Interim Bank Guarantee Securing Short-Paid Tax Need Not Be Enhanced to Cover Penalty for Perishable Goods Release
Issue
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Whether an interim order directing a bank guarantee equivalent only to the alleged short-paid tax for releasing a perishable consignment should be modified to include the penalty amount.
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Whether the authority before whom the interim bank guarantee is to be furnished can be changed to a different departmental officer (DGGI) upon the Revenue’s request.
Facts
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A writ petition [WP(C)/318/2026] was filed challenging the detention/seizure of a consignment of perishable areca nuts and accompanying vehicles.
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The Court passed an interim order directing the release of the seized goods and vehicles subject to the petitioner furnishing a bank guarantee equal to the alleged short-paid tax amount before Respondent No. 2.
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The Directorate General of Goods and Services Tax Intelligence (DGGI) filed an interlocutory application seeking two modifications to the interim order:
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Enhancing the bank guarantee amount to secure not just the tax, but also the penalty amount as per the departmental tabulation.
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Changing the named authority for receiving the guarantee from Respondent No. 2 to Respondent No. 3 (Additional Director General, DGGI).
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The writ petitioner opposed the enhancement, arguing that the penalty aspect was already considered by the Court when the initial interim order was formulated.
Decision
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On Enhancement of Bank Guarantee (In favour of Assessee):
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The Court rejected the Revenue’s request to increase the guarantee amount to cover the penalty.
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It held that the primary purpose of the interim stage was to balance justice by securing the core alleged short-paid tax, especially considering the highly perishable nature of the areca nuts.
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The existing interim arrangement adequately protected the interests of justice, and no valid ground was established to alter the financial terms.
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The Court clarified that if the petitioner ultimately loses the main writ petition, the Department retains the right to enforce and recover the penalty at that later stage.
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On Modification of the Receiving Authority (In favour of Revenue):
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The Court accepted the DGGI’s administrative request.
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The interim order was modified solely to the extent that the bank guarantee would now be furnished in the name of Respondent No. 3 (Additional Director General, DGGI) instead of Respondent No. 2.
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Key Takeaways
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Securing Tax over Penalty at Interim Stage: For the interim release of seized goods—particularly perishable commodities—securing the core alleged short-paid tax is generally deemed sufficient to protect Revenue interests without pre-emptively forcing a guarantee for penalties.
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Preservation of Perishable Assets: Courts heavily weigh the perishable nature of cargo when balancing equities, preferring swift conditional releases over prolonged detentions that destroy commercial value.
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No Prejudice to Final Adjudication: Refusing to secure a penalty via an interim bank guarantee does not wipe out the liability; the Revenue’s right to enforce statutory penalties remains fully preserved pending the final outcome of the writ petition.
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Administrative Flexibility: Minor administrative modifications to interim orders, such as changing the specific departmental designation or officer in whose favor a security bond/guarantee is executed, are readily permitted to align with internal jurisdictional mandates.
WP(C)/318/2026
