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- 1 -
India's GST system struggles with compliance paradox as enforcement practices undermine self-assessment design after nine years
India's GST system, entering its ninth year, faces a compliance paradox where advanced technology coexists with enforcement-heavy practices and taxpayer mistrust. Originally designed for self-assessment with minimal human interface, the system now features frequent notices, audits, and credit blockages. Input Tax Credit has become problematic, with buyers facing liability for vendor defaults under Section 16(2)(c) and Rule 86A allowing discretionary credit blocking. Procedural rigidity affects businesses through complex filing requirements and punitive late fees. Enforcement has hardened since 2020, featuring arrests under Section 132 and frequent inspections. While courts provide relief through interventions, the author advocates for compliance empathy, dispute prevention, and legal certainty in future reforms. - (AI Summary)
Date 10 Jul 2025
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EOUs must pay customs duty, cess, and IGST on unutilized materials when exiting or debonding operations
Export Oriented Units (EOUs) exiting or debonding must pay customs duty, cess, and Integrated GST on unutilized raw materials and capital goods originally imported duty-free. Payment obligations include customs duty calculated at debonding date rates with depreciation benefits for capital goods, IGST under applicable provisions, and interest only if payment is delayed beyond the stipulated period after duty assessment. The debonding process requires application to Development Commissioner, stock verification, duty assessment, payment, and obtaining No Dues Certificate. Interest liability arises only when assessed duty remains unpaid beyond the allowed timeframe, typically thirty days from demand order, not from import date. A notification exempts interest on customs duties for specific capital goods and equipment when cleared from bonded warehouses. - (AI Summary)
Date 10 Jul 2025
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Section 18 GST Act allows input tax credit during registration transitions and business changes within 30 days
Section 18 of the GST Act provides input tax credit availability in special circumstances. Registered persons can claim ITC when obtaining new or voluntary registration, transitioning from exempt to taxable supplies, or switching from composition to regular scheme. Credit can be claimed on inputs in stock, semi-finished/finished goods, and capital goods (with prescribed reductions). Claims must be made within 30 days of eligibility. The section covers business transfers, requiring tax payment on capital goods supply, and ensures consistent ITC treatment across transitions while maintaining government revenue protection. - (AI Summary)
Date 10 Jul 2025
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Shipping bill SB0006 error blocks IGST refund due to data mismatches between customs and GST systems
A shipping bill SB0006 error prevents IGST refund processing for export transactions due to data mismatches between customs systems and GST portals. Resolution requires verifying shipping bill accuracy including exporter's GSTIN, invoice numbers, and HSN codes against GSTR-1 entries. Exporters must confirm IGST payment status in GST portal, ensure proper reconciliation between shipping bill and GSTR-1 data, validate exporter profile details including active IEC codes, and check customs processing status. Missing documents like shipping bills, export invoices, and IGST payment proof can trigger errors. If discrepancies persist, exporters may need to amend shipping bills through customs offices or file fresh refund applications after correcting all data inconsistencies. - (AI Summary)
Date 10 Jul 2025
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Tax authorities cannot deny refunds by disregarding binding judicial precedents without stay or appeal
A taxpayer filed a writ petition seeking implementation of a refund following a High Court judgment that held services from foreign affiliates without invoices have deemed nil value under GST rules. The tax department rejected the refund claim, stating it did not accept the High Court's precedent decision. The Delhi High Court ruled that tax authorities cannot deny refunds by disregarding binding court orders when no stay or appeal exists. The court emphasized that its earlier judgment had attained finality and directed the department to process the refund within two months, establishing that administrative disagreement with judicial precedent cannot justify non-compliance with court orders. - (AI Summary)
Date 10 Jul 2025
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Tax demand order exceeding show-cause notice amount violates Section 75(7) CGST Act safeguards
A taxpayer received a show-cause notice proposing recovery of Rs.66,13,874.78 but the tax authority issued a demand order for Rs.1,34,94,294, significantly exceeding the notice amount. The Allahabad High Court ruled that demand orders cannot exceed amounts specified in show-cause notices, as this violates the mandatory bar under Section 75(7) of the CGST Act. The court emphasized this provision safeguards taxpayers from surprise demands and quashed the excessive demand order, directing fresh proceedings with proper opportunity for the taxpayer to respond. - (AI Summary)
Date 10 Jul 2025
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Company wins refund of unutilized Input Tax Credit worth INR 4.37 crore after business closure under Section 54
A registered company discontinued its operations in Sikkim and sought refund of unutilized Input Tax Credit (ITC) worth INR 43,761,402. The tax authorities rejected the refund application, arguing that Section 54(3) of the CGST Act only permits ITC refunds in specific circumstances: zero-rated supplies without tax payment and inverted duty structure situations. Business closure was not included as a valid ground. The company challenged this decision before the Sikkim High Court, which ruled in favor of the taxpayer, holding that Section 49(6) read with Section 54 permits refund of unutilized ITC upon business closure, as no express prohibition exists. The court relied on precedent establishing that absence of statutory prohibition entitles taxpayers to claim refunds, despite the restrictive provisions of Section 54(3). - (AI Summary)
