Interest Payable on Unconstitutional Ocean Freight GST Refund as Retention Violates Article 265.
Issue
Whether the government is liable to pay interest on the refund of a tax (IGST on ocean freight) that was collected without the authority of law, and whether the standard procedural limits of the GST Act (like the 60-day refund window) apply to such a refund.
Facts
- The levy of IGST on ocean freight under reverse charge (vide Notifications 8/2017 and 10/2017) was previously held to be unconstitutional, as it lacked legislative authority.
- The assessee sought a refund of this unconstitutionally collected IGST, along with interest.
- The department refunded the principal amount but refused to pay interest.
- The department argued that the refund was subject to the normal procedural provisions of the CGST Act (like the 60-day processing window), which would mean no interest was due.
- The assessee contended that the refund was not a statutory one, but a constitutional one, as the tax was collected in violation of Article 265.
Decision
- The Bombay High Court ruled decisively in favour of the assessee.
- It held that since the IGST was collected without legal sanction, its refund is not governed by the procedural provisions of the CGST Act.
- The court found that the government’s retention of the unlawfully collected tax violated Article 265 (no tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law).
- Denying interest on this amount would allow the government to be unjustly enriched, which is contrary to constitutional principles.
- The refund was held to be a form of “restitution,” and the department was ordered to pay the quantified interest of ₹71.31 lakh immediately.
Key Takeaways
- Constitutional vs. Statutory Refund: A clear distinction exists. A refund of a tax collected without authority of law (unconstitutional) is not a statutory refund under Section 54/56.
- Article 265 is Paramount: The retention of an unconstitutional tax is a violation of Article 265. The government has no right to retain such funds.
- Interest as Restitution: In such cases, interest is not a statutory benefit but a constitutional remedy to prevent the unjust enrichment of the State.
- Statutory Timelines Do Not Apply: The department’s defense of a 60-day interest-free window is invalid, as those rules apply only to refunds of taxes that were lawfully collected in the first place.