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2025 (6) TMI 1790 - HC - GST


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Court in this matter are:

- Whether the claim of Input Tax Credit (ITC) by registered dealers, which was rejected by the Department on grounds of limitation under Section 16(4) of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 (CGST Act), is sustainable in light of subsequent amendments and notifications extending the time limit for availing ITC.

- The applicability and interpretation of Section 16(4) of the CGST Act, and the retrospective amendment by insertion of sub-section 16(5) extending the deadline for claiming ITC for financial years 2017-18 to 2020-21.

- Whether the impugned orders reversing ITC claims and imposing tax/penalty/interest on petitioners are valid in view of the extended limitation period.

- The extent to which the Department can proceed against petitioners on issues beyond limitation, such as discrepancies, wrong or excess claims, or fraudulent ITC claims.

- The procedural consequences flowing from quashing of impugned orders, including de-freezing of bank accounts, refund or adjustment of tax amounts collected, and restraining recovery proceedings during pendency of petitions.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue 1: Validity of ITC claim rejection based on limitation under Section 16(4) of the CGST Act

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 16(4) of the CGST Act provides that a registered person shall not be entitled to take ITC in respect of any invoice or debit note for supply of goods or services after the 30th day of November following the end of the financial year to which such invoice or debit note pertains, or furnishing of the relevant annual return, whichever is earlier. This provision sets a strict time limit for availing ITC.

However, the GST Council, in its 53rd meeting held on 22.06.2024, recommended an extension of this deadline for availing ITC for financial years 2017-18 to 2020-21. This was given effect by the Finance Act (No. 2) of 2024 and the insertion of Section 16(5) into the CGST Act, which allows registered persons to claim ITC in any return filed under Section 39 up to 30.11.2021, notwithstanding the limitation in Section 16(4).

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Court observed that the petitioners, despite filing GSTR-1 returns on time, failed to claim ITC within the original limitation period due to hardships such as COVID-19 lockdown, health issues, and fire accidents. The Department's rejection of ITC claims without considering these factors and the subsequent amendment extending the limitation period rendered the impugned orders unsustainable.

The Court emphasized the retrospective effect of Section 16(5) from 01.07.2017, thereby validating the petitioners' entitlement to claim ITC for the relevant financial years up to 30.11.2021.

Key evidence and findings: The petitioners' inability to file GSTR-3B returns timely due to exceptional circumstances was noted. The legislative amendment and the Circular No. 237/31/2024-GST issued by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs clarified the implementation of the extended deadline.

Application of law to facts: The Court applied the amended Section 16(5) to override the limitation imposed by Section 16(4), holding that the petitioners' ITC claims filed within the extended deadline must be accepted.

Treatment of competing arguments: The Department contended that the original limitation period barred the ITC claims and that the impugned orders were valid. The Court rejected this, relying on the statutory amendment and policy rationale behind the extension.

Conclusions: The impugned orders reversing ITC claims solely on limitation grounds were quashed. The petitioners are entitled to claim ITC within the extended deadline.

Issue 2: Consequences of quashing impugned orders and related procedural directions

Relevant legal framework and precedents: The Court has inherent powers to grant reliefs consequential to quashing orders, including restraining recovery proceedings, directing de-freezing of bank accounts, and refund or adjustment of tax amounts.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: Recognizing the hardship caused by freezing bank accounts and recovery actions based on impugned orders, the Court directed immediate de-freezing of accounts and restrained the Department from initiating recovery proceedings on limitation grounds during pendency of petitions.

The Court also clarified that any tax amounts collected based on impugned orders must be refunded or allowed to be adjusted towards future tax liabilities, ensuring no undue financial prejudice to the petitioners.

Key evidence and findings: The freezing of petitioners' bank accounts and recovery actions were found to be directly linked to the impugned orders now quashed.

Application of law to facts: The Court balanced the rights of the petitioners against the Department's interest in tax recovery, ensuring protection of petitioners' rights pending final adjudication.

Treatment of competing arguments: The Department expressed concern about proceeding against petitioners for other issues such as discrepancies or fraudulent claims. The Court granted liberty to the Department to proceed on such grounds, distinguishing them from limitation-based challenges.

Conclusions: The Court provided comprehensive directions to safeguard petitioners' interests post-quashing, while preserving the Department's right to act on substantive violations unrelated to limitation.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

- The Court held that "notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (4), in respect of an invoice or debit note for supply of goods or services or both pertaining to the Financial Years 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20 and 2020-21, the registered persons shall be entitled to take input tax credit in any return under section 39 which is filed upto the thirtieth day of November, 2021." This statutory provision overrides the limitation in Section 16(4) retrospectively.

- The impugned orders reversing ITC claims on limitation grounds are "no longer sustainable and liable to be quashed."

- The Department is restrained from initiating proceedings solely on limitation grounds and directed to de-freeze bank accounts frozen pursuant to the impugned orders.

- Any tax amounts collected based on the impugned orders must be refunded or allowed to be adjusted towards future tax liabilities.

- The Department retains liberty to proceed against petitioners for issues such as discrepancies, wrong or excess claims, or fraudulent ITC claims in accordance with law.

- The Court emphasized the importance of considering exceptional circumstances such as the COVID-19 lockdown and other hardships that prevented timely filing of returns and ITC claims.

 

 

 

 

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