Ignoring a Fresh Hearing Request After Additional Submissions Violates Section 75(4) and Natural Justice.
The Dispute: The “Mid-Adjudication” Silence
The Conflict: The petitioner followed the standard adjudication process, appearing for a personal hearing on July 11, 2025. However, the situation evolved:
The New Evidence: On August 14, 2025, the petitioner filed an additional reply raising entirely new grounds that were critical to the defense.
The Request: Along with this new reply, the petitioner explicitly requested a fresh personal hearing via email and written requests on July 21 and August 14.
The Breach: The Department ignored these later requests and passed the final order on August 20, 2025, relying solely on the old hearing from July 11 and ignoring the new reply altogether.
The Judicial Verdict: Mandate of Section 75(4)
The High Court ruled in favour of the Assessee, quashing the order based on the mandatory language of the law:
1. The “Adverse Decision” Trigger
The Court emphasized that under Section 75(4), a personal hearing is not a “gift” from the officer; it is a statutory right. The law says a hearing shall be granted in two independent scenarios:
Where a request is received in writing.
Where any adverse decision is contemplated.
Since the petitioner made a fresh request after filing a new reply, the officer was legally bound to provide a new hearing date.
2. Ignoring Additional Submissions
The Court noted that by passing an order without considering the reply filed on August 14, the officer failed in their duty of “fair adjudication.” An officer must consider all material on record before signing a final order. Ignoring a subsequent reply renders the order “cryptic” and “pre-decided.”
3. Meaningful vs. Formal Hearing
The judgment clarifies that natural justice requires a meaningful and effective hearing. A hearing held before a crucial defense is even filed cannot be considered “effective” for the points raised in that defense.
Strategic Takeaways for Taxpayers in 2026
The “Fresh Ground” Strategy: If you realize you missed a point during your first hearing, file an “Additional Submission” immediately and explicitly ask for a fresh hearing on those new points. This creates a strong “Natural Justice” shield.
Email Evidence: Always send your hearing requests via the registered email ID and upload them as “supporting documents” on the GST portal. This prevents the Department from claiming they never received the request.
Remand Advantage: Like this case, a successful Writ Petition usually leads to a “Remand.” This gives you a “clean slate” to argue your additional grounds before a potentially more careful officer.
Section 75(5) Adjournments: Remember, you are legally entitled to up to three adjournments. If the Department is rushing to pass an order before the limitation period (Section 73/74) ends, they cannot use the “approaching deadline” as an excuse to skip your hearing.
