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Notice cannot be issued comparing particulars at which Assessee has sold its goods with that of prevalent market price |
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Notice cannot be issued comparing particulars at which Assessee has sold its goods with that of prevalent market price |
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The Hon’ble Jharkhand High Court in the case of M/S. SRI RAM STONE WORKS, M/S. G.D. STONE COMPANY, M/S. KARAMBI STONE WORKS, M/S. MAA RAKSI STONE WORKS, M/S. DURGA STONE WORKS, M/S. SHAKTI STONE WORKS, M/S. JAI MATA DI STONE WORKS, M/S. VAISHANV STONE WORKS, M/S. AWADH KISHOR & SONS, M/S. A CREATION, M/S. SARASWATI STONE WORKS, VERSUS STATE OF JHARKHAND, JOINT COMMISSIONER OF STATE TAX, SAHIBGANJ CIRCLE, ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF STATE TAX, SAHIBGANJ CIRCLE, STATE TAX OFFICER, SAHIBGANJ CIRCLE, JOINT COMMISSIONER OF STATE TAX, SAHIBGANJ. - 2025 (5) TMI 772 - JHARKHAND HIGH COURT quashed GST notices issued under Section 61 of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 (“the CGST Act”)/Jharkhand Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 (“the JGST Act”), on the ground that the department had exceeded its jurisdiction by comparing the transaction value declared in returns with prevalent market prices, rather than pointing out discrepancies in the returns. The Court reaffirmed that Section 61 of the CGST Act/ the JGST Act is meant for scrutiny of returns, and not for price benchmarking or value substitution unless transactions are proven to be sham. Facts: M/s Sri Ram Stone Works (“the Petitioner”), are mining lessees/dealers engaged in the business of sale of stone boulders/stone chips to various customer and is registered under the JGST Act. A Notice was issued to the Petitioner under Section 61 of the CGST Act/JGST Act, stating, that the Petitioners had sold stone-boulders/stone chips at prices lesser than the prevalent market price and accordingly, the Petitioners were directed to show cause as to why proceedings under Section 73/74 of the CGST Act should not be initiated against them. The Petitioner contended that the notices issued under Section 61 of the CGST Act/JGST Act are limited to the extent to discrepancy occurring in the returns and issuance of notices by comparing taxable value of supply disclosed by the Petitioner in their returns with that of market price of goods, is beyond the scope of Section 61 of the CGST Act. Despite such reply being filed, in some cases, subsequent notices in Form GST ASMT-10 were again issued and all such Notice was under challenge in the present writ petitions. Issue: Whether notice under Section 61 of the CGST Act can be issued comparing particulars at which Assessee has sold its goods with that of the prevalent market price? Held:
Our Comments: Section 61 of the CGST Act prescribes “Scrutiny of returns”. Section 61(1) of the CGST Act prescribes that the proper officer may scrutinize the return and related particulars furnished by the registered person to verify the correctness of the return and inform him of the discrepancies noticed, if any, in such manner as may be prescribed and seek his explanation thereto. The attempt of the Department to invoke scrutiny proceedings solely based on alleged undervaluation in comparison to the market rate constitutes an untenable extension of jurisdiction. The Court has correctly held that such action transgresses the statutory framework, particularly when Section 15 of the CGST Act lays down that the transaction value is to be the sole basis for valuation, provided the transaction is between unrelated parties and is priced at arm’s length. The ruling will significantly curb unwarranted issuance of FORM GST ASMT-10 based on speculative benchmarks like "prevalent market prices", thereby strengthening taxpayer confidence and ensuring fidelity to procedural safeguards under the GST regime. (Author can be reached at [email protected])
By: Bimal jain - May 26, 2025
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