN was also based
on the silence of the defendant. Silence as the basis
of a lawsuit can be seen in Dispute Number 01 / G /
2014 / PTUN.YK and Dispute Number 09 / G / 2014
/ PTUN.YK
Dispute Number 01 / G / 2014 / PTUN.YK. The
silent act of the Head of the Caturtunggal Village to
the request for a sign of supporting evidence for the
Land Conversion Letter C. The plaintiff in this case
wanted to carry out his Letter C Land Conversion,
and then submitted a request to the Defendant to sign
the supporting evidence. However, the Defendant re-
sponded by ignoring the request for several months.
The Plaintiff felt disadvantaged because of being ob-
structed in his Letter C Land Conversion process.
Dispute Number 09 / G / 2014 / PTUN.YK. The
silent act towards the request to cancel the write-off
of the Plaintiffs name Revocation of the Plaintiffs
name and replaced with the name of another person
in the Plaintiffs Title Certificate is deemed a pro-
cedural defect. The Plaintiff submitted a request to
the Defendant to cancel the write-off, but the Defen-
dant responded with a silence for months. The two
disputes are similar because they both have a nega-
tive fictitious object of dispute (regulated in Article 3
UUNo. 5 of 1986 concerning Peratun), and occurred
before the enactment of Law No. 30 of 2014 concern-
ing Government Administration. This negative ficti-
tious dispute object no longer exists after the Act No.
30 of 2014, because the provisions regarding nega-
tive fiction have been changed to positive fictitious
provisions. However, because fictitious positive State
Administrative decisions are relatively less published
than negative fictions, even positive fictional claims
to the State Administrative Court are less frequent.
ICASESS 2019 - International Conference on Applied Science, Engineering and Social Science
104
This is a benefit of the enactment of Law No. 30
of 2014 because before that, the lawsuit against the
decision of a negative fictional State Administrative
Court dominated the disputes in the State Adminis-
trative Court, not least in the Yogyakarta State Ad-
ministrative Court.
The concept of positive fictitious decisions in Law
No. 30 of 2014 is very different from the negative fic-
titious decisions stipulated in the Peratun Law. Con-
trary to the concept of negative fiction, it means that
the silence of the official’s attitude is considered to
be refusing, while the positive fictional is considered
granted. Even in positive fictitious decisions, the ap-
plicant does not automatically obtain the results of his
application, but must first submit a request to the Ad-
ministrative Court to obtain a decision on receipt of
the request. PTUN must decide on the application no
later than 21 (twenty one) working days after the ap-
plication is submitted. State Administration Decree is
final and binding, there are no other legal remedies.
Government Agencies and / or Officers must deter-
mine the Decree to implement the PTUN decision no
later than 5 (five) working days after the decision of
the Court is determined. (Abdullah, 2010)
In general, the legal basis used by the plaintiff to
sue the State Administrative Court is the first reason
that a TUN official or TUN body has committed an
act that violates the applicable laws and regulations
and the second has violated Good Governance Gen-
eral Principles ( AUPB) both AUPB in Law No. 28
of 1999 (before the enactment of Law No.30 of 2014)
and Good Governance General Principles contained
in Law No. 30 of 2014.
Good Governance General Principles as a doctrine
is universal that has been recognized and applied in
many countries, where there are formulated (codified)
formally and some are not codified. In essence, the
functions of the Good Governance General Principles
are: 1) As a guideline or code of ethics for State Ad-
ministration Agencies / officials in carrying out gov-
ernment affairs (including in order to issue State Ad-
ministration Decree), the ultimate goal is for the real-
ization of good and clean governance (clean and good
governance) ; 2) As a benchmark as well as a rea-
son (beroepsgronden) for parties who feel their inter-
ests have been impaired by a decision issued by the
State Administration Agency / Officer to file a claim
against the decision; 3) As a basis or criteria for test-
ing (toetsingsgronden) for the court or State Adminis-
tration judge to assess whether the decision issued by
the State Administration Agency / Official has been
in accordance with legal norms and justice, so that a
decision can be made regarding the validity of the de-
cision. (Wahyunadi, 2016)
The concept of positive fictitious decisions in Law
No. 30 of 2014 is very different from the negative
fictitious decisions stipulated in the State Administra-
tive Law. Contrary to the negative fiction concept, it
means that the silence of the official’s attitude is con-
sidered to be refusing, while the positive fictional is
considered to be granted. Even in positive fictitious
decisions, the applicant does not automatically obtain
the results of his application, but must first submit a
request to the Administrative Court to obtain a deci-
sion on receipt of the request. State Administrative
Court must decide on the application no later than
21 (twenty one) working days after the application
is submitted. State Administrative Court decision is
final and binding, there are no other legal remedies.
