Quick answer. Decorator or caterer took your Rs 30,000 to Rs 5 lakh advance and then swapped the menu, cut the guest count, hiked the price or went silent? Same day: send a written refund-and-perform notice citing Consumer Protection Act 2019 Sections 2(11) and 2(47); demand the GST invoice under Section 31 of the CGST Act 2017; file at NCH 1915 at consumerhelpline.gov.in; lodge a parallel FSSAI Food Safety Connect complaint if any food-safety angle. eDaakhil stays on a 7 to 14 day standby. Most party-vendor disputes settle the moment the vendor sees the parallel filings.
If the function is already past, jump to the sample notice and the evidence checklist.
This is the sibling guide to our wedding photographer refund guide and the interior designer and contractor advance guide. It is written for the smaller, faster-moving disputes that dominate the Indian event economy: birthday parties, small weddings, mundans, housewarming pujas, society events, school annual days and corporate town halls. The legal toolkit is the same; the timelines are tighter, so the playbook below is calibrated for that.
Three structural forces collide in the party-vendor economy. One, most decorators and caterers operate as proprietorships or partnerships on verbal contracts plus a WhatsApp quote, with no signed agreement. Two, the advance is typically 40 to 70 percent of the bill, paid via UPI to a personal handle, with no GST invoice on the way in; your advance is often already spent on the next event before yours has happened. Three, the work is delivered on a fixed date that cannot slip, so the vendor holds disproportionate leverage in the final 72 hours. The result is a market where small-ticket disputes are common and citizens often give up at Rs 25,000 to Rs 1.5 lakh losses because “court would cost more”.
That last assumption is wrong. The Consumer Protection Act 2019 raised district consumer commission jurisdiction to Rs 50 lakh (no court-fee for claims up to Rs 5 lakh in many states), and eDaakhil put filing online. NCH 1915 mediation is free. The grievance window now closes in weeks, not years, if you file in parallel rather than waiting.
The original quote listed full tandoori, three sabzis, biryani, two desserts and a live chaat counter at Rs 850 per plate. After the advance is paid, the vendor “confirms” a quietly thinner menu: a tandoori item dropped, dessert cut to one, chaat counter “available as add-on at Rs 75 per plate”. This is a unilateral variation of contract: a deficiency in service under Section 2(11) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019 and an unfair contract under Section 2(47) of the same Act.
You booked for 150 guests. On event day the caterer claims the prep is for 130 citing a WhatsApp message you cannot find, or over-prepares and bills for 220 citing “your father-in-law called”. The remedy is the same: written quote, written variation, dated and acknowledged. A verbal variation nobody can produce in writing is a non-variation. The original quote stands.
Forty-eight hours before the function the decorator messages: “Sorry, crew double-booked. Please find another vendor, I will refund next week.” There is no “next week”. You scramble at premium rates and the original vendor goes silent. This is a breach of contract under Section 73 of the Indian Contract Act 1872 and a deficiency under Section 2(11) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. You can claim the price difference for the replacement vendor, not just the advance.
Agreed plate rate Rs 850. On event morning the caterer demands Rs 950 “because vegetable prices went up”, or the decorator bills extra for “flower import” or “delivery”. Under Section 16 of the Indian Contract Act 1872 (free consent) any price coerced from you while the vendor is already on-site with your event hours away is contestable. Pay under written protest, take the GST invoice for the full demanded amount, and recover the difference later.
Food is cold, raw, mismatched with the order, served in unhygienic containers, or causes stomach upset. Beyond the Consumer Protection Act 2019, the Food Safety and Standards Act 2006 applies. Every commercial caterer must hold an FSSAI licence or registration. Operating without one, or in breach of the hygiene schedule, is an offence under Section 31 read with Section 63 of the FSS Act. If a guest fell ill, Sections 48 to 59 apply, and severe adulteration moves into BNS 2024 Section 274. File at the FSSAI Food Safety Connect portal in parallel with NCH 1915.
The vendor accepted Rs 1.2 lakh via UPI but never issued a GST invoice. This is a violation of Section 31 of the CGST Act 2017 (mandatory tax invoice for any taxable supply) and Rule 46 of the CGST Rules 2017. A registered vendor refusing an invoice attracts penalty under Section 122. An unregistered vendor billing above the threshold is in breach of Section 22. Either way you have a complaint at the GST grievance portal and at the jurisdictional GST officer.
The party-vendor transaction is a contract for services. Five statutes overlap on it.
The Negotiable Instruments Act 1881 enters only if you paid by cheque and the vendor's “refund cheque” bounced. Section 138 then applies, with a 30-day notice and a 15-day grace window.
The first half hour after the dispute crystallises is decisive. Set a timer and walk through these steps in order.
