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GST Case Laws March 2026: Key Rulings Businesses Must Know
A large number of rulings from several High Courts and Appellate Courts in India on GST-related matters were pronounced in March 2026. The subject matter of the rulings was the taxability of the transfer of leasehold rights, provisional attachments, transitional credit, cancellation of registration, and procedural mistakes in SCN notices, etc.
These rulings stand as a reminder to businesses, tax professionals, and chartered accountants about the major GST compliance requirements. Furthermore, the rulings dealt with the jurisdiction of the GST Appellate Tribunal, the issuance of notifications on a GST portal, and procedural requirements for arrests.
GST Case Laws in March 2026: Quick Reference Table
The following table gives a quick overview of the important matters delivered by different forums in March 2026.
Court / Forum
Case Name
Key Issue
Kerala HC
Pinnacle Motor Works Pvt Ltd vs Dy. Commissioner
TRAN-1 rectification for bona fide error
Bombay HC
Bajaj International Realty Pvt Ltd vs State of Maharashtra
Provisional attachment quashed for lack of reasoning
Calcutta HC
Mohammad Javed vs Union of India
Registration cancellation for non-filing quashed
Gujarat HC
ACCO Logistics vs Asst. Commissioner of CGST
Refund rejection without examining the documents set aside
Bombay HC
HSBC Ltd vs State of Maharashtra
GSTAT has the inherent power to grant interim relief
Rajasthan HC
Zoomcar India Pvt Ltd vs Union of India
Sec 168A extension validity deferred to the Supreme Court
Bombay HC
Swastik Processors vs Union of India
GST on the leasehold rights assignment stayed
Allahabad HC
Jai Kumar Aggarwal vs DGGI
Grounds of arrest mandatory; remand declared illegal
Delhi HC
Jarosniv Exports Pvt Ltd vs Sales Tax Officer
SCN in the Additional Notices tab is not a valid service
Madras HC
Tvl. Vishagan Traders vs Dy. State Tax Officer
Duplicate proceedings on GSTR-2A/3B mismatch quashed
Gauhati HC
Md Shoriful Islam vs State of Assam
DRC-01 summary is not a substitute for proper SCN
Telangana AAAR
The Singareni Collieries Company Ltd
GST on DMF contributions exempt; NMET taxable
Registration, Refund, and Transitional Credit Cases
In addressing taxpayer rights regarding refund denials, transitional credit repairs, and GST registration cancellations, several courts have repeatedly held that Procedural fairness must be upheld.
TRAN-1 Rectification Allowed for Bona Fide Error
Case: Pinnacle Motor Works Pvt Ltd vs Deputy Commissioner (Adjudication) | Kerala HC | WP(C) No. 21609 of 2024
In TRAN-1, the assessee had first requested a transitional credit of about Rs. 88.04 lakh.
Due to a genuine misunderstanding, only incremental amounts were reported during the Supreme Court-mandated revision timeframe.
Revenue refused any credit under Section 73(9) and regarded updated filings as superseding originals.
Kerala High Court ruled that it was impossible for a taxpayer to willingly lower confirmed, lawful credit; the Section 73(9) ruling was overturned.
The assessee was allowed to fix TRAN-1 by reinstating the proper amounts.
Registration Cancellation for Non-Filing Without Fraud Allegation Quashed
Case: Mohammad Javed vs Union of India | Calcutta HC | WPA 16279 of 2025
The court determined that the termination of GST registration without any accusations of fraud, tax evasion, or suspicious transactions was unfair.
The revocation was based only on the failure to file GST returns.
The assessee has six weeks to file any outstanding returns and settle any outstanding debts.
Within a week, revenue will be used to reinstate GST portal access.
Refund Rejection Without Examining Documentary Evidence Set Aside
Case: ACCO Logistics and Forwarding vs Assistant Commissioner of CGST | Gujarat HC | Special Civil Application No. 14415 of 2025
In a Department appeal, the appellate authority overturned the refund that was first approved using Form RFD-06.
Without reviewing the documentary evidence that was already on file, the appellate body issued an ex parte ruling.
Gujarat High Court said that while ex parte proceedings are acceptable, it is legally untenable to ignore material that is already on file.
The assessee must pay Rs. 10,000 to have the order set aside and the case remanded for a new hearing.
Procedural Validity and Natural Justice Cases
In March 2026, many courts reaffirmed that the GST law's procedural protections are non-negotiable. Due to their failure to comply with the fundamental requirements of notice, hearing, and authentication, a number of orders were overturned. SCN Uploaded Only in the Additional Notices Tab Does Not Constitute Valid Service
Case: Jarosniv Exports Pvt Ltd vs Sales Tax Officer Class II | Delhi HC | WP(C) 2200/2026
Only the Additional Notices option on the GST site was used to post show cause notices for FY 2017–18 and FY 2019–20.
