Extended GST Limitation Period Validly Invoked Due to Turnover Under-Declaration Against High Seigniorage Fees

By | June 23, 2026

Extended GST Limitation Period Validly Invoked Due to Turnover Under-Declaration Against High Seigniorage Fees

Issue

Whether the revenue department validly invoked the extended period of limitation under Section 74 of the CGST/TNGST Act to demand tax on suppressed outward supplies, where the petitioner’s declared turnover was drastically lower than the volume indicated by the high seigniorage fees paid.

Facts

  • The petitioner is engaged in the sale of rock boulders and contracted the physical extraction of the material to a third party.

  • Following a department inspection in March 2024, the revenue issued pre-notice intimations (DRC-01A) and subsequent Show Cause Notices (DRC-01) for the financial years 2018-19, 2019-20, and 2020-21.

  • The department passed final orders in Form DRC-07 confirming the tax demands, alleging intentional suppression of outward supplies in the petitioner’s GSTR-1 returns.

  • To determine the true quantum of the escaped turnover, the Assessing Officer applied the “National Standard Method” to estimate actual mineral clearance based on the total seigniorage fees paid by the petitioner.

  • The petitioner challenged the orders through writ petitions, arguing that no incriminating material was discovered during the inspection, the invocation of Section 74’s extended limitation period was illegal, and the underlying issue of tax on seigniorage fees was currently kept in abeyance by the Supreme Court.

Decision

  • Held, in favour of revenue: The writ petitions were dismissed because the records clearly demonstrated a massive under-declaration of outward supply turnover relative to the large volume of seigniorage fees paid.

  • Held, in favour of revenue: It is highly improbable that a commercial entity would pay a significantly higher statutory fee for a lesser volume of mineral extraction; this stark imbalance establishes a prima facie case of suppression, fully justifying the extended limitation period under Section 74.

  • Held, in favour of revenue: The department’s reliance on the National Standard Method to estimate the escaped turnover was reasonable, and the entire adjudication process was free from any procedural irregularities.

Key Takeaways

  • Statutory Fees as Yield Indicators: A severe mismatch between high statutory production fees (like seigniorage or mining royalties) and low declared outward turnover provides a solid, verifiable foundation for the revenue to suspect deliberate tax evasion.

  • Legitimacy of Formula-Based Estimation: Where an assessee fails to properly reconcile their actual production indicators with their sales declarations, the tax authorities are legally entitled to use standard industry estimation formulas to calculate suppressed turnover.

  • Section 74 Invocation Standards: To successfully invoke the extended five-year limitation period, the department does not always need external “incriminating material” if the taxpayer’s own statutory filings and government payment logs contain glaring, irreconcilable contradictions.

HIGH COURT OF MADRAS
KPR Enterprises
v.
State Tax Officer
C. Saravanan, J.
W.P. Nos. 35453, 35458 and 35463 of 2024
W.M.P. Nos. 38346, 38355 and 38364 of 2024
JUNE  12, 2026
Dr. S. Sathyanarayanan for the Petitioner. V. Prashanth Kiran, Govt. Adv. for the Respondent.
ORDER
1. By this Common Order, all these Writ Petitions are being disposed of.
2. In these Writ Petitions, the Petitioner has challenged the respective impugned Orders all dated 15.07.2024 passed for the Tax Period 2018-2019, 2019-2020 and 2020-2021, as detailed below:
S. No. Writ Petition No. Tax Period DRC-01A Date of Reply to DRC-01A DRC-01 Date of Reply to DRC-01 DRC-07
1 35453/2024 2018-2019 20.03.2024 23.03.2024 02.04.2024 25.06.2024 15.07.2024
2 35458/2024 2019-2020 20.03.2024 23.03.2024 02.04.2024 25.06.2024 15.07.2024
3 35463/2024 2020-2021 20.03.2024 23.03.2024 02.04.2024 25.06.2024 15.07.2024

 

