Sufficiency of Show Cause Notice (SCN) for Cancellation of Registration (Section 29)
Facts
The Notice: The Jurisdictional Officer issued a Show Cause Notice (SCN) in Form GST REG-17 to the Petitioner, proposing the cancellation of their GST registration.
The Allegation: The SCN alleged that the Petitioner had availed ineligible Input Tax Credit (ITC) from non-existent or non-operating taxpayers.
The Supporting Evidence: Annexed to the SCN was a communication from the DGGI Hyderabad. This document detailed investigation findings regarding a network of fraudulent taxpayers and specifically sought action against the Petitioner based on those findings.
The Response: The Petitioner filed a reply in Form GST REG-18 and a subsequent detailed response addressing the specific allegations raised in the DGGI communication.
The Dispute: The Petitioner approached the High Court seeking a Writ to quash the SCN, arguing that the notice was “vague,” lacked specific charges, and did not provide a clear basis for the proposed cancellation.
Decision
The Court ruled in favor of the Revenue, declining to interfere at the SCN stage based on the following legal reasoning:
Sufficiency of Information: The Court held that an SCN is not to be read in isolation. Since the DGGI’s detailed communication—which narrated the investigation and specific findings—was annexed to the SCN, the “basis” for the proposed action was sufficiently communicated to the Petitioner.
Test of Prejudice: The primary test for a “vague” SCN is whether the taxpayer was unable to understand the charges. The Court noted that the Petitioner had filed a “categorical and detailed reply” addressing the specific allegations. This demonstrated that the Petitioner clearly understood the charges; therefore, the plea of prejudice or vagueness failed.
No Premature Interference: Judicial interference at the Show Cause stage is rare. Since the charges were understood and the Petitioner had already submitted their defense, the Proper Officer must be allowed to adjudicate the matter on its merits.
Final Directive: The Proper Officer was directed to consider the Petitioner’s replies and pass a final order in accordance with the law within two weeks.
Key Takeaways
Annexures Complete the Notice: A summary SCN that appears thin on details may still be legally valid if it refers to and annexes a detailed investigation report or inter-departmental communication (like a DGGI report).
Impact of Replying: If a taxpayer files a comprehensive reply to an allegedly vague SCN, they effectively waive the right to later claim that they didn’t understand the charges. If an SCN is truly vague, the initial response should ideally be a request for better particulars rather than a full defense on merits.
ITC from Non-Existent Entities: Availing ITC from “non-operating” taxpayers is a “reason to believe” sufficient for a Proper Officer to initiate cancellation proceedings under Section 29, especially when backed by specialized investigative wings like the DGGI.
Adjudication Path: Taxpayers should focus on proving the “existence” and “genuineness” of their suppliers during the personal hearing rather than relying on technical challenges to the SCN format, provided the underlying material has been shared with them.
and G.M. MOHIUDDIN, J.