ITC Time Bar Relief: Section 16(5) Overrides Section 16(4) for Past Periods
The Legal Issue
The case addresses the conflict between the original time limit for claiming Input Tax Credit (ITC) under Section 16(4) and the newly introduced relaxation under Section 16(5) of the CGST/TNGST Act. Specifically, it examines whether a taxpayer is entitled to credit that was previously denied as “time-barred” if it now falls within the extended window provided by the recent legislative amendments.
Facts Of Case
The Denial: The petitioner, a registered dealer, claimed ITC that the Department initially rejected. The rejection was based on Section 16(4), which stipulates that ITC must be claimed by the November following the end of the financial year.
The Change in Law: During the pendency of the dispute, the government introduced Section 16(5) (via the Finance Act, 2024), which retrospectively extends the deadline for claiming ITC for the financial years 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20, and 2020-21 up to November 30, 2021.
The Consequence: Based on the old limitation, the Department had issued an order demanding tax, interest, and penalties, and had subsequently freezed the petitioner’s bank accounts for recovery.
The Precedent: Both the taxpayer and the Revenue agreed that the issue was squarely covered by the Madras High Court’s ruling in Sri Ganapathi Pandi Industries v. Asstt. Commissioner (State Tax) [2025].
The Decision
The Madras High Court (2025/2026) ruled in favour of the assessee, providing comprehensive relief:
Order Quashed: The original assessment order denying the ITC was quashed to the extent that the claim was now valid under the relaxed timelines of Section 16(5).
Restraint on Recovery: The Department was explicitly restrained from initiating any further proceedings or recovery actions based on the “limitation” issue for those specific years.
Bank Account De-freezing: The Court ordered the immediate de-freezing of the petitioner’s bank accounts.
Refund of Collected Tax: Crucially, the Court directed the Department to refund any tax amounts that had already been collected from the petitioner based on the now-quashed assessment order.
Key Takeaways
Legislative Grace: Section 16(5) is a “remedial” provision. If your ITC for the first four years of GST (2017-21) was denied solely because you filed the return late (but before Nov 30, 2021), you are now legally entitled to that credit.
Automatic Relief: Even if you lost at the Adjudication or First Appeal stage, this new law provides a fresh ground to challenge those orders in the High Court or the GST Tribunal.
Recovery Protection: If the Department has attached your bank accounts or property based on a Section 16(4) demand for the 2017-21 period, you should immediately cite Section 16(5) and the Sri Ganapathi Pandi precedent to seek a stay and de-freezing.
W.M.P.(MD) Nos.2240 and 2241 of 2026
| (i) | The orders impugned in all Writ Petitions are quashed insofar as it relates to the claim made by the petitioners for ITC which is barred by limitation in terms of Section 16 (4) of the CGST Act, 2017 but, within the period prescribed in terms of Section 16 (5) of the said Act. |
| (ii) | Therefore, the respondent-Department is restrained from initiating any proceedings against the petitioners by virtue of the impugned orders based on the issue of limitation. |
| (iii) | In view of the fact that the impugned orders are quashed, the respondent-Department is directed to take immediate steps towards de-freezure of the concerned petitioners bank accounts, which have been freezed in furtherance of the impugned orders, by sending intimation to the concerned bankers. |
| (iv) | In the event, in the interregnum, i.e. during the pendency of these Writ Petitions, if any orders are proposed to be passed towards recovery, same shall be dropped immediately upon production of the order copy by the petitioners, in whichever case, where, there is no interim order. |
| (v) | It is also made clear that if at all, if there is any tax amounts were collected from the petitioners based on the impugned assessment orders from the cash ledgers/credit ledgers of the petitioners concerned, the same shall be refunded to them or by means of orders of this Court or even in the absence of any order from this Court, if any amount is deposited either in the cash ledgers/credit ledgers of the petitioners concerned, the same is permitted to be utilized/adjusted by the petitioners towards payment of future tax. |
| (vi) | Insofar as the apprehension expressed by the learned Additional Advocate General for the respondent-Department that in certain Writ Petition apart from the issue on limitation, challenges have also been made to the order related to issues such as discrepancies in availing the ITC/wrong availment of ITC/excess claim of ITC/Fake ITC claim, as the case may be, or such other issues, liberty is be granted to the respondent-Department to proceed against the assessees/petitioners in furtherance of the impugned orders in accordance with law. |
| (i) | The impugned original order dated 23.04.2024 is quashed insofar as it relates to the claim made by the petitioner for ITC which is barred by limitation in terms of Section 16 (4) of the CGST Act, 2017 but, within the period prescribed in terms of Section 16 (5) of the said Act. |
| (ii) | Therefore, the respondent-Department is restrained from initiating any proceedings against the petitioners by virtue of the impugned order based on the issue of limitation. |
| (iii) | The liberty is granted to the petitioner to move a separate application for refund, if any, and the respondent-Department shall consider and decide the same on its own merits and in accordance with law. |
| (iv) | In view of the fact that the impugned order is quashed, the respondent-Department is directed to de-freezure of the concerned petitioner bank account, if any, which have been freezed in furtherance of the impugned order, by sending intimation to the concerned bankers. |
| (v) | In the event, in the interregnum, i.e. during the pendency of this Writ Petition, if any orders are proposed to be passed towards recovery, same shall be dropped immediately upon production of the order copy by the petitioners, in whichever case, where, there is no interim order. |
| (vi) | It is also made clear that if at all, if there is any tax amounts collected from the petitioner based on the impugned assessment order from the cash ledgers/credit ledgers of the petitioner concerned, the same shall be refunded to them or by means of orders of this Court or even in the absence of any order from this Court, if any amount is deposited either in the cash ledgers/credit ledgers of the petitioner concerned, the same is permitted to be utilized/adjusted by the petitioners towards payment of future tax. |
| (vii) | If there is any challenge related to issues such as discrepancies in availing the ITC/wrong availment of ITC/excess claim of ITC/Fake ITC claim, as the case may be, or such other issues, liberty is be granted to the respondent-Department to proceed against the assessee/petitioner in furtherance of the impugned order in accordance with law. |