Mandatory Nature of Pre-deposit for Filing GST Appeals (Section 107)
Facts
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The Adjudication: For the period of August and September 2022, the Petitioner-taxpayer paid the outstanding tax amount during the course of investigation/adjudication via Form DRC-03.
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The Penalty: Despite the tax payment, the Adjudicating Authority imposed additional penalty and interest in the final order.
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The Dispute: The Petitioner wanted to appeal the penalty but argued they should be exempt from the statutory pre-deposit because the principal tax was already paid.
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The Delay: Instead of filing the appeal, the Petitioner engaged in correspondence with the GSTN (GST Network) seeking a technical waiver/permission to file without the deposit. During this time, the limitation period for filing the appeal expired.
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Revenue’s Stand: The Department maintained that the GSTN has no legal authority to waive a statutory requirement mandated by the Act.
Decision
The High Court ruled in favor of the Revenue, affirming that pre-deposit is an absolute requirement:
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No Exemption Power: The Court held that there is no provision in the CGST/SGST Act that allows any authority (including the GSTN or the Commissioner) to exempt a taxpayer from the mandatory pre-deposit required under Section 107(6).
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Merits vs. Procedure: Whether the penalty was rightly imposed or the tax was already paid are matters to be decided on merits by the Appellate Authority. These arguments cannot be used as a justification to bypass the procedural requirement of the deposit.
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Procedural Liberty: Recognizing that the Petitioner was stuck in a “correspondence trap” with the GSTN, the Court granted a two-week window to file the appeal.
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Condonation of Delay: The Court directed the Appellate Authority to consider the delay condonation application “sympathetically,” provided the Petitioner paid the statutory pre-deposit.
Key Takeaways
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The “Pay-to-Play” Rule: Under Section 107(6), an appeal cannot be admitted unless the appellant pays:
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The full amount of tax, interest, and penalty admitted by them.
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A sum equal to 10% of the remaining amount of tax in dispute (subject to a maximum cap).
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DRC-03 Payments: Any tax paid during the investigation via DRC-03 is usually adjusted against the “admitted” portion. However, 10% of the disputed tax must still be specifically debited/paid as a pre-deposit to “stay” the recovery of the remaining 90%.
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Avoid Technical Correspondence: Do not waste time writing to the GSTN or Helpdesk for “permission” to bypass law. The portal is a tool; the Act is the authority. If the portal doesn’t allow a filing, file a manual appeal (where permitted) or pay the deposit under protest to save the limitation period.
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Automatic Stay: Once the 10% pre-deposit is paid and the appeal is filed, the recovery of the balance 90% is automatically stayed by operation of law.
and G.M. MOHIUDDIN, J.
