The thought of penning this article emerged from two decisions of the Bombay High Court1: The first was a case where a mammoth penalty of ₹3,700 crores was imposed on a key employee of the Company, and the second involved a case where past directors were made liable for tax dues pertaining to a period after their resignation. While the Court ultimately granted relief from such over-ambitious notices, the decision brought to the forefront the monetary exposures hovering over individual(s) operating under the aegis of a company.
1. Shantanu Sanjay Hundekari v. UOI (WP (L) NO. 30198 OF 2023) & Prasanna Karunakar Shetty v State of Maharashtra (2024-VIL-358-BOM)
Directors are at the forefront of recovery of any statutory liability. In this context, the GST law provides for three areas for discussion — (a) Recoveries of tax dues from directors of private companies including those arising during liquidation; (b) Penalty recoverable from directors for offences committed by Companies; (c) Penalty imposable on directors for aiding or abetting an offence committed by Companies.
The first two categories are recovery provisions where the tax, interest or penalties would be first imposed on the company and in case of their non-recoverability, the extended provisions enable the revenue to recover the tax and penalty from the directors of su