The High Court allowed anticipatory bail to a petitioner in a scrap-related case, directing surrender within three weeks and compliance with BNSS conditions.
Considering the duration of custody, the High Court directed the release of the petitioner on bail despite being identified as the mastermind of the GST evasion.
In the matter of Deepak Kumar Bhagat, the High Court ruled that a hyper-technical view, especially one entailing financial liability in tax matters, is impermissible and restored the appeal for a hearing on merits.
Jharkhand High Court dismisses bail in case of fraudulent availment and passing of fake GST Input Tax Credit, holding the offence as a serious crime affecting national economic health.
Jharkhand High Court sets aside a GST appeal rejection based on ‘non-receipt of certified copies,’ deeming it ‘hyper technical.’ Appellate authority must now decide the case on merits.
Jharkhand High Court in Maa Kalyani Electrical Vs Union of India set aside an appellate order that rejected an appeal on ‘functus officio’ grounds. The court held that since the original dismissal was only for failure to make a mandatory pre-deposit, not on merits, the authority wasn’t functus officio after the deposit was subsequently made.
Jharkhand High Court set aside an order disallowing Rs. 30.29 lakh in Input Tax Credit (ITC) for the period 2018-19. Court quashed order because a new provision, S. 16(5) of CGST Act (inserted by Finance Act, 2024
Jharkhand High Court grants bail to an individual accused of Rs. 11 crore GST evasion, citing the prolonged period of the accused’s custody.
Jharkhand High Court quashes Rs. 9.01 Cr CGST penalty; ex-parte order violated natural justice and service tax exemption applied.
The Jharkhand High Court has quashed a tax notice issued to Ravi Singh Bhatia, ruling that authorities failed to consider his reply to a show-cause notice.