High Court: GSTAT Must Independently Decide Intermediary Status Without Being Bound by Prior AAAR Orders.
The Dispute: The Intermediary Export Trap
The Conflict: The petitioner provided services to an entity outside India and claimed them as “Export of Services” (Zero-rated).
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The Revenue’s Allegation: The Department reclassified the petitioner as an “Intermediary” under Section 2(13) of the IGST Act.
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The Place of Supply (PoS) Trap: Under Section 13(8)(b) of the IGST Act, the PoS for intermediaries is the location of the supplier (India). Therefore, the service is taxed at 18% in India, even if the client and the benefit are abroad.
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The AAR/AAAR Deadlock: The petitioner sought a ruling from the AAR/AAAR. However, the AAAR declined to rule on the “Export of Services” status, citing a lack of jurisdiction over Place of Supply issues—leaving the petitioner in a legal limbo while a separate tax demand was confirmed against them.
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The Judicial Verdict: Resetting the Scales of Justice
The High Court intervened with a “Partly in favour of Assessee” order, focusing on the right to a fair trial:
1. Non-Adjudication by Advance Ruling Authorities
The Court noted that since the AAR and AAAR failed to decide on the core issues (Export status and the validity of PoS rules) due to jurisdictional constraints, their orders should not be allowed to prejudice the taxpayer’s case in other forums.
2. Mandatory Independence of the Tribunal
The Court directed the GST Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT)—which is now functional as of April 2026—to decide the pending appeal on its merits.
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Key Command: The Tribunal must decide the case “without being influenced” by the adverse remarks or observations in the AAAR order. This effectively “un-links” the advance ruling from the main litigation.
3. Place of Supply Rule Challenge
The Court kept the constitutional challenge to the “Place of Supply” provisions open. While it did not “read down” the law in this specific order, it ensured the petitioner could raise these fundamental legal questions before the Tribunal.
Strategic Takeaways for Cross-Border Service Providers in 2026
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Transition to GSTAT: This case confirms that with GSTAT benches becoming operational (e.g., Hyderabad and Chennai benches notified in April 2026), the High Courts will now push “Intermediary” disputes toward the Tribunal for factual determination.
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The Finance Act 2026 Amendment: Note that Section 13(8)(b) of the IGST Act—the source of this entire controversy—was omitted by the Finance Act, 2026 (effective March 30, 2026).
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Pre-April 2026: Disputes continue under the old “supplier location” rule.
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Post-April 2026: The Place of Supply for intermediaries now aligns with the location of the recipient, making most such services qualify as Exports.
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Advance Rulings vs. Adjudication: This judgment serves as a warning: AAR orders on intermediary status are often narrow and can be technically restrictive. If you have a complex service model, direct adjudication followed by a GSTAT appeal may offer a more comprehensive “merits-based” resolution.
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| I] | The GST Scheme is based on annual returns for each financial year (even if returns are filed monthly in practice, the liability is tied to a specific financial year). |
| II] | The statute fixes a five year time limit for demanding and recovering tax from due date for furnishing annual return for that year or from the date of erroneous return (Sections 73(10) and 74(10) of the CGST Act as applicable). This limit runs separately for each year. |
| III] | If issued a single SCN covering multiple years, you would be aggregating different tax period with different due dates and different limitations, which the statute does not permit. |
| IV] | Tax period is defined (Section 2(106) of the CGST Act) as the period, for which the return is required to be furnished. Return can be monthly or yearly, but the statute treats each financial year as a separate tax period for the purpose of assessment and recovery (Sections 39, 44, 37, 50, etc.). |
| V] | Time limit operate year by year. Section 73(10) and 74(10) of the CGST Act fix the time limit to issue an assessment order within three years (Section 73) or five years (Section 74) from the last date for filing annual return for the year to which the tax dues relate. |
| VI] | Consolidation would collapse these years, specific steps and grounds, harming the tax payers’ ability to respond year by year and violating the explicit year wise structure of the statute. |
