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Bank Account Freeze Quashed as DGGI Failed to Record Mandatory Opinion Under GST Law: Gauhati High Court

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The Gauhati High Court has held that the bank account freeze was quashed as Directorate General of GST Intelligence (DGGI) failed to record mandatory opinion under GST law.

The bench of Justice Nelson Sailo has set aside a provisional attachment order issued under Section 83 of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017, holding that authorities cannot mechanically freeze a taxpayer’s bank account without first recording a reasoned opinion demonstrating the necessity of such action. 

The petitioner challenged a provisional attachment order dated February 27, 2026, through which its bank account maintained with Punjab & Sind Bank was frozen under Section 83 of the CGST Act. The company contended that the attachment order was issued in a routine and mechanical manner without the competent authority forming the legally required opinion that such attachment was necessary to protect government revenue. 

Senior Counsel appearing for the petitioner argued that Section 83 confers a drastic and extraordinary power upon tax authorities and therefore strict compliance with statutory requirements is mandatory. It was submitted that the impugned order merely stated that attachment was being made to protect the interests of revenue without disclosing any basis or satisfaction recorded by the authority. 

The petitioner further highlighted that the freezing of its bank account had severely disrupted business operations, preventing payment of salaries and other dues to employees. 

The High Court extensively relied upon the Supreme Court’s landmark judgment in Radha Krishan Industries v. State of Himachal Pradesh, wherein the apex court had characterized provisional attachment under Section 83 as a “draconian” power requiring strict observance of statutory safeguards. 

The Supreme Court had held that before exercising powers under Section 83, the Commissioner must form an independent opinion; arrive at a conclusion that attachment is necessary to protect government revenue; record such satisfaction before issuing attachment orders; issue a written order in accordance with law; and follow the prescribed procedural requirements.

The apex court had further cautioned that any challenge to the exercise of Section 83 powers must be examined on the basis of strict compliance with these statutory preconditions. 

Upon examining the impugned attachment order, the Gauhati High Court found that it contained no indication that the competent authority had undertaken the mandatory exercise of forming an opinion before directing attachment.

The Court observed that the order merely recited that attachment was necessary for protecting the interest of revenue and that powers under Section 83 were being exercised. Such a bare assertion, without demonstrating any application of mind or recording of satisfaction, fell short of the requirements laid down by the Supreme Court. 

The court noted that the legislature deliberately imposed safeguards because provisional attachment is imposed even before final assessment or determination of tax liability and can have serious consequences on business operations and property rights. Therefore, authorities must strictly comply with statutory conditions before invoking such powers. 

The Court concluded that the attachment order had been issued in a mechanical manner. It emphasized that merely stating that the action was taken to protect revenue does not amount to formation of the opinion mandated under Section 83.

According to the Court, in the absence of any material demonstrating that the authority had independently evaluated the necessity of attachment, the order could not survive judicial scrutiny. 

The judgment reiterates that tax authorities cannot rely on standardized or template-based language while exercising one of the most intrusive powers available under GST law. 

Holding the attachment order legally unsustainable, the High Court quashed the provisional attachment order dated February 27, 2026.

As a consequence, Punjab & Sind Bank was directed to immediately de-freeze the petitioner’s bank account, enabling the company to resume normal financial operations. The writ petition was accordingly allowed. 

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Read More: Payments By Indian Company To Its Foreign Parent Company Under “Reimbursement Of Expenses” Can’t Automatically Escape TDS Obligations: Madras High Court

Mariya Paliwala
Mariya Paliwalahttps://www.jurishour.in/
Mariya is the Senior Editor at Juris Hour. She has 7+ years of experience on covering tax litigation stories from the Supreme Court, High Courts and various tribunals including CESTAT, ITAT, NCLAT, NCLT, etc. Mariya graduated from MLSU Law College, Udaipur (Raj.) with B.A.LL.B. and also holds an LL.M. She started her career as a freelance tax reporter in the leading online legal news companies.

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