No Double Jeopardy: General Penalty Dropped Where Specific Late Fee for Same Period Exists
The Legal Issue
Whether the GST Department can impose a General Penalty (Section 125) in addition to a Late Fee (Section 47) for the same tax period, and whether multiple assessment orders can impose redundant penalties for the same underlying default.
Facts of the Case
The Assessment: The petitioner challenged an assessment order (Form GST DRC-07) for the period 2021-2022.
Dual Levy: The order imposed two distinct financial charges:
A Late Fee of ₹1,67,200 for delayed return filing under Section 47.
A General Penalty of ₹50,000 under Section 125.
The Conflict: The petitioner pointed out a significant procedural error: another assessment order had already been passed for the same tax period, which had also imposed a ₹50,000 penalty. This resulted in a “double penalty” scenario for a single period of non-compliance.
The Decision (Madras High Court)
The Court provided relief by applying the principle that penal provisions must be specific and non-overlapping:
General Penalty is a “Fallback”: Section 125 (General Penalty) applies only where no specific penalty is provided in the Act. Since Section 47 specifically provides for a “Late Fee” to regularize delayed returns, invoking Section 125 for the same delay is legally impermissible.
Dropping the Duplicate Charge: Taking note of the two overlapping assessment orders, the Court ordered the dropping of the ₹50,000 general penalty.
Conditional Quashing: The Court maintained the liability for the Late Fee (₹1,67,200). It directed that:
The petitioner must pay the late fee within 30 days.
Upon payment, the impugned order would stand quashed and all recovery proceedings (like bank attachments) would be dropped.
Merit Review: The case was remanded to the Appellate Authority to pass a final order on the remaining merits of the assessment.
Outcome: Partly in favour of the assessee.
Key Takeaways for Taxpayers
The “Late Fee is Penalty” Rule: The Madras High Court has consistently ruled (e.g., in Kandan Hardware Mart) that a late fee is penal in nature. Therefore, imposing an additional general penalty for the same delay constitutes “Double Jeopardy.”
Check for Overlapping Orders: Always verify if the Department has issued multiple DRC-07s for the same period. This often happens when different modules (Return Filing vs. Scrutiny) trigger separate automated or manual proceedings.
Section 125 Limits: If your notice proposes a ₹25,000 CGST + ₹25,000 SGST penalty (total ₹50k) for simply filing returns late, you can contest it on the grounds that Section 47 is the only applicable provision for that specific default.
WMP NO. 2847, 2849 OF 2026
| Act | Late fee (Rs.) | Penalty (Rs.) | Total (Rs.) |
| CGST | 83600 | 25000 | 108600 |
| SGST | 83600 | 25000 | 108600 |
| Total | 167200 | 50000 | 217200 |