Advance Ruling Denied for Failure to Examine Whether Land Conversion Fee Constitutes a Supply.
Issue
Whether the AAR and AAAR were justified in rejecting an advance ruling application by only deciding the exclusion under Section 7(2) of the CGST Act without first determining whether the payment of land conversion fees constitutes a “supply” under Section 7(1).
Facts
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The petitioner-company paid a statutory fee under Section 27A of the Kerala Conservation of Paddy Land and Wetland Act, 2008, to change a land description and obtain permission to construct an office complex for its business.
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The petitioner sought an advance ruling to clarify its liability under the Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) pursuant to Notification No. 13/2017-CT (Rate).
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To resolve the RCM liability, the application required a composite two-step determination:
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Whether the payment of the statutory fee is a “supply” under Section 7(1) of the CGST Act.
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In the alternative, whether it qualifies for exclusion under Section 7(2) via constitutional notifications (Articles 243G and 243W).
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The Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR) and the Appellate Authority for Advance Ruling (AAAR) addressed only the second aspect, ruling that only activities strictly falling under Articles 243G and 243W of the Constitution are excluded from being a supply or service.
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Both authorities completely failed to answer the primary, foundational question of whether the activity falls within the scope of Section 7(1) in the first place.
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The petitioner filed a writ petition challenging the incomplete orders passed by the AAR and AAAR.
Decision
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The High Court held that the two statutory limbs—determining inclusion under Section 7(1) and exclusion under Section 7(2)—form an inseparable, composite inquiry.
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The Court observed that because the authorities only answered the second limb and skipped the foundational analysis of Section 7(1), the entire adjudication process was legally vitiated.
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The Court ruled that an advance ruling cannot be left half-answered or decided on assumptions regarding the nature of a “supply.”
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Consequently, the orders passed by both the AAR and the AAAR were set aside.
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The matter was remitted back to the Kerala Authority for Advance Ruling for a fresh, comprehensive reconsideration of both issues after giving all parties a proper hearing.
Key Takeaways
Adjudication Must Be Composite: Advance ruling authorities cannot issue partial or fragmented rulings. They must comprehensively address all interconnected questions raised in an application, especially when one question forms the legal basis for the next.
Section 7(1) is the Gateway: Before jumping to whether an activity is excluded from GST under Section 7(2), authorities must first establish that the activity qualifies as a “supply” under Section 7(1). If there is no supply, the question of exemption or exclusion becomes redundant.
Remand for Omission: When an authority fails to exercise its jurisdiction to answer a fundamental question of law, the appropriate judicial remedy is to set aside the order and remand the matter back for complete adjudication.
| (i) | Whether there was any supply of service within the meaning of Section 7 of CGST Act 2017; and |
| (ii) | Whether there was any consideration for rendering the service by the service provider. |
