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06/03/2024

The Hon’ble Madras High Court in the case of Engineers India Ltd. v. Assistant Commissioner (Central Tax) [W.P. No. 26927 of 2021 dated February 07, 2024] set aside the Impugned Order and held that, the refund claim should not be rejected on the ground that the refund application was filed under wrong category.

Facts:

Engineers India Ltd. (“the Petitioner”) is a company engaged in providing design, engineering, procurement, supply and related services with respect of large construction projects. As per Section 13 of the Tamil Nadu Value Added Tax Act, 2006 (“the TNVAT Act”), the employer was required to deduct TDS at the time of making payment to contractors including the Petitioner and the contractor was entitled to adjust the TDS amount against the tax liability under the TNVAT Act. The Petitioner, after the implementation of GST, asserted that, he is eligible to claim transitional TDS credit. However, the tax was deposited under protest by the Petitioner, as the subject matter was pending before the Hon’ble High Court. Later, the High Court allowed the writ petitions filed before the Hon’ble Madras High Court wherein it was held that, the Petitioner is entitled to claim transition of credit of TDS under the TNVAT Act. However, the refund application filed by the Petitioner was rejected vide Order dated September 9, 2021 (“the Impugned Order”) on the ground that claim for refund was made under the wrong category i.e. “Any Others”.

Aggrieved by the Impugned Order, the Petitioner filed a writ petition before the Hon’ble High Court contending that, the aforesaid category for refund is not stated in Circular No. 125/44/2019-GST dated November 18, 2019 (“the Circular”).

Issue:

Whether refund claim should be rejected when refund application is filed under wrong category?

Held:

The Hon’ble Madras High Court in the case of W.P. No. 26927 of 2021 held as under:

Noted that, refund claim cannot be rejected on the ground that refund claim does not fall within the specific categories enumerated in the Circular.
Further Noted that, Section 54(1) of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 is wide enough to include any kind of refund of tax or interest if the claim is made within two years from the relevant date.
Opined that, the Impugned Order was issued without stating any adequate reason for rejection of refund claim, thereby, the writ petition was disposed of.
Held that, the Impugned Order is quashed and the matter is remanded back for reconsideration.
Relevant extract of the Circular:

“3. With effect from September 26, 2019, the applications for the following types of refunds shall be filed in FORM GST RFD 01 on the common portal and the same shall be processed electronically:

a. Refund of unutilized input tax credit (ITC) on account of exports without payment of tax;

b. Refund of tax paid on export of services with payment of tax;

c. Refund of unutilized ITC on account of supplies made to SEZ Unit/SEZ Developer without payment of tax;

d. Refund of tax paid on supplies made to SEZ Unit/SEZ Developer with payment of tax;

e. Refund of unutilized ITC on account of accumulation due to inverted tax structure;

f. Refund to supplier of tax paid on deemed export supplies;

g. Refund to recipient of tax paid on deemed export supplies;

h. Refund of excess balance in the electronic cash ledger;

i. Refund of excess payment of tax;

j. Refund of tax paid on intra-State supply which is subsequently held to be inter-State supply and vice versa;

k. Refund on account of assessment/provisional assessment/appeal/any other order;

l. Refund on account of “any other” ground or reason.”

Courtsey :

A2Z Taxcorp LLP is a boutique Indirect Tax firm having its offices at New Delhi and Guwahati specializing in GST, Central Excise, Custom, Service Tax, VAT, DGFT, Foreign Trade Policy, SEZ, EOU, Export – Import Laws, Free Trade Policy, etc

18/01/2024

Before the end of the financial year, take special care of the new provision of income tax applicable for MSMEs from April 1, 2023. Tax liability may arise. So start planning from now on.

1. Deduction (debit in trading-profit/loss account) of purchases/expenses made from micro and small units will be available only if the payment is made from the supplier within the credit period (maximum – 45 days). is given.

2. If no credit period has been fixed, then in such a case the payment terms will be considered to be only 15 days. Even if both the parties agree, more than 45 days will not be valid for this provision.

3. For example, if the payment for your purchase (packing material/job/other expenses) worth Rs 1 crore is pending for more than 45 days on 31st March, then Rs 1 crore will be added to your income and on top of that, it will be around Rs 30-35 lakh. Tax liability may arise.

4. Micro Enterprise means a firm whose investment in Plant and Machinery (AC/Computer/Car/2 Wheeler/Machinery/other business assets) does not exceed Rs 1 crore and turnover does not exceed Rs 5 crore.

5. Small Enterprise means a firm whose investment in Plant and Machinery (AC/Computer/Car/2 Wheeler/Machinery/other business assets) does not exceed Rs 10 crore and turnover does not exceed Rs 50 crore.

6. A large number of firms come under the definition of micro and small units.

7. If the payment is pending for more than 45 days but is made before the end of the financial year, then in such a case its deduction will be available in the same year.

8. If the payment is made after 45 days, then in that case the deduction will be available in the year in which the payment is made.

9. These provisions will be applicable on purchases/expenditures made from such units whether the buyer is registered with MSME or not.

10. If during the income tax scrutiny, it is revealed from the cross confirmation of the Income Tax Department that your supplier is a micro or small unit and the payment has been made after the time limit, then the outstanding payment will be made at that time also. Can add to income.

11. This provision has come into effect from the financial year starting 1/04/2023.

12. You should mention your enterprise registration number (MSME number) and your category (Micro / Small / Medium) in your sale bill so that the buyer can know your MSME status.

13. Payments of the group firm also remain outstanding, so keep this in mind also.
*Income tax Maha Alert*

As per the insertion of clause (g) to section 43B, last year, any amount remaining unpaid as at year end ( say 31st March, 2024) to any creditors being any micro or small enterprise, wherher for goods or services, beyond 45 days or lesser period if so agreed or 15 days if nothing specifically agreed, shall be added to your taxable Income and would be allowed as deduction in the year of payment thereof, hence please ensure that payment to all such creditors is made in time else full tax would be payable on such unpaid amount resulting in huge additional tax liability.

Tax auditors will have to compulsorily report the same in audit report.

*Thus keeping such creditors unpaid is a ticking tax bomb.*

15/01/2024
26/05/2020

We are pleased to inform you that the Government has now extended Emergency COVID Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) to all business entities registered under GST having a turnover of less than Rs. 100 crore. Retailers are not required to register as MSMEs to avail the benefits.

This is a big relief for retailers who are not eligible to register as MSMEs. An RAI delegation had met with Hon’ble Minister of MSME Shri Nitin Gadkari to discuss this issue. And the Minister assured us that retailers will also be included under the MSME ambit. We, at RAI, welcome this step and thank Government of India for considering our recommendation, which will benefit millions of retailers.

Please click here for detailed guidelines of this scheme

13/10/2019

Capping of ITC not reflected in GSTR-2A up to 20%:
*Analysis*
on 11 October 2019 The central government vide Notification no 49/2019 central tax dated 9/10/2019 has made amendments to CGST Rules, 2017. One of the amendments is insertion of sub-rule (4) to rule 36 which is reproduced as follows: 'Input tax credit to be availed by a registered person in respect of invoices or debit notes, the details of which have not been uploaded by the suppliers under sub-section (1) of section 37, shall not exceed 20 per cent of the eligible credit available in respect of invoices or debit notes the details of which have been uploaded by the suppliers under sub-section (1) of section 37.' Analysis The above sub-rule seeks to restrict the ITC in respect of invoices/debit notes not uploaded by seller in GSTR-1 ( and consequently does not appear in GSTR-2A) to the extend of 20% of eligible ITC in respect of invoices/debit notes uploaded by seller in GSTR-1(which is supposed to appear in GSTR-2A). This amendment seeks to negate down para 4 of press release dated 18-10-2018 which reads as follows: 'It is clarified that the furnishing of outward details in FORM GSTR-1 by the corresponding supplier(s) and the facility to view the same in FORM GSTR-2A by the recipient is in the nature of taxpayer facilitation and does not impact the ability of the taxpayer to avail ITC on self-assessment basis in consonance with the provisions of section 16 of the Act. The apprehension that ITC can be availed only on the basis of reconciliation between FORM GSTR-2A and FORM GSTR- 3B conducted before the due date for filing of return in FORM GSTR-3B for the month of September, 2018 is unfounded as the same exercise can be done thereafter also.'
Illustration of sub-rule 4 of Rule 36 1.

