Failure to Fix a Date for Personal Hearing Invalidates GST Demand Order; HC Remands.
Issue
Whether a GST demand order passed under Section 73 (non-fraud) is legally valid if the adjudicating authority failed to fix any date for a personal hearing, and whether a subsequent appellate order dismissing the appeal as time-barred can be sustained.
Facts
- An adjudicating authority passed an adverse assessment order against the petitioner under Section 73.
- The authority never fixed a date for a personal hearing before passing the order.
- The petitioner filed a statutory appeal against this order, but the appeal was dismissed by the appellate authority solely on the grounds of being time-barred.
- The petitioner then filed a writ petition in the High Court, challenging both the original order (for breach of natural justice) and the appellate order (as consequential).
- In court, the State (Revenue) admitted the fact that no date for a personal hearing had been fixed.
Decision
- The High Court quashed and set aside both the impugned adjudication order and the appellate order.
- It held that the failure to fix a date for a personal hearing is a fundamental violation of the principles of natural justice and the mandatory requirements of Section 75 of the CGST Act.
- Relying on precedent (Mahaveer Trading Company), the court affirmed that a personal hearing is mandatory before any adverse order is passed.
- The matter was remanded back to the assessing authority with a direction to pass a fresh order after providing the petitioner a proper opportunity of being heard.
Key Takeaways
- Hearing is a Mandatory Right: The right to a personal hearing under Section 75 is a non-negotiable statutory safeguard. Passing an adverse order without even fixing a date for such a hearing is illegal.
- Violation of Natural Justice: An order passed without affording a hearing is void for being in breach of the principles of natural justice.
- Writ Petition is Maintainable: A writ petition is maintainable against an order that is void due to a fundamental breach of natural justice, even if the subsequent statutory appeal was dismissed on limitation. The dismissal on a technicality (delay) does not cure the fatal legal defect in the original order.
- Department’s Admission is Fatal: The State’s admission that no hearing date was fixed left no room for factual dispute and made the order indefensible.
“An opportunity of hearing shall be granted where a request is received in writing from the person chargeable with tax or penalty, or where any adverse decision is contemplated against such person.”

“1. The column in which date of personal hearing has to be mentioned, only N.A. is mentioned without mentioning any date.
2. The column in which time of personal hearing has to be mentioned, only N.A. is mentioned without mentioning time of hearing.
3. In some cases, the date of personal hearing is prior to which reply to the Show Cause Notice has to be submitted this is non-est and this practice has to be discontinued. The date of reply to the Show Cause Notice has to be definitely prior to the date of personal hearing.
4. In some cases, the date of personal hearing is on the same date to which reply to the Show Cause Notice has to be submitted-this is non-est and this practice has to be discontinued. The date of reply to the Show Cause Notice has to be definitely prior to the date of personal hearing.
5. In all cases observed, the date of passing order either u/s 73(9)/74(9) etc. of the Act is not commensurate to the date of personal hearing. It is trite law that the date of the order has to be passed on the date of personal hearing. For eg., the date of furnishing reply to SCN is 15.11.2023 and date of personal hearing is 17.11.2023, then the date of order has to be 17.11.2023”