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2024 (7) TMI 1154 - HC - GSTMaintainability of appeal - time limitation - pre-deposit - appeal rejected on the ground that they had been filed beyond time and also that the pre-deposit of 10% of the disputed tax, required to be paid under Section 107 of the Central Goods and Services Act, 2017, had not been paid - HELD THAT - The Hon ble Division Bench after noticing Rule 108 (1) of the AP GST Rules, 2017, stipulating the method of pre-deposit as well as the provisions of Section 107 (1) of the AP GST Act which requires pre-deposit to be made under GST APL-01 had directed the Appellate Authority to consider the question of whether there was a technical difficulty in making payment under APL-01 and to pass orders thereafter. This would mean that the Appellate Authority was required to ascertain whether there was a technical glitch which shut out the petitioners from making the necessary pre-deposits and to accept the payment made under DRC-03 as payment under APL-01. However, the Appellate Authority, without going into the question as to whether there was a technical glitch or not, had simply decided that, payment made under a wrong head is not sufficient compliance of the requirements of Rule 108 of the AP GST Rules r/w Section 107 of the AP GST Act. The matters are remanded back to the 2nd respondent-Appellate Authority for fresh consideration - petition allowed by way of remand.
Issues:
1. Rejection of appeals due to late filing and non-payment of required pre-deposit under Section 107 of the Central Goods and Services Act, 2017. 2. Dispute regarding the payment made under a different head (DRC-03) instead of the required head (APL-01) due to technical glitch. 3. Appellate Authority's refusal to accept the payment under DRC-03 as a valid pre-deposit under APL-01. Analysis: The petitioners, registered dealers operating oil mills, challenged notices of demand raising additional tax claims by the Assessing Officers. Their appeals to the Appellate Authority were rejected for being filed late and for not making the mandatory 10% pre-deposit under Section 107 of the Central Goods and Services Act, 2017. The Hon'ble Division Bench remanded the matters back to the Appellate Authority for reconsideration of the delay condonation and pre-deposit issues. The petitioners faced a hurdle in making the pre-deposit under APL-01 due to a technical glitch, leading them to make the payment under a different head, DRC-03. Despite the Appellate Authority accepting the delay condonation, it refused to acknowledge the payment under DRC-03 as a valid pre-deposit under APL-01, prompting the petitioners to file new writ petitions challenging these rejections. The petitioners argued that their payment under DRC-03 should be considered valid as it was due to the technical issue preventing payment under APL-01. They contended that the Commercial Tax Department received the pre-deposit, fulfilling the substantive requirement of the Act. Conversely, the Government Pleader for Commercial Tax maintained that the Act mandates a specific method of pre-deposit, and any deviation would not meet the statutory requirements, supporting the Appellate Authority's decision. The Hon'ble Division Bench's previous directive required the Appellate Authority to investigate if there was a technical issue preventing the proper pre-deposit and to accept the payment under DRC-03 as payment under APL-01 if satisfied. However, the Appellate Authority failed to adhere to this directive, leading to non-compliance with the court's instructions. Consequently, the writ petitions were allowed, setting aside the Appellate Authority's orders and remanding the matters back to the Appellate Authority. The Appellate Authority was instructed to ascertain the technical glitch faced by the petitioners, accept the payments made under DRC-03 as valid pre-deposits under APL-01, and proceed with the appeals accordingly. No costs were awarded, and pending applications were closed as a result of this decision.
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