Parallel Proceedings: Central and State Authorities Cannot Adjudicate Simultaneously
Issue
Whether Central Tax Authorities can issue a Show Cause Notice (SCN) and proceed with adjudication for a transaction where State Tax Authorities have already passed an order and an appeal is currently pending.
Facts
The Period: Assessment Year 2021-22.
State Action: The State Tax Authorities initiated and concluded adjudication on a specific transaction. The assessee subsequently filed an appeal against this order, which is currently pending before the State Appellate Authority.
Central Action: While the state appeal was pending, the Central Tax Authorities issued a fresh SCN under Sections 73 and 74 regarding the same transaction.
The Conflict: The assessee challenged the Central SCN, arguing that parallel proceedings by two different authorities on the same subject matter are barred under Section 6 of the CGST Act.
Decision
Section 6 Bar: The High Court (Telangana) reaffirmed the “one subject matter – one authority” principle. Under Section 6(2)(b), if a State officer has initiated proceedings, the Central officer is barred from initiating proceedings on the same subject matter.
Status of Proceedings: Since the State had already concluded its adjudication and the matter was in the appellate stage, the Central authorities could not “re-adjudicate” the same issue simultaneously.
Abeyance Order: The Court directed that the SCN issued by the Central Tax Authorities must be kept in abeyance (stayed).
Outcome: The Central Authorities can only proceed with their SCN after the State’s appellate proceedings have reached a final conclusion. This ensures there are no contradictory orders on the same transaction. In favour of assessee.
Key Takeaways for Taxpayers
The First-in-Time Rule: Generally, the authority that initiates the formal adjudicatory process (issuance of SCN) first is the only one entitled to complete it.
Single Interface: The core design of GST is to provide a “single interface.” If you are being harrassed by “dual control” (both State and Central teams asking for the same data for the same year), you can invoke the Section 6 bar.
Inquiry vs. Proceeding: Per recent Supreme Court guidance (Armour Security, 2025), mere “summons” or “investigations” do not always trigger the Section 6 bar. The bar is most effectively triggered once a formal Show Cause Notice is issued.
Notification Duty: If a second authority initiates an inquiry on a matter already being handled by another team, the taxpayer has a duty to inform the second authority about the existing proceedings to avoid duplication.
and G.M. MOHIUDDIN, J.
31.10.2025:
“Learned counsel Sri P.Venkata Prasad, representing M/s.P.V.Prasad Associates, appears for the petitioner.
Sri D.Raghavendar Rao, learned Senior Standing Counsel for Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs, appears for respondents No.1 and 2 through video conferencing.
Learned counsel Sri Angothu Nehru appears for respondent No.4.
The show cause notice dated 19.09.2025 along with Form GST DRC-01 issued under Section 73 and also under Section 74 of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017/Telangana Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017, for the tax period 2021-2022 is under challenge in this writ petition on the ground that the State Tax authorities have already adjudicated the demand in respect of the same transaction by the order-in-original dated 21.04.2025, against which the appeal is pending.
Learned counsel for the petitioner submits that the impugned show cause notice is in violation of Section 6(2)(b) of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017.
Learned Senior Standing Counsel for Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs appearing for the respondents prays for two weeks time to obtain instructions.
List this case on 20.11.2025.
In the meantime, there shall be interim stay of the impugned show cause notice.”
20.11.2025:
“Sri P. Venkata Prasad, learned counsel, representing M/s. P.V. Prasad Associates, appears for the petitioner.
Sri D. Raghavendar Rao, learned Senior Standing Counsel for Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs, appears for respondent Nos.1 and 2.
The show cause notice dated 19.09.2025 against the petitioner for the financial year 2021-22 is on three counts, which read as under:
“3. Excess availment of Input Tax Credit (ITC) of Rs.2,28,450/-(IGST: Rs.30,890.-, CGST: Rs.98,780/- & SGST: Rs.98,780/-) in GSTR-3B in comparison with ITC available in GSTR-2A, (GSTR 3B v. 2A).”
“4. The taxpayer has claimed ITC of Rs.96,08,924/- (CGST: Rs.48,04,462/- & SGST: Rs.48,04,462/-) in respect of supplies received from taxpayer whose registration has been cancelled suo-moto retrospectively.”
“5. Irregular availment of Blocked/ineligible credit of Rs.19,573/-(IGST: Rs.2,285/-, CGST: 8,644/- & SGST: Rs.8,644/-) during the period 2021-22 for contravention of provisions of Section 17(5) of the CGST Act, 2017.”