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CBIC Special Drive: Non-existent Vs Bogus And Cancellation Of GST Registration

The CBIC has initiated a special drive to be conducted by all Central and State GST departments during the period 16th May 2023 to 15th July 2023 to detect suspicious/fake GSTINs. As per Instruction No. 01/2023-GST dated 04th May 2023, in case the taxpayer upon verification is non-existent and fictitious, then the tax officer may initiate action for suspension and cancellation of the registration of the said taxpayer in accordance with the provisions of section 29 of CGST Act.

Further, the tax officer may block input tax credit in Electronic Credit Ledger as per CGST Rules. Further, suitable action may be initiated for demand and recovery of the input tax credit wrongly availed by the recipient on the basis of the invoice issued by the said non-existing supplier, without an underlying supply of goods or services or both.

In past also the GST registration of the taxpayers was cancelled on account of the reason that the firm is not existing/run at the registered place. Further, actions were also taken against the buyers who procured goods or services from the non-existent firm. There is a difference between non-existent and bogus or fictitious firms. The field officer before cancelling any GST registration has to prove followed by corroborative evidence that the firm is fictitious and obtained GST registration by presenting forged or false documents. There might be some genuine reason why the taxpayer could not be found at a registered place or there was no business activity at the registered place. Such cases are illustrated below:

  • Change in address of the taxpayer which was not updated on the GST portal
  • No prior intimation as per rule 25 was given to the taxpayer for inspection by the field officers due to which the taxpayer was not available at the time of inspection
  • Trading firms do not maintain any stock and directly supply goods from their supplier to the ultimate Such firms may not require a big setup and may have huge amounts of turnover.

Therefore, the officer cannot straight away proceed with the cancellation of registration considering the non-existent person as fictitious. Further, in the recent past the taxpayers, whose registrations were cancelled considering them as non-existent, approached the High Courts. The high courts have held that once registration is granted, the same could be cancelled only in terms of the conditions prescribed under Section 29(2) and allegedly being a bogus firm is not a ground enumerated under Section 29(2). It has been also held by the courts that no action can be taken against the buyer unless it is proved that the buyer and supplier have colluded to defraud the revenue and the transactions were dubious based upon corroborative evidence.

Cancellation of GST registration would curtail the fundamental right of a citizen to carry on trade and profession. Therefore, the GST department has to be cautious and provide appropriate opportunity to the taxpayer to explain his case, before taking any action so that the genuine taxpayer does not suffer. Further, due procedures as provided in law has to be followed before taking any adverse action.

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