Remand for GSTR-1 & GSTR-3B Mismatch Analysis (FY 2020-21)
1. The Core Dispute: Clerical Error vs. Tax Liability
The dispute arose from a significant discrepancy identified between the assessee’s GSTR-1 (Statement of Outward Supplies) and GSTR-3B (Monthly Summary Return). The Revenue noted that the liability reported in GSTR-3B was less than that in GSTR-1, leading to a demand for the difference.
The Error: The assessee explained that they had inadvertently entered the taxable values twice in GSTR-1. While they rectified this “double entry” by paying the correct tax in GSTR-3B, the system-generated mismatch remained on record.
The Conflict: The Assessing Authority ignored the explanation and confirmed the demand in the final order, essentially taxing the assessee on a “phantom” liability created by a clerical typo.
2. Legal Analysis: The Principle of “Substance over Form”
The High Court observed that in the GST regime, clerical and typographical errors in return filing are common. If an assessee can prove through supporting documents (such as sales registers and bank statements) that the GSTR-1 value was indeed a double entry, they cannot be forced to pay tax on a non-existent supply.
I. Opportunity for Personal Hearing
The court emphasized that where a genuine mistake is claimed, a mere summary rejection of the explanation without a thorough verification of the accounts violates the principles of Natural Justice.
II. The “25% Deposit” Condition
To balance the interest of the Revenue and the assessee, the Madras High Court has adopted a consistent “remand policy”:
The assessee is granted another chance to prove their case.
In return, the assessee must demonstrate their bona fides by depositing 25% of the disputed tax amount.
3. The Ruling: Quashing and Remand
The High Court quashed the original demand order and sent the case back to the respondent authority.
Directive to Assessee: Deposit 25% of the disputed tax in cash (via Electronic Cash Ledger) within 30 days.
Directive to Revenue: Upon receipt of the deposit and a detailed reply with proof, the authority must pass a fresh order after granting a personal hearing.
Outcome: The assessee gets a chance to delete the “double entry” liability through de-novo adjudication.
Key Takeaways for Taxpayers
Reconcile Regularly: [Image showing the GSTR-1 vs GSTR-3B Mismatch Dashboard on the GST Portal] Always compare your GSTR-1 data with GSTR-3B before the final filing. Mistakes in GSTR-1 can now lead to Rule 88C intimations (DRC-01B) and immediate recovery action if not explained.
Documentation is Shield: Keep a “Sales Reconciliation Statement” ready that maps your invoices to your bank receipts. This is the primary evidence needed to win “mismatch” cases.
Writ as a Remedy: If an order is passed mechanically without considering your evidence of a “clerical error,” the High Court can be approached for a remand, provided you are willing to make a partial pre-deposit.
W.M.P. Nos. 54844 & 54845 of 2025
| Year | CGST | SGST | IGST |
| 2020-21 | 202085 | 202085 | 0 |