Confiscation (Sec 130) Cannot be Invoked for Excess Stock Found in Survey; Sec 73/74 Applies.
Issue
Whether the GST authorities can initiate confiscation proceedings under Section 130 of the CGST Act for “excess” or “unaccounted” stock found during a survey of business premises, or if they are legally mandated to determine the tax under Section 73 or 74.
Facts
Survey: Surveys were conducted at the business premises of the respondents (registered persons).
Discrepancy: The authorities alleged discrepancies in the form of excess or unaccounted stock compared to the recorded books.
Action Taken: Based on these survey findings, the department initiated proceedings for confiscation of the goods and levy of penalty under Section 130.
Challenge: The State (Revenue) filed writ petitions challenging the orders (presumably appellate orders that had set aside the confiscation or ruled against the department’s approach).
Decision
The High Court dismissed the writ petitions filed by the State, ruling in favour of the assessee.
Specific Provision Prevails: The Court held that Section 35(6) of the CGST Act specifically covers situations where goods are not accounted for in the books. This section mandates that the Proper Officer “shall determine the amount of tax payable” on such goods under Section 73 or 74.
Section 130 Inapplicable: Since the statute provides a specific route (assessment/demand) for handling unaccounted stock found during a survey, recourse to the harsh provisions of confiscation under Section 130 is not permissible.
Refund: The Court directed that any amounts deposited by the respondents (assessees) pursuant to these invalid confiscation proceedings be refunded.
Key Takeaways
Assessment, Not Confiscation: Discrepancies in stock found during a survey are fundamentally issues of “suppression of supply” or “non-recording of transaction,” which must be addressed by determining the tax liability under Section 73 (non-fraud) or Section 74 (fraud).
Section 130 is for Specific Offences: Confiscation is generally reserved for cases involving the movement of goods without documents or intent to evade payment in transit, not for stock mismatches found within the registered premises.
Binding Precedent: This ruling aligns with recent Supreme Court decisions confirming that Section 130 cannot be mechanically applied to excess stock cases.