Government Agencies and / or Officers must deter-
mine the Decree to implement the State Administra-
tive Court decision no later than 5 (five) working days
since the decision of the Court is determined. (Lim-
bong, 2012)
3.3 Form of Decision
he decision made by the Judge on land disputes that
entered throughout 2014 to 20 18 consisted of:
a 4 (four) cases with a ’Grant’ decision
b 1 (one) case with a ’Granting Partly’ verdict
c 1 (one) case with the decision ‘Refusing’
d 6 (six) cases with the decision of ’NO (Niet On-
varkelijkVerklaard)’ or ’cannot be accepted
The decisions on land disputes are explained in
detail as follows
1 4 (four) cases with a ’Grant’ decision There are
4 (four) State Administrative Court decisions that
grant all plaintiffs requests. Formally the plain-
tiffs request against State Administrative Court
can be grouped into 2 (two), the first is the main
lawsuit, namely requesting State Administrative
Court to cancel / revoke the disputed state admin-
istration decision letter and the second, an addi-
tional lawsuit consisting of requesting a new ad-
ministrative decision, request for compensation
and the last request for rehabilitation.
a dispute based on the fact that the issuance
of the dispute object was flawed in proce-
dure, the Judge declared the object of the
dispute null or invalid and ordered the revo-
cation of the object of dispute. ( Dispute
No.05/G/2015/PTUN.YK,
b on the fact that the issuance of the dispute
object was flawed in procedure and violated
AAUPB, especially the principle of accuracy
Juridical Review of Land Dispute Decisions in the Administrative Court of Yogyakarta
105
and the principle of legal certainty. (Dispute
No.26/G/2015/PTUN.YK),
c based on the consideration of a District Court
decision that had to be carried out, because the
object of the dispute was considered juridical
defect in material and formal aspects so that it
was deemed invalid or invalid and had to be re-
voked(Dispute No. 18/G/2017/PTUN.YK)
d based on the reasons for discovering various
procedural defects and violations of the Gen-
eral Principles of Good Governance in the is-
suance of the object of the dispute, (Dispute
No.01/G/2018/PTUN.YK)
2 1 (one) case with a ’Granting Partly’ verdict be-
cause the object of the lawsuit was proven legally
and convincingly to contain material defects that
is contrary to the laws and regulations of Arti-
cle 19 paragraph (1) of the Basic Agrarian Law.
Therefore, the object of the dispute is declared
void or invalid and must be revoked by the De-
fendant, and the Defendant is ordered to follow
up on the Plaintiffs request. Meanwhile the de-
mands besides and the rest were rejected by the
Panel of Judges.
3 1 (one) case with the decision ‘Refusing’ with
consideration of finding evidence that the Certifi-
cate of Property Rights that would be encumbered
by the Underwriting Right had the status of inher-
itance which had not been divided and was still
blocked.. Therefore, the Defendant / Head of the
Sleman Regency Land Office refuses to issue the
Mortgage Certificate submitted by the Plaintiff.
4 6 (six) cases with the decision of ’NO (Niet Onva-
rkelijkVerklaard)’ or ’cannot be accepted’ Judges’
considerations for deciding ”NO” or ”Unaccept-
able” lawsuit from the defendant can be detailed
as follows
a Dispute Number 02 / G / 2014 / PTUN.YK This
dispute was decided ‘NO’ or ‘unacceptable’ by
the Panel of Judges for several reasons. The
first reason is because of absolute competence,
that aside from State Administrative Court of
Yogyakarta, it turns out that this dispute was
also registered in the Yogyakarta District Court.
