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March 2026 has delivered a series of authoritative rulings that not only clarify the statutory framework under GST but also redefine the limits of departmental powers and strengthen taxpayer protections.

A striking pattern emerges—courts are insisting on strict statutory compliance, evidentiary discipline, and procedural fairness, while simultaneously taking a stern view in cases involving fraud or misuse of ITC.

This article presents 14 key rulings with detailed legal analysis and practical implications.

1. Cash Cannot Be Seized Under GST

Scope of Section 67 Narrowly Interpreted

Case: Smruti Waghdhare vs DGGI (2026) 40 Centax 256 (Bom.)

Legal Findings:

  • Section 67 authorizes seizure only of goods, documents, books or things
  • “Things” cannot be stretched to include cash without statutory backing
  • “Reason to believe” must be recorded and demonstrable
  • Transfer of seized cash to Income Tax Department held ultra vires

Deeper Insight:

The Court emphasized that search and seizure provisions must be strictly construed, as they encroach upon property rights. Administrative convenience cannot expand statutory scope.

Professional Impact:

  • Cash seizures during GST searches are highly vulnerable to challenge
  • Officers must demonstrate nexus between seized item and proceedings

2. Registration Restoration – Recovery Stayed

Due Process Before Coercive Action

Case: Bi-Chem India Pvt. Ltd. vs Union of India (2026) 40 Centax 276 (Bom.)

Legal Findings:

  • Suspension and cancellation without effective hearing invalid
  • Parallel recovery proceedings unsustainable
  • Registration restored with direction for fresh adjudication

Deeper Insight:

The ruling reinforces that registration is foundational to business continuity, and arbitrary suspension disrupts economic activity.

Professional Impact:

  • Challenge suspension orders lacking reasoning or hearing
  • Recovery action must follow adjudication—not precede it

3. Affiliation Fees Taxable

Strict Interpretation of Educational Exemption

Case: Bharathidasan University vs JC (2026) 39 Centax 319 (Mad.)

Legal Findings:

  • Affiliation is a regulatory/administrative function
  • Not directly linked to student admission or examination
  • Hence, outside exemption scope

Deeper Insight:

The Court applied the doctrine that exemption notifications must be interpreted strictly, and any ambiguity benefits revenue.

Professional Impact:

  • Universities must evaluate non-core services separately
  • Potential exposure in audit for similar ancillary receipts

4. Bail Denied in Fake ITC Racket

Economic Offences Treated as Serious Threat

Case: Hari Shankar Sharma vs Union of India (2026) 40 Centax 147 (All.)

Legal Findings:

  • Fake invoicing networks indicate organized fraud
  • Gravity of offence outweighs bail considerations
  • Risk of evidence tampering a decisive factor

Deeper Insight:

The judiciary is aligning GST fraud with serious economic offences impacting national revenue.

Professional Impact:

  • Directors and key personnel face personal exposure
  • Documentation and vendor due diligence become critical

5. No Anti-Profiteering Without ITC Gain

Quantitative Analysis is Determinative

Case: DGAP vs Prateek Infraprojects (2026) 39 Centax 415 (GSTAT)

Legal Findings:

  • ITC benefit must increase post-GST to trigger Section 171
  • Reduction in ITC ratio negates profiteering

Deeper Insight:

Anti-profiteering is not a theoretical exercise—it requires mathematical correlation between benefit and pricing.

Professional Impact:

  • Maintain robust cost and ITC working papers
  • Useful precedent in ongoing real estate disputes

6. Misleading Court Attracts Penalty

Duty of Candour Reinforced

Case: Velocity Exports LLP vs Union of India (2026) 39 Centax 433 (Guj.)

Legal Findings:

  • False claim of denial of hearing rejected
  • ₹50,000 cost imposed

Deeper Insight:

Courts expect utmost good faith in writ jurisdiction, which is discretionary and equitable.

Professional Impact:

  • Pleadings must be carefully vetted
  • Misstatements can damage credibility of entire case

7. Bank Attachment Lapses After One Year

Section 83 Has Built-in Sunset Clause

Case: Shagun Goel vs DGGI (2026) 39 Centax 430 (Del.)

Legal Findings:

  • Attachment automatically ceases after one year
  • No need for formal revocation

Deeper Insight:

Provisional attachment is an extraordinary power, hence time-bound to prevent misuse.

Professional Impact:

  • Monitor attachment timelines closely
  • Seek automatic relief if period exceeded

8. GSTAT Can Grant Stay

Tribunal is an Effective Remedy

Case: HSBC vs State of Maharashtra (2026) 40 Centax 54 (Bom.)

Legal Findings:

  • GSTAT has inherent power to grant interim relief
  • High Court intervention not warranted prematurely

Deeper Insight:

The ruling strengthens the appellate framework under GST, reducing burden on High Courts.

Professional Impact:

  • Strategic shift: approach GSTAT first
  • Faster relief possible at tribunal level

9. Interest Must Be Quantified in SCN

Principle of Certainty in Taxation

Case: Ziva Auto Sales vs State of U.P. (2026) 39 Centax 326 (All.)

Legal Findings:

  • Interest cannot be imposed beyond SCN scope
  • Section 75(9) does not cure such defect

Deeper Insight:

SCN is the foundation of demand—lack of quantification violates natural justice.

