Denial of ITC for Mismatch Without Opportunity of Hearing Set Aside; Validity of Limitation Extension Notifications to be Decided by Supreme Court.
Issue:
- Whether an Input Tax Credit (ITC) denial order based on a mismatch in returns can be upheld if the assessee was not served with the Show Cause Notice (SCN) and/or not afforded proper opportunities to file a reply and be heard.
- What is the status of the challenge to Notification Nos. 56/2023-Central Tax dated December 28, 2023, and 56/2023-State Tax dated July 11, 2024, which extend the limitation period for passing orders, allegedly contrary to Section 168A of the CGST Act, 2017.
Facts:
A show cause notice (SCN) was issued to the assessee, alleging wrongful availment of Input Tax Credit (ITC) due to certain differences in the returns filed by the assessee. Subsequently, an impugned order was passed. The assessee’s primary contention was that they were not properly served with the SCN and, more critically, were not afforded adequate opportunities to file a reply and to be heard before the impugned order was passed. The assessee also challenged the validity of Notification Nos. 56/2023-Central Tax and 56/2023-State Tax, arguing that these notifications, which extended the limitation period for passing orders, were issued contrary to the mandate of Section 168A of the CGST Act, 2017.
Decision:
In favor of the assessee: The court acknowledged that the challenge to the aforementioned notifications (regarding the extension of the limitation period under Section 168A) is currently under consideration before the Supreme Court in HCC-SEW-MEIL-AAG JV v. Assistant Commissioner of State Tax [S.L.P No. 4240 of 2025, dated February 21, 2025]. Therefore, the assessee’s challenge to these notifications in the present proceedings will also be subject to the outcome of the Supreme Court’s decision.
Crucially, the court held that since the assessee was not afforded a proper opportunity to be heard, such an opportunity ought to have been granted to them to contest the matter on merits. Accordingly, the impugned order was set aside, and the assessee was granted time to file a reply to the SCN.
Key Takeaways:
- Fundamental Right to Hearing (Natural Justice): Regardless of the merits of the allegations (like ITC mismatch), the principles of natural justice mandate that an assessee must be given a proper opportunity to present their case, including filing a reply to the SCN and being heard, before any adverse order is passed. Failure to provide this opportunity is a significant procedural irregularity that can lead to the setting aside of the order.
- Interim Relief for Procedural Lapses: Courts often set aside orders on procedural grounds (like denial of natural justice) and remand the matter back to the lower authority for fresh adjudication after providing the necessary opportunity, rather than ruling on the merits of the tax demand immediately.
- Pendency of Similar Issues Before Higher Courts: When a legal question (like the validity of notifications extending limitation periods) is sub-judice before a higher court (e.g., Supreme Court), lower courts typically acknowledge this and make their decisions on other grounds, stating that the specific issue will be governed by the higher court’s eventual ruling. This indicates the widespread legal debate and uncertainty surrounding the validity of these GST limitation extension notifications.
- Section 168A and Force Majeure: The validity of extensions under Section 168A of the CGST Act hinges on whether the conditions of “force majeure” (like the COVID-19 pandemic) truly warranted such extensions and whether the procedural requirements, particularly GST Council recommendations, were fulfilled. This is a complex legal issue with conflicting High Court judgments, now awaiting definitive clarity from the Supreme Court.
CM APPL. No. 24753 OF 2025
“65. Almost all the issues, which have been raised before us in these present connected cases and have been noticed hereinabove, are the subject matter of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in the aforesaid SLP.
66. Keeping in view the judicial discipline, we refrain from giving our opinion with respect to the vires of Section 168-A of the Act as well as the notifications issued in purported exercise of power under Section 168-A of the Act which have been challenged, and we direct that all these present connected cases shall be governed by the judgment passed by the Hon’ble Supreme Court and the decision thereto shall be binding on these cases too.
67. Since the matter is pending before the Hon’ble Supreme Court, the interim order passed in the present cases, would continue to operate and would be governed by the final adjudication by the Supreme Court on the issues in the aforesaid SLP-4240-2025.
68. In view of the aforesaid, all these connected cases are disposed of accordingly along with pending applications, if any.”