MOVEMENT WITHOUT E-WAY BILL FATAL; TRANSPORTER’S ERROR NO DEFENSE
ISSUE
Whether the detention and seizure of goods under Section 129 are justified when the goods are intercepted without a valid E-way bill, even if the taxpayer claims the transporter moved the goods contrary to instructions and the E-way bill was generated immediately after interception due to technical glitches.
FACTS
The Shipment: The petitioner, a registered trader in water purifiers, issued multiple tax invoices for a shipment. Due to the aggregate value, an E-way bill was mandatory.
The Defense: The petitioner claimed they specifically instructed the transporter not to commence movement until the E-way bill was generated. They cited technical glitches for the delay in generation.
The Violation: Disregarding the instruction (allegedly), the transporter dispatched the vehicle.
The Interception: The Mobile Squad intercepted the vehicle in transit. Upon verification, the driver produced tax invoices but no E-way bill.
The Seizure: The authorities seized the goods for violation of Section 68 read with Rule 138. The petitioner generated and produced the E-way bill only after the interception took place.
DECISION
Mandatory Requirement: The Court reiterated that under Section 68 and Rule 138, the E-way bill must be generated before the commencement of movement of goods.
Undisputed Default: It was an admitted fact that at the time of interception, no E-way bill existed.
Post-Interception Cure Invalid: Generating the E-way bill after the vehicle has been intercepted does not cure the illegality of the transport. If this were allowed, every evader would generate a bill only when caught.
Transporter’s Fault is No Excuse: The plea that the transporter moved the goods against instructions does not absolve the taxpayer of liability under the GST Act. The proper remedy for the taxpayer is to seek damages from the transporter, not relief from the tax department.
Ruling: The detention order under Section 129(3) was upheld as lawful. The writ petition was dismissed.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Zero Tolerance on E-way Bills: Courts are increasingly strict about E-way bills. “Technical glitches” or “Transporter error” are rarely accepted as valid defenses once the goods are caught in transit without the document.
Control Your Logistics: As a consignor, you are liable for the goods until delivery. If your transporter moves goods without your green signal (the E-way bill), you pay the penalty (200% of tax). Ensure strict contracts with transporters to recover these penalties from them if they are at fault.