Portal Service vs. Effective Communication: Madras High Court Mandates Multi-Mode Service
The Legal Issue
The central dispute is whether “Service of Notice” under Section 169 is satisfied by simply uploading a document to the GST portal, especially when a taxpayer fails to respond to multiple digital reminders. The Court evaluated if “portal-only” service constitutes a violation of Natural Justice when more effective physical modes are available.
Facts of the Case
The Process: The Competent Authority issued a Show Cause Notice (SCN) and several reminders by uploading them exclusively to the GST common portal.
The Default: The petitioner-assessee was unaware of these digital uploads and did not receive any physical copies of the notices. Consequently, no reply was filed.
The Order: The authority passed an Adjudication Order ex parte, confirming the tax demands and penalties proposed in the SCN.
The Challenge: The petitioner moved the High Court, arguing they were denied a fair opportunity to be heard because the service was not “effective.”
The Decision
The Madras High Court (2026) ruled in favour of the assessee, setting aside the order and remanding the case:
“Empty Formality” Doctrine: The Court acknowledged that while uploading to the portal is a “sufficient” service under the letter of the law, the tax officer must not treat it as a mere checkbox exercise. If there is no response to repeated portal notices, proceeding blindly is “fulfilling empty formalities.”
Duty to Apply Mind: The Court held that a lack of response should trigger a “duty to explore” other valid modes of service under Section 169(1), such as Registered Post with Acknowledgement Due (RPAD) or email.
Object of the GST Act: The primary goal of the Act is fair adjudication. The Court noted that failing to ensure the taxpayer is actually aware of the proceedings leads to a “multiplicity of litigations” and wastes judicial time.
Preference for RPAD: The Court specifically highlighted that RPAD should be the preferred fallback mode when portal service fails to elicit a response, as it provides tangible proof of delivery.
Outcome: The adjudication order was quashed, and the matter was remanded for a fresh hearing with a direction to serve the notices effectively.
Key Takeaways
Check the “Additional Notices” Tab: Many taxpayers miss notices because they only check the main dashboard. This ruling confirms that “hiding” a notice in a portal tab without a follow-up via post or email can be challenged.
The Threshold for Writ: If you have received an ex parte order and can prove that the department only used the portal for communication (and you never replied), you have strong grounds to seek a Remand from the High Court.
Section 169 Hierarchy: Section 169 provides a menu of service modes (Hand delivery, Post, Email, Portal, Newspaper). This ruling suggests that these modes are complementary, not just alternatives to be used in isolation.
W.M.P(MD)No. 2917 of 2026
| (i) | The impugned order dated 26.08.2024 is set aside and the matter is remanded to the respondent for fresh consideration. |
| (ii) | The petitioner shall file their reply/objection along with the required documents, if any, within a period of three weeks from the date of receipt of a copy of this order. |
| (iii) | On filing of such reply/objection by the petitioner, the respondent shall consider the same and issue a 14 days clear notice, by fixing the date of personal hearing, to the petitioner and thereafter, pass appropriate orders on merits and in accordance with law, after hearing the petitioner, as expeditiously as possible. |