CGST Act – India Legal https://www.indialegallive.com Your legal news destination! Sat, 21 Oct 2023 16:57:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://d2r2ijn7njrktv.cloudfront.net/IL/uploads/2020/12/16123527/cropped-IL_Logo-1-32x32.jpg CGST Act – India Legal https://www.indialegallive.com 32 32 183211854 Allahabad High Court says petitioner cannot argue case beyond pleadings once finding of fact recorded against assessee https://www.indialegallive.com/constitutional-law-news/courts-news/allahabad-high-court-petitioner-fact-finding-assessee/ Fri, 20 Oct 2023 16:29:36 +0000 https://www.indialegallive.com/?p=323221 Allahabad High CourtThe Allahabad High Court while dismissing the petition said that “once the finding of fact, which has been recorded against the assessee has not been assailed in the petition, the petitioner cannot be permitted to argue the case beyond the pleadings”. A Single Bench of Justice Piyush Agrawal passed this order while hearing a petition […]]]> Allahabad High Court

The Allahabad High Court while dismissing the petition said that “once the finding of fact, which has been recorded against the assessee has not been assailed in the petition, the petitioner cannot be permitted to argue the case beyond the pleadings”.

A Single Bench of Justice Piyush Agrawal passed this order while hearing a petition filed by M/S Millennium Impex Pvt Ltd.

By means of the petition, the petitioner is assailing the order dated 31.8.2020 passed by respondent no 1 in Appeal A.Y 2019-20 dismissing the appeal filed by the petitioner.

The facts of the case are that the petitioner is a registered company incorporated under the Companies Act, as well as duly certified by ISO 9001:2015.

The petitioner is a verified seller of supreme quality of metal seated zero leakage Ball Valves and purchaser of Ball Valve, Diaphragm Valves in bulk. In the normal course of business, the petitioner has made outward supply of Rotor Assembly Elmo and Complete Assy-CL 3001 to NTPC Ltd, Ramagundam Super Thermal Power Station, P.O Jyotinagar, Distt Pedapalli, Telangana vide Tax Invoice dated 14.8.2019 and the said goods were being transported from New Delhi to Telangana via Agra, U.P , where the same was intercepted by respondent no 2 at Saiyan, Agra, U.P on 16.8.2019 and after physical verification of the goods, it was found that part B of the e-way bill accompanying with the goods, was not filled on which notice was issued proposing to impose tax @ 18 % i.e Rs 14,63,063/- along with equal amount of penalty.

Thereafter on deposit of impugned tax along with penalty, the goods in question were released and respondent no 2 vide order dated 21.8.2019 passed the penalty order in Form GST MOV 09 under Section 20 of IGST read with Section 129 (3) of CGST Act observing that part B of e-way bill was not filled, hence the seizure of the goods was valid.

Feeling aggrieved to the said order, the petitioner has filed an appeal which was dismissed by respondent no 1 by order dated 31.8.2020.

Counsel for the petitioner submitted that goods in question were sold by one registered dealer to another registered dealer and the same was accompanied with genuine tax invoices, GR, e-way bill; the authorities ought not to have seized the goods on technical glitch.

He further submitted that merely because part B of e-way bill was not filled, which was required to be filled by the transporter, the proceedings had wrongly been initiated against the petitioner.

It was further argued that there was no intention to evade the payment of tax; once the authorities have not recorded any finding of fact in respect of any intention to evade the payment of tax, the impugned order is not justified in the eyes of law and same is liable to the quashed.

Per contra, Rishi Kumar, A.C.S.C has supported the impugned order and submitted that it is admitted fact that at the time of interception of goods, the documents which were produced by the petitioner, after verification of the same, it was found that part -B of e- way bill was not filled and the same is in contravention of the provisions of the Act, therefore, proceeding has rightly been initiated.

It was further argued that after detention of the goods a show cause notice was issued to which no reply was submitted by the petitioner to explain the fact that under what circumstances, part -B of the eway bill was not filled. The amount was deposited and goods were released on the next date, which shows that there was contravention of the provisions as contemplated under the Act.

