Writ Admits Challenge Over Delhi Jal Board Local Authority Status and Stays Tax Demand

By | May 30, 2026

Writ Admits Challenge Over Delhi Jal Board Local Authority Status and Stays Tax Demand

Issue

Whether the Delhi Jal Board qualifies as a ‘local authority’ under Section 2(69) of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017, thereby making works contract services executed for it eligible for a lower tax rate of 12% instead of the standard 18% rate.

Facts

  • The petitioner is a commercial contractor engaged by the Delhi Jal Board (DJB) to execute various works contract services.

  • A tax dispute arose concerning the applicable Goods and Services Tax (GST) rate for these services: a concessionary 12% rate applies if the recipient is a “local authority,” while an 18% rate applies otherwise.

  • The petitioner calculated and deposited its GST liability at the 12% rate based on the understanding that the DJB meets the statutory criteria of a local authority.

  • The tax department issued a Show Cause Notice (SCN) demanding a differential GST amount of 6%, operating on the premise that the DJB does not qualify as a local authority and the higher rate applied.

  • The petitioner bypassed alternative remedies and directly invoked the High Court’s writ jurisdiction to challenge the validity of the SCN, arguing that the classification of the DJB is a pure question of law.

Decision

  • The High Court held that the fundamental question of whether the Delhi Jal Board qualifies as a “local authority” under the GST framework is a pure legal issue that warrants direct determination to prevent protracted, multi-layered litigation.

  • The court affirmed that the controversy deserves thorough examination within its writ jurisdiction rather than pushing the taxpayer back to regular departmental assessment channels.

  • Accordingly, the High Court formally admitted the writ petition and ordered an interim stay on all further recovery proceedings emerging from the impugned Show Cause Notice pending final adjudication.

Key Takeaways

  • Writ Intervention on Pure Law: While courts generally discourage challenging a Show Cause Notice at a preliminary stage, they will intervene under writ jurisdiction if the dispute hinges entirely on a pure question of statutory interpretation or legal status without needing deep factual verification.

  • The Importance of Local Authority Status: The definition of a “local authority” under Section 2(69) of the CGST Act is critical for public infrastructure contractors, as misclassification can instantly expose businesses to significant unexpected tax liabilities and interest penalties.

  • Interim Relief Safeguards Cash Flow: Securing a formal judicial stay on a differential tax demand notice protects contractors from coercive recovery actions while the foundational legal principle is actively being debated in court.

HIGH COURT OF DELHI
M S Ajab Singh and Co.
v.
Commissioner of CGST*
NITIN WASUDEO SAMBRE and Ajay Digpaul, JJ.
W.P.(C) No. 6403 of 2026
CM APPL. Nos. 31619 and 31620 OF 2026
MAY  12, 2026
Nitin Gulati and Ms. Reena Gandhi, Advs. for the Petitioner. Akash Panwar, JSC for the Respondent.
ORDER
1. The present petition has been filed by the petitioner under Articles 226 of the Constitution of India, inter alia, challenging the impugned Show Cause Notice dated 30th September, 2025 (hereinafter, ‘impugned SCN’).
2. The petitioner in the present petition is a contractor engaged by the Delhi Jal Board for carrying out certain works. Vide the impugned SCN, the petitioner has been called upon to pay a differential Goods and Services Tax (hereinafter, ‘GST’) of 6% on works contract services executed by the petitioner for the Delhi Jal Board.
3. The question for consideration in the present petition is that whether the works assigned by the Delhi Jal Board to private contractors would attract GST at the rate of 12% or 18%.
4. The submission on behalf of the learned counsel for the petitioner is that the Delhi Jal Board is a local authority, as held by the GST Department’s policy wing decision dated 16th November, 2020.
5. The position of the GST Department in other matters relating to this same issue is that the Delhi Jal Board is not a local authority, and hence the contractor is not entitled to the benefit of the Delhi Jal Board being a local authority, in terms of Section 2(69) of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017.
6. Further, learned counsel for the petitioner submits that the issue concerned in the present petition would affect many contractors who have been issued notices by the GST Department.
7. Additionally, learned counsel for the petitioner submits that, applying the 12% rate, the GST has already been deposited by the petitioner.
8. Issue notice.
9. Mr. Akash Panwar, learned JSC, waives notice for respondents no. 1 and 2.
10. Notice be issued to the remaining respondent through all permissible modes.
11. The question raised as to whether DJB is a local authority is a legal issue which would have to be determined, so as to avoid protracted proceedings.
12. Accordingly, the same deserves consideration in a writ petition. In the meantime, proceedings in the impugned SCN are hereby stayed.
13. List on 29th July, 2026.
Category: GST