SLP dismissed: Excess stock found in search/inspection triggers Sections 73/74, not Section 130 of CGST Act.

By | June 1, 2025

SLP dismissed: Excess stock found in search/inspection triggers Sections 73/74, not Section 130 of CGST Act.

Issue:

Whether a Special Leave Petition (SLP) filed by the revenue challenging a High Court judgment, which held that if excess stock is found during a search or inspection, proceedings should be initiated under Sections 73/74 of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 (CGST Act, 2017), rather than under Section 130 (confiscation of goods or conveyances), is maintainable.

Facts:

  • Excess stock was found during a search/inspection of the assessee’s premises.
  • The High Court had issued a judgment holding that in such a scenario, proceedings under Sections 73 (demand for tax not involving fraud, etc.) or 74 (demand for tax involving fraud, etc.) of the CGST Act should be invoked.
  • The High Court specifically ruled that Section 130 of the CGST Act (read with Rule 120 of GST Rules, though Rule 120 seems unrelated to Section 130 in current context, it might be a typo for another relevant rule or a past context) should not be pressed into service for excess stock.
  • The revenue filed an SLP against this High Court judgment.

Decision:

The Supreme Court held in favor of the assessee. It stated that it was “not inclined to interfere with the impugned judgement” and accordingly, the Special Leave Petition was dismissed.

Key Takeaways:

  • Scope of Section 130 (Confiscation): Section 130 deals with the confiscation of goods or conveyances and imposition of penalty. It is generally invoked in cases of serious contraventions, often implying a deliberate attempt to evade tax, such as transporting goods without proper documents or supplying taxable goods without invoices.
  • Scope of Sections 73/74 (Demand Proceedings): Sections 73 and 74 are the general demand provisions for recovery of tax that has not been paid, short-paid, erroneously refunded, or ITC wrongly availed/utilized. Section 73 applies in non-fraud cases, and Section 74 applies when fraud, willful misstatement, or suppression of facts is involved.
  • Excess Stock – A Matter of Demand, Not Confiscation (Generally): The High Court’s (and implicitly the Supreme Court’s agreement) reasoning is that merely finding excess stock does not automatically warrant confiscation under Section 130. Excess stock implies that some supply might have gone unrecorded or that there are discrepancies in accounting, leading to non-payment of tax. This is more appropriately addressed by raising a demand for the differential tax liability under Section 73 or 74, based on whether the excess stock points to tax evasion (fraud) or mere accounting discrepancies.
  • Confiscation as a Last Resort/Severe Cases: Confiscation (Section 130) is a more punitive measure than mere demand. It should ideally be reserved for cases where the intention to evade is clearly established and there’s a serious contravention beyond simply accounting for stock.
  • Consequence of SLP Dismissal: The Supreme Court’s dismissal of the SLP means that the High Court’s interpretation holds: for excess stock found in inspection/search, the department should primarily use demand-and-recovery provisions (Sections 73/74) rather than immediately resorting to confiscation under Section 130. This provides clarity and relief to taxpayers by preventing immediate and severe penal action for stock discrepancies unless other grounds for confiscation are specifically proven.
  • Rule 120 Irrelevance: The mention of Rule 120 (relating to the Electronic Cash Ledger) in the original text seems an error or irrelevant to Section 130. The core legal principle remains the applicability of Sections 73/74 versus Section 130 for excess stock.
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Additional Commissioner Grade-2
v.
Vijay Trading Company
SANJIV KHANNA, CJ.
Sanjay Kumar and K.V. Viswanathan, JJ.
SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CIVIL) Diary No. 5881 of 2025
APRIL  4, 2025
Bhakti Vardhan Singh, AOR, Ms. Sthavi Asthana, Adv. for the Petitioner.
ORDER
Delay condoned.
1. We are not inclined to interfere with the impugned judgment(s); hence, the present special leave petitions are dismissed.
2. We, however, clarify that the impugned judgment(s) and the dismissal of the present special leave petitions will not come in the way of the petitioners in taking recourse to appropriate remedies in accordance with law.
3. Pending application(s), if any, shall stand disposed of.
Category: GST

About CA Satbir Singh

Chartered Accountant having 12+ years of Experience in Taxation , Finance and GST related matters and can be reached at Email : Taxheal@gmail.com