Judicial Corner: Goods in question were loaded in two trucks as the machine could not be accommodated in one truck, and in the invoice as well as in the e-way bill, multi-vehicle transport was specifically mentioned; therefore, no intention to evade tax could be attributed to the assessee. (13.01.2026)

Goods in question were loaded in two trucks as the machine could not be accommodated in one truck, and in the invoice as well as in the e-way bill, multi-vehicle transport was specifically mentioned; therefore, no intention to evade tax could be attributed to the assessee. {Falcon Autotech (P.) Ltd. vs. Additional Commissioner [2026] 182 taxmann.com 175 (Allahabad)}

Facts

  • The assessee (Falcon Autotech Pvt. Ltd.) transported goods that could not fit in a single truck, so they were loaded into two trucks.
  • In both the tax invoice and the e-way bill, the movement of goods by multiple vehicles was specifically mentioned.
  • At the point of interception, GST officials raised proceedings under Section 129 (detention/seizure/penalty) alleging potential tax evasion.

Issue 

Whether the movement of goods by two separate vehicles (as declared in the invoice and e-way bill)  where multi-vehicle dispatch was clearly disclosed could be taken as evidence of intention to evade tax, justifying seizure/penalty under Section 129?

Held

The Allahabad High Court held that:

  • Since the multi-vehicle dispatch was clearly and transparently disclosed in the invoice and the e-way bill, there was no concealment or misrepresentation of facts.
  • All statutory documents were in order, and there was no material to show any intention to evade tax.
  • In the absence of mens rea (intention to evade tax), penalty/seizure under Section 129 was not justified.