IMPORTANT GST CASE LAW 26.11.25

By | November 26, 2025

IMPORTANT GST CASE LAW 26.11.25

SectionCase Law TitleBrief SummaryCitationRelevant Act
16Anjani Seeds and Fertilizers Depo v. State of GujaratDemand raised due to GSTR-3B/GSTR-2A mismatch was set aside and the matter was remanded for a fresh decision because the adjudicating authority did not consider the petitioner’s reply to the Show Cause Notice and denied a proper hearing opportunity.Click HereCentral Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
17S.A. Enterprises v. Assistant Commissioner of Central TaxThe order blocking the petitioner’s Electronic Credit Ledger was invalid because it was done without pre-decisional hearing and without furnishing independent reasons, failing to satisfy statutory prerequisites. Petitioner was entitled to unblocking.Click HereCentral Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
29M A Enterprises v. Additional Commissioner Appeals1Cancellation of GST registration was justified where the petitioner could not prove a genuine place of business, supported by physical verification findings and forged/inconsistent rental documents.Click HereCentral Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
29Ram Ashish v. Union of IndiaAn order of cancellation of registration could not be made retrospectively if the Show Cause Notice (SCN) did not propose retrospective effect. Since the assessee had filed an appeal, the appellate authority was directed to decide it by a specific date.Click HereCentral Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
73Habitus HR Solutions (P.) Ltd. v. Union of IndiaMultiple ex-parte adjudication orders passed against the assessee were set aside, and the matter was remitted for fresh consideration in the interest of justice, as effective opportunity was not afforded.Click HereCentral Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
75Walsons Services (P.) Ltd. v. Sales Tax OfficerAn ex parte demand order was set aside for breach of natural justice because non-filing of a reply and non-attendance was due to a consultant’s oversight and lack of portal access, meaning no effective opportunity of hearing was afforded.Click HereCentral Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
79Sudhan VFX v. SuperintendentRecovery proceedings were held justified pending substantiated proof where a supplier unilaterally cancelled an invoice (reported in GSTR-1) but the contract did not fructify, and the cancellation was unsupported by corroborating evidence in annual books, though the matter was remitted for allowing a proper evidentiary reply.Click HereCentral Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
107Indrani Dhar v. State of West BengalAn appellate order dismissing the appeal was set aside because it was a non-speaking two-page order that failed to provide reasons or address the grounds and evidence submitted by the petitioners, thus violating the mandate for reasoned adjudication.Click HereCentral Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
132Gaurav Babu Jain v. State of HaryanaBail was granted under Article 21, despite the seriousness of the economic offence (operating bogus firms to issue fake invoices and pass on unlawful ITC), because the evidence was primarily documentary and digital, rendering prolonged custody unjustified.Click HereCentral Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017

For More :- Read IMPORTANT GST CASE LAWS 25.11.25

Category: GST

About CA Satbir Singh

Chartered Accountant having 12+ years of Experience in Taxation , Finance and GST related matters and can be reached at Email : Taxheal@gmail.com