The Court noted that,

Admittedly, the goods were intercepted during transportation from New Delhi to Telangana at Agra, U.P and after verification of the documents produced, it was found that part- B of the e- way bill was left blank thereafter a show cause notice was issued to the petitioner but the petitioner has not submitted any explanation for the same. But on deposit of tax along with penalty, the goods were released on 27.8.2019.

The petitioner has not submitted any explanation up to the stage of this Court that under what circumstances, part B of the e-way bill was not filled. The demand raised against the petitioner was challenged in the appeal but the same has been dismissed by the impugned order dated 31.8.2020. The petitioner has not assigned any reason, whatsoever, for not complying with the provisions under Rule 138.

An argument has been raised by the counsel for the petitioner that there was no intention to avoid the payment of tax or any finding has been recorded by the authorities below in this respect.

The Court observed that,

He has relied upon para 3 and 5 of the grounds of appeal filed before the first appellate authority.

On perusal of the impugned order, it shows that the petitioner pressed only two grounds taken in the appeal. Further not a single word has been whispered in the writ petition about the said argument, as such the petitioner’s counsel cannot be permitted to argue the case without any pleading in the writ petition.

On perusal of the judgements of the Apex Court as well as this Court, it has been held that the petitioner cannot be permitted to argue the case without there being any pleading in support of his arguments.

No rebuttal / rejoinder affidavit has been filed by the petitioner controverting the said assertions made in the counter affidavit and on the other hand on 16.10.2023, a statement was made on behalf of the petitioner that the petitioner did not propose to file any rejoinder affidavit.

“Once the finding of fact, which has been recorded against the assessee has not been assailed in the petition, the petitioner cannot be permitted to argue the case beyond the pleadings. In view of the aforesaid facts, the case law as well as circular relied upon by the petitioner are of no help to him.

In view of the facts as stated above, no interference is called for by the Court in the impugned order”, the Court further observed while dismissing the petition.

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Levy of tax and penalty cannot be based upon the presumption: Allahabad High Court https://www.indialegallive.com/constitutional-law-news/courts-news/lev-tax-presumption-allahabad-high-court/ Thu, 03 Nov 2022 07:42:01 +0000 https://www.indialegallive.com/?p=289958 Allahabad High CourtAllahabad High Court while dismissing a petition of the U.P. state Secretary said that in provisions of Section 129 it is well settled that the levy of tax and penalty cannot be based upon the presumption, especially in cases where the goods were accompanied by a tax invoice and E-way bill.]]> Allahabad High Court

The Allahabad High Court has dismissed the petition saying that in provisions of Section 129 it is well settled that the levy of tax and penalty cannot be based upon the presumption, especially in cases where the goods were accompanied by a tax invoice and E-way bill.

A Single Bench of Justice Pankaj Bhatia passed this order while hearing a petition filed by the State Of U.P through Secretary.

The petition has been filed challenging the order dated 22.06.2019 passed by the appellate authority whereby the demand of tax and penalty imposed vide order dated 17.05.2019 under Section 129(3) of the CGST Act was set aside.

The facts of the case are that the goods being transported by the respondent were intercepted on 28.04.2019 at about 21:31 hours on the intelligence received by the petitioners that the goods were being transported on the basis of tax invoices which were pre used.

After the interception, the statement of the truck driver was recorded. Based upon the said statement, the authorities proceeded to pass an order under Section 129(3) of the CGST Act after serving the copy of the notice to the respondent, whereby the respondents were directed to pay the tax on the goods being transported amounting to Rs 7,23,700/- and further cess of Rs 19,05,024/-.

The said order was challenged by the respondents by preferring an appeal.

The Court noted that the appellate authority by means of the impugned order held that there was no material available with the authorities concerned for detention and seizure of the goods, for passing the orders under Section 129 (3) of the CGST Act. While deciding the appeal, the appellate authority after referring to the provisions of Section 129 held that it is well settled that the levy of tax and penalty cannot be based upon the presumption.