Ex parte adjudication orders resulted from the assessee's ignorance of the notices and the lack of responses.
Delhi High Court reaffirmed that adding a new tab to a portal does not constitute effective communication.
Orders are overturned, and the case is remanded; a new decision will be made following a full hearing by email and mobile.
DRC-01 Summary Cannot Replace a Proper Show Cause Notice
Case: Md Shoriful Islam vs State of Assam | Gauhati HC | WP(C) No. 471 of 2026
Only a Form DRC-01 summary with an accompanying decision statement was provided; no independent SCN was served.
Only the Sd/-Proper Officer without digital authentication was included in the documents connected to DRC-01 and DRC-07.
Form DRC-06 requested a personal hearing, but it was never provided prior to the demand order being issued.
DRC-01 is supplemental and cannot replace a fully verified, independently issued SCN, according to the Gauhati High Court.
The entire process was dismissed as unlawful.
Duplicate Proceedings on Same GSTR-2A vs GSTR-3B Mismatch Quashed
Case: Tvl. Vishagan Traders vs Deputy State Tax Officer-2 | Madras HC | WP(MD) No. 3833 of 2026
For the same tax period, two distinct adjudication orders regarding the same GSTR-2A vs. GSTR-3B discrepancy were issued.
Overlapping demands on the same matter are against the rules of good adjudication, the court said.
The subsequent ruling was set aside, and the issue was remanded after the earlier order dated November 28, 2025, was annulled.
Before a new judgment is made, the assessee is required to deposit 25% of the contested tax.
Provisional Attachment Quashed for Failure to Consider Assessee Objections
Case: Bajaj International Realty Pvt Ltd vs State of Maharashtra | Bombay HC | Writ Petition No. 922 of 2026
Members of the society and MHADA received free apartments from the real estate developer. GST was paid on these units.
The department claimed responsibility for almost Rs. 42.68 crore and viewed free handovers as a taxable supply.
Multiple bank accounts were temporarily attached without any justification.
Objections submitted on Form DRC-22were turned down without providing an explanation, which went against natural justice.
Attachment orders were struck aside by the Bombay High Court, and the case was returned for new consideration with justification.
Taxability, Classification, and Other Key Rulings
Important rulings on the taxability of leasehold rights, GST on contributions tied to mining royalties, and the authority of the GST Appellate Tribunal were also delivered by courts.
GST on Assignment of Leasehold Rights Stayed Pending Supreme Court Decision
Case: Swastik Processors vs Union of India | Bombay HC | Writ Petition (L) No. 42522 of 2025
Under the CGST Act Schedule II, taxpayers contested the GST charge on the assignment or transfer of leasehold rights.
The Gujarat High Court has previously ruled that GST is not levied on the assignment of leasehold rights of industrial sites.
Revenue contended that the Supreme Court is considering a challenge to the Gujarat High Court verdict. Bombay High Court granted temporary protection, stating that no recovery would be made and that adjudication would be postponed until the Supreme Court's ruling.
GST on DMF Contributions Exempt NMET Contributions Remain Taxable
Case: The Singareni Collieries Company Ltd | Telangana AAAR | Order-in-Appeal No. AAAR/1/2026
A coal mining company pays the National Mineral Exploration Trust (NMET) 2% and the District Mineral Foundation (DMF) 30% of the royalties.
DMF and NMET payments were previously held by AAR to be taxable at 18% as compensation associated with the granting of mining rights.
Telangana AAAR changed the decision based on CBEC Circular No. 206/18/2023-GST, which states that GST is not due on DMF contributions but is still due on NMET contributions.
Relief is prospective in nature; GST paid on DMF is not refundable.
GSTAT Has Inherent Power to Grant Interim Relief
Case: The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Ltd vs State of Maharashtra | Bombay HC | Writ Petition (L) No. 4698 of 2026
The assessee contended that GSTAT is not expressly authorised by law to provide temporary stays
According to the Bombay High Court, Section 113(1) implies complete appellate powers, including interim relief
Supreme Court's decision in M.K. Mohammed Kunhi to uphold the inherent appellate authority to issue stays
The GSTAT Procedure Rules 2025 specifically acknowledge inherent powers and interlocutory applications
The writ petition was denied, and the assessee was given a two-week window of protection to contact GSTAT
Conclusion
The rulings related to GST cases in March 2026 underscore important compliance requirements, such as proper notice, orders, and compliance under Indian GST laws. Several High Courts also supported taxpayer interests by overturning orders related to wrong notifications, duplicate processes, unauthenticated documents, and arbitrary attachments.
MYSTRefund provides an integrated platform with GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filing, multi-dimensional GST reconciliation, AI-powered tools, seven times faster refund processing, CFO dashboards, and expert-backed notice management to handle all GST obligations in one location for businesses and CAs trying to stay ahead of compliance risk.
Note*: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice