A Petition has been filed in the Calcutta High Court has challenged the constitutional validity of Section 16(2)(c) of the CGST Act/WBGST Act, which seeks to deny ITC to a buyer of goods or services, if the tax charged in respect of supply of goods or services has not been actually paid to the Government by the supplier of goods or services.
The Petition has been filed by LGW Industries Ltd has also challenged the demand of reversal of ITC along with interest only on the basis of allegation that registration has been obtained by some of the suppliers of goods on the basis of fake identity proofs and that none of the suppliers is found in their Principal Place of business.
The Petitioner was represented by Advocate Vinay Shraff with Advocate Rajarshi Chatterjee and Advocate Himangshu Ray submitted that denying ITC to a buyer of goods and services would tantamount to treating both the āguilty purchasersā and the āinnocent purchasersā at par whereas they constitute two different classes.
The petition reads stated that denying ITC to a buyer of goods or services for default of the supplier of goods or services would tantamount to shifting the incidence of tax from the supplier to the buyer, over whom it has no control whatsoever, is arbitrary and irrational & therefore violative of the Article 14, Article 19(1)(g) and Article 300A of the Constitution of India. It would also clearly frustrate the underlying objective of removal of the cascading effect of tax as stated in the Statement of object and reasons of the Constitution (One Hundred And Twenty-Second Amendment) Bill, 2014.
The petition also reads that, in the absence of any finding of petitioners mala fide intention, connivance or wrongful association with the suppliers, no liability can be imposed on it on the principle of vicarious liability on account of fraudulent conduct of the suppliers, who have obtained registration on the basis of fictitious documents.
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