The Counsel for the petitioner argued that the petitioners had received intelligence that the goods are being transported twice over on the same set of invoices. The said argument, in the case in hand, is not worthy of acceptance, inasmuch as, the goods to be transported have to be accompanied by E-way bills as provided under Section 138 of the Rules framed under CGST Act and this fact that the said set of E-way bills would use neither emerged in the assessment order nor is there any basis to arrive at the conclusion that the appellate authority rightly allowed the appeal preferred by the respondent and directed for release of goods and the transport vehicle.

The Court further noted that the plain reading of the provisions of CGST Act makes it clear that the provisions as contained in Chapter 19 including Section 129 are the provisions for release of goods intercepted during transportation on the ground as engrafted therein and provides an opportunity to the assessee to take the benefit and to come forward for release of the goods on payment of the amounts as indicated in Section 129 (1)(a)(b) and (c) as the case may be. The quantum of penalty which is to be paid under Section 129 (1)(a)(b) and (c) is to be determined under Section 129(3) of the CGST Act.

The said power is purely an alternate mode given to the assessees to come forward and to avoid any future litigation and to offer and pay the amount. If the assessee does not avail the benefit as accrue from Section 129, the department is clearly free to take recourse under Chapter 15 read with Section 122 of the CGST Act to take steps for determining the tax due liability and the penalty, the Court said.

“In the case, as the respondent has not approached for availing the benefit that flow from Section 129, coupled with the fact that the appellate authority found that the basis for initiating proceedings were non-existent, I do not see any reason to interfere with the order passed by the appellate authority, in exercise of powers under Section 226 of the Constitution of India”, the Court observed while dismissing the petition.

The Court ordered that the interim order passed earlier is vacated.

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Supreme Court upholds validity of Rule 89 (5) of CGST Rules 2017 under GST law https://www.indialegallive.com/constitutional-law-news/supreme-court-news/supreme-court-upholds-validity-of-rule-89-5-of-cgst-rules-2017-under-gst-law/ Mon, 13 Sep 2021 14:19:20 +0000 https://www.indialegallive.com/?p=209529 Supreme CourtThe Supreme Court on Monday upheld the validity of Rule 89(5) of the CGST Rules 2017 in case of inverted duty structure under the Goods and Services Tax law.]]> Supreme Court

The Supreme Court on Monday upheld the validity of Rule 89(5) of the CGST Rules 2017 in case of inverted duty structure under the Goods and Services Tax law.

The Division Bench of Justices D.Y. Chandrachud and M.R. Shah passed this verdict, while disposing of a bunch of petitions, which arose from the verdicts of the High Courts of Gujarat and Madras. The Gujarat High Court had held that Explanation (a) to Rule 89(5) of the CGST Rules 2017 was ultra vires, while a contrary view was taken by the High Court of Madras.

The Gujarat High Court had said that Rule 89 was violative of Article 14 of Constitution of India in as much as it treats dealers with accumulated credit on input goods and dealers with accumulated credit on input services differently.

On the other hand, the Madras High Court in the case of Tvl Transtonnelstroy Afcons joint venture vs Union of India held that 54(3)(ii) does not infringe Article 14 and thus refund of only inputs is available under inverted duty structure (IDV) (Section 54(3)(ii). This judgment is in contrast to the Gujarat high court verdict in case of VKC Footsteps.

Parliament, while enacting the Central Goods and Services Tax Act 2017, has incorporated a provision for refund of tax in Section 54. Sub-Section (3) embodies a provision for refund of unutilized input tax credit2 in cases involving: 
(i) zero rated supplies made without payment of tax; and 
(ii) credit accumulation “on account of rate of tax on inputs being higher than rate of tax on output supplies”.

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While envisaging a refund in the latter of the above two situations, Parliament was cognizant of the fact that ITC may accumulate due to a variety of reasons. However, Parliament envisaged a specific situation where the credit has accumulated due to an inverted duty structure, that is where the accumulation of ITC is because the rate of tax on inputs is higher than the rate of tax on output supplies. Taking legislative note of this situation, a provision for refund has been provided for in Section 54(3). The Central Goods and Service Tax Rules 20173 have been formulated in pursuance of the rule making power conferred by Section 164 of the CGST Act. Rule 89(5) provides a formula for the refund of ITC, in “a case of refund on account of inverted duty structure”. The said formula uses the term “Net ITC”. In defining the expression “Net ITC”, Rule 89(5) speaks of “input tax credit availed on inputs”.

