Refund should not be credited to the Electronic Credit Ledger of a taxpayer whose business is no longer operational

Refund should not be credited to the Electronic Credit Ledger of a taxpayer whose business is no longer operational

The Hon’ble Calcutta High Court in Edelweiss Rural & Corporate Services Limited & Anr. v. The Deputy Commissioner of Revenue, Taltala Charge, WBGST & Ors. [WPA 3033 of 2025 dated May 5, 2025] instructed the Assessing Officer to reconsider the Refund Sanction Order to the extent that it directed the refund to be credited to the Assessee’s Electronic Credit Ledger instead of their Bank Account. The direction was given by the Court on the ground that the Assessee had already ceased its business operations and had its GST registration cancelled, and thus, would not be in a position to utilize the refund credited to its Electronic Credit Ledger.

Facts:

M/s. Edelweiss Rural & Corporate Services (“the Petitioners”) filed an appeal against the refund/rejection order. The Appeal was allowed by the Appellate Authority, pursuant to which, the Petitioners filed a Refund Application in Form GST RFD-01 before the Deputy Commissioner of Revenue (“the Respondent”) and a Refund Sanction Order was issued by the Respondents. While the Order in FORM GST RFD-06 directed the refund to be paid to the Petitioner’s Bank Account, the Detailed Order (“the Impugned Order”) contradictorily stated that the refund would be credited to the Petitioner’s Electronic Credit Ledger (“ECrL”).

Aggrieved by the Impugned Order, the Petitioner filed the Present Petition.

Issue:

Whether a refund should be credited to the Electronic Credit Ledger of a taxpayer whose business is no longer operational?

Held:

The Hon’ble Calcutta High Court in WPA 3033 of 2025 held as under:

  • Observed that, the Respondent had directed the refund to be paid to the Petitioners’ Bank Account on the subsequent application made by the Petitioner; however, in the Impugned Order, there is a direction to credit the refund amount to the Petitioner’s ECrL, which appears to be self-contradictory.
  • Noted that, the Impugned Order is passed on the basis that the Petitioner has closed down its business operation and its registration has already been cancelled and that there is no tax due and payable by the Petitioner.
  • Held that, the Respondent ought to reconsider the Impugned Order and take a decision within six weeks after providing an opportunity of hearing to the Petitioner.

Our Comments:

Section 54 of the Central Goods & Services Tax Act, 2017 (“the CGST Act”) governs “The Refund of Tax”. Section 54(1) of the CGST Act mentions that any person claiming a refund of tax, interest, penalty, or any other amount may apply to the proper officer within two years from the relevant date. Registered persons can also claim a refund of the balance available in their ECrLin accordance with Section 49(6) of the CGST Act.

Section 54(3) of the CGST Act states that, a registered person can claim a refund of unutilised Input Tax Credit (“ITC”) at the end of any tax perioding cases of zero-rated supplies made without payment of tax or in cases where the ITC has accumulated due to an inverted duty structure.

As per Section 54(5)of the CGST Act, if on receipt of any such application, the proper officer is satisfied that the whole or part of the amount claimed as refund is refundable, he may make an order accordingly and the amount so determined shall be credited to the Fund referred to in Section 57 of the CGST Act. As per Section 54(8) of the CGST Act, the Refund shall be paid directly to the Applicant instead of being credited to the Consumer Welfare Fund in cases such as, export of goods or services, unutilised ITC, excess tax paid, or where the incidence of tax has not been passed on to any other person.

Further, Section 54(7) of the CGST Act provides that upon receiving a refund application, the proper officer shall issue the refund within sixty days from the date of receipt of the complete application.

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CA Bimal Jain

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. It is a professionally managed firm having a team of experienced and distinguished Chartered Accountants, Company Secretary, Lawyers, Corporate Financial Advisors and Tax consultants to provide various services like litigation and representation, transaction advisory, diagnostic reviews/ health checks, audit defense & protection, retainership & compliance, configuration of tax efficient business model etc. Its clientele consists mainly of Foreign MNC, large/mid-sized Indian companies which includes exporters, FMCG, consumer durables, automobiles, aerated beverages, ceramic tiles, real-estate, hospitality, etc. Our clients include Varun Beverages Limited, Kajaria Ceramics Limited, L.G. Electronics India Private Limited, Shipra Hotel Limited, Multani Pharmaceuticals Limited, Shangri-La Eros Hotel etc. Flat No. 34B, Ground Floor, Pocket - 1, Mayur Vihar, Phase–I, Delhi – 110091 India Desktel:+91-11-42427056 Mobile:+91 8076563802 [email protected] www.a2ztaxcorp.com

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