Orissa HC: GSTAT is Functional; Taxpayers Must File Appeals and Pay 20% Pre-deposit by June 2026.
The Dispute: The Mandatory Pre-Deposit Hurdles
The Conflict: The petitioner lost their first appeal for the period 2019-20. To stay the tax demand, they filed a Writ Petition, arguing that the Second Appeal (to the GSTAT) was impossible because the Tribunal wasn’t yet accepting cases.
The Revenue’s Stand: The Department argued that even if the Tribunal was delayed, the petitioner cannot escape the mandatory pre-deposit required under Section 112(8).
The New Timeline: The government issued Notification S.O. 4220(E), setting a strict “outer date” of June 30, 2026, for filing appeals against old orders (communicated before April 1, 2026).
The Judicial Verdict: GSTAT is Now the Sole Forum
The High Court dismissed the Writ Petition in favour of the Revenue, ordering the taxpayer back to the statutory route:
1. End of the “Non-Functional” Excuse
The Court noted that the GSTAT e-Filing Portal is now live and functional, supported by a specific User Advisory that provides staggered windows for filing. Since the forum officially exists and a clear timeline (up to June 30, 2026) has been provided, the High Court will no longer keep Writ Petitions pending for issues that the Tribunal is equipped to handle.
2. Mandatory Pre-Deposit (Section 112(8))
The Court emphasized that even in a Writ, the conditions of an appeal must be met. To stop the Revenue from recovering the tax, the petitioner must satisfy the pre-deposit requirement:
Section 112(8) Requirement: A sum equal to 20% of the remaining amount of tax in dispute, in addition to the 10% already paid at the first appeal stage.
Total Burden: The taxpayer must effectively have 30% of the tax amount deposited to have their appeal heard by the Tribunal.
3. Rejection of Merits
The High Court refused to comment on whether the tax demand itself was correct. It held that once a specialized Tribunal (GSTAT) is constituted, the High Court’s role is not to act as a primary fact-finding body. The GSTAT, with its technical and judicial members, is the correct forum to decide the case on its merits.
2026 Strategic Takeaways for Taxpayers
The June 30, 2026 Deadline: If you have any pending First Appeal orders from the years 2017 to 2024, you must ensure your Second Appeal is filed on the GSTAT portal by this “outer date.” Failing to do so will result in the demand becoming final and enforceable.
Cash Flow Management: Prepare for the 20% pre-deposit. Unlike the first appeal (where you pay 10%), the second appeal is more “expensive.” Ensure your Electronic Cash Ledger is funded accordingly.
Portal Staggering: Be aware of the “staggered windows” mentioned in the User Advisory. Different states or registration types may have different opening dates for the portal to prevent system crashes.
Stay of Demand: Once you file a compliant appeal with the GSTAT (including the pre-deposit), the recovery of the remaining 70% of the tax is automatically stayed by operation of law. You do not need a separate court order for a stay.
and MURAHARI SRI RAMAN, J.
| (a) | in full, such part of the amount of tax, interest, fine, fee and penalty arising from the impugned order, as is admitted by him, and |
| (b) | a sum, equal to ten per cent of the remaining amount of tax in dispute, in addition to the amount paid under sub-section (6) of Section 107, arising from the said order, subject to a maximum of twenty crore rupees, in relation to which the appeal has been filed.” |
| Sl. No. | Period of filing appeal in Form APL-01 or APL-03 under section 107 of the Act or issuance of notice in Form RVN-01 in terms of section 108 of the Act. | Period during which the appeal under section 112 of the Act before the GSTAT may be filed |
| 1 | Such orders of the Appellate authorities or revisional authorities sought to be appealed before the appellate tribunal where the Appeal in Form GST APL-01 or GST APL-03 or notice in Form GST RVN-01 filed or, as the case may be, issued on the common portal on or before 31.01.2022 | Period commencing on 24.09.2025 and ending on 31.10.2025 or any date succeeding such date being not later than 30.06.2026 |
| 2 | Such orders of the Appellate authorities or revisional authorities sought to be appealed before the appellate tribunal where the Appeal in Form GST APL-01 or GST APL-03 or notice in Form GST RVN-01 filed or, as the case may be, issued on the common portal on or after 01.02.2022 but on or before 28.02.2023 | Period commencing on 01.11.2025 and ending on 30.11.2025 or any date succeeding such date being not later than 30.06.2026 |
| 3 | Such orders of the Appellate authorities or revisional authorities sought to be appealed before the appellate tribunal where the Appeal in Form GST APL-01 or GST APL-03 or notice in Form GST RVN-01 filed or, as the case may be issued on the common portal on or after 01.03.2023 but on or before 31.01.2024 | Period commencing on 01.12.2025 and ending on 31.12.2025 or any date succeeding such date being not later than 30.06.2026 |
| 4 | Such orders of the Appellate authorities or revisional authorities sought to be appealed before the appellate tribunal where the Appeal in Form GST APL-01 or GST APL-03 or notice in Form CST RVN-01 filed or, as the case may be, issued on the common portal on or after 01.02.2024 but on or before 31.05.2024 | Period commencing on 01.01.2026 and ending on 31.01.2026 or any date succeeding such date being not later than 30.06.2026 |
| 5 | Such orders of the Appellate authorities or revisional authorities sought to be appealed before the appellate tribunal where the Appeal in Form GST APL-01 or GST APL-03 or notice in Form GST RVN-01 filed or, as the case may be, issued on the common portal on or after 01.06.2024 but on or before 31.03.2026 | Period commencing on 01.02.2026 or any date succeeding such date being not later than 30.06.2026 |
| – | It may be noted that if an appeal before the GSTAT relating to any ARN/CRN could not be filed within the window scheduled for it, the appellant can still come on any subsequent date but before 30th June, 2026. |
| – | It may further be noted that appeals before the GSTAT against any order of the appellate/revisional authority in APL-04 that has been communicated on or after 1st April, 2026 shall have to filed before the appellate Tribunal within three months of the order of APL-04 being communicated. |
| – | Appeals before the GSTAT in cases where the appeal in APL-01/03 or notices in RVN-01 are not available in the GSTN system: for all the Appeals filed before the Appellate authority or notices of the Revisional authority where the ARN/CRN is not available in the GSTN system, the filing window will open from the midnight of 31st December 2025 and will expire on June 30. 2026. |
| – | Thus, users are strongly advised not to hurry since more than sufficient time has been provided for filing appeals before the GSTAT wherever the orders in APL-04 have been issued on or before 31st March 2026. |
| I. | The petitioner is directed to deposit the amount if not already deposited, as required under sub-section (8) of Section 112 of the GST Act before the GSTAT to file the appeal within the period specified in the timeline mentioned above. |
| II. | The petitioner, as undertaken, shall file appeal as per the timeline given in the “User Advisor for the GSTAT e-Filing Portal”. |
| III. | In the event the appeal is filed and the same is found to be in order as per the requirement of Section 112 of the GST Act read with relevant Rules framed thereunder, the same shall be entertained by the GSTAT. |