Suppose for the month of October 2019, Mr.A, a registered person, has Rs.1,00,000 as eligible ITC in respect of which respect of invoices/debit notes uploaded by his seller in their GSTR-1 and appear in GSTR-2A of Mr.A; and Rs.50,000 as ITC in respect of which respect of invoices/debit notes has not been uploaded by his seller in their GSTR-1 and does not appear in GSTR-2A of Mr.A. After the insertion of sub-rule 4 to Rule 36, the eligible credit of Mr.A shall be as follows:
With respect to eligible ITC invoices/debit notes uploaded by his seller in their GSTR-1 Rs. 1,00,000/- With respect to ITC invoices/debit notes not uploaded by his seller in their GSTR-1 Rs. 1,00,000 X 20% = Rs. 20,000/- Total ITC available Rs. 1,20,000/- Effectively, ITC in excess of 20% i.e. Rs.30,000 (50,000 - 20,000) shall be ineligible for availment for the month of October. 2. Suppose for the month of October 2019, Mr.A, a registered person, has Rs.1,00,000 as eligible ITC in respect of which respect of invoices/debit notes uploaded by his seller in their GSTR-1 and appear in GSTR-2A of Mr.A; and Rs.10,000 as ITC ITC in respect of which respect of invoices/debit notes has not been uploaded by his seller in their GSTR-1 and does not appear in GSTR- 2A of Mr.A. With respect to eligible ITC invoices/debit notes uploaded by his seller in their GSTR-1 Rs. 1,00,000/- With respect to ITC invoices/debit notes not uploaded by his seller in their GSTR-1 Rs.10,000/- Total ITC available Rs. 1,10,000/-.
Thus, in this case, the entire ITC in respect of invoices/debit notes uploaded by seller in GSTR-1 amounting to Rs.10,000 shall be available as it is less than 20% of eligible ITC (Rs.1,00,000). Impact of the amendment After the insertion of this sub-rule, the reconciliation of GSTR-2A and invoices has become mandatory to find out the ITC to be availed for each month. This results in a strenuous workload to the tax-payer / practitioners/professionals to reconcile the GSTR-2A each month. Also, taxpayers have to keep a close follow up with their suppliers which can sometimes result in tough relationship with the vendor. Another common issue is that the supplier may inadvertently report B2B transactions as B2C as a result of which invoices/debit notes may not appear in GSTR-2A of the recipient. The time lag to amend the same by the supplier may result in a blockage of funds for the recipient. For those taxable persons who have a single/very few suppliers who are MNCs/organized sector such as in case of automobile industry may not be much affected by this amendment as the reconciliation and follow-up will be easier. But for those taxable persons who are retailers or in the lower levels of the chain especially in the FMCG industry or Multi-product dealers may find it hard to reconcile and follow up with suppliers every month. Open Issues to be addressed Mismatches between GSTR-1 and GSTR-2A - Since GSTR-2A is auto-populated on the basis of the corresponding FORM GSTR-1 furnished by suppliers even after the due date, in such cases there would be a mismatch between the updated FORM GSTR-2A and the actual invoices for a given period, making it difficult to reconcile both. GSTR-1 filed quarterly by supplier - In case of taxable persons having Turnover less than Rs.1.5 crores, the GSTR-1 is to be filed quarterly (Notification 46/2019 central tax dated 09/10/2019). However, since ITC is to be availed each moth in FORM GSTR-3B, it becomes impossible to reconcile monthly invoices with GSTR-2A (as it would be updated only after the said quarter). Govt has to issue some clarification in these cases. Calculation problems - The newly inserted sub-rule does not clarify the situations when the supplier reports the invoice/debit note in a subsequent tax period. Whether this amount will form part of eligible ITC for the reported tax period for the calculation of 20% is a question yet to be clarified. Also when the invoices/debit note is reported subsequently, whether the ITC can be taken as credit on FIFO basis or on a pro-rata basis is also to be clarified. For example, Suppose for the month of October, Mr.A has availed Rs.1,00,000 as eligible ITC and Rs.20,000 in respect of ITC for which supplier has not uploaded invoice/debit notes amounting to say, Rs.50,000 and for the month of November, suppliers have uploaded invoices for Rs.30,000. A question will arise whether this whole Rs.30,000 can be availed in the month of November or only Rs. 18,000 (30,000 x 30000/50,000) can be availed. While the taxpayer may argue as the former is intended by the notification, department may argue for the latter. Legal Issues Section 164(1) empowers the Government, on the recommendations of the Council, by notification, to make rules for carrying out the provisions of this Act. When the provisions of CGST Act, 2017 viz., section 16 and section 17 does not provide for such embargo and the matching provisions contained in section 41, 42, 43 and 43A has been suspended as Form GSTR-2 is not operational, whether a rulemaking power be invoked for such restrictions has to be looked into. Further, it is a well-established ratio that rule cannot override the provisions of the Act. The newly inserted sub-rule does not distinguish between bona fide cases where the mismatch is due to fault of the supplier and non bona fide cases where bogus credits are claimed, thus violating Article 14 of the Constitution of India (granting equality before law). This ratio is laid down by Delhi High Court in the case of Arise India Limited and Quest Merchandising India Pvt Ltd and the same view has been concurred by the Supreme Court of India. On failure of supplier to furnish details in his Form GSTR-1, the recipient is restricted ITC without any failure on his part. It violates the basic principle of law viz., Lex non cognit ad impossiblia i.e Law cannot compel a man to do what is impossible. It is against the principle of natural justice and hence unreasonable. Possible Solutions It has been two years since the inception of GST and it is high time GSTR-2 and GSTR-3 are made operational. The matching provisions as envisaged in the model GST law should be implemented. This will at least allow the taxpayer to add, correct or delete inwards supplies in his Form GSTR-2 which can be accepted or rejected by the supplier.

