Adverse GST orders passed without an oral hearing are procedurally vitiated and must be remanded.
Issue
Whether an assessment order passed under Section 73 of the CGST/UPGST Act, 2017 can be legally sustained if the underlying Show Cause Notice recorded “NA” for the personal hearing details, thereby denying the taxpayer an opportunity for an oral hearing.
Facts
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The Revenue issued a Show Cause Notice (SCN) under Section 73 of the Act to the petitioner proposing a tax or Input Tax Credit (ITC) demand.
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In the columns designated for the date, time, and venue of the personal hearing, the SCN explicitly recorded “NA” (Not Applicable), meaning no oral hearing was proposed or scheduled.
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The petitioner did not file a detailed written reply to the SCN.
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The assessing authority proceeded to pass an adverse final assessment order confirming the demand without providing any opportunity for a personal hearing.
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The petitioner filed a writ petition in the High Court challenging the validity of the adverse order on the grounds of a breach of natural justice and statutory procedure.
Decision
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Held, in favour of the assessee (matter remanded): The impugned assessment order is set aside, and the matter is remitted back to the tax authority for fresh adjudication.
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Statutory Mandate of Oral Hearing: Section 75(4) of the Act makes it mandatory to grant a personal hearing before any adverse decision is finalized against a taxpayer.
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Dual, Independent Requirements: The opportunity to file a written reply and the opportunity for an oral hearing are two distinct, independent statutory rights.
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Failure to Reply Does Not Waive Hearing: A taxpayer’s failure to file a detailed written reply merely closes the written submission stage; it does not automatically strip them of their independent right to an oral hearing.
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Order Vitiated: Because the record explicitly showed “NA” for the hearing details, the mandatory statutory procedure was bypassed, which completely vitiated the final order. The authority is directed to fix a fresh hearing date and allow the petitioner to file a final reply.
Key Takeaways
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Personal Hearing is Mandatory for Adverse Orders: Under the GST regime, if an assessment order contemplates any tax, interest, or penalty liability against an assessee, the authority must offer a personal hearing, even if the taxpayer does not explicitly request one.
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“NA” in SCNs is a Fatal Flaw: Mechanically marking personal hearing details as “Not Applicable” or leaving them blank in a Show Cause Notice is a structural defect that invalidates any consequential adverse order.
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The Right to be Heard is Not Conditional: A taxpayer’s right to an oral hearing is not conditional upon them filing a prior written explanation; both safeguards must be independently provided by the Revenue to fulfill the principles of natural justice embedded in the statute.

