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AAR Exempts Consolidated Firm (As A Going Concern) From GST

AAR Haryana

Supply of goods and services or both under GST Law is Taxable. If there is no supply than no GST levied on it. When a firm consolidates with another firm/company, then there is a transfer of assets and liabilities from an applicant firm to a company-the ultimate firm. Are these transfers treated as supply and liable to GST?

Let us check:

BM Industries a Yamunanagar, Haryana based proprietorship firm involved in manufacturing and sale of aluminium profiles proposed to merge as a going concern with Bimal Aluminium Pvt another firm of the same city. As a result of which the applicant firm -BM Industries will not exist anymore and all its liabilities, assets, rights and claims will be taken up by Bimal Aluminium Pvt.

The applicant put forth two specific queries to Haryana AAR:

  1. Is the applicant liable to pay tax under the CGST/SGST Act, on its fixed and current assets after its consolidation as a going concern with a Pvt. Ltd. firm
  2. Is ITC available in its credit ledger account or cash ledger account transferable to the respective credit ledger and cash ledger account of the private limited company, after merging?

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The appeal was made that:

The AAR found to weigh in the appeals made and held that certain provisions are made under the GST laws which are related to the taxability of the transaction where the business is transferred as a going concern.

The provision concludes that:

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A tax expert demonstrated his agreement with the provision by saying “This ruling signifies that where facts about entire business getting transferred are clear, there is not much to be deliberated upon taxability or credit transfer, as the law on both these aspects is crystal clear,”.

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