Export the WhatsApp chat with the vendor to your email. Screenshot the original quote, the final agreed terms, the payment confirmations and any change-of-terms message. Photograph the event setup (or non-setup) with timestamp on. If the dispute is about food, photograph each platter with the time visible.
In a single sheet write the timeline: date of first quote, date and amount of each advance instalment, date the menu or count changed, date of the event, date of the final bill, mode of payment for each entry, total claimed, total paid, balance disputed.
Use the sample notice below. Send it on WhatsApp and email and as SMS and by registered post (the post copy goes the next morning). The dispute must visibly cross from “argument” to “record”.
Register at consumerhelpline.gov.in with company name, GSTIN if known, description, evidence and claim. Mediation is free. The portal generates a complaint number to quote in every later filing. See our NCH 1915 walkthrough.
Food-safety related? Open the FSSAI Food Safety Connect complaint at foodsafety.fssai.gov.in right away. Loss above Rs 50,000 and vendor silent for 48 hours? Start the eDaakhil filing. GST-registered vendor refusing an invoice? Open the GST grievance portal in parallel.
Treat this as a paper-trail audit. Every box should be filled or actively pursued.
Half these boxes empty? You can still file, but recovery will be smaller. The citizens who win full refund-plus-damages awards are the ones who walked into the dispute holding a screenshot of the original menu and the GSTIN of the vendor.
The cheapest door and the one most citizens skip. A clearly-worded notice citing statute, figures and a 7-day deadline often unlocks a settlement before any portal is touched. The vendor's accountant reads “Section 138 NI Act” or “BNS Section 318 cheating” and the conversation re-opens. The sample notice below is calibrated for this.
The National Consumer Helpline is a free mediation forum. Case is registered, assigned to a counsellor, vendor contacted, settlement attempted within 7 to 21 days. A large fraction of party-vendor cases close at this stage because the vendor would rather refund than have a docketed CCPA escalation.
Where the vendor shows a pattern (repeat menu-swap, repeat advance theft, repeat bait-and-switch), the CCPA can issue a class-style direction under Section 18 of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. Trigger this by attaching the CCPA Dark Patterns Guidelines 2023 to the NCH complaint. See our CCPA dark patterns guide; the relevant patterns here are bait-and-switch, drip pricing and hidden costs.
eDaakhil is the online filing portal of the consumer commissions. District jurisdiction up to Rs 50 lakh, filing fee Rs 100 to Rs 2,500. The commission can award refund, damages, mental-harassment compensation, costs and interest. Typical disposal: 3 to 9 months; faster if the vendor settles after the first notice. Use our eDaakhil walkthrough.
The criminal route is for cases where the vendor took the advance with no intention to perform: repeat victims, shifted phone numbers, no fixed address, bounced refund cheques. Cite BNS 2024 Section 318 (cheating) and, for food adulteration, Section 274. BNSS 2023 makes online FIR or eFIR available in most states for property offences. Use this only after the civil doors have failed, because once a criminal case is filed the vendor's willingness to refund typically drops.
Citizens who recover money do not file one complaint and wait. They file in parallel.
Each new filing raises the vendor's cost of keeping the dispute open. One complaint is one call to ignore; four parallel filings feel like a compliance crisis.
From: [Your name]
[Your address] | [Email] | [Phone]
Date: [DD MMM 2026]
To: [Vendor firm name] (Proprietor / Partner: [Name as on quote])
[Vendor address] | GSTIN: [if known]
FSSAI Licence/Reg No: [if known and applicable]
Subject: Notice for refund of advance and compensation for deficiency
in service, unfair contract terms and breach of contract;
demand under the Consumer Protection Act 2019, the Indian
Contract Act 1872, the CGST Act 2017 and the Food Safety
and Standards Act 2006.
1. I engaged your firm by written/WhatsApp quote dated [DD MMM YYYY]
for [decoration / catering / both] services for an event on
[DD MMM YYYY] at [venue].
2. The agreed scope was:
(a) Guest count: [number].
(b) Menu / decor items: [list as originally quoted].
(c) Total price: Rs [amount], inclusive / exclusive of GST.
(d) Advance paid: Rs [amount] on [date] via [UPI / NEFT / cheque],
reference [transaction ID].
3. You have breached the agreed terms as follows (tick all that apply):
(a) Unilateral menu downgrade on [date]: dropped items [list],
reducing value by Rs [amount].
(b) Disputed guest count on [date]: prepared for [number] instead
of agreed [number].
(c) Last-minute cancellation by you on [date], [hours] hours before
the event.
(d) Last-minute price hike from Rs [amount] to Rs [amount].
(e) Quality of service deficiency [describe with photographs].
(f) Food-safety failure [describe; attach medical records].
(g) No GST tax invoice issued despite payment of Rs [amount].
4. These acts constitute deficiency in service under Section 2(11)
and unfair contract under Section 2(47) of the Consumer Protection
Act 2019; breach of contract under Section 73 of the Indian
Contract Act 1872; violation of Section 31 of the CGST Act 2017
read with Rule 46 of the CGST Rules 2017; and, where applicable,
violation of Sections 31 and 63 of the Food Safety and Standards
Act 2006.
5. I therefore demand, within 7 days of receipt:
(a) Refund of Rs [amount], being [advance / price-difference for
replacement vendor / over-charge amount].
(b) Issue of a GST tax invoice for every rupee retained.
(c) Compensation of Rs [amount] for mental harassment and loss
of reputation at the event.
(d) Written confirmation that no further amount is owed.
6. Failing the above within 7 days I will file at the District
Consumer Commission via eDaakhil under Section 35 of the
Consumer Protection Act 2019; at NCH 1915 and CCPA under Section
18; at FSSAI Food Safety Connect (where applicable); at the
jurisdictional GST officer under Section 122 of the CGST Act 2017;
and, where your conduct discloses no intention to perform from
the outset, lodge an FIR under Section 318 of the Bharatiya Nyaya
Sanhita 2024 (read with Section 274 where adulteration is
involved) under the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita 2023.
7. Without prejudice to my other rights and remedies under law.
[Your signature] | [Your name in block letters]
Copy by registered post and by email.
The notice is deliberately long. It is calibrated to look like the first page of a court file the vendor's lawyer would not enjoy reading.
Composite scenarios drawn from common patterns in NCH and consumer-commission filings between 2024 and 2026. No real person is named.
A family booked a decorator-caterer combo for a five-year-old's birthday at a society clubhouse, advance Rs 48,000 of a Rs 75,000 quote. Two days before the event the decorator swapped the agreed cartoon backdrop for a “generic kids” one and removed the entry arch. The family sent a written notice that evening citing Section 2(11) and Section 2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019, plus the CCPA bait-and-switch pattern. NCH 1915 filed next morning. Decorator refunded Rs 30,000 within 19 days; family completed the event with a replacement vendor.
Caterer booked for a 200-guest dinner at Rs 950 per plate, advance Rs 1.4 lakh. On the night the caterer served for what looked like 150 guests, ran out of two of the four advertised mains, and substituted a packaged dessert for the promised live counter. Family paid the balance under written protest, photographed every platter, noted three guests who left hungry. NCH filed Day 1 (mediation stalled). eDaakhil filed Day 12 claiming Rs 1.6 lakh in refund plus damages. Caterer settled at Rs 1.1 lakh refund plus Rs 15,000 costs before the first hearing.
Company booked a decorator-caterer package for a 120-person offsite. Vendor took a 60 percent advance, disappeared 72 hours before the event citing “crew issue”. The replacement cost Rs 4.1 lakh against an original Rs 2.7 lakh budget. Filed NCH 1915, CCPA (bait-and-switch plus forced action under Dark Patterns Guidelines 2023), and eDaakhil simultaneously. District Commission awarded Rs 2.7 lakh refund, Rs 1.4 lakh price-difference damages, Rs 25,000 mental-harassment damages and Rs 10,000 costs, with 9 percent interest from the date of advance. Vendor's repeat conduct drew a separate CCPA show-cause.
The Food Safety and Standards Act 2006 is the most under-used statute by Indian citizens dealing with caterers. Every commercial caterer must hold an FSSAI Registration (turnover up to Rs 12 lakh per annum), a State Licence (Rs 12 lakh to Rs 20 crore) or a Central Licence (above Rs 20 crore), printed on menu, packaging, vehicle and invoice.
No valid FSSAI number is a stand-alone offence under Section 31 read with Section 63 of the FSS Act (imprisonment up to six months, fine up to Rs 5 lakh). If a guest fell ill, Sections 48 to 59 apply with penalties up to Rs 10 lakh. Severe adulteration moves into BNS 2024 Section 274.
File at foodsafety.fssai.gov.in or with the District Designated Officer for hygiene failures, adulteration, short-weight, mis-labelling, or lack of licence. Photographs help; medical records help more. FSSAI runs an inspector-led investigation track parallel to consumer commission recovery.
Section 31 of the CGST Act 2017 makes a tax invoice mandatory for any taxable supply by a registered supplier. Rule 46 of the CGST Rules 2017 prescribes contents: supplier name and GSTIN, invoice number and date, recipient details, HSN/SAC code, description and value, GST rate and amount.
A registered vendor refusing the invoice is in violation of Section 122 (penalty of Rs 25,000 or the tax amount, whichever is higher). An unregistered vendor whose turnover exceeds the threshold (Rs 20 lakh in most states, Rs 10 lakh in special-category states) is in breach of Section 22.
Two levers. First, the GST grievance portal at selfservice.gstsystem.in. Second, an RTI to the jurisdictional CGST Commissioner asking for the vendor's filing status and any past action raises systemic visibility. Most party-vendor disputes hide a buried GST irregularity, and the firm that refuses an invoice is exactly the firm that settles fastest when CCPA, FSSAI and CGST levers are pulled simultaneously.
