Consolidated GST Show Cause Notices Issued Across Multiple Financial Years Under Section 73 Are Legally Unsustainable
Issue
Whether the Goods and Services Tax (GST) authorities can issue a single, composite Show Cause Notice (SCN) and its electronic summary covering multiple financial years for demands not involving fraud under Section 73, or whether separate notices are mandatory for each individual financial year.
Facts
-
Tax Period: 2019-20 to 2023-24.
-
The Action: The GST department issued a single, consolidated Show Cause Notice (Ext.P1) along with an electronic summary (Ext.P2) under Section 73 of the CGST/SGST Act, clubbing five financial years together.
-
The Writ Petition: The petitioner-assessee filed a writ petition before the High Court, vigorously challenging the validity of the composite SCN and its summary.
-
Assessee’s Contention: The petitioner argued that the issuance of a composite notice is a fundamental procedural error. Based on binding Division Bench rulings, the department is legally required to evaluate each financial year independently and issue separate notices for each year.
Decision
-
Composite SCN Quashed (In Favor of Assessee): The High Court held that the petitioner’s submission carried substantial merit in light of binding Division Bench precedents. The composite SCN and its automated electronic summary were declared legally unsustainable and were quashed.
-
Liberty to Re-issue: The Court granted liberty to the respondent-tax authorities to initiate fresh proceedings by issuing separate, distinct notices for each individual assessment year.
-
Limitation Window Excluded: To ensure equity, the Court directed that the entire period from the date of issuance of the quashed SCN up to the date of receipt of the certified copy of the judgment shall be completely excluded when computing the statutory limitation period for launching fresh proceedings.
-
Merits Left Open: All other substantive contentions regarding the actual tax liability or Input Tax Credit (ITC) eligibility were left completely open for future adjudication.
Key Takeaways
-
No Clubbing of Financial Years Under Section 73: Each financial year constitutes a self-contained and distinct unit for assessment under GST. The tax authorities cannot pool multiple years into a single, comprehensive Show Cause Notice to meet limitation deadlines, especially when fraud is not alleged.
-
Strict Adherence to Procedural Law: The requirement to issue separate notices is not an empty formality. It ensures that limitation periods (which run differently for each financial year under Section 73) and corresponding financial computations are accurately calculated and defended.
-
Protection Against Limitation Forfeiture: When a court strikes down a tax notice on purely technical or procedural defects, it routinely provides the department with a limitation waiver (exclusion of time spent in court) to allow them to re-frame and cure the defect under law.