Wishing a successful year ahead...
01/01/2019

Wishing a successful year ahead...

06/08/2018

Office of the Principal Secretary & Commissioner,
State Goods and Service Tax Department
Government of Kerala, Thiruvananthapuram

No.
CT/7932/2017C1
Dtd 23/05/2018
----
Circular
No.10 / 2018

Sub:
SGSTD
– Filing of Annual Return and Financial Statements for the from period
April, 2017 to June, 2017 – Instructions issued – reg.

As
per the Kerala Value Added Tax Act, 2003 (hereinafter referred to as the said Act),
dealers have to file annual return on or before 31st May of succeeding year. Goods and Services
Tax has been rolled out from 1st day of July, 2017. Value Added Tax was applicable during the
1st quarter of the financial year 201718.
In the circumstances, the following instructions are
issued for filing of consolidated returns for the period from April to June 2017.
1. All the dealers who were liable to file monthly returns in Form No.10 & Form No.10 DA for
April, May & June, 2017 shall file consolidated return for this period on or before 30th
September, 2018.
2. All dealers who were liable to file quarterly return for the first quarter of 2017 shall file the
return on or before 30th September, 2018.
3. In the case of dealers whose turnover for this period is not in excess of Rs.60 lakhs and who
require no change in the already submitted returns, they need not file audited report in Form
No.13 & 13A.
4. In the case of dealers filing monthly return whose turnover for this period is not in excess of
Rs.60 lakhs and who require any change in the returns submitted, they shall file the
consolidated return after including such changes on or before 30th September, 2018.
5. In the case of dealers filing quarterly return whose turnover for this period is not in excess of
Rs.60 lakhs and who require any change in the returns submitted, they shall apply before the
assessing authority and get the return revised and file the return after including such changes
on or before 30th September, 2018.
6. In the case of dealers whose turnover for this period is in excess of Rs.60 lakhs and who
require no change in the returns submitted, they shall file the audit report in Form No.13 &
13A as prescribed in Rule 60.
7. In the case of dealers whose turnover for this period is in excess of Rs.60 lakhs and who
require any change in the return submitted, they shall file the audit report in Form No.13 &
13A incorporating the changes, as prescribed in Rule 60, and simultaneously file a request for
revision of returns before the assessing authority.
8. If a dealer intends to file the consolidated return online, then he has to file 'NIL' returns for
the subsequent months till March, 2018, and generate the online consolidated return.
9. Commoditywise
closing stock inventory in Form No.53 as on 30th June, 2017 shall be filed
by all dealers manually or online on or before 30th September, 2018.
10. All assessing authorities shall maintain a register for entering the details of returns received,
filed manually, containing the following details:
o Serial number in the register
o Name and TIN of the dealer
o Date of filing of the consolidated return and Form No.53
o Total value of the goods conceded in Form No.53
o The data entered in the register shall be countersigned by the controlling officer
concerned on weekly basis.
All Deputy Commissioners shall acknowledge this circular.
Sd/Principal
Secretary & Commissioner

25/04/2018

http://www.cbec.gov.in/resources//htdocs-cbec/gst/51_GST_Flyer_Chapter28.pdf

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