High Court Restores Input Tax Credit by Applying Retrospective Statutory Extensions to Limitation Deadlines
In this significant March 2026 ruling, the High Court quashed a tax demand that had reversed a taxpayer’s Input Tax Credit (ITC) on the grounds of being time-barred. The court clarified that the rigorous deadlines of Section 16(4) must now yield to the retrospective relaxations introduced under the newly enacted Section 16(5).
The Legal Conflict: Section 16(4) vs. The New Section 16(5)
The Department’s Original Stand
The Revenue issued an order on 22.12.2023 reversing the petitioner’s ITC. Their reasoning was based on the traditional interpretation of Section 16(4), which mandates that ITC for a financial year must be claimed by the November following the end of that year. Since the petitioner claimed it later, the Department labeled it “time-barred” and raised demands for tax, interest, and penalties.
The Legislative Shift
The Government recently introduced Section 16(5), which provides an extended timeline (retrospectively) for claiming ITC for specific past periods, effectively overriding the previous strict deadlines. This amendment was designed specifically to settle thousands of pending litigations where credit was denied purely due to filing delays.
The Decision: Retrospective Relief Trumps Earlier Orders
The High Court ruled in favour of the assessee, establishing the following legal protections:
Quashing of Time-Barred Demands: The order dated 22.12.2023 was set aside specifically regarding the denial of ITC due to limitation. The Court held that since the claim falls within the extended timeline of Section 16(5), it cannot be rejected as “late” or “lapsed.”
Restraint on Revenue: The Department is now legally restrained from initiating any fresh proceedings against the petitioner that are based solely on the “limitation” argument for these historical periods.
Right to Refund: The petitioner was granted permission to file a separate refund application for any amounts already paid or reversed. The Court directed the Department to consider this application on its “merits”—meaning they can check if the credit was genuine, but they cannot reject it because of the “timing” of the claim.
Key Takeaways for GST Taxpayers
Review Old Notices: If you have pending litigation or have already paid penalties for “delayed ITC” for the years 2017-18 through 2020-21, you may be eligible for a total waiver or refund under Section 16(5).
Limited Scope of Protection: The Court clarified that this protection only covers the “delay” in claiming. The Department still has the power to investigate other issues such as Fake Invoices, Mathematical Errors, or Wrong/Excess ITC that is not related to the date of filing.
Proactive Refunds: If your ITC was previously blocked or reversed by an officer’s order, use this precedent to file for a refund, citing the legislative change and this High Court ruling.
Summary of the ITC Deadline Evolution
Under the Original Rule (Sec 16(4)), the deadline was strictly the November of the following year, and any delay resulted in a permanent loss of ITC. Under the New Rule (Sec 16(5)), the timeline is extended specifically for the early years of GST. Unlike the original rule, this is Retrospective, meaning it applies to past disputes and restores ITC that was previously considered lost.
W.M.P(MD) Nos. 4014 & 4016 of 2026
| (i) | The impugned original order dated 22.12.2023 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. |