Appellate Authority cannot dismiss appeal without reasons even if Appellant is absent (Ex-Parte)
Issue
Whether an Appellate Authority can dismiss an appeal via a non-speaking order without addressing the specific grounds raised in the appeal memo, solely because the appellant failed to appear for the personal hearing.
Facts
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Background: The petitioner, a registered taxpayer, applied for voluntary cancellation of GST registration due to cessation of business.
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Adjudication: The Department rejected the application and instead issued a “one-line” Show Cause Notice (SCN) proposing retrospective cancellation. A cancellation order followed.
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The Appeal: The petitioner filed an appeal under Section 107, challenging the cancellation on the grounds of vagueness of the SCN and violation of natural justice.
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The Hearing: The petitioner failed to appear on the scheduled dates for the personal hearing.
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The Impugned Order: Consequently, the Appellate Authority proceeded ex parte and affirmed the cancellation. The order did not discuss the grounds raised by the petitioner and merely echoed the original order.
Decision
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Duty to Adjudicate: The High Court held that while the Appellate Authority was within its rights to proceed ex parte due to the petitioner’s non-appearance, it was not absolved of its duty to apply its mind to the grounds of appeal already on record.
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Quasi-Judicial Obligation: As a quasi-judicial authority, the Appellate Authority must pass a “speaking order” (reasoned order). It must determine the points raised in the appeal memo even if the appellant is not physically present to argue them.
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Rubber-Stamping Invalid: Merely affirming the lower authority’s decision without independent reasoning renders the appellate order invalid.
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Ruling: The appellate order was set aside, and the matter was remanded for a fresh decision on merits.
Key Takeaways
Written Grounds are Permanent: Your “Grounds of Appeal” in Form GST APL-01 are critical. Even if you miss the hearing, the officer is legally bound to read and adjudicate upon the written arguments you submitted.
Ex-Parte vs. Dismissal for Default: In GST (unlike civil courts), the authority usually decides the case on merits based on records if the appellant is absent. They generally cannot dismiss the appeal “in default” (for non-prosecution) without examining the case files.

