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CDJ 2026 Raj HC 016 print Preview print Next print
Court : High Court of Rajasthan, Jaipur Bench
Case No : Civil Writ Petition No. 7616 of 2024
Judges: THE HONOURABLE DR. JUSTICE PUSHPENDRA SINGH BHATI & THE HONOURABLE MRS. JUSTICE SANGEETA SHARMA
Parties : M/s Ramjilal Mohanlal, New Grain Mandi, Through Its Prop. Shri Jagdeesh Prasad Gupta Versus Union Of India, Represented Through Union Secretary, Department Of Revenue, Ministry Of Finance, New Delhi & Others
Appearing Advocates : For the Petitioners: Akshay Sharma, Dheeraj Kumar, Advocates. For the Respondents: Mahi Yadav, AAG with Manaswia Nakwaal & Rohan Mittal Arnav Singh, Dhairya Agarwal on behalf of Sandeep Pathak, Advocates.
Date of Judgment : 29-01-2026
Head Note :-
Rajasthan Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 - Section 67(2) -

Comparative Citation:
2026 RJ-JP 4146,
Summary :-
1. Statutes / Acts / Rules Mentioned:
- Rajasthan Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
- Section 67(2) of the Rajasthan Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
- Rule 139(1) of the RGST Rules, 2017
- Section 107(1) of the Act of 2017
- Section 67 of the Act of 2017
- Section 107 of the Act of 2017

2. Catch Words:
natural justice, nemo judex in causa sua, bias, jurisdictional infirmity, writ of certiorari, appeal, quashing, remand

3. Summary:
The petitioner filed a civil writ petition seeking the record and a writ of certiorari to quash an appellate order dated 11.12.2023 passed by Shri Shiv Dayal Meena, who had earlier authorized a GST inspection under Section 67. The petitioner argued that the same officer acted as both authorizing authority and appellate authority, violating natural justice and creating inherent bias. The Additional Advocate General contended that the petitioner had other remedies and that the officer’s roles were distinct. The Court, without examining merits, accepted the limited submission on jurisdictional infirmity and held that the dual role breached the principle of nemo judex in causa sua. Consequently, the appellate order was quashed and the matter remanded to be heard by a different competent appellate authority. The writ petition was disposed of accordingly.

4. Conclusion:
Petition Allowed
Judgment :-

1. The instant civil writ petition has been preferred claiming the following reliefs:

                  “i. To call for the record from the office of the respondents for its kind perusal;

                  ii. Issue a writ of certiorari or any other writ or writs for quashing the impugned order dated 11.12.2023 (Annexure-5) passed by Shri Shiv Dayal Meena, Additional Commissioner, Appellate Authority, Commercial Taxes Department, Zone-Bharatpur, Rajasthan and declare the same as being contrary to the principle of natural justice.”

2. Learned counsel for the petitioner submits that the search and survey proceedings were initiated in pursuance of the authorization for inspection and search conducted by Shri Shiv Dayal Meena, Additional Commissioner, Appellate Authority, Commercial Taxes Department, Bharatpur, on 06.01.2021 vide form GST INS-01 under Section 67(2) of the Rajasthan Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 (‘the Act of 2017) read with Rule 139(1) of the RGST Rules, 2017. Upon conclusion of the inspection and search proceedings, a Show Cause notice was issued on 30.03.2023 in pursuance of the search proceedings and thereafter, the order dated 05.06.2023 was passed by the respondent No. 5 against the petitioner firm.

3. Aggrieved by the order dated 05.06.2023, the petitioner firm preferred an appeal under Section 107(1) of the Act of 2017 before the Appellate Authority, Commercial Taxes Department, Bharatpur, who vide its order dated 11.12.2023, dismissed the appeal.

4. Learned counsel for the petitioner confines the challenge to a singular jurisdictional infirmity. It is submitted that the authorization for inspection and search dated 06.01.2021 was issued by Shri Shiv Dayal Meena, Additional Commissioner, Commercial Taxes, Bharatpur, in exercise of powers under Section 67 of the Act of 2017. The same officer, in his capacity as the Appellate Authority under Section 107 of the Act of 2017, thereafter presided over and decided the statutory appeal arising from proceedings initiated pursuant to the very authorization issued by him. It is contended that such dual exercise of power, first as the authorizing authority for inspection and search, and subsequently as the appellate adjudicator, offends the foundational principle of natural justice that no person shall be a judge in his own cause (nemo judex in causa sua), thereby vitiating the appellate order on account of inherent bias and lack of institutional impartiality.

5. Learned Additional Advocate General submits that the petitioner have had a remedy against the appellate order and ought to have taken that remedy and no such objection was raised before. She further submitted that the order of sanctioning the search and seizure was the administrative exercise performed in a different capacity.

6. This Court, without going into the merits of the case and confining itself to the limited submission advanced on behalf of the petitioner, as also in view of the fact that it is not disputed by the respondents that the same officer acted as the authorizing authority for inspection and search under Section 67 of the Act of 2017 and thereafter functioned as the Appellate Authority under Section 107 of the Act of 2017, is inclined to make limited interference in the matter. Consequently, the appellate order dated 11.12.2023 passed under Section 107 of the Act of 2017 is quashed and set aside. The matter is remanded back to the Appellate Authority with a direction that the appeal preferred by the petitioner against the order dated 05.06.2023 be decided afresh by any competent Appellate Authority other than Shri Shiv Dayal Meena, Additional Commissioner, Commercial Taxes Department, Bharatpur, strictly in accordance with law and without being prejudiced by any observations made herein.

7. The present writ petition disposed of accordingly. Pending applications, if any, shall also stand disposed of.

 
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