The second reason is that this lawsuit has no
legal basis or legal standing. The third reason
is because the lawsuit is subject to declarative
(declanatoir) exceptions (because of absolute or
relative competence of the court) and premor-
tal (premetoir) exceptions because they have
passed the deadline or have expired. The fourth
reason is because the plurium litis consortium,
that the Plaintiff acknowledges that there are
other heirs who are entitled, so this lawsuit is
lacking of parties.
b Dispute Number 09 / G / 2014 / PTUN.YK This
dispute was decided ‘NO’ or ‘unacceptable’ on
the grounds that the Plaintiff did not have a di-
rect relationship with the object of the dispute.
The arguments and evidence are considered ir-
relevant with the case and object of the dispute.
Based on that, the lawsuit is considered to have
no legal standing.
c Dispute Number 10 / G / 2014 / PTUN.YK This
dispute was decided ‘NO’ or ‘unacceptable’ on
the grounds that the State Administrative Court
was not authorized to examine, decide on and
resolve the dispute in lititis. This means that the
dispute is not the absolute authority of the Yo-
gyakarta Administrative Court but the absolute
authority of the Religious Court because the
subject of the dispute is actually an inheritance
case. The Panel of Judges is of the opinion that
the subject matter of the dispute in casu does
not need to be further considered and legally,
the Plaintiffs claim has legal grounds to be de-
clared not accepted.)
d Dispute Number 22 / G / 2015 / PTUN.YK The
Panel of Judges decided that this dispute was
not accepted or ’NO’ for various reasons. The
first reason is because the lawsuit has expired.
The second reason is because the claim does
not have a legal standing because the plaintiffs
claim does not explain the origin of the object
of thedispute, so there is actually no legal re-
lationship between the Plaintiff and the object
of the dispute. The third reason is because ob-
scuur libel lawsuit because there is no correla-
tion between the title of the claim, the basis of
the claim (posita), and the claim (petitum).
e Dispute Number 16 / G / 2017 / PTUN.YK This
dispute was decided by the Yogyakarta State
Administrative Court Judge with the ‘NO’ ar-
gument based on the reason that the lawsuit has
expired. This fact is known at the time of ex-
amination of the subject matter of the dispute,
namely at the examination of evidence and wit-
nesses, where the evidence and witnesses show
conclusively that the Plaintiff has known about
the object of the dispute in advance and has
passed the time limit of the claim.
f Dispute Number 26 / G / 2017 / PTUN.YK
The Panel of Judges decided ‘NO’ on this dis-
pute because it considered that this dispute was
not a State Administration dispute but a dispute
of ownership (civil) therefore State Administra-
tive Court was not in an authority to try it.
ICASESS 2019 - International Conference on Applied Science, Engineering and Social Science
106
From these data it is known that the Yogyakarta
State Administrative Court Judges very often decide
cases that contain land disputes with a decision ‘NO’
or niet ontvankelijke verklaard. The ’NO’ verdict is a
ruling stating that the claim cannot be accepted on the
grounds that the claim contains formal defects. The
causes of formal defects in the lawsuit are, among
other things, because the lawsuit does not meet the
requirements given in Article 123 paragraph (1) HIR
j.o. SEMA No. 4 of 1996, in the form of:
1 A claim has no legal basis or legal standing;
2 An error in persona suit in the form of disqualifi-
cation or plurium litis consortium;
3 Claims containing defects or obscuur libel; or
4 The suit violates absolute or relative competence.
The ’NO’ decision at the Yogyakarta State Ad-
ministrative Court often occurs because the Judge is
not sure yet, or there is no convincing evidence, to
fulfill dismissal as stipulated in Article 62. The reg-
istered claim is often made in such a way by the Ad-
vocate, as if it should be examined to the point of the
matter. After examining the subject matter, through
verification and examination of witnesses, it was dis-
covered that the exception was the object of the dis-
pute. For this kind of outcome, the Judge will in-
evitably have to give a ’NO’ or ’unacceptable’ verdict
after the main examination.
