Portal Uploading is Valid, but Officers Must Use Alternate Modes (like RPAD) if the Taxpayer Does Not Respond.
Facts
The Notice: The GST Department uploaded a Show Cause Notice (SCN) only on the GST Portal.
The Taxpayer’s Stand: The Petitioner claimed they had no knowledge of the notice as it was not served through any other mode (like email or physical post). Consequently, no reply was filed.
The Action: Since no response was received, the Proper Officer passed an ex-parte assessment order and a summary order without providing a personal hearing.
The Challenge: The Petitioner approached the Court, arguing that the service was ineffective and their right to a fair hearing (Natural Justice) was violated.
Decision
The Court ruled in favor of the Assessee (subject to conditions), remanding the matter based on the following legal reasoning:
Portal Upload vs. Effective Service: While Section 169(1)(d) recognizes “making it available on the common portal” as a valid mode of service, the Court held that if the taxpayer fails to respond, the officer should not simply proceed to an ex-parte order.
Duty to Explore Other Modes: To ensure the process isn’t a mere “empty formality,” the officer ought to explore other statutory modes—preferably Registered Post with Acknowledgement Due (RPAD)—to ensure the taxpayer is actually aware of the proceedings.
Mandatory Personal Hearing: Under Section 75(4) of the CGST Act, a personal hearing is mandatory if an adverse decision is contemplated against the taxpayer, even if they haven’t specifically requested one. Passing an order without a hearing when the notice itself wasn’t effectively served vitiates the order.
Conditional Remand: To balance the interest of the Revenue, the Court set aside the orders but directed the Petitioner to deposit 25% of the disputed tax as a condition for the matter to be reconsidered with a fresh personal hearing.
Key Takeaways
Check the “View Additional Notices” Tab: Many taxpayers miss notices because they only check the main dashboard. Courts are increasingly strict, but this ruling offers a “safety net” if the Department relied solely on the portal without backup communication.
Natural Justice is Supreme: An assessment order passed without a personal hearing is fundamentally flawed (voidable) if the taxpayer was never effectively reached.
Section 169 Hierarchy: While there is no strict “order” in Section 169, the spirit of the law requires the Department to act reasonably to secure the taxpayer’s presence before creating a massive tax demand.
The “25% Rule”: In writ petitions against ex-parte orders, Courts often impose a “pre-deposit” (usually 10% to 25%) to test the bona fides of the taxpayer before granting a second chance.
W.M.P(MD)No. 3024 of 2026
| (i) | The impugned order dated 29.12.2023 and the summary order dated 06.12.2024 are set aside and the matter is remanded to the respondent for fresh consideration on condition that the petitioner shall pay 25% of the disputed tax amount to the respondent within a period of four weeks from the date of receipt of a copy of this order. The setting aside of the impugned order will take effect from the date of payment of the said amount |
| (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 payment of amount as stated above. |
| (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. |