A summary notice in Form DRC-01 cannot replace a formal show cause notice under Section 73(1), and an order passed without a hearing violates natural justice.
Issue
- Whether the issuance of a summary of a show cause notice in Form GST DRC-01 is sufficient to initiate proceedings under Section 73 of the AGST Act, 2017, without a separate, formal show cause notice being issued.
- Whether a demand order passed without providing the assessee an opportunity of being heard, despite a specific request for the same, is legally valid.
Facts
The petitioner challenged a demand order on two primary grounds. Firstly, the proceedings were initiated only with a summary of a show cause notice (Form GST DRC-01), and no formal show cause notice as required under Section 73(1) of the Assam Goods and Services Tax (AGST) Act, 2017, was ever issued. Secondly, the petitioner had specifically requested an opportunity for a personal hearing, but the adjudicating authority proceeded to pass the final order without granting any such hearing. The petitioner relied on the precedent set in the case of Construction Catalysers (P.) Ltd. v. State of Assam.
Decision
The High Court ruled in favour of the assessee and set aside both the summary of the show cause notice (Form DRC-01) and the subsequent summary of the order. The Court found the proceedings to be legally unsustainable.
The Court relied on its earlier decision in Construction Catalysers (P.) Ltd., reiterating the following principles:
- A summary of a show cause notice in Form GST DRC-01 is not a substitute for the mandatory show cause notice required under Section 73(1) of the CGST/AGST Act.
- To validly initiate proceedings under Section 73, the proper officer must issue a formal, detailed show cause notice, irrespective of whether a summary in DRC-01 has been issued.
- The issuance of summaries (like summary of SCN, summary of statement, or summary of order) does not absolve the tax authority of its statutory obligation to issue a proper show cause notice and pass a reasoned order as mandated by law.
Since the foundational requirement of issuing a proper show cause notice under Section 73(1) was not met, and the principles of natural justice were violated by not providing an opportunity of hearing, the entire proceedings were deemed void.
Key Takeaways
- DRC-01 is Not an SCN: The issuance of a summary notice in Form GST DRC-01 is merely a procedural formality. It cannot legally substitute for the detailed show cause notice that must be issued under Section 73(1) of the GST Acts.
- Mandatory Nature of SCN: A formal show cause notice is a foundational requirement for a valid demand proceeding. Without it, the entire action initiated by the tax department is without jurisdiction and liable to be quashed.
- Right to be Heard is Absolute: The principles of natural justice, particularly the right to a personal hearing (audi alteram partem) enshrined in Section 75 of the GST Acts, are mandatory. Passing an order without granting a requested hearing is a fatal procedural flaw.