Penalty for Delayed ITC Reversal Unjustified as Credit Was Eventually Reversed and No Advantage Gained.
Issue
Whether a penalty under Section 122 of the CGST Act is sustainable for a delay in reversing proportionate Input Tax Credit (ITC) on obsolete stock, especially when the reversal was eventually made and the assessee gained no financial advantage from the delay.
Facts
The assessee, a taxpayer, had slow-moving or obsolete inputs on which it was required to reverse the proportionate ITC.
The assessee did reverse this ITC, but only on October 23, 2019, after a significant delay from the time the inputs became obsolete.
The GST department issued a Show Cause Notice (SCN) and the adjudicating authority imposed a penalty under Section 122 for this delayed reversal.
However, the authority dropped the demand for interest, noting that the assessee had a sufficient overall ITC balance throughout the period. This implied that the unreversed credit was never actually used to offset any cash tax liability.
The assessee filed a writ petition, arguing that the penalty was unjustified as the reversal was eventually made and the delay yielded no advantage.
Decision
The High Court allowed the writ petition and quashed the penalty.
It held that since the assessee gained no financial advantage from the delayed reversal (as evidenced by the dropping of the interest claim), the imposition of a penalty lacked justification.
The court found that the assessee’s eventual bona fide reversal of the proportionate credit demonstrated a lack of mala fide intent to evade tax, which is the spirit of the penalty provision.
The action was deemed a procedural delay with no revenue impact, which should not attract such a harsh penalty.
Key Takeaways
No Advantage, No Penalty: A penalty under Section 122 is not justified for a mere delay in an ITC reversal, especially when the taxpayer can demonstrate that they gained no undue financial advantage (e.g., they did not use the credit to save cash on their tax liability).
Dropping of Interest is Key: The authority’s decision to drop the interest claim was a crucial fact, as it confirmed that the unreversed credit had simply remained in the ledger and was never improperly utilized by the assessee.
Proportionality (Section 126): This judgment aligns with the principles of Section 126, which states that penalties should not be imposed for minor breaches or procedural lapses where there is no intent to defraud the revenue.
Subsequent Compliance: The taxpayer’s act of eventually reversing the credit, even if delayed, was seen as a sign of bona fide compliance, which weighed against the imposition of a penalty.
W.M.P. No. 2173 of 2024