Issuing a Second SCN for the Same Assessment Period Violates Prior High Court Remand Directions
Issue
Whether the Assessing Officer (AO) can legally issue a second Show Cause Notice (SCN) and pass a fresh assessment order for the same financial year after the High Court specifically remanded the matter to adjudicate only the original, first SCN following a breach of natural justice.
Facts
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The petitioner previously challenged an assessment order for the period 2022–23 via a writ petition.
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In a prior order dated 25 July 2024, the High Court set aside that initial assessment due to a breach of the mandatory personal hearing requirement.
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The High Court remanded the matter back to the AO with explicit directions to adjudicate the original SCN after giving the petitioner a personal hearing and permitting them to file a reply.
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Following the remand, the AO ignored the first SCN and instead issued a completely new, second SCN for the same assessment year.
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The AO then proceeded to pass a fresh adjudication order based on this second SCN, which the petitioner challenged in the current writ petition.
Decision
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Remand Scope Violated: The High Court held that the prior remand directions strictly obligated the AO to adjudicate only the original, first SCN after affording a compliant personal hearing and considering the reply.
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Issuance of Second SCN Impermissible: The Court ruled that issuing a second SCN for the same assessment year without adjudicating the first one was entirely impermissible.
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Overreaching Judicial Order: The AO’s actions in bypassing the original SCN amounted to overreaching the definitive directions issued in the prior writ order.
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Adjudication Order Quashed: The High Court set aside the fresh adjudication order, confining the scope of post-remand proceedings exclusively to the first SCN.
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Matter Remanded Again: The matter was remanded back to the AO to pass a fresh decision strictly on the basis of the first SCN, ensuring a proper personal hearing and due consideration of the petitioner’s response.
Key Takeaways
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Strict Adherence to Remand Scope: An Assessing Officer cannot expand or alter the scope of a high court’s remand order. If a case is sent back to decide a specific notice, the officer has no authority to issue a new notice for the same period.
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Prohibition on Multiple SCNs: The department cannot iteratively issue multiple notices under Section 74 for the same assessment period to cover up procedural lapses or create parallel litigations once a court has frozen the boundaries of the dispute.
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Judicial Discipline: Passing an order outside the specific mandate of a high court’s directions constitutes administrative overreach and renders the final tax demand void, ensuring the matter must be remanded back to correct the deviation.
and G.M.MOHIUDDIN, J.

