GST Case Laws March 2026
The goal of this article is to cover all recent GST case laws March 2026. All latest high court judgments on gst and all the latest Supreme Court judgments on gst issued in March 2026 have been covered in this article. All the latest GST case laws of March 2026 in this article have been classified by name, date, judge, counsel, GST concept, GST section, etc. In addition, a PDF of the GST case law is provided with the case law so that the user can download it for further study.
GST Case law on Input Service Distributor – Time limit for distribution of ITC in same month
Madras High Court says Rule 39(1)(a) requiring ISD to distribute ITC in same month cannot be enforced for period prior to 01-04-2025 as parent section did not empower prescription of time limit; however after amendment rule is valid.
| Madras High Court Judgement 2026 |
| Name of case: Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd. vs. Union of India |
| Date of Judgment: 05-03-2026 |
| Appeal No: WP Nos. 27038 and 28371 of 2025 WMP Nos. 30334 & 30336 of 2025 and others |
| Judges: MANINDRA MOHAN SHRIVASTAVA, CJ. and G. Arul Murugan, J. |
| Counsel Name: Union of India & State GST Authorities |
| Fact of the Case: The petitioner, Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd., is engaged in providing telecommunication services and has multiple GST registrations across various States, treated as distinct persons under GST law. The company used the Input Service Distributor (ISD) mechanism to distribute Input Tax Credit (ITC) relating to common input services to its various branches. During audit proceedings, the department alleged that ITC distributed by ISD was not distributed in the same month in which the underlying invoices were received, which was considered violation of Rule 39(1)(a) of CGST Rules. Show cause notices were issued for several financial years alleging wrong availment of ITC. The petitioner challenged Rule 39(1)(a) on the ground that prior to 01-04-2025 Section 20 of CGST Act did not empower the Government to prescribe any time limit for distribution of ITC. It was also argued that distributing ITC in the same month is practically impossible and arbitrary, and therefore the rule is ultra vires the Act and violative of Article 14 of the Constitution. |
| Held by court : The High Court held that prior to 01-04-2025, Section 20 of the CGST Act did not authorize the Government to prescribe a time limit for distribution of ITC by ISD. Therefore, Rule 39(1)(a) to the extent it required distribution of credit in the same month was beyond the scope of the parent provision and could not be enforced for the period prior to the amendment. The amendment made in Section 20 with effect from 01-04-2025 inserting power to prescribe time limit is substantive and prospective. The Court further held that after the amendment, the Government is empowered to prescribe conditions including time limit, and therefore Rule 39(1)(a) is valid for the period after 01-04-2025. Consequently, show cause notices based solely on same-month distribution requirement for earlier period cannot be sustained. |
| In favor of : Assessee |
| Topic of GST : Input Tax Credit |
| Section of GST: Section 20 & 16 of CGST Act,2017. Rule 39 of CGST Rules. |
Download PDF of Madras High Court Judgement of Reliance Jio Infocomm Limited
GST Case law on Seizure of Cash during GST Search proceedings
Bombay High court says Cash cannot be seized under Section 67 of CGST Act without proper “reason to believe” and without proving relevance to GST proceedings
| Bombay High Court Judgement 2026 |
| Name of case: Smruti Waghdhare V/s Joint Director, Directorate General of GST Intelligence |
| Date of Judgment: 10-03-2026 |
| Appeal No: Writ Petition No. 839 of 2025 |
| Judges: G. S. Kulkarni & Aarti Sathe, JJ. |
| Counsel Name: Directorate General of GST Intelligence Officers |
| Fact of the Case: The petitioner, a GST registered proprietor engaged in trading of metals, was subjected to search proceedings conducted by GST Intelligence officers at her office, another premises, and residence of her parents. During the search, cash amounting to ₹1 crore was seized from the petitioner’s premises and parental residence through seizure orders issued in Form GST INS-02. The department alleged that the cash was linked to fake billing and fraudulent input tax credit transactions involving another person who was under investigation. The petitioner challenged the seizure before the High Court contending that cash is not covered under goods, documents, books, or things under Section 67(2) of the CGST Act, and that the department had no authority to seize the cash without recording proper reasons to believe or issuing notice within prescribed time. She also argued that the seized cash belonged to her and was kept for personal purposes including medical treatment of her parents. |
| Held by court : The High Court held that seizure under Section 67(2) can be made only when the proper officer has valid “reason to believe” that goods, documents, books, or things relevant to GST proceedings are secreted at a place. In the present case, the department failed to record proper reasons and also failed to establish how the seized cash was relevant to GST proceedings. Cash cannot automatically be treated as a “thing” liable for seizure without statutory backing. The Court further held that no notice was issued within six months as required under Section 67(7), therefore the seized amount must be returned. The action of handing over the cash to the Income Tax Department was also held to be without authority of law. Accordingly, the seizure orders were quashed and the department was directed to return ₹1 crore with interest. |
| In favor of : Assessee |
| Topic of GST : Search & Seizure |
| Section of GST: Section 67 of CGST Act,2017. |
Download PDF of Bombay High Court Judgement on Smruti Waghdhare









