High Court Remands Time-Barred GST Appeal for Merit-Based Review Upon 15% Tax Deposit.
The Dispute: Mismatch, Negligence, and the Limitation Barrier
The Conflict: The petitioner had a mismatch between their outward supplies (GSTR-1) and the tax actually paid (GSTR-3B).
The Revenue’s Action: An SCN was issued, but because the petitioner’s part-time accountant failed to report it, no reply was filed. The authority passed an ex-parte order on November 6, 2024.
The Appeal Failure: The petitioner eventually filed an appeal under Section 107 (with the mandatory 10% pre-deposit), but it was rejected because it was filed beyond the 4-month maximum period (3 months + 1 month condonable) that an Appellate Assistant Commissioner is allowed to excuse.
The Petitioner’s Plea: They argued that the demand was based purely on a reconciliation error and that an ex-parte order without a merit-based review would cause irreparable financial hardship.
The Judicial Verdict: Remand over Rejection
The High Court ruled in favour of the Assessee (Remanded), using its extraordinary powers under Article 226 to override the limitation period:
1. Substantive Justice vs. Technical Default
The Court noted that the demand was created without the benefit of the taxpayer’s explanation. Since the mismatch was the core of the dispute, the Court held that the taxpayer deserved a “day in court” to provide a reconciliation statement and supporting documents.
2. The “Pre-deposit” Condition (15%)
To balance the interest of the Revenue and prove the taxpayer’s sincerity, the Court imposed a stricter condition than a standard appeal:
The petitioner was ordered to deposit 15% of the disputed tax (instead of the usual 10%).
This deposit had to be made within four weeks.
3. De Novo Consideration
Upon payment of the 15% amount, the ex-parte order was set aside. The matter was remanded to the Assessing Officer, who was directed to:
Accept an additional reply and reconciliation documents from the petitioner.
Pass a fresh order after conducting a proper hearing on the merits of the mismatch.
Strategic Takeaways for Taxpayers in 2026
The Writ Remedy for Late Appeals: If you miss the 4-month deadline for a GST appeal, the Appellate Authority cannot help you. Your only hope is a Writ Petition in the High Court. As this case shows, courts are often willing to help if the delay wasn’t intentional.
The “Accountant Default” Defense: While usually not a strong legal defense, mentioning the negligence of a third-party consultant (with proof) can help persuade a High Court judge to grant “mercy” for a procedural lapse.
Reconciliation is Key: GSTR-1 vs. 3B mismatches are the most common cause of Section 73 notices. Always keep a month-wise reconciliation ready. If the GSTR-1 was higher due to a clerical error (B2B instead of B2C, or duplicate entry), it can be easily corrected during the remanded hearing.
Financial Cost of Delay: Note that the “mercy” of the Court came at a price—a 15% pre-deposit. Filing your reply on time would have cost nothing, and a timely appeal would have only required 10%.
W.M.P (MD). Nos. 5240 and 5241 of 2026
| i. | The petitioner is directed to deposit 15% of the disputed tax amount with the respondent within a period of four weeks from the date of receipt of a web copy of this order, without waiting for the certified copy of the order; |
| ii. | On such deposit, the impugned order dated 06.11.2024 is set aside and the matter is remanded back to the file of the respondent. |
| iii. | The petitioner is directed to appear before the respondent without fail, file any additional reply, and produce all documents in support of his claim |
| iv. | Upon receipt of the same, the respondent is directed to reconsider the issue afresh and and pass appropriate orders on merits and in accordance with law as expeditiously as possible. |
| v. | It is needless to state that the petitioner depositing 15% of the disputed tax amount, the bank attachment shall be lifted and the account shall be de-freezed. |
| vi. | No costs. Consequently, connected miscellaneous petition is closed. |
