Retrospective Cancellation: High Court Rejects Review Petition Seeking to Reopen Finalized Cases
The Legal Issue
The central dispute is whether the Revenue can seek a review of a High Court judgment that quashed a retrospective cancellation of GST registration. The Revenue argued that allowing the registration to stand (even for a past period) would “break the chain” of tax recovery from other parties who dealt with the assessee. The Court examined whether a “review” can be used to re-argue a case that was already lost due to the Department’s own procedural failures.
Facts of the Case
The Initial Order: The Department cancelled the assessee’s GST registration with retrospective effect.
The High Court’s First Ruling: The High Court set aside the retrospective cancellation because the original Show Cause Notice (SCN) failed to:
Provide specific reasons for backdating the cancellation.
Give the assessee prior notice that the Department intended to cancel it retrospectively.
The Revenue’s Review Petition: The Department filed a review application, claiming that quashing the retrospective cancellation would jeopardize the recovery of tax from the entire supply chain linked to this registration.
The Procedural Lapse: The Court noted that during the original hearing, the Department did not ask for “liberty” to issue a fresh, detailed notice but instead accepted the Court’s decision on the existing facts.
The Decision
The Delhi High Court (2026) rejected the Revenue’s review petition, ruling in favour of the assessee:
Review is Not a Re-hearing: The Court held that a review jurisdiction cannot be equated with an “original hearing.” You cannot simply repeat overruled arguments or bring up new points that should have been raised during the first trial.
Procedural Finality: If the Department failed to provide reasons in the SCN, they cannot fix that mistake by filing a review petition years later. They should have conceded the error earlier and asked for permission to start a fresh, legal proceeding.
No Error on Face of Record: A review is only allowed if there is a “manifest error” or a “miscarriage of justice” evident in the judgment. Since the original judgment followed settled law (that an SCN must be detailed and reasoned), there was no error to correct.
Outcome: The quashing of the retrospective cancellation stands. The Department cannot use a review petition to bypass the constitutional requirement of providing a “reasoned notice” to taxpayers.
Key Takeaways
The “Reasoned SCN” Rule: A GST registration cannot be cancelled retrospectively unless the SCN explicitly states the grounds for such a backdated move. If the notice is vague, the cancellation is legally unsustainable.
Chain of Transactions: While the Department is concerned about “breaking the chain” of Input Tax Credit (ITC), the Court clarified that administrative concerns do not justify violating the principles of Natural Justice.
Finality of Litigation: Once a High Court passes an order based on the facts presented, the Department cannot “reopen” the case through a review petition unless they find a clerical error or a major legal oversight in the judgment itself.
| (i) | Discovery of new and important matter or evidence which, after the exercise of due diligence, was not within knowledge of the petitioner or could not be produced by him; |
| (ii) | Mistake or error apparent on the face of the record; |
| (iii) | Any other sufficient reason. |
| “(i) | A repetition of old and overruled argument is not enough to reopen concluded adjudications. |
| (ii) | Minor mistakes of inconsequential import. |
| (iii) | Review proceedings cannot be equated with the original hearing of the case. |
| (iv) | Review is not maintainable unless the material error, manifest on the face of order, undermines its soundness or results in miscarriage of justice. |
| (v) | A review is by no means an appeal in disguise whereby an erroneous decision is reheard and corrected but lies only for patent error. |
| (vi) | The mere possibility of two views on the subject cannot be a ground for review. |
| (vii) | The error apparent on the face of the record should not be an error which has to be fished out and searched. |
| (viii) | The appreciation of evidence on record is fully within the domain of the appellate Court, it cannot be permitted to be advanced in the review petition. |
| (ix) | Reviews is not maintainable when the same relief sought at the time of arguing the main matter had been negatived.” |