Recovery from Director’s Personal Account for Company Dues Invalid Without Prior Adjudication of Liability
Issue
Whether the GST department can directly attach the personal bank account of a former Director under Section 79 (recovery from third parties/garnishee) to recover the unpaid tax dues of a Private Limited Company, without first conducting a separate adjudication under Section 89 to establish that the non-recovery is due to the director’s gross neglect, misfeasance, or breach of duty.
Facts
The Company: EWIE Services India Pvt. Ltd.
The Assessment: An assessment order was passed against the company on 26.04.2024 for the period 2018-2019, raising a tax demand. The company challenged this order in a separate writ petition.
The Petitioner: A former Director of the company who stated that he had resigned in 2023.
The Action: To recover the company’s arrears, the department issued a notice in Form GST DRC-13 to the petitioner’s bank, attaching his personal bank account under Section 79(1)(c) of the CGST Act.
The Challenge: The petitioner challenged this attachment, arguing that he cannot be automatically held personally liable for the company’s dues without a specific finding of guilt or negligence.
Decision
The Madras High Court ruled in favour of the assessee (the Director).
No Automatic Liability: The Court held that a director’s liability for a private company’s GST dues is not automatic. Under Section 89 of the CGST Act, a director is liable only if the department proves that the non-recovery from the company is attributed to the director’s gross neglect, misfeasance, or breach of duty.
Requirement of Adjudication: Since Section 89 involves a subjective satisfaction regarding “neglect” or “misfeasance,” it requires a separate adjudication process. The department cannot straightaway jump to recovery (Section 79) without first passing an order fixing the director’s personal liability.
Conversion of Notice: To expedite the process while ensuring natural justice, the Court directed that the impugned DRC-13 (attachment notice) be treated as a Show Cause Notice (SCN) to the director.
Directions:
The petitioner was granted 30 days to file a detailed representation/reply to this “deemed SCN.”
The competent officer was directed to adjudicate the matter and pass a speaking order determining the director’s liability within two months after affording a personal hearing.
Attachment Lifted: Pending this fresh adjudication, the attachment on the petitioner’s bank account was ordered to be lifted, subject to the condition that he makes no unusual transfers to deplete the funds.
Key Takeaways
Section 89 is Conditional: Unlike a sole proprietorship where liability is absolute, a Director’s liability for Pvt Ltd company dues is conditional. The “Corporate Veil” is pierced only upon proof of negligence or fraud.
Section 79 vs. Section 89: Section 79 (Recovery) is the execution step. Section 89 (Liability determination) is the adjudication step. You cannot execute before you adjudicate.
Right to be Heard: A director has a specific right to prove that the non-payment was not their fault (e.g., due to lack of control, market conditions, etc.). Denying this opportunity violates natural justice.
Relief for Ex-Directors: Directors who have resigned are particularly protected against automatic recovery for periods post-resignation or for past dues where they were not “officers in default.”
W.M.P. Nos. 38840 and 38841 of 2025