Appellate Authority Must Pass Reasoned Orders: Calcutta High Court Remands “Mechanical” GST Appeal

By | March 18, 2026

Appellate Authority Must Pass Reasoned Orders: Calcutta High Court Remands “Mechanical” GST Appeal

This ruling (delivered in early 2026) reinforces the principle that the first appellate stage is not a mere formality. The Calcutta High Court clarified that an Appellate Authority cannot simply “paraphrase” the lower officer’s order; it must independently evaluate the evidence already present on record.


The Legal Issue: Duty to Pass a “Speaking Order”

Under Section 107 of the CGST Act, the Appellate Authority acts as a quasi-judicial body. The core question was: Is an appellate order valid if it dismisses an appeal solely because “no new documents” were provided, even when the appellant argues that the existing records sufficiently prove their case?


Facts of the Case

  • The Adjudication: For the period 2018-19, an order was passed under Section 73 determining liability on four specific counts:

    1. Short payment of outward tax.

    2. Short payment under Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) on inward supplies.

    3. Excess availment of Input Tax Credit (ITC).

    4. Ineligible ITC found reversible.

  • The Appeal: The petitioner challenged every count, explicitly stating in their grounds of appeal that all supporting documents and reconciliations had already been submitted to the Adjudicating Authority.

  • The Appellate Rejection: The Appellate Authority upheld the demand, mechanically stating that since the petitioner did not furnish “further” explanations or “new” documents during the appeal hearing, the lower order required no interference.

  • The Writ Challenge: The petitioner moved the High Court, alleging a total “non-application of mind” and a “mechanical approach” by the Appellate Authority.


The Decision: Appellate Order Set Aside and Remanded

The High Court ruled in favour of the assessee, highlighting serious procedural flaws in the appellate process:

  1. Independent Application of Mind: An appellate order must show that the authority independently considered the grounds raised. Simply repeating the Adjudicating Officer’s findings does not constitute a valid legal review.

  2. Mechanical Approach: The Court observed that the Appellate Authority used repetitive concluding phrases across all four grounds of the appeal. This “cut-copy-paste” style evidenced a failure to actually engage with the specific merits of each tax head.

  3. Duty to Examine Existing Record: The Authority was “duty-bound” to examine the documents already on record. Rejecting an appeal because no additional documents were filed—while ignoring the existing ones—is a failure to exercise jurisdiction.

  4. Requirement of Reasons: Every quasi-judicial order must be a “speaking order” (an order that speaks its own reasons). Glossing over the explanations provided in the grounds of appeal renders the order legally void.


Key Takeaways for Taxpayers

  • Record Everything in the Grounds: When filing an appeal in Form GST APL-01, explicitly list the documents already submitted to the lower authority. If the Appellate Authority ignores them, this case serves as your precedent for a Writ challenge.

  • Challenge “Unreasoned” Orders: If an order says “the taxpayer failed to provide further evidence” without discussing the evidence you did provide, it is a violation of the Principles of Natural Justice.

  • Remand for Merits: A remand means the case is “born again.” Use this opportunity to provide a fresh “Table of Documents” to the Appellate Authority, cross-referencing every disputed amount to a specific invoice or ledger already on file.


Checklist for a “Reasoned” Appellate Order

  • Does the order summarize the Appellant’s contentions?

  • Does the order discuss the evidence/documents submitted?

  • Does the order provide a logical link between the facts and the final decision?

  • Is each point of the dispute (e.g., RCM, ITC, Outward Tax) addressed individually?

