Appellate Authorities cannot dismiss appeals for non-appearance; they must pass a reasoned order on merits.
The Dispute: Summary Dismissal vs. Speaking Order
The Conflict: The assessee filed an appeal against a GST demand, raising specific technical grounds:
Procedural Lapses: That they had replied to the show-cause notice (RFT-08) on time, but it was ignored.
Natural Justice: That no personal hearing was granted by the lower authority.
System Errors: That delays in filing (RFT-01) were due to technical glitches on the GST portal, not negligence.
The Appellate Action: The Commissioner (Appeals) dismissed the case in a single stroke because the assessee did not attend the scheduled hearing. The merits of the written appeal memo were never discussed.
The Judicial Verdict: Victory for Due Process
The Court quashed the dismissal and remanded the matter, establishing three critical legal mandates:
1. No Dismissal for Default
Unlike civil courts, tax appellate authorities under Section 107 do not have the power to dismiss an appeal simply because the appellant is absent. The authority must examine the “grounds of appeal” already submitted in the appeal memo.
2. The Requirement of a “Speaking Order”
Under Section 107(12), the order of the Appellate Authority must be in writing and must state the “points for determination,” the “decision thereon,” and the “reasons for the decision.” A dismissal for non-appearance fails this statutory test because it doesn’t address the core dispute.
3. Mandatory Personal Hearing (Section 75)
The court noted the assessee’s grievance that a personal hearing was denied even at the original stage. Under Section 75(4), a hearing is mandatory if an adverse decision is contemplated or if the taxpayer specifically requests one.
Strategic Takeaways for 2026 Compliance
The “Memo” is Your Shield: Always ensure your Statement of Facts and Grounds of Appeal in the appeal filing (Form GST APL-01) are comprehensive. Even if you miss a hearing due to an emergency, the authority is legally bound to read and decide based on those written grounds.
Portal Errors as a Defense: Since the court acknowledged “system-driven delays,” keep screenshots or “Ticket IDs” from the GST Helpdesk if you face portal issues. These serve as valid evidence to excuse technical delays in filing RFT-01/08.
The “Second Chance” Rule: The court clarified that if the matter is remanded and you fail to appear again, the authority still cannot dismiss it for default—they must write a judgment based on your documents. However, it is always advisable to attend or seek an adjournment to avoid an ex-parte order on merits.
Faceless Appeals: In the current 2026 environment of faceless appeals, the “Written Submission” is everything. Since the physical presence is replaced by video conferencing, the quality of your uploaded PDF determines the outcome.
