HC Quashes Ex Parte GST Order; Remands Subject to 25% Deposit or ECL Recovery Verification.
Issue
Whether an ex parte assessment order (DRC-07), passed after a Show Cause Notice (DRC-01) was allegedly not noticed by the taxpayer on the GST portal, should be quashed, and what conditions apply for a fresh hearing, especially when the tax has allegedly already been recovered.
Facts
An assessment order (DRC-07) was passed against the petitioner for the period 2020-21.
This order was preceded by a Show Cause Notice (DRC-01), which the petitioner claimed was only posted on the portal and went unnoticed.
The petitioner produced an extract of their Electronic Credit Ledger (ECL) for May 2025, asserting that the department had already recovered the disputed tax amount by debiting the ledger.
The petitioner filed a writ petition challenging the ex parte order.
Decision
The High Court, following its “consistent view” in similar cases, quashed the impugned assessment order.
The matter was remanded back to the adjudicating authority for a fresh decision, but this relief was made conditional.
The authority was directed to first verify whether the debit entries in the petitioner’s ECL (from May 2025) actually corresponded to the tax confirmed in the impugned order.
If the tax was already recovered: The authority shall proceed to pass a fresh order on the merits (after receiving the petitioner’s reply) within three months.
If the tax was NOT recovered: The petitioner, as a condition for the remand, must deposit 25% of the disputed tax amount in cash within 30 days.
Upon compliance, the petitioner is permitted to file a detailed reply to the original SCN.
Key Takeaways
Writ Jurisdiction for Natural Justice: High Courts will often exercise their writ jurisdiction to set aside ex parte orders passed due to “portal non-service” to grant a final opportunity for natural justice, even if the appeal time has lapsed.
Conditional Relief: This relief is not automatic. The court, balancing the taxpayer’s default with the principles of justice, imposed a 25% cash deposit condition, which is significantly higher than the standard 10% pre-deposit for an appeal, as a prerequisite for the fresh hearing.
Verification of Prior Recovery: The court adopted a pragmatic approach by linking the 25% deposit to the alleged recovery. If the department has already recovered the tax (illegally or otherwise), the petitioner is not required to deposit the 25% to secure a new hearing.
W.M.P. Nos. 38919 & 38920 of 2025