Madras High Court Remands Matter Due to Computational Errors and Disregard of Proposal to Drop Demand
Issue
Computational Errors: Whether an adjudication order passed under Section 74 of the GST Act is sustainable when it contains computational errors in the figures adopted for confirming the demand.
Contradictory Order: Whether the order is valid if it confirms a demand despite a prior proposal (in the defect notice/SCN stage) to “drop the demand” (referred to as “drop me demand” in the query, likely a typo for “drop the demand” or “drop proceedings”).
Writ Maintainability: Whether a writ petition can be entertained against such an order when the petitioner failed to file a statutory appeal within the limitation period.
Facts
Period: Financial Year 2019-20.
Proceedings: The Department issued a Show Cause Notice (SCN) in Form GST DRC-01.
Petitioner’s Action: The petitioner filed a reply and subsequently furnished a further reply to the notice.
The Error: The petitioner pointed out that:
There were computational errors in the figures adopted by the authority while confirming the demand.
A proposal to “drop the demand” (drop proceedings) was made in the defect notice/proposal stage, but the final order erroneously confirmed the demand instead of dropping it.
Challenge: The petitioner did not file a statutory appeal under Section 107 within the time limit and approached the High Court directly, challenging the order on grounds of non-application of mind and calculation errors.
Decision
The Madras High Court ruled in favour of the assessee (regarding the opportunity) and remanded the matter back to the adjudicating authority.
Interference Justified: Despite the existence of an alternative remedy (appeal), the Court was inclined to interfere because the order suffered from patent errors (computational mistakes and disregarding the proposal to drop demand), which indicated a lack of proper adjudication.
Conditional Remand: Considering that the petitioner had not approached the Appellate Authority or the Court earlier (laches), the Court imposed a condition to balance the Revenue’s interest.
Directions:
The impugned order was set aside.
The matter was remitted back to the authority for fresh consideration.
Condition: The petitioner was directed to remit 10% of the disputed tax amount within a specified period (usually 4-6 weeks).
Upon such deposit, the authority was directed to afford a personal hearing and pass a fresh, reasoned order correcting the errors.
Key Takeaways
Correction of “Apparent” Errors: High Courts often exercise writ jurisdiction to correct orders that suffer from obvious calculation errors or contradict their own proposals (e.g., proposing to drop but then confirming), as these are errors on the face of the record.
Cost of By-passing Appeal: While the Court granted relief, it imposed a 10% pre-deposit condition. This mirrors the pre-deposit required for a statutory appeal, ensuring the petitioner does not gain a financial advantage by skipping the appellate route.
Opportunity to Explain: The remand ensures the taxpayer can demonstrate the actual figures and enforce the original proposal to drop the demand if the facts support it.
W.M.P. Nos. 43530, 43531 and 43533 of 2025
| Year | Tax due | Interest Delay days -1786 | Penalty | Total | |||
| 2019-20 | CGST | SGST | CGST | SGST | CGST | SGST | |
| Total | 1268683 | 1268683 | 1346403 | 1346403 | 1268683 | 1268683 | 7767538 |