The CCPA notified the Guidelines for Prevention and Regulation of Dark Patterns on 30 November 2023. Four of the 13 listed patterns occur frequently in party-vendor disputes:
Each violates the CCPA Guidelines 2023 and Section 18 of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. Attach the matching guideline number to your NCH and CCPA complaint. See our CCPA dark patterns guide.
File an RTI to the Central Consumer Protection Authority for the aggregate number of complaints against the vendor in the last two years, and any class-style direction passed against the catering or decoration sector under Section 18 of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. Pair with an RTI to the FSSAI Designated Officer for licence status, inspection history and past show-cause notices, and an RTI to the jurisdictional CGST Commissionerate for registration status and past penalties under Section 122. Use our AI RTI Drafter; see the citizen RTI playbook for the filing flow.
This sits inside a larger consumer-defence stack: the wedding photographer refund guide for the photo segment, the interior designer and contractor guide for home-renovation, the NCH 1915 and eDaakhil walkthroughs as the procedural backbone, and the middle-class traps pillar as the map for advance-based traps across categories.
No, not unilaterally. If the vendor breached the agreed terms (menu change, count dispute, last-minute cancellation), the advance is recoverable under Section 73 of the Indian Contract Act 1872 read with Section 2(11) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. Only a clearly-worded forfeiture clause in a written contract can justify retaining part of it, and even that is subject to Section 74 of the Indian Contract Act 1872, which limits forfeiture to “reasonable compensation” for actual loss to the vendor.
It matters a lot. Section 31 of the CGST Act 2017 makes the tax invoice mandatory. A registered vendor refusing it violates Section 122; an unregistered vendor above threshold violates Section 22. The missing invoice is your strongest leverage: a GST grievance complaint often unlocks settlements that consumer-route filings alone do not.
File at NCH 1915, the FSSAI Food Safety Connect portal, and consider an FIR under BNS 2024 Section 274 (adulteration of food intended for sale) read with FSS Act 2006 Sections 48 to 59. Collect medical records, photographs of the food and packaging, and witness statements from three affected guests. The FSSAI inspection can suspend the caterer's licence, often a stronger lever than the refund itself.
Yes. District consumer commission jurisdiction is up to Rs 50 lakh with no minimum threshold. Filing fee for claims up to Rs 5 lakh is Rs 100 to Rs 200 in most states. eDaakhil makes the filing online. See our eDaakhil walkthrough.
Read it and reply within the time stated. Most party-vendor lawyer notices threaten a civil suit for the balance. Reply citing your refund grounds and your parallel filings. Civil debt is not arrestable in India, so the notice can only support a civil suit the vendor has to actually file and prove. Your written reply becomes part of the record.
Yes. Consumer commission awards in party-vendor cases have ranged from Rs 5,000 to Rs 1 lakh depending on conduct documented: embarrassment at the function, reputation impact, scramble for replacement, aggressive vendor follow-up. Keep chat screenshots, lawful recordings and witness statements.
Section 138 Negotiable Instruments Act 1881 route. Send a 30-day notice to the drawer within 30 days of the bank's “cheque returned unpaid” memo. If no payment in 15 days, file complaint before the magistrate within one month. Punishment up to 2 years imprisonment or fine up to twice the cheque amount, or both. Many vendors refund within days once a Section 138 notice lands.
Yes. An unregistered firm cannot file a suit on the contract (Section 69 of the Indian Partnership Act 1932) but a consumer can still file against an unregistered firm. The lack of registration is itself an additional violation to flag.
No. eDaakhil is built for citizens to file in person. Forms are guided, fee is low, hearing is in plain language. Many citizens win refund-plus-damages awards without a lawyer. A lawyer becomes useful in appeals to the state or national commission.
Straightforward menu-downgrade or short-delivery cases settle at NCH in 14 to 30 days. eDaakhil filings run 3 to 9 months at the district commission, with most cases settling after the first or second hearing. Parallel filing compresses this further by raising the vendor's compliance cost.
A clean, citizen-first illustration for the article header. A photo-realistic 1200×630 image showing a half-set Indian wedding-reception table at dusk: round table with three empty plates, two mismatched glasses, one folded napkin, a small floral centrepiece partly assembled, scattered marigold petals, a fairy-light backdrop half-installed in the background, soft golden hour light, shallow depth of field, no people visible, no logos, no text overlay, warm but slightly tense mood (the function has not yet started and something looks incomplete). Apple-green and warm-gold palette accent, photographic realism. Composition: rule of thirds, table occupying lower-left, lights in upper-right blur. Use as `/home/bighelpers/wiki/data/media/social/auto/event-decorator-caterer-advance-refund-india.png`.