Professional Impact:

  • Scrutinize SCNs for completeness
  • Strong ground for quashing defective notices

10. Fraud Cases Not Fit for Writ

Supreme Court Reaffirms Appellate Discipline

Case: C.L. International vs Addl. Commissioner (2026) 40 Centax 40 (SC)

Legal Findings:

  • Fraud cases involve complex factual determination
  • Writ jurisdiction inappropriate

Deeper Insight:

The Court preserved the distinction between judicial review and appellate adjudication.

Professional Impact:

  • Avoid premature writ petitions
  • Build strong factual record before appellate authority

11. Proceedings Against Deceased Person Invalid

Jurisdictional Defect is Fatal

Case: P.B. Sethi Plastics vs State of U.P. (2026) 39 Centax 353 (All.)

Legal Findings:

  • Proceedings against dead person void ab initio
  • Legal heir must be brought on record

Deeper Insight:
Jurisdictional errors cannot be cured—even by consent or subsequent action.

Professional Impact:

  • Check validity of notices at threshold
  • Immediate ground for quashing proceedings

12. Cancellation Without Reasons Invalid

Speaking Order is Mandatory

Case: S.K. Tripathi vs State of U.P. (2026) 40 Centax 57 (All.)

Legal Findings:

  • Non-speaking orders violate natural justice
  • Mechanical exercise of power invalid

Deeper Insight:

Reasoned orders ensure transparency, accountability, and appellate review.

Professional Impact:

  • Strong defence in cancellation cases
  • Demand fresh adjudication

13. Margin Scheme Not Universally Applicable

Used Asset Sale Taxable on Full Value

Case: Tvl. Paranthaman Engineering Works (Prop: Ponnusamy Thangaraj) (GST AAR Tamilnadu)

Legal Findings:

  • Margin scheme applies only to dealers in second-hand goods
  • Sale of capital asset not eligible

Deeper Insight:

Beneficial provisions must satisfy strict eligibility conditions.

Professional Impact:

  • Review sale of fixed assets carefully
  • Avoid incorrect reliance on margin scheme

14. No GST Exemption on Group Insurance

E.P. Gopakumar Vs Union of India (Kerala High Court)

Exemption Limited to Individual Policies

Legal Findings (Kerala HC):

  • Group policies are contractual arrangements
  • Not covered under exemption meant for individuals

Deeper Insight:

Nature of service recipient and contractual structure determines taxability.

Professional Impact:

  • Employers must factor GST cost in group insurance
  • Potential impact on employee benefit structuring

The evolving jurisprudence sends a powerful signal:

“GST litigation is no longer about interpretation alone—it is about discipline, documentation, and procedural precision.”

Professionals must therefore:

  • Build evidence-backed cases
  • Focus on procedural lapses as strong defence
  • Stay updated with High Court trends
  • Advise clients on risk mitigation and compliance hygiene

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7 Comments

    1. cariteshrmehta says:

      This case was also referred to in the Madras HC Division bench ruling of Bharathidasan University (cited above) & then on the basis of Circular no. 234/28/2024 GST-dated 11.10.2024 decided the above.

  1. RAJAN BELANI says:

    Thanks for article of 14 land mark judgement of march 2026. for this i suggest one suggetion that with case law pl. provide case no. and date of judgement with name of high court.
    Regards Rajan Belani

  2. HASMUKH says:

    GST Not Applicable on University Statutory Fees: Bombay HC (Goa Bench)

    The Bombay High Court (Goa Bench) in Goa University Versus Joint Commissioner of Central Tax examined whether various statutory fees collected by a university—such as affiliation, examination, convocation, prospectus, and migration certificate fees—constitute a “supply” under Section 7 of the GST law. The GST Department had demanded tax on these collections, treating them as taxable services. The Court held that these fees arise from statutory educational functions and are not commercial activities carried out in the course of business. Since the university is a statutory body established to impart education, its activities cannot be equated with business transactions. The Court further observed that such fees are regulatory or statutory in nature and do not qualify as “consideration” because they lack contractual obligations or quid pro quo. Relying on judicial precedents and GST exemption provisions for educational institutions, the Court concluded that these charges are not liable to GST. The ruling draws a clear distinction between sovereign or statutory functions and taxable commercial supplies under GST.
    The Issue : The GST Department demanded tax on various fees collected by the university, including: Affiliation fees Convocation fees Examination fees Prospectus fees Migration certificate fees The key question before the Court was: Do such statutory fees constitute “supply” under Section 7 of the GST law?
    A. In terms of Section 7, in order to qualify as supply, an activity shall be in the course or furtherance of business.

    The Court observed that fees such as affiliation, prospectus and migration certificate, sports etc. are received by the University and are per se not commercial in nature but are towards educational activities. Consequently, the activity does not qualify as supply. The Appellant being a creature of statute to impart education cannot be said to be undertaking business. B. In terms of Section 7 of the GST provisions, an activity would constitute as supply when the same is undertaken for a consideration. The Court, placing reliance on the decision of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Ahmedabad Urban Development Authority, observed that the fees such as affiliation, PG registration, prospectus etc. do not qualify as ‘consideration’ as the same are in the nature of statutory fee or regulatory fee in terms of the statutory provisions and not contractual in nature.

    1. cariteshrmehta says:

      This case was also referred to in the Madras HC Division bench ruling of Bharathidasan University (cited above) & then on the basis of Circular no. 234/28/2024 GST-dated 11.10.2024 decided the above.

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