The Legal Validity Of Re-Blocking Electronic Credit Ledgers Under Rule 86A And Section 74
This ruling for AY 2025-26 (delivered in March 2026) addresses a critical tension between the “one-year cap” on blocking Input Tax Credit (ITC) and the Department’s power to protect revenue when a formal tax demand has been created.
I. The Conflict: Rule 86A Time Limits vs. Revenue Protection
The Legal Issue
Can the Department “re-block” an Electronic Credit Ledger (ECL) if the initial one-year limit under Rule 86A has expired, especially if a formal tax demand under Section 74 has since been issued?
The Petitioner’s Argument
The taxpayer argued that any blocking of the ECL under Rule 86A automatically expires after one year. They claimed the “re-blocking” was an illegal extension of jurisdiction intended to bypass the statutory sunset clause.
II. The Revenue’s Defense and Factual Disclosure
The Reality of the Case
The State Revenue authorities provided a different context that the petitioner had omitted:
The Section 74 Order: A formal Show Cause Notice (SCN) had already culminated in an Order-in-Original (OIO).
The Demand: This order disallowed ITC and imposed a total liability of ₹4.95 Crores (including tax, interest, and penalty).
The Fresh Block: The ledger was not simply “extended”; it was re-blocked on May 30, 2025, specifically to secure the newly confirmed demand of ₹4.95 Crores.
III. The Judicial Verdict: The Doctrine of Clean Hands
The High Court dismissed the petition and ruled in favour of the Revenue based on the following principles:
1. Fatal Non-Disclosure
The Court emphasized that Writ jurisdiction is an “equitable remedy.” By failing to disclose the existence of the Section 74 proceedings and the ₹4.95 Crore demand, the petitioner was guilty of suppressing material facts. This non-disclosure alone was enough to dismiss the case.
2. Validity of the “Fresh” One-Year Period
Rule 86A(3) states that a block shall cease to have effect after the expiry of one year from the date of imposing such restriction.
The Court held that since the re-blocking occurred on May 30, 2025, the one-year window is currently active and will only expire on May 29, 2026.
Because the blocking was founded on a crystallized demand (the OIO), it was not an arbitrary exercise of power.
3. Interference Unwarranted
Since the legal “one-year cap” had not yet been breached for the current blocking instance, there was no jurisdictional error for the Court to correct.
Key Takeaways for Taxpayers and Practitioners
Disclose All Proceedings: If you challenge a ledger block, you must mention any underlying SCNs or Orders. If the Court finds out from the State that a demand exists, your petition will likely be dismissed for “lack of clean hands.”
Rule 86A is a Temporary Shield: Rule 86A is designed to prevent the use of fraudulent credit while an investigation is pending. Once an investigation turns into a formal Order (OIO), the Department has stronger grounds to keep the credit restricted until the demand is paid or stayed by an appellate authority.
The “One-Year” Reset: While the Department cannot keep the same block active forever, a new event (like a final assessment order) can sometimes trigger a fresh blocking action, provided it follows the procedure and starts a new one-year clock.
W.M.P. Nos. 2545 and 2546 of 2026