3. The impugned Orders have preceded Intimation Notices in GST DRC-01A followed by the Show Cause Notices in GST DRC-01 to which the Petitioner has given reply.
4. The case of the Petitioner appears to be that the Petitioner was unable to carry on the business and therefore entered into a contract with one B.T.Nagaraj Reddy, who extracted the boulders from the site and the price was fixed based on the provisional advisor consultations / instructions and GST was duly discharged.
5. It is submitted that despite no incriminating being unearthed in the inspection during March 2024, Intimation Notices in DRC-01A were issued to the petitioner to which the Petitioner had replied.
6. It is submitted that the Petitioner was also issued with Show Cause Notices in GST DRC-01 to which also, the Petitioner has replied. It is further submitted that the finding arrived in the impugned Orders regarding “fraud”, “willful-misstatement” and “suppression of fact” is absent.
7. It is further submitted that the Petitioner sold only rock boulders which are not capable of being used or even followed by the measurements and that the said Contractor namely B.T.Nagaraj Reddy had discharged the tax liability, who extracted the boulders, and sold them from the Petitioner’s site. Hence, there is no loss to the exchequers.
8. That apart, it is submitted that the impugned Orders have been passed without the Petitioner being given an opportunity of being heard and therefore the impugned Orders are liable to be quashed and the Writ Petitions be allowed.
9. Learned Government Advocate for the Respondent on the other hand would submit that the impugned Orders are detailed Orders and does not merit any interference and therefore these Writ Petitions are liable to be dismissed with exemplary costs.
10. By the impugned order, the demand has been confirmed based on the seigniorage fee paid by the petitioner. In the show cause notice, the department has arrived at the quantity of boulders cleared by the petitioner in Cubic Meters and Tons, which are extracted below:
S.Nos. W.P.Nos. Tax Period Seignorage fee Quantity of boulders in Cubic Meters Tax Liability
1 35453/2024 2018-2019 708000 12000 10,17,750
2 35458/2024 2019-2020 2478000 42000 14,09,568
3 35463/2024 2020-2021 2832000 48000 16,38,650

 

The petitioner has, however, declared the value of the supply in GSTR-1 as 34,09,433/-.
11. I have considered the arguments advanced by the learned counsel for the petitioner and the learned Government Advocate for the respondent. I have also perused the records and the provisions of the respective GST enactments and the Rules made thereunder.
12. This case was heard along with the batch, and decisions were pronounced in W.P.Nos.2142 of 2026 [Turbo Energy Private Limited], W.P.Nos.35967 of 2024 [Fastenex Private Limited], W.P.Nos.14487 of 2025 [Ispahani Estates] etc., wherein a detailed order has been passed insofar as the invocation of extended period of limitation under Section 74 of the respective GST Enactments.
13. The arguments in this case were advanced along with the arguments heard in the 53 cases which were disposed by two separate orders, whereby orders were pronounced in the aforesaid cases.
14. A reading of the impugned order reveals that the inspection was held prior to the issuance of the above information on 19.03.2024.
15. As far as the tax payable on the seigniorage fee is concerned, the matter is pending before the Hon’ble Supreme Court and the same has been kept in abeyance. As far as the difference in the value of supply is concerned, the respondent has arrived at the tax based on the inference that there was a suppression of the value of supply of boulders in GSTR-1, warranting the invocation of the extended period of limitation under Section 74 of the respective GST enactments.
16. The facts on record and the above tabulation would reveal that the petitioner has suppressed turn over, warranting the initiation of proceedings under Section 74 of the respective GST enactments.
17. It is evident that the respondent has estimated the escaped turnover based on the National Standard Method in order to arrive at the value of supply short declared by the petitioner in the Returns to invoke the machinery under Section 74 of the respective GST enactments. It is also highly improbable for the petitioner to have paid the higher amounts towards the seigniorage fee as compared to lesser quantity of minerals extracted and supplied during the respective tax periods.
18. It is in this background, the value was arrived and the demand has been confirmed.
19. In the show cause notice also, it has been clearly stated that the petitioner has suppressed the value of the output supply of goods in GSTR-1, based on the calculation given therein. Thus, there were sufficient materials / foundational facts available for the issuance of a notice under Section 74 to demand tax for the above tax period.
20. Since the petitioner has paid a huge amount for the seigniorage fee, but has under-declared the value of the outward supply, it is evident that a prima facie case was made out for the invocation of the extended period of limitation under Section 74 of the respective GST enactments, as both under Section 73 and 74 of the respective GST enactments, the expression used is “Where it appears”.
21. As such, the challenge to the impugned order on the ground that there is no basis for invoking the extended period of limitation under Section 74 of the respective GST enactments, cannot be countenanced.
22. As such, I am unable to discern any any procedural irregularity committed by the respondent while passing the respective impugned orders so as to interfere with the present writ petitions
23. Therefore, these writ petitions are liable to be dismissed, and are accordingly, dismissed. However, liberty is given to the petitioner to file a statutory appeal before the appellate authority, if so desired, in compliance with the requirements under Section 74, within a period of 30 days form the date of receipt of a copy of this order.
24. If such an appeal is filed within the specified time, the appellate authority shall take up the appeal and dispose the same on merits without reference to limitation.
25. It is needless to state that, before passing any orders, the petitioner shall be heard. No costs. Connected miscellaneous petitions are closed.