The mandate of SEMA Number 4 of 2014 does
require the Judge to be careful and not careless in giv-
ing a decision ”NO” in dismissal. This is related to
the 90 day lawsuit that is feared to be missed so that
the lawsuit is not subject to questioning only because
the lawsuit has to be filed repeatedly as a result of not
passing the dismissal.
The basis for granting the “NO” verdict can be
seen in the Indonesian Supreme Court Jurisprudence
No. 1149 / K / Sip / 1975 dated 17 April 1975 j.o.
Decision of the Supreme Court of the Republic of In-
donesia No. 565 / K / Sip / 1973 dated August 21,
1973 j.o. Decision of the Supreme Court of the Re-
public of Indonesia No 1149 / K / Sip / 1979 dated
April 7, 1979 which states that against the object of
the claim that is not clear, the claim cannot be ac-
cepted. In the State Administrative Judiciary, regard-
ing the “NO” verdict is regulated in Article 77 of the
TUN Judicial Law (51/2009) that basically a decision
cannot be accepted because of an exception. The ex-
ception is three categories, namely:
1 The exception of the absolute authority of the
Court, can be filed at any time during the exam-
ination, and although there is no exception to the
Court’s absolute authority (from the Defendant),
if the Judge is aware of it, he is obliged to declare
that the Court is not authorized to adjudicate the
dispute;
2 Exception of the relative authority of the Court,
submitted before being given an answer to the
subjectmatter of the dispute, and the exception
must be decided before the dispute is examined;
3 Other exceptions that do not concern the Court’s
authority can only be decided along with the sub-
ject matter of the dispute.
The fact that occurs in society, there is still confu-
sion or misunderstanding of the community in deter-
mining a land case in the realm of the General Court
or State Administrative Court.
At present, there are three justice systems that
can handle a land case, namely Civil Court, Criminal
Court and State Administrative Court. Land cases can
be an accumulation of civil, state administration, or
criminal cases at the same time. (Simanjuntak, 2017)
In general, land disputes can be resolved either
through civil or religious justice (if it involves own-
ership of land rights), criminal justice (if the criminal
element is contained in the dispute), or administra-
tive justice (if it involves the validity of land rights).
The liquidation of the jurisdictional authority bound-
aries in resolving land issues makes the land prob-
lem a gray legal area. This ambiguity can be seen
from the problematic relationship between adminis-
trative law and civil law in solving land issues. In
such conditions, it is often not easy to determine the
meaning of ”certificate validity” or ”certificate own-
ership” for both the General Court and the State Ad-
ministrative Court. Both in the context of the Gen-
eral Courts and the Religious Courts, in civil disputes
involving land related to land titles, the Court often
states that the ”legality” and land title certificates are
first tested by State Administrative Court. Likewise
on the contrary, the plural found by the State Admin-
istrative Court stated that the General Court must first
decide the matter of ownership, even if the sued is the
validity of a certificate.
4 CONCLUSIONS
Based on the results of research and discussion on
Land Dispute Settlement through the State Adminis-
trative Court in Yogyakarta, conclusions can be drawn
as follows:
1 Land disputes handled by the Yogyakarta State
Administrative Court can be determined by two
variables, namely: (a) based on the subject (Plain-
tiff and Defendant), and (b) based on the object of
Juridical Review of Land Dispute Decisions in the Administrative Court of Yogyakarta
107
the dispute:The results showed that land disputes
handled by the Yogyakarta State Administrative
Court, 11 from 12 lawsuits, when it is viewed
from the subjects (Plaintiffs and Defendants), the
one who sued were individuals and only one is
a Private Legal Entity, while the defendant is the
Head of the Land Office and Village Chief. Most
of the objects of the dispute are the Land Certifi-
cates , the Decree of Giving Rights and the silence
of the officials (negative fictitious). This nega-
tive fictitious dispute object no longer exists after
the Act No. 30 of 2014, because the provisions
regarding negative fiction have been changed to
positive fictitious provisions. However, because
fictitious positive State Administrative decisions
are relatively less published than negative fictions,
even positive fictional claims to the State Admin-
istrative Court are less frequent. Until this re-
search was conducted, there was no land suit that
consisted of Positive Fictitious decisions that en-
tered the Yogyakarta Administrative Court.
