Writ Petition Dismissed as Technical Plea on Portal Glitch Rejected When Order Was Reasoned on Merits
Issue
Whether a taxpayer can invoke writ jurisdiction to challenge an appellate order upholding a GST demand solely on the “technical ground” that the GST portal allegedly did not allow the payment of the 10% pre-deposit (Section 107(6)), forcing a physical filing, when the appellate authority has already heard the case and passed a reasoned order on the merits of the demand.
Facts
Background: The assessee faced an adjudication order confirming a demand for duty, interest, and penalty.
The Appeal: The assessee filed an appeal against this order.
The Grievance: The assessee claimed that they tried to pay the mandatory 10% pre-deposit (required under Section 107(6)) through the GST portal but were denied access/faced glitches. Consequently, they were “constrained” to file the appeal in physical form instead of electronically.
The Impugned Order: Despite the physical filing, the Appellate Authority evidently admitted the appeal but dismissed it on merits, upholding the demand confirmed by the original authority.
Writ Petition: The assessee challenged this appellate order in the High Court. Crucially, the challenge was based solely on the technical premise regarding the portal access and the mode of filing/deposit, rather than substantive arguments against the tax liability.
Decision
The Orissa High Court dismissed the writ petition and ruled in favour of the Revenue.
Technicality vs. Merit: The Court observed that the petition was filed solely on a “technical aspect being de-hors law” (outside the substantive law). Since the Appellate Authority had actually heard the case and passed a decision, the method of filing (physical vs. online) had become largely academic.
No Perversity: The Court reviewed the findings of the Appellate Authority on the merits of the case (the demand itself). It found that the order was not irrational, unreasoned, or perverse.
Standard of Review: In writ jurisdiction, the High Court does not act as a second appellate court on facts. It interferes only if the order is patently illegal or suffers from a gross procedural violation that prejudices the outcome. Here, the findings on merit were sound.
Conclusion: There was no justification to interfere with a reasoned order merely because the appellant had complaints about the portal interface during the filing stage.
Key Takeaways
Substance Over Form: A technical grievance (like portal glitches) loses its weight if the appellate authority has already entertained the appeal and decided it on merits. You cannot use a procedural hurdle as a ground to quash a substantive decision that went against you.
Writ Jurisdiction Limits: The High Court will not overturn a factual finding by an appellate authority unless it is “perverse” (no reasonable person would arrive at that conclusion).
Merits Matter: Ultimately, to win a tax case, the taxpayer must have strong arguments on the tax liability itself. Relying solely on procedural complaints about the filing system is often a weak defense strategy once the adjudication stage is passed.
and M.S. Raman, J.
“(6) No appeal shall be filed under sub-section (1), unless the appellant has paid-
(a) in full, such part of the amount of tax, interest, fine, fee and penalty arising from the impugned order, as is admitted by him; and
(b) a sum equal to ten per cent of the remaining amount of tax in dispute arising from the said order, [subject to a maximum of [twenty] crore rupees,] in relation to which the appeal has been filed:
Provided that no appeal shall be filed against an order under sub-section (3) of section 129, unless a sum equal to twenty-five per cent. of the penalty has been paid by the appellant.”