Bona fide medical reasons justify remanding ex parte order despite failure to reply to SCN
Issue
Whether an ex parte adjudication order should be set aside and the matter remanded when the petitioner failed to reply to the Show Cause Notice (SCN) due to genuine personal difficulties (medical emergency), despite having replied to the pre-intimation notice.
Facts
Initial Compliance: The Revenue Department issued a pre-intimation in Form GST DRC-01A, to which the petitioner successfully submitted a reply.
Show Cause Notice: Subsequently, an SCN under Section 73 of the CGST/KGST Act was issued.
Non-Compliance: The petitioner failed to submit a reply to this specific SCN.
Ex Parte Order: Consequently, the Adjudicating Authority passed an ex parte order confirming the demand with interest and penalty, issuing a summary in Form DRC-07.
Reason for Default: The petitioner challenged the order, citing bona fide reasons: his father was suffering from prostate cancer, necessitating frequent travel to Odisha, which resulted in an inability to access the GST portal during the relevant period.
Relief Sought: The petitioner requested one more opportunity to contest the demand on its merits.
Decision
Justice-Oriented Approach: The High Court accepted the petitioner’s specific assertion of unavoidable circumstances and sufficient cause (medical emergency).
Merit over Technicality: The Court held that it was just and appropriate to adopt a justice-oriented approach rather than upholding the order solely on the technical ground of non-response.
Order Quashed: The impugned ex parte order and the DRC-07 summary were set aside.
Remand Directions: The matter was remitted to the Adjudicating Authority. The proceedings were restored to the stage of the petitioner submitting a reply to the SCN.
Imposition of Costs: The relief was granted subject to the petitioner paying a cost of Rs. 5,000 to the High Court Legal Services Authority, Bengaluru.
Key Takeaways
Humanitarian Grounds: Courts are willing to condone procedural lapses (like missing a reply deadline) if the assessee can demonstrate a “sufficient cause” such as a family medical emergency.
Prior Conduct Matters: The fact that the petitioner had replied to the earlier Intimation (DRC-01A) likely helped establish that the subsequent failure to reply to the SCN was not willful negligence.
Restoration with Costs: While Courts protect the right to be heard, they often impose monetary costs on the assessee to acknowledge the procedural delay caused to the Revenue.