Background of the Case
(High Court - Allahabad), July 30, 2025
The principal question: Can a mere technical breach—specifically, the non-mention of the transporter’s name in the e-way bill-trigger a penalty under Section 129?
Nature of Transaction
Action of the Case
Petitioner’s Contentions
Respondent’s Contentions
Document Compliance: All essential documentation (invoice, e-way bill, etc.) was in place, with only the transporter’s name missing.
No Recorded Intention to Evade Tax: Lower authorities did not note any intent to evade tax.
Insufficiency of Driver’s Statement Alone: The driver’s statement was inadequate to establish evasion intent.
Appellate Grounds Unchallenged: The department did not refute the the appellant’s ground that goods were transported in a full truckload to a godown.
State of U.P. v. Varun Beverages Ltd. (Allahabad HC)
The Supreme Court ruled in Asst. Commissioner (ST) v. Satyam Shivam Papers (P.) Ltd. that technical errors without the intent to dodge taxes do not warrant a penalty under Section 129.
Outcome/Decision
Primary Finding: Section 129 cannot be invoked in the absence of tax evasion intent.
The Case Orders Quashed: The appellate order (dated October 23, 2021) and the initial penalty order (dated April 30, 2021) were both quashed.
Relief Granted: The writ petition is allowed in favor of the assessee.
Documentary Perfection Is Important, but Intent Matters: Minor technical omissions without any malicious intent shouldn’t attract a penalty under Section 129.
Authority May Be Cautioned: Enforcement bodies should exercise discretion and verify intent before invoking penal provisions.
Binding Precedents Strengthen Assessee’s Position: This ruling reinforces prior judgments that penal action requires deeper scrutiny—mere technical errors are insufficient ground.
Business Compliance Insight: Businesses should strive for completeness in documentation while knowing that courts consider context and intent before penalizing.
Suggested Further Reading/Legal References
- Varun Beverages Ltd. v. State of U.P. (Allahabad HC) – technical lapses without intent do not justify penalties.
- Asst. Commissioner (ST) v. Satyam Shivam Papers (P.) Ltd. (Supreme Court) – Section 129 penalties require tax evasion intent.
Other HC rulings (e.g., Madras, Andhra Pradesh, etc.) on technical errors vs. intent in GST enforcement.