ITC Denial Quashed as Section 16(5) Overrides Original Limitation Period for FY 2017-18 to 2020-21
1. The Core Dispute: Statutory Deadlines vs. Retrospective Relief
The petitioner’s Input Tax Credit (ITC) claims for late 2019 and early 2020 were originally rejected. The tax authorities argued that the returns (filed in December 2020 and November 2021) were submitted beyond the time limit set by Section 16(4).
The Original Rule (Section 16(4)): Generally restricts ITC claims to the deadline of November following the end of the financial year.
The New Relief (Section 16(5)): Introduced via the Finance Act (No. 2) of 2024 (effective retrospectively from July 1, 2017), this provision extends the deadline specifically for the initial years of GST (FY 2017-18 to 2020-21).
2. Legal Analysis: The Overriding Power of “Notwithstanding”
The High Court emphasized that the legislature introduced Section 16(5) specifically to provide relief to taxpayers who faced difficulties during the early transition to GST and the COVID-19 pandemic.
I. Overriding Effect
The court noted that Section 16(5) begins with the non-obstante clause: “Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (4).”
Significance: This means that if a taxpayer meets the conditions of Section 16(5), any restriction or deadline mentioned in Section 16(4) becomes legally irrelevant.
II. The November 30, 2021 Cut-off
The only primary condition under Section 16(5) for the relevant financial years is that the return (GSTR-3B) must have been filed on or before November 30, 2021.
Fact of the Case: Since the petitioner filed their returns on December 28, 2020, and November 18, 2021, they were well within the statutory “amnesty” window created by the amendment.
3. Final Ruling: Statutory Right Cannot Be Denied
The Court held that the benefit under Section 16(5) is a statutory right conferred by the Parliament. Even if there were prior lapses or if the petitioner had unsuccessfully challenged Section 16(4) earlier, the new provision creates a fresh cause of action.
Verdict: The orders rejecting the ITC were quashed.
Outcome: The petitioner is entitled to the ITC benefit, provided they are otherwise eligible on merits.
Key Takeaways for Taxpayers
Check Your Filing Dates: If your ITC for FY 2017-18 to 2020-21 was denied due to a delay, check if you filed that GSTR-3B before November 30, 2021. If yes, you are legally entitled to the credit.
Rectification Procedure: If you have an existing adverse order, you may apply for rectification or appeal citing this retrospective amendment and CBIC Circular No. 237/31/2024-GST.
Fresh Cause of Action: This ruling confirms that Section 16(5) is a powerful, independent tool that overrides previous denials based on Section 16(4).