GST Authorities Can Lawfully Recover Crystallized Partnership Firm Dues From a Partner’s Personal Bank Account Under Section 79
Issue
Whether the GST authorities can lawfully issue a garnishee recovery notice under Section 79(1)(c)(i) to attach the personal bank account of a partner for the crystallized tax liabilities of a partnership firm, without invoking the provisional attachment powers under Section 83.
Facts
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The petitioner is a partnership firm that challenged a departmental recovery communication issued to its bank for the assessment period 2019–20.
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The firm alleged that the department unlawfully attached the bank account of an erstwhile partner without serving a prior notice.
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The petitioner argued that only the Commissioner could authorize a provisional attachment under Section 83, thereby mischaracterizing the recovery action as a provisional measure.
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Official records revealed that the tax liability of the partnership firm had already been crystallized under an order-in-original, which the firm chose not to challenge.
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Following this crystallization, the department issued a garnishee recovery notice directly to the bank under Section 79(1)(c)(i).
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An evidentiary affidavit disclosed that although the partner resigned from the firm at a later date, he was actively a partner during the relevant assessment period when the tax liability accrued.
Decision
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Firm Lacked Standing for Partner: The High Court observed that the writ petition was filed by the partnership firm itself, and not by the individual partner whose personal account was affected.
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Garnishee Powers Upheld: The Court held that Section 79(1)(c) explicitly empowers GST authorities to proceed against a third party (the bank as a garnishee) to recover government dues.
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Partners Jointly and Severally Liable: Since the firm’s tax liability was fully crystallized and partners are fundamentally liable for the dues of the firm, executing recovery actions against the partner’s personal bank account was entirely permissible.
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Misconception Cleared: The Court ruled that the petitioner’s reliance on Section 83 was completely unfounded, as the impugned communication was a final recovery notice under Section 79(1)(c)(i), not a provisional attachment.
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Petition Dismissed: Finding no legal infirmity or procedural deviation in the department’s actions, the High Court dismissed the writ petition in favor of the revenue.
Key Takeaways
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Section 79 vs. Section 83: Section 83 is a provisional attachment tool used during pending proceedings to protect revenue. Once a tax liability is finalized and remains unpaid, the department can directly deploy Section 79 garnishee powers to seize funds.
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Retrospective Liability of Partners: A partner cannot escape tax liabilities that accrued during their tenure in a partnership firm by simply resigning from the firm before the recovery stage.
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Direct Recovery Vectors: Because partnership liabilities extend to the personal assets of the partners under general partnership law and GST frameworks, the department can bypass the firm’s accounts and recover outstanding crystallized dues straight from a partner’s personal bank accounts.
W.M.P. Nos. 24381 and 24382 of 2026