Writ petitions under Article 226 of the Constitution were instituted before the High Court of Gujarat and the High Court of Judicature at Madras. The petitioners before the High Court submitted inter alia:

(i) Section 54(3) allows for a refund of ITC where the accumulation is due to an inverted duty structure; 
(ii) ITC includes the credit of input tax charged on the supply of goods as well as services; 

(iii) Section 54(3) does not restrict the entitlement of refund only to unutilized ITC which is accumulated due to the rate of tax on inputs being higher than the rate of tax on output supplies. It also allows for refund of unutilized ITC when the rate of tax on input services is higher than the rate of tax on output supplies; 
(iv) While Section 54(3) allows for a refund of ITC originating in inputs as well as input services, Rule 89(5) is ultra vires in so far as it excludes tax on input services from the purview of the formula; and 
(v) In the event that Section 54(3) is interpreted as a restriction against a claim for refund of accumulated ITC by confining it only to tax on inputs, it would be unconstitutional as it would lead to discrimination between inputs and input services.

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N Venkataraman,  Additional Solicitor General, led the arguments on behalf of the Union Government in assailing the correctness of the decision of the Gujarat High Court (and supporting the decision of Madras High Court).

Venkataraman urged that:
(i) Goods and services are distinct at a constitutional level. Article 366(12) of the Constitution defines goods, while Section 366(26A) defines services. Under the CGST Act, the expression ‘input’ in Section 2(59) means tangible commodities other than capital goods, while on the other hand ‘input service’ in Section 2(60) means any service used or intended to be used by a supplier for business. Hence, ‘goods’ and ‘services’ and ‘inputs’ and ‘input services’ have distinct definitions; 
(ii) Article 366(12A) defines ‘goods and services tax’ to mean any tax on the supply of goods or services or both except taxes on the supply of alcoholic liquor for human consumption , 
(iii) Article 246A, which traces the source of power of taxation and identifies the fields of taxation, empowers the Parliament, the States and Union Territories to impose simultaneous tax both on goods and services. Consequently, though goods and services are brought to tax under a common code, both the Constitution and the statute have maintained a distinction between goods and services. They remain distinct for prescription, treatment and interpretation; 
(iv) Section 2(62) and Section 2(63) define ‘input tax’ and ‘input tax credit’ which include taxes paid on goods (input goods) and services (input services) either under CGST, State Goods and Services Tax Act10 and Integrated Goods and Services Tax Act 201711; 
(v) Input tax means a tax charged both on goods and services. These are taxes paid by a supplier on their outward supplies as defined under Section 2(83) which become inward supply for the recipient under Section 2(67); and 
(vi) The need to integrate both taxes on input goods and input services is to enable credit on a single pool for further cross utilization on both goods and services.

