Writ petitions for SEZ IGST refunds will not be entertained when an efficacious statutory appeal remedy exists.
Issue
Whether a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) unit can bypass the alternative, efficacious statutory appeal remedy under Section 107 of the CGST Act and directly invoke writ jurisdiction to challenge an IGST refund rejection order.
Facts
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The petitioner is an established Special Economic Zone (SEZ) unit.
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During the tax period spanning November 2023 to December 2023, the petitioner availed group health insurance services.
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The petitioner subsequently filed an application seeking a refund of the Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST) paid on these services.
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The Refund Sanctioning Officer evaluated the application and issued a formal refund rejection order dated December 8, 2025.
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Rather than filing a statutory appeal, the petitioner approached the High Court under writ jurisdiction, asserting a clear entitlement to the refund under Section 16 of the IGST Act and Section 54 of the CGST Act.
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The State opposed the maintainability of the writ petition, arguing that the taxpayer must utilize the structured, alternate statutory appeal route available under the law.
Decision
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The writ petition is dismissed in favor of the Revenue without any order as to costs.
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High Courts will not entertain a writ petition when complex questions—such as whether an SEZ refund qualifies as a zero-rated supply or a simpliciter refund—are better suited for a statutory appellate authority.
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The petitioner is granted explicit liberty to approach the competent appellate authority by filing a formal statutory appeal to raise all their legal grounds.
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If the petitioner files this appeal within a period of two weeks from the date of the order, the appellate authority is directed to consider condoning the limitation delay caused by the time spent pursuing the writ petition.
Key Takeaways
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Writ Jurisdiction is Not a Shortcut: Taxpayers cannot bypass the regular appellate hierarchy established under the GST law simply to fast-track a dispute. Unless there is a gross violation of natural justice or a patent lack of jurisdiction, the High Court will mandate using the standard appeal route.
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Protection Against Limitation Expiry: When a court redirects a taxpayer from a writ to a statutory appeal, it routinely protects the assessee’s interests by directing the appellate authority to exclude the time spent during the mistaken writ proceedings from the limitation clock.
and G.M. MOHIUDDIN, J.

