Non-speaking cancellation order quashed; suspension upheld pending expedited adjudication on wrongful ITC allegations
Issue
Validity of Cancellation: Whether a GST registration cancellation order is valid if it fails to discuss the comprehensive reply and documents submitted by the assessee, merely recording a conclusion.
Suspension: Whether the interim suspension of registration pending adjudication of an SCN alleging wrongful ITC constitutes an act without jurisdiction or disproportionate action.
Facts
The Allegation: The petitioner, a GST registrant, was issued a Show Cause Notice (SCN) on 15 September 2025 proposing cancellation of registration due to alleged wrongful availment of Input Tax Credit (ITC).
Suspension: Upon issuance of the SCN, the petitioner’s registration was suspended under Rule 21A.
Petitioner’s Defense: The petitioner filed a detailed reply on 18 September 2025, submitting invoices, e-way bills, ledgers, and bank statements to prove the genuineness of the transactions. A personal hearing was also attended.
The Order: The Proper Officer passed an order on 22 September 2025 cancelling the registration with retrospective effect from 15 June 2022.
Defect: The order merely recited that a reply was filed and a hearing conducted, but concluded that the registration was liable to be cancelled without analyzing the evidence submitted.
Decision
On Cancellation (Non-Speaking Order): The High Court held that the order was “non-speaking” and violated principles of natural justice.
The officer failed to discuss the documents (invoices/ledgers) placed on record.
The Court emphasized that “reasons are the link between the decision and the decision maker.” Absence of reasons renders the order void.
Ruling: The cancellation order was quashed, and the matter was remanded for fresh disposal.
On Suspension (Jurisdiction): The Court rejected the challenge to the SCN and the suspension.
The SCN was issued within jurisdiction.
Given the gravity of the allegation (wrongful ITC), interim suspension for two months was not considered disproportionate.
Factual disputes regarding the fraud allegations could not be examined in writ proceedings.
Direction: The Department was directed to dispose of the SCN on its own merits within four weeks.
Key Takeaways
The “Link” of Reasoning: A cancellation order must explicitly explain why the assessee’s reply and documents (invoices, bank statements) were rejected. A mere conclusion without this logical link is legally unsustainable.
Suspension is Standard Protocol: Courts are generally reluctant to interfere with the interim suspension of registration (Rule 21A) during the pendency of fraud/wrongful ITC investigations, provided the adjudication is not dragged on indefinitely.
Speedy Adjudication: While upholding suspension, Courts protect business rights by mandating time-bound disposal (e.g., 4 weeks) of the show cause notice.
| 1. | Heard Mr Jain, learned Counsel for the Petitioner |
| 2. | Issue notice to the Respondents, returnable on 13 November 2025, for final disposal at the admission stage. |
| 3. | In addition to the usual mode of service, private service/humdast is allowed. |
| 4. | The Petitioner to file an affidavit of service. |