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Step 2 – Draft Generation
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• Relevant statutory provisions • Judicial precedents and Supreme Court, High Court and other citations • Issue-wise legal analysis • Practical arguments and supporting content • Professionally structured draft ready for further review.
Tax Relief Dispute: 20% Deposit Required, Tribunal Constitution Mandated, Recovery Proceedings Suspended Under B.G.S.T. Act The HC addressed a writ petition challenging non-constitution of a tax tribunal. The court directed the petitioner to deposit 20% of remaining tax and ...
Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
The HC addressed a writ petition challenging non-constitution of a tax tribunal. The court directed the petitioner to deposit 20% of remaining tax and stay recovery proceedings. The ruling mandates appeal filing once the tribunal is constituted, with specific conditions for statutory relief. Recovery actions will be suspended upon compliance, ensuring the petitioner's right to statutory remedy under the B.G.S.T. Act.
Issues involved: The petition seeks relief under Article 226 of the Constitution of India due to non-constitution of the Tribunal, preventing the petitioner from availing statutory remedy under Section 112 of the Bihar Goods and Services Tax Act (B.G.S.T. Act).
Judgment Details:
Issue 1: Non-constitution of Tribunal and denial of statutory remedy The petitioner filed a writ petition seeking relief against the impugned order, desiring to appeal before the Appellate Tribunal under Section 112 of the B.G.S.T. Act. However, due to the non-constitution of the Tribunal, the petitioner is deprived of the statutory remedy under Sub-Section (8) and Sub-Section (9) of Section 112. The respondent State authorities acknowledged this fact and issued a notification for removal of difficulties, stating that the period of limitation for preferring an appeal before the Tribunal shall start only after the Tribunal is constituted. The Court ordered that the petitioner must deposit a sum equal to 20 percent of the remaining tax amount to avail the statutory benefit of stay under Section 112. The recovery of the balance amount will be stayed, and the petitioner will be required to file an appeal once the Tribunal is constituted and functional.
Issue 2: Statutory relief of stay and appeal filing requirements The Court held that the statutory relief of stay, upon deposit of the required amount, cannot be open-ended. The petitioner must file an appeal under Section 112 of the B.G.S.T. Act once the Tribunal is constituted and the President or State President enters office. Failure to file the appeal within the specified period upon Tribunal constitution will allow the respondent authorities to proceed further in the matter. If the order is complied with and the required payment made, any bank account attachment pursuant to the demand shall be released.
Conclusion: The Court disposed of the writ petition with the above directions, granting relief to the petitioner subject to the specified conditions and requirements for availing the statutory benefit of stay and filing an appeal once the Tribunal is constituted.
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