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Legal Propositions

Article 265 of the Constitution provides that no tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law. There being no challenge either to the levy or collection of taxes in these cases, taxes paid into the coffers of the Union Government or the States become the property of the Union/States. The refund of taxes is neither a fundamental right nor a constitutional right. The Constitution only guarantees that the levy should be legal and that the collection should be in accordance with law. There is no constitutional right to refund. Refund is always a matter of a statutory prescription and can be regulated by the statute subject to conditions and limitations.
The submission which has been urged on behalf of the assessee is that:-
(i) The assessee is, inter alia, engaged in the manufacture and supply of footwear which attracts output tax (goods and services tax14) at the rate of 5%; 
(ii) The assessee, inter alia, procures input goods such as synthetic leather, PU Polyol and input services such as job work service, goods transport agency service on payment of applicable GST for use in the course of business and avails ITC on the GST paid thereon. A majority of the input goods and input services attract tax at the rate of 12% or 18%; 
(iii) The rate of GST paid by the assessee on procurement of input goods and input services is higher than the rate of tax payable on their outward supply of footwear. Therefore, despite utilization of credit for payment of GST on outward supply, there is an accumulation of unutilized ITC in the electronic credit ledger of the assessee; 
(iv) The assessee applied for refund of such unutilised accumulated ITC under Section 54(3) of the CGST Act read with Rule 89(5) of the CGST Rules; 
(v) Rule 89(5) of the CGST Rules as originally enacted provided for refund of ITC availed on both inputs (that is input goods) and input services and was in line with Section 54(3) of the CGST Act. Accordingly, the assessee was granted refund of such unutilised ITC; 
(vi) Rule 89(5) was substituted by Notification No. 21/2018-CT dated 18 April 2018 prescribing a revised formula for determining the refund on account of inverted duty structure. The above substitution was given retrospective effect from 1 July 2017 by Notification No. 26/2018-CT dated 13 June 2018; 
(vii) The revised formula inter alia excludes ‘input services’ from the scope of ‘Net ITC’ for computation of the refund amount under the said Rule; 
(viii) The substituted Rule 89(5) of the CGST Rules denies refund on the unutilised ITC availed on input services and allows relief of refund of ITC availed on input goods alone; 
(ix) The Revenue is relying on amended Rule 89(5) to contend that refund will not be allowed on taxes paid on input services; and 
(x) The Revenue is allowing refund of accumulated ITC of tax paid on input goods such as synthetic leather, and PU Polyol. Further, the Revenue is allowing accumulation of ITC paid on procurement of input services such as job work service and goods transport agency service. However, the refund of accumulated unutilized ITC paid on input services is being denied and refund already granted has been recovered from the assessee.

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The Court observed that if the provision of law is explicitly clear, language unambiguous and interpretation leaves no room for more than one construction, it has to be read as it is. In that case, the provision of law has to be tested on the touchstone of the relevant provisions of law or of the Constitution and it is not open to a court to invoke the doctrine of “reading down” with a view to save the statute from declaring it ultra vires by carrying it to the point of “perverting the purposes of the statute.
The court said that the legislature has made the distinction for claims of refunds clear and added: “With reference to exports, the ITC on input goods and input services brought in the fold of the Act in contrast with domestic supplies.” “While discharging function, the GST Council will be guided by the need for harmonized structure for GST,” the court said in its order. The court also said the second stage cascading effects of GST must be kept in mind. The SC further added that the dual system of GST law operates within the federal structure and has to be progressively realized.
The Apex Court further said that the formula is not ambiguous in nature or unworkable, nor is it opposed to the intent of the legislature in granting limited refund on the accumulation of unutilized ITC. It is merely the case that the practical effect of the formula might result in certain inequities. The reading down of the formula as proposed by Mr Natarjan and Mr. Sridharan by prescribing an order of utilization would take this Court down the path of recrafting the formula and walk into the shoes of the executive or the legislature, which is impermissible. Accordingly, we shall refrain from replacing the wisdom of the legislature or its delegate with our own in such a case. However, given the anomalies pointed out by the assessees, we strongly urge the GST Council to reconsider the formula and take a policy decision regarding the same.
Having considered this batch of appeals, and for the reasons which have been adduced in this judgment, we affirm the view of the Madras High Court and disapprove of the view of the Gujarat High Court. We accordingly order and direct that: 
(i) The appeals 55 filed by the Union of India against the judgment of the Gujarat High Court dated 4 July 2020 in VKC Footsteps India Pvt. Ltd. (supra) and connected cases are allowed and the judgment shall be set aside; 
(ii) The appeals56 filed by the assessees against the judgment of the Madras High Court in Tvl Transtonnelstroy Afcons Joint Venture (supra) and connected cases dated September 21, 2020 shall stand dismissed. As a consequence, the writ petition filed by the assessees shall also stand dismissed. There shall no order as to costs; and 
(iii) The observations in paragraphs 104 to 111 shall be considered by the GST Council to enable it to take a considered view in accordance with law,” the order read.

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