Single Composite GST Assessment Order Issued For Multiple Financial Years Is Legally Impermissible

By | May 26, 2026

Single Composite GST Assessment Order Issued For Multiple Financial Years Is Legally Impermissible

Issue

Whether a single composite assessment order or show-cause notice can be validly issued under Sections 73 and 74 of the GST Act to cover multiple financial years or tax periods.

Facts

  • Parties involved: The petitioner-assessee company filed a writ petition challenging an assessment action initiated by the state tax authorities.

  • Period of dispute: The matter pertained to two distinct financial periods: 2018–2019 and 2019–2020.

  • Adjudication action: The tax authorities issued and served a single, combined composite assessment order on the assessee to recover Goods and Services Tax (GST) demands/Input Tax Credit (ITC) items.

  • Basis of challenge: The assessee filed a writ petition before the High Court, asserting that the single composite framework of the assessment order across distinct periods was legally flawed, alongside raising other substantive grounds.

Decision

  • Reliance on precedent: The High Court followed the binding Division Bench precedent set in S J Constructions v. Asstt. Commissioner 102 GSTL 348 (Andhra Pradesh).

  • Bar on composite orders: It was reaffirmed that a single show-cause notice or single composite assessment order cannot aggregate and cover more than one distinct tax period.

  • Pre- vs. Post-annual return guidelines: The Court clarified that such overlapping action is strictly prohibited for multiple months before the annual return due date, and similarly impermissible for multiple years after the due date.

  • Order quashed: Finding that the contested demand notice collapsed two independent periods into one composite framework, the High Court set aside the impugned assessment order.

  • Revenue liberty preserved: The Court reserved full liberty for the revenue authorities to split the demands and initiate fresh, separate adjudication proceedings for each assessment year individually.

Key Takeaways

  • Periodicity is a statutory right: Under Sections 73 and 74 of the CGST/APGST Act, each tax period is treated as an independent adjudicatory unit. Collapsing multiple years into a single order compromises the taxpayer’s distinct statutory options for appeals, rectifications, or fee waivers.

  • Enforcement discipline: Even in cases not involving fraud, administrative convenience cannot override procedural compliance. Revenue authorities must issue separate notices and orders for separate financial years once annual returns are due.

HIGH COURT OF ANDHRA PRADESH
Srivalli Shipping and Transport (P.) Ltd.
v.
Additional Commissioner of Central Tax*
R. Raghunandan Rao and T.C.D. Sekhar, JJ.
WRIT PETITION NO. 13363 of 2026
MAY  6, 2026
Anil Kumar Bezawada for the Petitioner.
ORDER
R. Raghunandan Rao, J.- Heard Sri Anil Kumar Bezawada, the learned counsel appearing for the petitioner and Smt. Santhi Chandra, the learned Standing Counsel, appearing for the respondents.
2. The petitioner is a registered Company, which has been served with an Order, dated 29.12.2025, passed by the 1st respondent. This Order of Assessment, covers the period, 2018-2019 & 2019-2020.
3. The petitioner, after having raised various grounds of challenge, has pressed the ground that, a single assessment order passed, for more than one financial year, would be violative of the provisions of Section 73 and Section 74 of the G.S.T. Act, 2017, and consequently, set aside the orders of assessment/appeals.
4. A Division Bench of this Court, in S J Constructions v. Asstt. Commissioner 102 GSTL 348 (Andhra Pradesh)/W.P.No.11028 of 2025 & batch, after considering the said question, had held that, a single show-cause notice or a single composite assessment order, cannot be passed, in relation to more than one tax period of either a month if the assessment is taken up before the due date for filing of the annual return or for more than one year if the due date for filing of annual return has been reached.
5. The petitioner has raised various grounds of challenge. However, the petitioner is pressing the primary ground of the order being a composite order. In that view of the matter, the present Writ Petition is being disposed of, on this ground of challenge, leaving open the other grounds of challenge.
6. Accordingly, this Writ Petition is disposed of, setting aside the impugned order, dated 29.12.2025, leaving it open to the respondents to initiate fresh proceedings, for each assessment year separately.
7. Needless to say, the period from the date of passing of the impugned order till the date of receipt of this order shall be excluded for the purpose of limitation. There shall be no order as to costs.
8. As a sequel, pending miscellaneous applications, if any, shall stand closed.
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