Invalidity of Composite Assessment Orders Spanning Multiple Financial Years

By | May 7, 2026

Invalidity of Composite Assessment Orders Spanning Multiple Financial Years


Facts

  • The Scope: The Petitioner, a registered company, was served with a single, composite assessment order covering a period from November 2020 to October 2023.

  • The Overlap: This period spanned across multiple tax periods and more than one financial year.

  • The Challenge: The Petitioner approached the Court specifically challenging the procedural illegality of issuing a composite assessment rather than year-wise adjudications.

  • The Conflict: The core dispute centered on whether the Revenue has the authority to combine multiple assessment years into a single Show Cause Notice (SCN) and a subsequent single order under Section 73.


Decision

  • Final Verdict: In favour of the Assessee (Matter Remanded).

  • Ratio Decidendi:

    • Periodicity of Assessment: Relying on Division Bench precedents, the Court held that a single SCN or composite assessment order cannot be issued for more than one tax period before the due date for the annual return, or for more than one financial year after the due date.

    • Statutory Infraction: Since the impugned order clubbed multiple periods across different financial years into one adjudication, it was deemed contrary to the settled legal view on tax periodicity.

    • Outcome: The Court set aside the composite assessment order and quashed all coercive recovery measures. The Department was granted liberty to initiate fresh, separate proceedings for each assessment year. To protect the Revenue’s interest, the time spent in this litigation was directed to be excluded for limitation purposes.


Key Takeaways

  • Year-Wise Adjudication is Mandatory: For Section 73 (non-fraud) cases, the Revenue must treat each financial year as a separate unit for adjudication. A composite notice covering 3–4 years is procedurally flawed and jurisdictionally vulnerable.

  • Defense Against Bulk Notices: If a client receives a “bulk SCN” covering multiple financial years, this ruling provides a strong ground to challenge the very maintainability of the notice via a Writ Petition.

  • Limitation Scrutiny: Because each year has a different limitation period for issuing an SCN and passing an order (linked to the annual return due date), clubbing years often leads to “time-barred” periods being smuggled into “live” periods. Separate orders ensure the limitation for each year is strictly calculated.

  • Strategy for Pending Cases: In cases where a composite order has already been passed, taxpayers should not only argue on merits but also raise this procedural illegality to have the order set aside, potentially buying more time as the Department must start the process fresh.


HIGH COURT OF ANDHRA PRADESH
Avika Steel Mart
v.
Union of India*
R RAGHUNANDAN RAO and T.C.D. Sekhar, JJ.
WRIT PETITION NO. 9510 of 2026
APRIL  15, 2026
Shaik Shahedaz for the Petitioner.
ORDER
R. Raghunandan Rao,J.- Heard Sri Shaik Shahedaz, learned counsel for the petitioner and the learned Government Pleader for Commercial Tax appearing for the respondents.
2. The petitioner is a registered Company, which has been served with an order of assessment, dated 22.11.2025, passed by the 5th respondent. This order of assessment covers the period from November-2020 to October 2023.
3. The petitioner, after having raised various grounds of challenge, has pressed the ground that, a single order of assessment, issued for more than one financial year, would be violative of the provisions of Sections 73 & 74 of the GST Act, 2017 and consequently, set aside the impugned order of assessment.
4. A Division Bench of this Court, in W.P.Nos.11028 of 2025 & batch, after considering the said question, had held that, a single show-cause notice or a single composite assessment order, cannot be passed, in relation to more than one tax period of either a month if the assessment is taken up before the due date for filing of the annual return or for more than one year if the due date for filing of annual return has been reached.
5. The petitioner has raised various grounds of challenge. However, the petitioner is pressing the primary ground of the order of assessment being a composite order of assessment. In that view of the matter, the present Writ Petition is being disposed of, on this ground of challenge, leaving open the other grounds of challenge.
6. Accordingly, this Writ Petition is disposed of, setting aside the impugned order of assessment, dated 22.11.2025 and remand back to the respondents, leaving it open to the respondents to initiate fresh proceedings, for each assessment year separately. Coercive steps taken against the petitioner, including attachment, for recovery of the dues under this order shall also stand set aside. Needless to say, the period from the date of issuance of the impugned order of assessment till the date of receipt of this order shall be excluded for the purposes of limitation. There shall be no order as to costs.
As a sequel, pending miscellaneous applications, if any, shall stand closed.
Category: GST

About CA Satbir Singh

Chartered Accountant having 12+ years of Experience in Taxation , Finance and GST related matters and can be reached at Email : Taxheal@gmail.com