High Court Quashes Recovery and Restores Hearing Rights in GSTR-3B Discrepancy Case
In a significant ruling from March 2026, the Karnataka High Court set aside an Order-in-Original (OIO) and a subsequent bank attachment, emphasizing that a taxpayer’s right to be heard cannot be bypassed even if they fail to file an initial reply to a Show Cause Notice (SCN).
The Legal Dispute: Automatic Recovery vs. Natural Justice
The Department’s Case
The Adjudicating Authority issued an SCN alleging three major discrepancies:
Short Payment: A mismatch between the higher tax declared in GSTR-1 and the lower tax paid in GSTR-3B.
Excess ITC: Alleged wrongful or excess Input Tax Credit availment.
Unpaid Tax: General short payment of declared GST liability.
When the petitioner failed to file a reply within the stipulated time, the officer passed a “best judgment” order and immediately initiated recovery via Form GST DRC-13 (Bank Attachment).
The Petitioner’s Defense
The petitioner challenged the order, arguing that the lack of a reply should not lead to a total denial of the opportunity to explain. They asserted that the discrepancies were explainable and that the aggressive bank attachment was crippling their business operations.
The Decision: Setting Aside Recovery for Fresh Adjudication
The High Court ruled in favour of the assessee, remanding the matter for a fresh hearing based on the following principles:
Substance Over Default: The Court held that passing an order without the benefit of a reply, followed by immediate recovery, was premature. Given that the petitioner asserted they had a valid explanation on merits, the interest of justice required a “de novo” (fresh) consideration.
Rescinding Bank Attachment: The Court ordered the immediate withdrawal of the bank attachment (Form GST DRC-13). This provides much-needed liquidity relief to the taxpayer.
Conditional Recovery: Interestingly, since the Department had already recovered some amounts, the Court did not order an immediate refund but made the recovered amount subject to the outcome of the fresh adjudication.
Key Takeaways for GST Taxpayers
GSTR-1 vs. 3B Mismatches: These are the most common triggers for Section 73 notices. Always ensure that your GSTR-1 (Sales declared) matches your GSTR-3B (Tax paid) every month to avoid “Auto-Populated” demand notices.
Bank Attachment Protection: If the Department attaches your bank account without giving you a proper personal hearing or considering your reply, you have a strong ground to approach the High Court under Writ Jurisdiction.
Remand Strategy: Even if you miss the deadline to reply to an SCN, all is not lost. You can seek a “Remand” from the Court, which pushes the case back to the stage of filing a reply, allowing you to present your evidence afresh.
Summary of the Adjudication Reset
The High Court has effectively hit the “reset button” on this case. The Order-in-Original is set aside, the Bank Attachment is cancelled, and the petitioner is now permitted to file a detailed reply to the SCN. The final liability will be determined only after the Department examines the petitioner’s explanation on its merits.