2 The fundamentals of the lawsuit in each land dis-
pute in the Yogyakarta State Administrative Court
can generally be grouped into 3 (three) groups,
namely the Plaintiff feels his rights and interests
are harmed because:
a The object of dispute (State Administrative De-
cree) issued contains material defects;
b The object of dispute (State Administrative De-
cree) issued contains formal defects; and
c The object of dispute (State Administrative De-
cree) issued ignores Good Governance Princi-
ples.
3 The decision made by the Judge on land disputes
that entered throughout 2014 to 2018 consisted of:
4 (four) cases with a ’Grant’ decision1 (one) case
with a ’Granting Partly’ verdict
1 (one) case with the decision ‘Refusing’
6 (six) cases with the decision of ’NO (Niet
OnvarkelijkVerklaard)’ or ’cannot be accepted
The form of the decision of the Yogyakarta Ad-
ministrative Court which adjudicates land dis-
putes is mostly in the form of a ”NO” verdicts,
which are as many as 6 out of 12 disputes. This
happened because the lawsuit registered was of-
ten made in such a way by the Advocates, as if
it should be examined up to the point of the case.
After examining the subject matter, through veri-
fication and examination of witnesses, it was dis-
covered that the exception was the object of the
dispute.
REFERENCES
Abdullah, H. U. (2010). Beberapa aspek dalam hukum ma-
teriil dan hukum formal peradilan tata usaha negara.
Istijab, I. (2018). Penyelesaian sengketa tanah sesudah
berlakunya undang-undang pokok agraria. Widya
Yuridika, 1(1).
kompas.com (2018). Ombudsman: Sengketa tanah aduan
paling tinggi dalam bidang pertanahan.
Limbong, B. (2012). Konflik pertanahan. Margaretha Pus-
taka.
Putrijanti, A. (2015). Kewenangan serta obyek sengketa di
peradilan tata usaha negara setelah ada uu no. 30/2014
tentang administrasi pemerintahan. Masalah-Masalah
Hukum, 44(4):425–430.
Putrijanti, A. and Leonard, L. T. (2019). Kompetensi per-
atun untuk memeriksa unsur penyalahgunaan wewe-
nang. Jurnal IUS Kajian Hukum dan Keadilan,
7(1):107–127.
SANTOSO, B. T. and SADJIJONO, N. (2018). Keputu-
san fiktif positif sebagai bentuk reformasi birokrasi
berdasarkan prinsip good governance/fictive positive
decision as a form of bureaucratic reform based on the
good governance principles. Jurnal Hukum Peratun,
1(1).
Setiawan, Y. and Hadiatmodjo, B. D. Cacat yuridis dalam
prosedur sebagai alasan pembatalan sertifikat hak atas
tanah oleh pradilan tata usaha negara. Jurnal Equality,
13.
Simanjuntak, E. (2017). Esensi sengketa administrasi per-
tanahan di peradilan tata usaha negara. BHUMI: Jur-
nal Agraria dan Pertanahan, 3(2):171–188.
Syaha, A. (2016). Eksistensi peradilan tata usaha negara
(ptun) dalam mewujudkan suatu pemerintahan yang
baik. Justice Pro: Jurnal Ilmu Hukum, 3(2).
Wahyunadi, Y. M. (2016). Kompetensi absolut pengadi-
lan tata usaha negara dalam konteks undang-undang
nomor 30 tahun 2014 tentang administrasi pemerinta-
han. Jurnal Hukum dan Peradilan, 5(1):135–154.
ICASESS 2019 - International Conference on Applied Science, Engineering and Social Science
108