Gujarat High Court: Limitation for GST Appeal Commences from Date of Rectification Order Rejection.
The Chronology of the Case
12.08.2024: Original Adjudication Order (Order-in-Original) was passed.
05.11.2024: Within the three-month window for appeal, the Petitioner filed a Rectification Application under Section 161 to correct errors apparent on the face of the record.
19.03.2025: The Rectification Application was decided/rejected by the Authority.
25.03.2025: The Petitioner filed a formal appeal in Form GST APL-01, challenging the original order.
The Rejection: The Appellate Authority dismissed the appeal, calculating the delay from the original date (August 2024) and stating that the statutory limit of 3+1 months (120 days) had long expired, leaving the Authority with no power to condone the delay.
The Judicial Verdict
The High Court quashed the rejection and remanded the matter, establishing a vital procedural precedent:
Limitation Resets Post-Rectification: The Court held that when a rectification application is filed, the “finality” of the order is in abeyance. The limitation period for filing an appeal must commence from the date the rectification order is served (in this case, 20.03.2025).
Appeal Within Time: Since the appeal was filed on 25.03.2025 (just five days after the rectification rejection), it was well within the three-month statutory period allowed under Section 107.
Duty of Appellate Authority: The Court noted that the Appellate Authority failed to examine the particulars in the APL-01 form, which would have revealed the pending rectification proceedings. Dismissing the appeal solely based on the original order date was a “mechanical” error.
No Power to Condone vs. Statutory Right: While it is legally true that an Appellate Authority cannot condone a delay beyond one month (total 120 days), that restriction does not apply if the appeal is filed within three months of a Section 161 order.
Key Takeaways for Taxpayers
Rectification as a Strategy: If there is a clear clerical or mathematical error in an order, filing a Section 161 application is a valid step. This judgment confirms that doing so protects your right to appeal the original order later if the rectification is denied.
Calculation of Days: Do not let the Department calculate the 120-day limit from the original order date if you have an intervening rectification order. The “Modified Order” or the “Order Refusing Rectification” provides a fresh cause of action.
Filing APL-01: When filing an appeal post-rectification, clearly mention the date of the rectification order in the “Date of Communication” column to avoid automated or manual rejections for delay.