HC Relegates Fraudulent ITC Case to Statutory Appeal; Writ Jurisdiction Declined Due to Complex Facts.
Issue
Whether a High Court should exercise its extraordinary writ jurisdiction under Article 226 to adjudicate a GST demand order involving complex allegations of fraudulent Input Tax Credit (ITC) and non-existent suppliers, or if the petitioner must exhaust the alternative statutory remedy of appeal under Section 107 of the CGST Act.
Facts
The Investigation: DGGI, Gurugram received intelligence regarding fraudulent ITC availment by five exporters. The investigation covered these exporters and their major suppliers, including the petitioner.
The Allegation: The petitioner had issued invoices to a firm named M/s SM Enterprises and availed ITC of approximately Rs. 89 lakhs.
Search Findings: A physical verification revealed that M/s SM Enterprises was non-existent at its registered premises.
Admission: The petitioner’s authorized representative admitted to issuing invoices to M/s SM Enterprises while delivering the goods to other locations (a typical characteristic of “bill trading”).
The Order: Based on the SCN and investigation, an Order-in-Original (OIO) was passed under Section 74 (fraud/suppression). It confirmed the demand for CGST/SGST, interest, and an equivalent penalty. A separate penalty was also imposed on the authorized representative.
The Challenge: The petitioner filed a writ petition challenging the OIO, the summary of demand (DRC-07), and the SCN.
Decision
The High Court dismissed the writ petition (ruling in favour of the Revenue on maintainability).
Writ Not Maintainable: The Court held that matters involving fraudulent ITC or GST evasion typically involve complex disputed facts and voluminous evidence. Such matters are best adjudicated by the statutory appellate authorities, not by a High Court in writ proceedings.
Exceptions Not Met: The Court noted that writ jurisdiction is usually reserved for cases involving a breach of fundamental rights, violation of natural justice, excess of jurisdiction, or a challenge to the vires of the Act. None of these exceptions applied here.
Parity with Co-Noticees: It was observed that co-noticees in the same proceedings had already been relegated to the statutory appeal remedy.
Relief Granted: While dismissing the writ, the Court granted the petitioner liberty to file a statutory appeal under Section 107 by 30 November 2025.
The Court directed the Appellate Authority not to dismiss the appeal on the ground of limitation, provided it is filed by this date with the requisite pre-deposit.
Key Takeaways
Fraud Cases belong in Appeal: High Courts are extremely reluctant to entertain writ petitions in cases alleging fraud, evasion, or fake invoicing (Section 74), as these require a deep dive into facts, evidence, and cross-examination, which is the domain of the Appellate Authority.
Alternate Remedy Rule: The “Rule of Alternate Remedy” is strictly applied in tax evasion cases to protect the interest of the exchequer and ensure due process.
Protection of Appeal Rights: Even when dismissing a writ petition as misdirected, High Courts often protect the taxpayer’s statutory right to appeal by condoning the delay caused by the writ litigation.
Admissions are Fatal: The admission by the authorized representative regarding the discrepancy between the invoice address and delivery location was a critical factual finding that weakened the petitioner’s case for writ intervention.
CM APPL. No. 52727 of 2025
| “(i) | I confirm the demand of TAX OF CGST of Rs.44,36,218/- & SGST of Rs.44,36,218/- on goods cleared clandestinely and order to recover the same from them under proviso to Section 74(1) along with interest payable thereon under Section 50 of the CGST Act, 2017 read with relevant provisions of the IGST Act, 2017, the Delhi State GST Act, 2017 & Section 11 of the GST (Compensation to States Act). |
| (ii) | Further, I impose penalty equivalent to the tax specified in (i) above upon them under Section 74 and Section 122 (1) of the CGST Act, 2017 read with relevant provisions of the IGST Act, 2017, the Delhi SGST Act, 2017 & Section 11 of the GST (Compensation to States Act). |
| (iii) | Further, I impose penalty upon Sh. Vinod Kumar Goyal, Authorized Representative of VMG Foods Pvt. Ltd under Section 74, 122(1) and 122(3) of the CGST/SGST Act, 2017 read with relevant provisions of the IGST Act, 2017, the Delhi SGST Act, 2017 & Section 11 of the GST (Compensation to States Act) 2017.” |
| 1. | W.P.(C) 6441/2025 | M/s Sheetal and Sons v. Union of India and Anr. |
| 2. | W.P.(C) 6443/2025 | Sunny Jagga v. Union of India &Anr. |
| 3. | W.P.(C) 6447/2025 | Sunny Jagga v. Union of India &Anr. |
| 4. | W.P.(C) 6449/2025 | M/s. Vikas Traders v. Union of India &Anr. |
| 5. | W.P.(C) 10921/2025 | M/s DK Enterprises Through Proprietor, Deepak Mittal v. Union of India Represented Through Secretary Dept of Revenue Ministry of Finance |
“11. The Court has considered the matter under Article 226 of the Constitution of India, which is an exercise of extraordinary writ jurisdiction. The allegations against the Petitioner in the impugned order are extremely serious in nature. They reveal the complex maze of transactions, which are alleged to have been carried out between various non-existent firms for the sake of enabling fraudulent availment of the ITC.
12. The entire concept of Input Tax Credit, as recognized under Section 16 of the CGST Act is for enabling businesses to get input tax on the goods and services which are manufactured/supplied by them in the chain of business transactions. The same is meant as an incentive for businesses who need not pay taxes on the inputs, which have already been taxed at the source itself. The said facility, which was introduced under Section 16 of the CGST Act is a major feature of the GST regime, which is business friendly and is meant to enable ease of doing business.
13. It is observed by this Court in a large number of writ petitions that this facility under Section 16 of the CGST Act has been misused by various individuals, firms, entities and companies to avail of ITC even when the output tax is not deposited or when the entities or individuals who had to deposit the output tax are themselves found to be not existent. Such misuse, if permitted to continue, would create an enormous dent in the GST regime itself.
14. As is seen in the present case, the Petitioner and his other family members are alleged to have incorporated or floated various firms and businesses only for the purposes of availing ITC without there being any supply of goods or services. The impugned order in question dated 30th January, 2025, which is under challenge, is a detailed order which consists of various facts as per the Department, which resulted in the imposition of demands and penalties. The demands and penalties have been imposed on a large number of firms and individuals, who were connected in the entire maze and not just the Petitioner.
15. The impugned order is an appealable order under Section 107 of the CGST Act. One of the co-noticees, who is also the son of the Petitioner i.e. Mr. Anuj Garg, has already appealed before the Appellate Authority.
16. Insofar as exercise of writ jurisdiction itself is concerned, it is the settled position that this jurisdiction ought not be exercised by the Court to support the unscrupulous litigants.
17. Moreover, when such transactions are entered into, a factual analysis would be required to be undertaken and the same cannot be decided in writ jurisdiction. The Court, in exercise of its writ jurisdiction, cannot adjudicate upon or ascertain the factual aspects pertaining to what was the role played by the Petitioner, whether the penalty imposed is justified or not, whether the same requires to be reduced proportionately in terms of the invoices raised by the Petitioner under his firm or whether penalty is liable to be imposed under Section 122(1) and Section 122(3) of the CGST Act.
18. The persons, who are involved in such transactions, cannot be allowed to try different remedies before different forums, inasmuch as the same would also result in multiplicity of litigation and could also lead to contradictory findings of different Forums, Tribunals and Courts. ”