Date 09 Jul 2025
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Customs exemption benefits under Advance Authorization Scheme cannot be denied for product description variations without DGFT violation allegations
Kerala High Court ruled that customs exemption benefits under the Advance Authorization Scheme cannot be denied solely due to product description variations when the licensing authority (DGFT) has not alleged violations. The court held that a gelatine manufacturer's duty-free import rights were valid despite description discrepancies, emphasizing substance over form. The judgment clarified that customs authorities cannot independently reinterpret classifications to deny benefits when DGFT finds no breach. Penal provisions under Customs Act sections 112(a), 114A, and 114AA require proven fraudulent intent, not mere technical variations. This decision strengthens trade facilitation predictability and protects genuine exporters from arbitrary departmental interpretations. - (AI Summary)
Date 09 Jul 2025
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GST Act Section 17 restricts input tax credit for mixed-use goods and blocks credits for vehicles, food, and personal items
Section 17 of the GST Act governs input tax credit apportionment and blocked credits. Credit is restricted when goods/services are used partly for business versus non-business purposes, or for taxable versus exempt supplies. Banks and financial institutions can opt for 50% credit instead of apportionment. Blocked credits include motor vehicles, vessels, aircraft, food and beverages, club memberships, construction services, personal consumption items, and gifts. Specific exceptions apply for business use in manufacturing, transportation, and taxable supplies. The provision ensures credit is available only for legitimate business purposes. - (AI Summary)
Date 09 Jul 2025
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SB0005 shipping bill errors block IGST refund claims for 2020 exports due to documentation mismatches
The SB0005 issue in shipping bills occurs when there are mismatches or errors in IGST refund claims for export transactions, particularly affecting refunds for goods exported in 2020. This error typically arises from discrepancies between shipping bill details and GST return filings. Resolution involves verifying shipping bill accuracy, reconciling export data with GST returns, confirming IGST payment details, and ensuring proper documentation alignment between customs and GST systems. Exporters should check refund status on the GST portal, file refund applications if necessary, and contact customs authorities for system-related issues. For 2020 transactions, additional steps include reviewing historical refund applications and filing for pending refunds with complete documentation. - (AI Summary)
Date 09 Jul 2025
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Housing Board cannot demand additional GST after advertising flat prices as inclusive of all taxes
The Madras High Court ruled that Tamil Nadu Housing Board cannot demand additional GST after advertising flat prices as "inclusive of GST." Housing board allottees paid full consideration based on advertisements stating prices were inclusive of all taxes. Subsequently, the board demanded additional 5% GST before executing sale deeds. The court held that clear contractual representations cannot be altered unilaterally after full payment. The board, being in dominant position with complete tax knowledge, must bear consequences of any pricing omissions. The court applied principles of promissory estoppel and contra proferentem, directing the board to adjust GST from collected amounts and refund excess payments. - (AI Summary)
Date 09 Jul 2025
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SB0004 shipping bill errors block IGST export refunds due to Customs EDI and GST system data mismatches
The SB0004 issue in shipping bills occurs due to data mismatches between Customs EDI and GST systems, blocking IGST refund processing for exports. Resolution requires verifying shipping bill details match GST returns, ensuring correct exporter GSTIN, invoice numbers, and HSN codes align across systems. Key steps include reconciling export data in GST portal, updating bank account details, filing corrected shipping bills if necessary, and contacting customs authorities for technical issues. Exporters should revalidate their profiles, ensure IEC codes are properly linked to GSTIN, and resubmit refund applications with required documentation. If unresolved, escalation to GST helpdesk or advance ruling applications may be necessary for complex classification issues. - (AI Summary)
Date 09 Jul 2025
- 0 -
Taxpayer's email reply to show cause notice must be considered in GST assessment proceedings
The Madras High Court addressed a case where a taxpayer's email reply to a show cause notice was not considered during GST assessment proceedings. The department passed an assessment order without reviewing the taxpayer's response submitted via email rather than through the GST portal, and subsequently rejected the taxpayer's rectification application. The court held that failing to consider the taxpayer's reply and not providing a personal hearing violated natural justice principles. While clarifying that rectification applications can only address apparent errors on record and not reassess facts, the court remanded the matter for fresh adjudication, directing the department to provide proper hearing opportunities and requiring the taxpayer to deposit 10% of disputed tax amount. - (AI Summary)
Date 09 Jul 2025
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Registered businesses must meet five key conditions to claim Input Tax Credit under Section 16
