General penalty under Section 125 cannot be superimposed when a specific late fee applies for delayed returns.
Issue
Whether the tax authority is legally justified in imposing a residual general penalty under Section 125 of the GST Act in addition to a specific late fee under Section 47 for the delayed filing of GST returns.
Facts
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The Notice: The proper officer issued a Show Cause Notice (SCN) in Form GST DRC-01 proposing both a late fee and a residual general penalty under the CGST and SGST Acts for delayed return filing.
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Inaction: The taxpayer failed to file a reply or appear for a personal hearing before the tax authority.
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The Order: The proper officer passed an assessment order confirming the initial proposal and levied the general penalty over and above the standard late fee.
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The Challenge: The assessee filed a writ petition directly challenging the legal validity of superimposing a general penalty alongside a specific late fee.
Decision
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Covered by Precedent: The High Court noted that the core issue was explicitly covered by the judicial precedent set in Kandan Hardware Mart v. Asstt. Commissioner (ST) (FAC) (2026).
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Scope of Section 125: The Court held that the residual general penalty under Section 125 applies only as a catch-all provision in cases where no other specific penalty or statutory levy is prescribed by the Act.
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No Double Imposition: Because a specific late fee is already structurally leviable under Section 47 for delays in filing returns, a parallel general penalty under Section 125 cannot be superimposed for the exact same infraction.
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Order Modified: The writ petition was partly allowed. The Court deleted the unsustainable general penalty while confirming that the assessee remains fully liable to pay the designated late fee.
Key Takeaways
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Exclusivity of Specific Penalties: If a specific statutory provision (like Section 47) addresses a particular non-compliance with a dedicated fee or penalty, the revenue department cannot leverage the catch-all general provision (Section 125) to amplify the financial burden.
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Nature of Section 125: Section 125 functions strictly as a residual tool. It cannot be used to penalize common, scheduled compliance delays that already carry their own built-in financial corrections.
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Partial Relief via Writs: Even if a taxpayer defaults on responding to a Show Cause Notice at the adjudication stage, they can still successfully challenge the legal validity of an incorrect, double-penalizing order via writ jurisdiction.
W.M.P. No. 18303 & 18304 of 2026
| ACT | Penalty | Late Fee | Total |
| CGST | 25000 | 95498 | 1,20,498 |
| SGST | 25000 | 95498 | 1,20,498 |
| (i) | W.P.Nos.3540, 3567, 3570, 3902 and 3966 of 2024 as detailed in Table-3 are allowed. Therefore, “General Penalty” imposed under Section 125 of the respective GST Enactments on these Petitioners are set aside. |
| (ii) | W.P.Nos.27029, 27032, 27036, 32599, 34352, 34357, 35186 of 2023 and W.P.Nos.3572, 3916, 15690 of 2024 and W.P.Nos.9988, 28786, 42416, 46522 of 2025 as detailed in Table-4A are allowed. Therefore, “General Penalty” imposed under Section 125 of the respective GST Enactments on these Petitioners are set aside. These Petitioners are liable to pay a “Late Fee” of Rs.10,000/- under the respective GST Enactments. |
| (iii) | W.P.No.19967 of 2023 and W.P.Nos.23356, 30854, 9867 of 2024 and W.P.Nos.47726, 38007, 48941 of 2025 as detailed in Table-4B are allowed. These Petitioners are liable to pay a “Late Fee” of Rs.10,000/- under the respective GST Enactments. |
| (iv) | W.P.No.3915 of 2024 in Table-4C is partly allowed. However, imposition of “General Penalty” under Section 125 of the respective GST Enactments is set aside in view of imposition of “Late Fee” against the Petitioner. |
| (v) | No costs. Consequently, all connected Writ Miscellaneous Petitions are closed.” |