HIGH COURT OF CALCUTTA
Fratelli Vineyards Ltd.
v.
State of West Bengal*
Om Narayan Rai, J.
WPA No. 24054 of 2025
FEBRUARY  23, 2026
Himangshu Kumar RaySubhasis PodderMs. Shiwani Shaw and Gaurav Chakraborty, Advs. for the Petitioner. Saptak Sanyal, Adv. for the Respondent.
JUDGMENT
1. This writ petition is directed against an order dated June 17, 2025 passed by the appellate authority under Section 107 of the WBGST Act, 2017/CGST Act, 2017 (hereafter the “said Act of 2017”).
FACTS OF THE CASE:
2. An adjudication order under Section 73 of the said Act of 2017 had been passed against the petitioner no. 1 (hereafter “the petitioner”) on April 3, 2024 for the tax period of April, 2018 to March, 2019 thereby holding the petitioner liable for payment of tax on four counts i.e. short payment of outward tax, short payment of tax on inward supply (RCM), excess availment of ITC on inward supply and ITC found reversible.
3. The petitioner carried the said order in appeal before the appellate authority and furnished its explanation why it was not liable to pay tax on the said grounds.
4. It is the petitioner’s case that all documents in support of the petitioner’s explanation had already been furnished before the adjudicating authority.
5. The appellate authority ultimately confirmed the adjudication order impugned before it by repeating the following after dealing with each of the aforesaid four grounds on which the petitioner was taxed:-
“As no further explanation and supporting documents have been furnished by the appellant at appeal stage, the findings of the adjuration officer stands valid and there is no reason to interfere his order. “
6. Feeling aggrieved thereby, the petitioner has approached this Court by way of the instant writ petition.
SUBMISSIONS ON BEHALF OF RESPECTIVE PARTIES:
7. Mr. Ray, learned Advocate appearing for the petitioner has taken this Court to the appeal (and especially the grounds thereof), filed before the appellate authority and sought to demonstrate that the petitioner’s contention against the findings of the adjudication authority had been distinctly detailed in the appeal.
8. He further submits that the documents that were there before the adjudicating authority would have sufficed for reaching a proper conclusion if the same had been examined in the light of the petitioner’s contention in the appeal.
9. Mr. Sanyal, learned Advocate appearing for the respondent State authorities has little resistance to offer to the submissions made by Mr. Ray.
DECISION:
10. Heard learned Advocates appearing for the respective parties and considered the material on record.
11. The appellate order impugned does not show any application of independent mind by the appellate authority. The appellate authority has paraphrased the observations of the adjudicating authority and has clearly glossed over the explanations given by the petitioner against the observations made by the adjudicating authority in the petitioner’s appeal before the appellate authority. Non-application of mind by the appellate authority is also evident from the repeated use of the same expression (which has already been extracted hereinabove) at the end of every conclusion that the appellate authority has reached in respect of every ground for demand of tax.
12. To wit, while the appellate authority has said that no further explanation was given it has clearly lost sight of the explanation actually given by the petitioner in the petitioner’s grounds of appeal and has not dealt with the same. Such approach renders the appellate order uninformed and susceptible to reproach in judicial review.
13. When explanations had been given by the appellant, it was the duty of the appellate authority to look into the same, assess the worth thereof and then reach a conclusion. It could have very well rejected the explanations, if the same were not acceptable in law or fact but there should be reasons therefor. In the case at hand there is none. Similarly there is no consideration of the documents already on record. At least the order impugned does not reveal so.
14. On such ground alone, the appellate order impugned dated June 17, 2025 is set aside and the matter is remanded to the appellate authority for fresh consideration on merits in the light of the documents already on record and upon proper consideration of the petitioner’s contention raised in the appeal filed before the appellate authority.
15. It is needless to mention that this Court has not gone into the merits of the petitioner’s case and all points are left open to be decided by the appellate authority in accordance with law.
16. WPA 24054 of 2025 stands disposed of with the above observations.
17. There shall be no order as to costs.
18. Urgent photostat certified copy of this order, if applied for, be supplied to the parties on urgent basis after completion of necessary formalities.
Category: GST

About CA Satbir Singh

Chartered Accountant having 12+ years of Experience in Taxation , Finance and GST related matters and can be reached at Email : Taxheal@gmail.com