Section 16 of the CGST Act governs Input Tax Credit eligibility for registered businesses. To claim ITC, taxpayers must possess valid tax invoices, receive goods/services, ensure suppliers have filed returns and paid taxes, and file their own returns. Key restrictions include a 180-day payment deadline to suppliers (with reversal required if exceeded), time limits for claiming ITC (by November 30th of following financial year or annual return filing), and prohibition on claiming ITC for depreciated capital goods under Income Tax Act. - (AI Summary)
Date 08 Jul 2025
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Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 prioritizes corporate revival over debt recovery within time-bound framework
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 consolidates insolvency laws under a unified framework to facilitate time-bound resolution of insolvency cases, maximize asset value, and promote entrepreneurship. Courts have established that the Code is beneficial legislation aimed at corporate debtor revival rather than mere debt recovery. The Supreme Court emphasized that the Code separates corporate debtor interests from promoters, ending "defaulter's paradise." The legislation seeks to balance stakeholder interests including creditors and debtors while establishing the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India for regulatory oversight. Time-bound resolution within specified timeframes prevents value erosion and ensures efficient processes, with revival being prioritized over liquidation as the last resort. - (AI Summary)
Date 08 Jul 2025
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SB0001 error blocks IGST refund processing for exports due to shipping bill discrepancies and GSTIN mismatches
The SB0001 issue in shipping bills commonly prevents IGST refund processing for export transactions under GST. This error typically stems from discrepancies in shipping bill details, GSTIN mismatches, incorrect invoice information, or IGST payment record issues. Resolution involves verifying shipping bill accuracy including GSTIN, invoice numbers, HSN codes, and export type classifications. Exporters must ensure IGST payments reflect properly in GST returns and reconcile shipping bill data with GSTR-1 entries. Additional steps include confirming exporter profile updates, checking shipping bill status in customs systems, verifying refund application status, and ensuring data synchronization between customs and GST systems. If discrepancies persist, shipping bill amendments may be required through customs authorities, or assistance sought from GST or customs helpdesks. - (AI Summary)
Date 08 Jul 2025
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SB0002 error blocks IGST refund processing due to data mismatches between Customs and GST systems requiring verification
The SB0002 error in shipping bills prevents IGST refund processing for exports due to data mismatches between Customs and GST systems. Resolution requires verifying shipping bill accuracy including GSTIN, invoice numbers, and HSN codes against GST portal records. Exporters must reconcile Customs and GST data, confirm IGST payments in returns, validate active IEC codes, and ensure proper refund applications. Common issues include mismatched GSTINs, incorrect invoice details, and unlinked IGST payments. Solutions involve amending shipping bills when necessary, contacting Customs or GST helpdesks, and reapplying for refunds after correcting discrepancies. Manual intervention may be required for persistent systemic errors. - (AI Summary)
Date 08 Jul 2025
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Rule 28 GST valuation methods for related party supplies: open market value, cost-plus, or 90% recipient sale price
Rule 28 governs valuation of supplies between distinct or related persons under GST, excluding agent transactions. Primary valuation follows open market value, then like kind and quality, then cost-plus methods under Rules 30/31. Suppliers may opt for 90% of recipient's sale price when goods are resold unchanged. When recipients claim full input tax credit, invoice value is accepted as open market value. Corporate guarantees to related parties are valued at 1% per annum of guaranteed amount or actual consideration, whichever is higher, unless recipient claims full credit. - (AI Summary)
Date 08 Jul 2025
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Vendor's goods detention quashed as technical e-way bill glitch doesn't constitute tax evasion under Section 129
A vendor transporting petroleum delivery machines for installation at a petrol pump faced detention and penalty under Section 129 of the CGST Act when an e-way bill couldn't be generated due to technical issues. The Allahabad High Court ruled that tax and penalty cannot be imposed without intent to evade tax. The court noted the e-way bill was generated before the detention order, goods were for stock transfer not sale, and authorities failed to establish tax evasion. The detention order was quashed, emphasizing that technical glitches preventing e-way bill generation don't constitute tax evasion when no intent exists. - (AI Summary)
Date 08 Jul 2025
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SB0003 error blocks IGST refund processing for exports due to data mismatches between Customs and GST systems
The SB0003 issue in shipping bills prevents IGST refund processing for exports due to mismatched data between Customs and GST systems. Common causes include incorrect GSTIN details, invoice number discrepancies, wrong HSN codes, and unlinked IGST payments. Resolution involves verifying shipping bill accuracy, reconciling data across systems, checking refund status on GST portal, updating exporter profiles, and filing amended shipping bills if necessary. Exporters should ensure GSTIN matches across platforms, invoice details align with GST returns, and IGST payments are properly linked. If issues persist, contact Customs or GST helpdesk for assistance and consider filing advance rulings for recurring classification problems. - (AI Summary)
Date 08 Jul 2025
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