Landmark Relief on ITC Limitation: Impact of New Section 16(5) and CBIC Circular
1. The Core Dispute: Section 16(2) vs. Section 16(4)
The petitioner challenged the denial of Input Tax Credit (ITC) for the second half of FY 2018-19. The credit was availed in October 2019, which the Revenue claimed was beyond the deadline prescribed under Section 16(4).
The Petitioner’s Arguments:
Constitutional Challenge: Argued that Section 16(4) (time limit for ITC) is unconstitutional and violates the right to property (Article 300-A).
Substantive Rights: Contended that Section 16(2) (eligibility conditions) should prevail over Section 16(4). If a taxpayer has the invoice and has received goods, the “procedural” time limit should not result in the forfeiture of credit.
Double Jeopardy: Since late fees for delayed filing are already paid under Section 47, the taxpayer should not be “penalized” a second time by losing their ITC.
2. The Legal Shift: Insertion of Section 16(5)
The High Court noted that the legal landscape shifted dramatically while the petition was pending. Through the Finance Act, 2024, the government inserted a new sub-section: Section 16(5).
What is Section 16(5)?
This newly inserted provision acts as a “non-obstante” clause. It specifically allows taxpayers to claim ITC for FY 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20, and 2020-21, provided the return was filed up to 30th November 2021. This amendment effectively overrides the strict limitation previously imposed by Section 16(4) for these early years of GST implementation.
3. The Ruling: Remand in Light of New Clarifications
The High Court declined to rule on the unconstitutionality of Section 16(4) because the legislative amendment (Section 16(5)) had already provided a potential remedy to the petitioner.
CBIC Circular 237/2024: The court highlighted the importance of Circular No. 237/31/2024/GST (dated 15.10.2024), which explains how to implement these new provisions. This circular guides authorities on how to handle pending appeals where ITC was previously denied solely on the grounds of Section 16(4).
Precedent Followed: The court adopted the reasoning from Vinod Udaipuri v. Union of India (2025), acknowledging that the new law must be applied to past disputes.
4. Final Order and Direction
The High Court quashed the earlier order of the Joint Commissioner (Appeals) that had denied the ITC.
Remand: The matter was sent back to the Appellate Authority.
Mandate: The authority is directed to re-decide the case by specifically considering the benefit provided under the newly inserted Section 16(5) and the clarifications issued in the CBIC Circular dated 15.10.2024.
Outcome: This gives the assessee a fresh opportunity to claim the disputed ITC of ₹ (amount) if they meet the revised deadline of November 30, 2021.
Key Takeaways for Taxpayers
Retroactive Relief: If you have pending litigation regarding “time-barred ITC” for FY 2017-18 through 2020-21, Section 16(5) is your primary defense.
Check Your Filing Date: The critical date is 30th November 2021. If your GSTR-3B for those early years was filed on or before this date, you are likely eligible for the credit regardless of the original Section 16(4) deadline.
Circular Compliance: Ensure your authorized representative cites Circular No. 237/2024 during hearings to ensure the field officers apply the latest relaxation rules.
and Rajesh Shankar, J.