‘NEGATIVE BLOCKING’ OF ELECTRONIC CREDIT LEDGER UNDER RULE 86A IS ILLEGAL
ISSUE
Whether the Revenue authorities have the power under Rule 86A of the CGST Rules to block the Electronic Credit Ledger (ECL) of an assessee in excess of the balance actually available, thereby creating a “negative balance” (Negative Blocking), to secure potential future demands.
FACTS
The Action: On 02-09-2025, the Respondent authority invoked Rule 86A and blocked the Input Tax Credit (ITC) in the petitioner’s Electronic Credit Ledger.
The Anomaly: The blocking resulted in a negative balance in the ledger. The authority effectively blocked credit that the assessee had not yet earned or accumulated, anticipating future liabilities.
Assessee’s Plea: The petitioner contended that Rule 86A does not mandate or authorize the blocking of ITC in excess of what is currently standing to the credit of the registered dealer.
Legal Context: The authority argued that the provision is for emergent situations to prevent fraud and thus allows broad powers.
DECISION
Available Credit is Prerequisite: Relying on the decision in M/s Shyam Sunder Strips (Punjab & Haryana High Court, 2025), the Court held that Rule 86A enables the Commissioner to withhold only the “available” ITC.
No Negative Blocking: The concept of “negative blocking” is alien to Rule 86A. If there is no credit in the ledger (or insufficient credit), the authority cannot create a negative figure. The power to “disallow debit” presumes there is a debitable balance.
Recovery vs. Blocking: If the Department wants to recover an amount exceeding the available credit, it must resort to standard recovery measures (under Section 73 or 74) after following due process. It cannot use Rule 86A as a recovery tool for amounts not yet in the ledger.
No Prior SCN Needed: While the Court upheld that a prior Show Cause Notice (SCN) is not required for Rule 86A (due to the urgency of preventing fraud), the exercise of power is strictly limited to the positive balance available.
Verdict: The negative blocking was held to be impermissible. [In Favour of Assessee]
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Rule 86A Limitations: This rule is a temporary emergency measure, not a final demand. It freezes what you have, it cannot mortgage what you will earn.
Immediate Writ Remedy: If your portal shows a negative balance due to administrative blocking (preventing you from filing returns), this is a jurisdictional error. A Writ Petition is often the fastest remedy to unfreeze the ledger back to zero (or actual positive balance).
Payment of Tax: A negative ledger stops you from offsetting liabilities, effectively forcing cash payment for new sales. Getting the “negative” removed restores your cash flow.
“28. Rule 86A of the CGST Rules empowers the Commissioner or his subordinates to freeze the debit in the electronic credit ledger provided he has reasons to believe that the credit of input tax available in the electronic credit ledger has been fraudulently availed or is ineligible. Thus, the condition precedent is that the input tax credit should be available in the electronic credit ledger before the power under Rule 86-A is invoked by the authority. In the case on hand, it is not in dispute that the amount of input tax credit available in the electronic credit ledger as on the date of blocking of ledger was Nil. If no input tax credit was available in the ledger, the blocking of electronic credit ledger under Rule 86-A of the Rules and insertion of negative balance in the ledger would be wholly without jurisdiction and illegal.
29. On a plain reading of the opening part of Rule 86A(1) of CGST Rules, 2017, it transpires that the power conferred under Rule 86A can be exercised by the Commissioner or an officer authorised by him (not below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner). Further the powers can be exercised if the following cumulative conditions are satisfied, (i) Credit of input tax should be available in the electronic credit ledger, (ii) The Commissioner of an officer authorised by him should have reason to believe that such credit has been fraudulently availed or is ineligible, (iii) The reason to believe are be recorded in writing.
30. In case the above referred conditions are satisfied, a proper officer can invoke Rule 86A. Upon invocation of Rule 86 A, a proper officer can – (a) Disallow debit from the electronic credit ledger for discharge of any liability under section 49 or for claim of any refund of any unutilised amount, (b) Such restriction should be for an amount equivalent to the amount claimed to have been fraudulently availed or is ineligible
31. Rule 86A (1) of CGST Rules, 2017 is broadly divided into two parts. The opening part of the rule deals with the conditions required to be fulfilled in order to invoke the powers under the rule. The second part of the rule provides for the consequences in case Rule 86A is invoked.
32. In other words, in case the conditions prescribed for the invocation of Rule 86A are not fulfilled, the officer cannot invoke the rule, and in such scenario, the consequences provided in the rule becomes ex-facie inapplicable.
33. One of the primary conditions in order to invoke Rule 86A is that the Credit of input tax should be available in the electronic credit ledger. Further, such credit should be claimed to have been (supported by reason to believe recorded in writing) fraudulently availed.
34. Accordingly, in case where (i) Credit of input tax is not available in the electronic credit ledger or (ii) such credit has already been utilised, the powers conferred under Rule 86A cannot be invoked.
35. Further, Rule 86A is not the rule which entitled the proper officer to make debit entries in the electronic credit ledger of the registered person. The rule merely allows the proper officer to disallow the registered person debit from the electronic credit ledger for the limited period of time and on a provisional basis. In case debit entries are made by the proper officer, the same will tantamount to permanent recovery of the input tax credit and certainly permanent recovery is governed by the statutory provisions (Section 73 of 74 of CGST Act) and it certainly travels beyond the plain language and underlined intent Rule 86A.
41. In the aforesaid regard, first the language of an amount equivalent appears in the later portion of the rule which provides for the consequences in case the conditions for invocation of the rule are satisfied. As already discussed, the rule itself can be invoked only in case where the credit of input tax is available in the electronic credit ledger and accordingly, the consequence of the invocation cannot determine the applicability of the rule. Secondly, once the input tax credit is claimed in electronic credit ledger, the credit becomes part of one fungible pool and the credit cannot be separately identified. Having regard to the same, the rule provides for restriction on an equivalent amount and not the credit itself. However, the rule presupposes existence of such credit in the electronic credit ledger.
42. A doubt may also arise that a registered person may persistently and continuously avail and utilise the fraudulent credit and in such scenario the strict interpretation of Rule 86A will defeat the underlying purpose of enacting such a preventive provision. In this regard. Rule 86A is not the only measure available with the Government. The Government can certainly initiate proceedings under the provisions of section 73 or section 74, as the case may be, for recovery of credit wrongly claimed. Further, the Government in an appropriate case may initiate proceeding for Cancellation of registration (either of the supplier of the recipient or both) under Section 29 of CGST Act. Furthermore, the Government can also provisionally attach any property, including bank account, belonging to the taxable person under Section 83 of CGST Act.
43. Accordingly, the fact or possibility of registered person availing and utilising the fraudulent credit persistently and continuously cannot be the basis to invoke Rule 86A.
44. The power to restrict debit from the electronic credit ledger is extremely harsh in nature. The rule outreaches the detailed procedure provided in the legislature for determination of input tax credit wrongly availed or utilised provided in Section 73 and 74 of CGST Act and empowers the officer to unilaterally impose certain restrictions in compelling circumstances. In other words, Rule 86A is invoked at a stage which is anterior to the finalization of an assessment or the raising of a demand. Accordingly, it should be governed strictly by specific statutory language which conditions the exercise of the power.
“49. Thus, the principle of law discernible from the aforesaid two decisions of the Supreme Court is that there can be no action based on any supposed intendment of the provision. Since the plain language of Rule 86A does not permit its exercise without there being availability of credit, the same could not have been invoked in the present case.”