Consolidated Show Cause Notice Covering Six Financial Years Quashed as Legally Unsustainable Under Section 73

By | June 8, 2026

Consolidated Show Cause Notice Covering Six Financial Years Quashed as Legally Unsustainable Under Section 73

Issue

Whether the tax authorities have the jurisdiction under Section 73 of the CGST/SGST Act to issue a single, consolidated Show Cause Notice (SCN) spanning six consecutive financial years (FY 2019-20 to 2024-25), or if the statutory scheme mandates the issuance of separate notices for each individual financial year.

Facts

  • The petitioner challenged an exhibit marked as Ext.P1, which was a single consolidated Show Cause Notice (SCN) issued by the tax department.

  • This single notice wrapped together tax demands and alleged discrepancies for six distinct financial years, stretching from FY 2019-20 to FY 2024-25.

  • The petitioner approached the High Court via a writ petition, asserting that the “bunching” of multiple years into a single notice was a fatal jurisdictional error.

  • The petitioner relied on binding Division Bench precedents which explicitly ruled that separate notices are mandatory for each financial year under Section 73.

  • The Revenue defended the notice, but the court evaluated the objection against the established architectural framework of the GST law.

Decision

  • The writ petition was allowed, and the issue was decided entirely in favour of the assessee.

  • Precedents Upheld: The High Court found substantial merit in the petitioner’s arguments, noting that the issue was no longer res integra (unsettled). Binding Division Bench rulings had already firmly established that composite notices for multiple assessment years are completely impermissible.

  • Quashing of Notice: Consequently, the consolidated SCN (Ext.P1) was held to be legally unsustainable under the governing statutory scheme and was quashed.

  • Liberty and Limitation Protection: The court granted the department the liberty to issue separate, individual notices for each relevant assessment year. To ensure the revenue was not unfairly penalized by time-bars due to this litigation, the court directed that the entire period from the issuance date of Ext.P1 until the receipt of the certified copy of the judgment must be excluded when computing the limitation period for initiating fresh proceedings.

Key Takeaways

No Multi-Year Clubbing: Under Section 73, the limitation period, the calculation of tax defaults, and the filing of annual returns are strictly segregated by financial year. The department cannot create a single, macro-demand spanning half a decade, as it violates the procedural design of the Act.

Year-Specific Defense: A taxpayer has a statutory right to defend their case on a year-by-year basis. Clubbing multiple years severely compromises this right, as distinct tax rates, exemptions, and compliance circulars apply to different financial years.

Limitation Clock Paused: When a court strikes down a tax notice on purely technical or procedural grounds (like a composite notice defect), it will almost always exclude the time spent in court from the department’s limitation deadline. This balances the scales, allowing the tax officer a clean slate to issue fresh, legally compliant, year-wise notices.

HIGH COURT OF KERALA
Federal Bank Ltd.
v.
Additional Director*
ZIYAD RAHMAN A.A., J.
WP(C) NO. 39328 OF 2025
MAY  25, 2026
Abraham Joseph MarkosAlexander Joseph MarkosJohn VithayathilV. Abraham MarkosIsaac ThomasP.G. Chandapillai Abraham and Paul P. Abraham, Advs. for the Petitioner. Sreelal N Warrier, SC and K.K. Sethukumar, CGC for the Respondent.
JUDGMENT
1. This writ petition is submitted by the petitioner challenging Ext.P1 consolidated Show Cause Notice which was issued by the 1st respondent for multiple financial years namely, 2019-2020 to 2024-2025. The main challenge raised against the sustainability of the same is that, issuance of a composite notice for multiple assessment years was found to be not legally sustainable as per the decision rendered by this Court in Jt. Commissioner (Intelligence & Enforcement) v. Lakshmi Mobile Accessories [2025] 108 GST 750/95 GSTL 356 (Ker.)/2025 KHC OnLine 149 and Tharayil Medicals v. Dy. Commissioner, SGST Department, Thrissur [2025] (Kerala)/[2025 KHC OnLine 467].
2. After hearing the learned counsel for the petitioner and the learned Standing Counsel for the respondents, I find merits in the said submission, in view of the fact that, such a finding was indeed entered into by the Division Bench of this Court in the decisions referred to above.
3. In such circumstances, in the light principles laid down by this Court in the above referred judgments, an interference is required. Accordingly, this writ petition is disposed of, quashing Ext.P1, granting liberty to the respondents to issue separate notices for the relevant assessment years. However, the period from the date of Ext.P1 till the date of receipt of a certified copy of the judgment shall be excluded while computing the period of limitation for initiating fresh proceeding. All the other contentions of the parties are left open.
Category: GST