Petitioner permitted to amend e-filed writ petition challenging Section 147A without producing original papers.

By | July 7, 2026

Petitioner permitted to amend e-filed writ petition challenging Section 147A without producing original papers.

Issue

Whether a petitioner can be permitted to amend an e-filed writ petition to challenge the constitutional validity (vires) of Section 147A without producing the untraceable original physical petition papers, and whether formal re-verification can be dispensed with.

Facts

  • The Background: The petitioner had previously filed a writ petition which was disposed of by the High Court via an order dated September 9, 2024.

  • The Lost Records: The original physical papers of that initial writ petition were subsequently found to be untraceable within the judicial records.

  • The Supreme Court Remand: The Supreme Court later remanded the writ petition back to the High Court and granted the petitioner explicit permission to amend the petition within four weeks to challenge the vires of Section 147A.

  • The Relief Sought: Due to the missing physical files, the petitioner moved a praecipe (procedural request) seeking permission to carry out the amendment directly on the e-filed version of the writ petition without the Registry insisting on the original papers.

Decision

  • Amendment Allowed on E-File: Considering the peculiar facts and circumstances, the petitioner is permitted to amend the e-filed writ petition to challenge the vires of Section 147A based on the schedule annexed to the praecipe (marked “X” for identification).

  • Original Production Waived: The Court explicitly directed the judicial Registry not to insist on the production of the untraceable original physical writ petition for the purpose of carrying out this amendment.

  • Re-verification Dispensed With: Since the scope of the amendment is strictly limited to challenging the legal vires of Section 147A, the requirement for a formal re-verification of the petition was completely dispensed with. (In favour of assessee)

Key Takeaways

  • Substance Over Missing Records: Administrative hurdles, such as the loss of physical records by a court registry, cannot defeat substantive rights or prevent a taxpayer from executing a specific amendment directive issued by the Supreme Court.

  • Digital Files as Valid Alternatives: In modern e-filing ecosystems, courts will pragmatically treat verified digital files as the actionable record to implement amendments when physical files are lost or untraceable.

  • Pragmatic Procedural Waivers: When a court amendment shifts strictly to a pure question of law (like challenging the vires of a statutory section), procedural formalities like physical re-verification can be waived to prevent unnecessary litigation delay.

HIGH COURT OF BOMBAY
Talati and Panthaky Associated Designers LLP
v.
Assistant Comissioner of Income-tax
B.P. COLABAWALLA and FIRDOSH P. POONIWALLA, JJ.
WRIT PETITION NO. 2912 OF 2024
JUNE  15, 2026
Bhargavi Raval, Adv. for the Appellant.
ORDER
1. Mentioned. Not on board. Taken on board.
2. The above praecipe has been moved because the Department is not allowing the Petitioner to amend the above Petition. The original Petition is not traceable, and the same was disposed of by an Order dated 9th September, 2024.
3. Since the above Writ Petition has been remanded back to this Court as per the Order of the Hon’ble Supreme Court dated 15th May 2026 in the case of Income Tax Office v. Innani Ritesh Kumar [SLP Diary No. 50893 of 2025, dated 15-5-2026] along with a batch of other SLPs and the Petitioner was allowed to amend the Writ Petition challenging the vires to Section 147A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (for short “IT Act”) within a period of 4 weeks from the date of uploading of the Order dated 15th May 2026, the above praecipe is moved seeking permission to amend the Writ Petition without production of the original papers in the Writ Petition.
4. It is contended before us that since the above Writ Petition has been e-filed, the Department ought not to insist on production of the original Petition. In this regard, the learned counsel also brought to our attention an Order dated 28th May 2026 passed by the Vacation Bench of this Court.
5. Considering the peculiar facts and circumstances, we permit the Petitioner to amend the above Writ Petition to challenge the vires of Section 147A of the IT Act as per the schedule of amendment annexed to the praecipe, and which is taken on record and marked “X” for identification. The Registry shall not insist on production of the original Writ Petition for allowing the amendment.
6. The amendment shall be carried out within one week from today, and the amended copy of the Petition shall be served on the Revenue immediately thereafter. The precise is accordingly disposed of. No costs.
7. Considering that by virtue of this amendment, only the vires of Section 147A is challenged, reverification is dispensed with.
8. This order will be digitally signed by the Private Secretary/ Personal Assistant of this Court. All concerned will act on production by fax or email of a digitally signed copy of this order.