Alternate remedy for appeal to be exhausted before approaching the High Court

The Hon’ble Madhya Pradesh High Court in Prism Johnson Ltd. V. Union of India [Writ Petition No. 9226 of 2020 dated June 13, 2022] held that, orders denying refund claim to the assessee for accumulated credit of Compensation Cess, where the reason of claim being time barred is absent but certain other reasons have been assigned that are sufficient to enable the assessee to know the cause for rejection of the claim for refund cannot be categorized to be non-speaking. Further, relegated the matter for avail the alternate remedy of appeal.

Facts:

This petition has been filed by Prism Johnson Ltd. (“the Petitioner”) against the Show Cause Notice (“SCN”) along with consequential Orders (“the Impugned Orders”) passed by the Revenue Department (“the Respondent”) refusing claim for refund for accumulated credit of Compensation Cess, on the grounds that the refund is wrongly being denied to the Petitioner and non-speaking of the Impugned Orders. Thus, in violation of principles of natural justice.

The Respondent contended as below:

  1. The Refund claim is time barred in view of Section 54(14)(2) of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 (“the CGST Act”).
  2. No record under credit ledger for accumulated ITC of cess was available, nor was the Input Tax Credit (“ITC”) of cess availed by the Petitioner.
  3. The Refund claim does not hold merit on account of Circular No. 125/44/2019-GST dated November 18, 2019, which discuss about the guidelines for claims of refund of Compensation Cess.
  4. The Refund claim was wrongly made under the head of “any other” instead of “refund of unutilized ITC on account of export without payment of tax”.
  5. Maintainability of the petition is untenable as the Petitioner did not exhaust the statutory remedy of appeal available under Section 107(1) of the CGST Act.

Issues:

Whether the petition to the High Court is tenable without exhausting the appeal provision under Section 107(1) of the CGST Act?

Held:

The Hon’ble Madhya Pradesh High Court in Writ Petition No. 9226 OF 2020 dated June 13, 2022 held as under:

  • Noted that, in some of the Impugned Orders, reason of claim being time barred is absent but certain other reasons have been assigned by the Respondent to support the Impugned Orders.
  • Stated that, though the Impugned Orders was obscure, it held sufficient grounds to bring to the knowledge of the Petitioner, as to why the refund claim was denied.
  • Held that, the Impugned Orders did not lack the principle of natural justice, as the order was complete and the assigned reasons which may be cryptic on bare perusal but are sufficient to enable the Petitioner to know the exact cause for rejection of the claim for refund.
  • Further, held that and the reasons assigned cannot categorize the Impugned Orders to be non-speaking.
  • Relegated the Petitioner to avail the remedy of appeal under Section 107 of the CGST Act.

Relevant Provisions:

Section 107(1) of the CGST Act:

“Appeals to Appellate Authority

 (1) Any person aggrieved by any decision or order passed under this Act or the State Goods and Services Tax Act or the Union Territory Goods and Services Tax Act by an adjudicating authority may appeal to such Appellate Authority as may be prescribed within three months from the date on which the said decision or order is communicated to such person.”

DISCLAIMER: The views expressed are strictly of the author and A2Z Taxcorp LLP. The contents of this article are solely for informational purpose and for the reader’s personal non-commercial use. It does not constitute professional advice or recommendation of firm. Neither the author nor firm and its affiliates accepts any liabilities for any loss or damage of any kind arising out of any information in this article nor for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Further, no portion of our article or newsletter should be used for any purpose(s) unless authorized in writing and we reserve a legal right for any infringement on usage of our article or newsletter without prior permission.

We have recently released the 7th Edition (May, 2022) of our book on Goods and Services Tax, titled, “GST LAW AND COMMENTARY – WITH ANALYSIS AND PROCEDURES”, updated with the Finance Act, 2022 in a set of 4 Volumes. We thank you all for the support and your enduring response.

Have a look at the complete tour of the Book at: https://cutt.ly/nF6O0oN

Order your copy now and be a part of the GST learning excursion in the most comprehensive and lucid form !!

For more details and purchase online at: https://cutt.ly/RFMox8D

Scroll to Top