Retrospective GST registration cancellation without prior notice or disclosed material is legally unsustainable.
Issue
Whether the revenue authorities can legally cancel a taxpayer’s GST registration retrospectively without issuing a Show Cause Notice (SCN) that explicitly proposes retrospective effect, discloses the underlying material, and provides objective reasons for such action.
Facts
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The Assessee: The petitioner was a duly registered person under the GST framework.
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The Action: The Proper Officer passed an order cancelling the petitioner’s GST registration with retrospective effect.
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The Omission: The officer failed to issue a Show Cause Notice (SCN) proposing a retrospective cancellation, did not disclose the supporting material, and did not state the reasons for the action.
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The Dispute: The fact that the SCN and the relied-upon material were never served remained entirely undisputed on record.
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Appellate History: The petitioner’s application for the revocation of the cancellation was rejected, and their subsequent statutory appeal against that rejection was dismissed by the appellate authority.
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Writ Remedy: Aggrieved by the absolute lack of due process, the petitioner invoked the extraordinary writ jurisdiction of the High Court.
Decision
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Precedent Followed: The High Court relied on the established legal principle laid down in Bansal Casting v. Union of India, which governs the boundaries of registration cancellations.
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Mandate of Due Process: The court held that while the law grants authorities the power to cancel a registration retrospectively under specific statutory contingencies, the exercise of this power requires the department to issue a prior notice explicitly proposing that retrospective effect.
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Cancellation Declared Illegal: Because no such specific SCN was issued and no adverse material was served upon the petitioner, the retrospective cancellation order was ruled entirely illegal.
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Orders Quashed: The High Court quashed the retrospective cancellation order along with the consequential orders rejecting the revocation and dismissing the appeal.
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Fresh Proceedings Permitted: The petition was decided in favor of the assessee, though the respondents were left free to initiate fresh proceedings strictly in accordance with the law.
Key Takeaways
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Prior Notice for Retrospective Effect: The power to cancel a GST registration retrospectively cannot be exercised secretly or via a standard boilerplate notice; the intention to cancel retrospectively must be explicitly declared in the SCN to allow the taxpayer a fair chance to defend themselves.
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Material Disclosure is Mandatory: For an administrative action to satisfy the principles of natural justice, the revenue must share the exact physical evidence or internal data it relies upon before stripping away a taxpayer’s registration.
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Consequential Orders Fall with the Root Order: If the primary order of cancellation is structurally flawed due to a violation of natural justice, all subsequent administrative actions—such as the rejection of a revocation application or an appellate dismissal—automatically collapse.
“24. It is well settled that a quasi-judicial authority, while acting in exercise of its statutory power must act fairly and must act with an open mind while initiating a show cause proceeding. A show cause proceeding is meant to give the person proceeded against a reasonable opportunity of making his objection against the proposed charges indicated in the notice.

