Blocking ITC Without Independent “Reasons to Believe” Based on Generic DGGI Alert is Invalid
Issue
Whether a jurisdictional officer can block a taxpayer’s Input Tax Credit (ITC) under Rule 86A of the CGST Rules solely based on a generic alert from an intelligence wing (DGGI) stating a supplier is non-functioning, without recording independent “reasons to believe” or establishing a specific link to the taxpayer.
Facts
The Action: The Respondent (GST Authority) blocked the petitioner’s Input Tax Credit (ITC) in the Electronic Credit Ledger.
The Reason: The remark displayed on the ledger was “Supplier found nonfunctioning.”
The Basis: The blocking was premised entirely on an alert received from the DGGI Raipur Zonal Unit. The alert alleged that a specific supplier, M/s Maa Kamakhaya Trading, was non-existent and had passed on fraudulent ITC via bogus invoices.
The Defense: The petitioner argued that no adjudication order had been passed against either the supplier or the petitioner establishing that the specific transactions were bogus.
Procedural Laptop: The jurisdictional officer had not recorded any “reasons to believe” in writing independently; they had merely acted on the DGGI alert.
Decision
The High Court ruled in favour of the assessee and set aside the blocking order.
Mandatory Requirement: The Court held that under Rule 86A, the requirement for the Commissioner or authorized officer to record “reasons to believe” in writing is mandatory and non-negotiable.
Borrowed Satisfaction: Relying solely on a generic DGGI alert without independent application of mind amounts to “borrowed satisfaction,” which is legally impermissible. The phrase “Supplier found nonfunctioning” is a conclusion, not a reasoned belief.
Lack of Nexus: The Court noted that a general alert about a supplier does not automatically justify the inference that the supplies made to this specific petitioner were bogus, absent specific corroborating material.
Outcome: The blocking was held to be without jurisdiction. The Court directed the immediate unblocking of the ledger, though it left the authority free to initiate fresh proceedings in accordance with the law (i.e., by following the correct procedure).
Key Takeaways
“Reasons to Believe” is the Heart of Rule 86A: The power to block ITC is a drastic measure. It cannot be exercised mechanically. The officer must have tangible material and must record their subjective satisfaction in writing before blocking the credit.
No “Cut-Copy-Paste” from Intelligence Reports: Adjudicating officers cannot simply copy alerts from investigation wings (like DGGI) to block credit. They must independently examine the material and form their own opinion.
Supplier’s Status vs. Transaction Genuineness: The mere fact that a supplier is under investigation or flagged as “risky” does not automatically render all their past transactions bogus. The department must establish a link between the supplier’s fraud and the recipient’s availment of credit.
Blocking ITC Without Independent “Reasons to Believe” Based on Generic DGGI Alert is Invalid
Issue
Whether a jurisdictional officer can block a taxpayer’s Input Tax Credit (ITC) under Rule 86A of the CGST Rules solely based on a generic alert from an intelligence wing (DGGI) stating a supplier is non-functioning, without recording independent “reasons to believe” or establishing a specific link to the taxpayer.
Facts
The Action: The Respondent (GST Authority) blocked the petitioner’s Input Tax Credit (ITC) in the Electronic Credit Ledger.
The Reason: The remark displayed on the ledger was “Supplier found nonfunctioning.”
The Basis: The blocking was premised entirely on an alert received from the DGGI Raipur Zonal Unit. The alert alleged that a specific supplier, M/s Maa Kamakhaya Trading, was non-existent and had passed on fraudulent ITC via bogus invoices.
The Defense: The petitioner argued that no adjudication order had been passed against either the supplier or the petitioner establishing that the specific transactions were bogus.
Procedural Laptop: The jurisdictional officer had not recorded any “reasons to believe” in writing independently; they had merely acted on the DGGI alert.
Decision
The High Court ruled in favour of the assessee and set aside the blocking order.
Mandatory Requirement: The Court held that under Rule 86A, the requirement for the Commissioner or authorized officer to record “reasons to believe” in writing is mandatory and non-negotiable.
Borrowed Satisfaction: Relying solely on a generic DGGI alert without independent application of mind amounts to “borrowed satisfaction,” which is legally impermissible. The phrase “Supplier found nonfunctioning” is a conclusion, not a reasoned belief.
Lack of Nexus: The Court noted that a general alert about a supplier does not automatically justify the inference that the supplies made to this specific petitioner were bogus, absent specific corroborating material.
Outcome: The blocking was held to be without jurisdiction. The Court directed the immediate unblocking of the ledger, though it left the authority free to initiate fresh proceedings in accordance with the law (i.e., by following the correct procedure).
Key Takeaways
“Reasons to Believe” is the Heart of Rule 86A: The power to block ITC is a drastic measure. It cannot be exercised mechanically. The officer must have tangible material and must record their subjective satisfaction in writing before blocking the credit.
No “Cut-Copy-Paste” from Intelligence Reports: Adjudicating officers cannot simply copy alerts from investigation wings (like DGGI) to block credit. They must independently examine the material and form their own opinion.
Supplier’s Status vs. Transaction Genuineness: The mere fact that a supplier is under investigation or flagged as “risky” does not automatically render all their past transactions bogus. The department must establish a link between the supplier’s fraud and the recipient’s availment of credit.