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HC: Tax Credit Can’t Be Refused on the Basis of GSTR 3B & 2A Mismatch When GSTR 2A Not Operational

Karnataka HC's Order for Orient Traders

The supply of machinery, mechanical appliances, parts, etc including the erection, commissioning, and installation is being supplied by the applicant. The GST returns in Form GSTR 3B for the FY 2017-18 (for short, “the FY”) would have been submitted by the applicant. Asking for the books of accounts for conducting the desk audit and rendering the attendance of the applicant, the first respondent has provided the notice to the applicant, dated 20th January 2021.

An answer is been furnished by the applicant to the observations incurred in the inquiry of the audit. The applicant who has filed his return observed that there has an accidental error and mistakes were placed during the filing of his returns for the fiscal year 2017-18. Input Tax Credit (for short “ITC”) has been claimed for the imports under Integrated Goods and Services Tax, (for short “IGST’) in July 2017 and March 2018 because of oversight and inadvertence in Column No. 4A(5) rather than claiming the same under Column No. 4A(1), the petitioner observed. The mistake did through the applicant understand that it accidentally acknowledged the import IGST related to July 2017 as local IGST and import IGST referred to March 2018 as local CGST and SGST. ITC which had accrued to the applicant was responsible to get disallowed as witnessed by the first respondent DCCT in its audit because of the error in inserting the numbers in the incorrect column which gives the outcome of the mismatch between the GSTR-3B and GSTR-2A forms.

Applicants Opinion

Department Opinion for the Case

While at present the applicant could not, at this belated stage, be allowed to correct the glitches that it has incurred in view of Section 39(9) of the CGST / KGST Act, stated by the AGA for the respondents beyond repeating diverse contentions requested in the statement of objections. He indeed trusts the current ruling of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Union of India v. Bharti Airtel Ltd.,& others – (2021) 13 SCALE 301, the taxpayer’s petition was denied by the Supreme court and there to amend its returns above the statutory duration specified under Section 39(9) of the Act. He argued to revise its returns there is no process that exists to facilitate the applicant to revise its returns in this belated phase, the appeal is accountable to get dismissed.

Case TitleOrient Traders Vs Deputy Commissioner of Commercial Taxes
CitationWRIT PETITION No.2911 OF 2022
Date16.12.2022
Appellant bySri. Vikram Huilgol, Sri. Syed Khanruddin
Respondent bySri. Hema Kumar
Karnataka High CourtRead Order
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