3,250 petitions filed by business houses were dismissed by the Kerala high court on Friday, questioning the power of the state government to levy value-added tax and penalties for alleged tax evasion that occurred prior to the introduction of Goods and Services Tax (GST).
Read Also : GST panel approves 1% ‘calamity cess’ for Kerala floods
Justice Dama Seshadri Naidu ruled against the contention of the petitioners that the state government lacked the power to add a Repeal and Saving provision (section 174) to Kerala State Goods and Services Act, 2017. The government had specified through the provision that the change in law will not affect any tax, surcharge, penalty, or fine due. Ruling that both the central and state governments have powers to legislate on GST, the court’s judgment said that it was a fallacy on the petitioners’ part to contend that the State lacks the legislative power to enact Section 174 of the KGST Act and that Article 246A is the special provision on the Goods and Services Tax which empowers, for the first time, both the Union and the State have been conferred simultaneous – not concurrent – powers to legislate on certain items. It was also stated that the “Concurrency yields to the doctrine of repugnancy, but simultaneous legislative power does not. Both the legislatures, say one from the Union and the other from the State, coexist-operate in the same sphere subject to other constitutional safeguards.”
Penalties imposed for 2010-11 and 2011-12 for alleged tax evasion after availing compounding rates of taxation in the petition (WP-C No. 11335/2018), which was considered as the lead case in the judgment, were challenged. The argument of the petitioners was that the state government has been denuded of its legislative power to enact the Kerala State Goods and Services Act, 2017. They contended that the provisions of other state legislations that existed earlier are no more valid as Kerala State GST Act came into being as a consequence to the constitutional amendment for GST and that the saving mechanism regarding transactions before September 16, 2017 therefore crumbles.