NEW GST CASE LAWS 20.05.2025

By | May 21, 2026

NEW GST CASE LAWS 20.05.2025

Here is the compiled and structured case law analysis table for the Goods and Services Tax (GST) updates, organized cleanly for quick reference.

Relevant Act Section Case Law Title Citation Brief Summary
CGST Act, 2017 Section 6 V.M. & Co. v. State Tax Officer Click Here Once the Central GST authority adjudicates a tax liability for specific differences (e.g., ITR vs. GSTR-3B), State GST authorities cannot initiate parallel proceedings on the same subject matter.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 29 A One Industries v. Central Board of Indirect Taxes & Customs Click Here A registration cannot be cancelled retrospectively if the Show Cause Notice (SCN) did not explicitly propose a retrospective effect or disclose the relied-upon material.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 54 CHEC-TPL line 4 joint venture v. Union of India no The amendment to Rule 89(5) via Notification No. 14/2022 (fixing the inverted duty refund formula anomaly) is clarificatory and retrospective; refunds cannot be denied for applications filed prior to July 5, 2022.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 73 Biotech Pest Control India (P.) Ltd. v. Superintendent of Central Tax Click Here Where a taxpayer voluntarily pays tax but an adjudication/recovery notice is still issued incorrectly, the proper remedy is to seek rectification rather than invoking writ jurisdiction.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 74 Tvl.T.Balasubramanian v. State Tax Officer no Section 74 penalty proceedings cannot be sustained if the differential tax was paid before the notice and there is no express allegation or proof of an intention to evade tax or suppress facts.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 107 Rameshwari Narpatram Bishnoi v. Union of India Click Here High Courts can invoke writ powers to condone a delay in filing a statutory appeal (even beyond the Appellate Authority’s condonable limits) under extraordinary circumstances affecting livelihood.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 107 Abdul Rahiman Kunju v. Deputy Commissioner Click Here If a taxpayer actively participates in proceedings and replies to Form GST DRC-01 by treating it as an SCN, they cannot later bypass the statutory appellate remedy by calling the order void.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 129 Kishan Cement Stores v. State of Bihar Click Here A writ petition is not maintainable against transit detention if the person-in-charge voluntarily paid the tax/penalty without protest to release the goods, failing to exhaust statutory appeals.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 130 Sreekrishna Traders v. State of Karnataka Click Here Once a formal confiscation order is passed under Section 130 and the title vests in the Government, the release mechanism of Section 129 becomes completely inapplicable.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 160 Srinivasa Agencies v. Superintendent of Central Tax Click Here An assessment order uploaded on the GST portal without the Assessing Officer’s physical or digital signature carries an incurable procedural defect and is legally invalid.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 160 Anne Lakshmana Rao v. Assistant Commissioner Click Here The absence of a Document Identification Number (DIN) or Reference Number (RFN) on a portal-issued assessment order constitutes an inherent defect that renders it liable to be quashed.
CGST Act, 2017 Section 160 Maddala Industries v. Assistant Commissioner Click Here Assessment orders issued in Form GST DRC-07 that lack both an official signature and a DIN are completely vitiated; Rule 26(3) cannot save such non-compliant service.

Note on GSTN Advisory: The GSTN has introduced an Excel-based Annexure-B Offline Utility to streamline applications for accumulated ITC refunds (including exports without payment of tax, SEZ supplies, and inverted duty structures). This tool mandates HSN/SAC-wise invoice reporting and uses JSON uploads alongside automated GSTR-2B validation to standardise processing.