Adjustment of Pre-Deposit for GSTAT: No Fresh Payment Required if 10% Already Paid
The Legal Issue
Whether a taxpayer is required to pay a fresh pre-deposit when filing an appeal before the GST Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT) if the amount already deposited during the first appeal (Section 107) exceeds the statutory requirement for the second appeal (Section 112).
Facts of the Case (Jharkhand High Court)
Order-in-Original: A massive demand of approximately ₹2.38 crores was initially raised against the assessee.
First Appeal (Section 107): To maintain the first appeal, the assessee made a mandatory pre-deposit of 10% of the disputed tax, amounting to ₹23.85 lakhs.
Order-in-Appeal: The First Appellate Authority “scaled down” (reduced) the demand significantly. The confirmed demand was now only ₹40 lakhs.
The Conflict: The assessee wanted to challenge this ₹40 lakh demand before the Tribunal. The Registry/Tribunal typically expects a pre-deposit for filing. The assessee argued that since they had already deposited ₹23.85 lakhs (which is much more than 20% of the revised ₹40 lakh demand), no further money should be blocked.
The Decision
The Jharkhand High Court ruled in favor of the assessee, establishing a practical approach to pre-deposits:
Adjustment Rule: The Court held that pre-deposit is a security for the appeal, not a repetitive tax. If a sum has already been deposited at the first stage, it must be adjusted against the requirements of the second stage.
Excess Deposit: Since the initial deposit of ₹23.85 lakhs was already lying with the Government and far exceeded any potential pre-deposit required for a ₹40 lakh dispute, the Court ruled that there was “no question of making any further pre-deposit.”
Mandatory Acceptance: The Tribunal was directed to accept the appeal without insisting on any fresh payment.
Outcome: In favour of the assessee.
Key Takeaways & Statutory Context
The 10% + 10% Formula: Under the current amended Section 112(8) (effective from August 2024), the total pre-deposit required to reach the Tribunal is generally 20% of the disputed tax (10% paid at the first appeal + an additional 10% for the Tribunal).
Scaling Down Benefit: If you win partially at the first appeal and the tax amount drops, your “disputed tax” for the Tribunal is the reduced amount. If your first 10% (calculated on the higher original amount) covers the total 20% of the new lower amount, you should not have to pay more.
Circular 224/18/2024: The CBIC has clarified that payments made during the “Tribunal-less” period (via DRC-03 or DRC-03A) will be adjusted against the pre-deposit once the GSTAT is fully functional.