The core issue in these appeals was the constitutional validity of the amendment to Section 29 of the Punjab Value Added Tax Act, 2005 (PVAT Act) by the Punjab Value Added Tax Act, 2013.
Before the amendment (15.11.2013), Section 29(4) allowed tax assessments within three years, extendable to six years by the Commissioner’s order under specific circumstances.
After the amendment, Section 29(4) allowed assessments within six years6. It also included a proviso for assessment year 2006-07 to be made till 20.11.2014, and explanations clarifying that the six-year limitation applied to cases where it hadn’t expired, and that prior notice wasn’t required before the amendment for extending the period.
A new Section 29(10A) was inserted, stating that Commissioner’s orders under Section 29(4) before the 2013 amendment would not be invalid due to lack of prior notice.
Appellants challenged these amendments in the High Court, arguing they were prospective, reversed/overruled High Court judgments, violated natural justice, Articles 14 & 19 of the Constitution, and extended the assessment period even after the original limitation had expired9. The High Court dismissed these challenges.
The Transferred Cases involved tax disputes from the State of Punjab, Union Territory of Chandigarh, and State of Andhra Pradesh. These cases heavily relied on the Supreme Court’s judgment in State of Punjab vs. Nokia India Pvt. Ltd. (2014).
Law Involved
◦Punjab Value Added Tax Act, 2005 (PVAT Act), particularly Section 29 (before and after amendment).
◦Punjab Value Added Tax Act, 2013 (the amending Act).
◦Articles 14 and 19 of the Constitution of India (alleged grounds of violation).
The legal principle of retrospective operation of statutory amendments, especially in tax laws.
Key judicial precedents cited include:
▪Amrit Banaspati Company Ltd. vs. State of Punjab & Others (High Court judgment followed by impugned orders).
▪Additional Commissioner (Legal) & Another v. Jyoti Traders & Another (1999) (relied upon for extending assessment period beyond original expiry)1516.
▪State of Punjab vs. Nokia India Pvt. Ltd. (2014) (“Nokia”) (a crucial precedent for the Transferred Cases).
▪M/s. Samsung (India) Electronics Pvt. Ltd. vs. Commissioner of Commercial Tax, UP (Allahabad High Court, affirmed by SC) and State of Karnataka & Another vs. Intex Technologies India Ltd. (Karnataka High Court) (relied upon by appellants to distinguish Nokia).
Reasoning
For the Civil Appeals (concerning PVAT Act amendments), the Supreme Court noted the High Court’s reasoning that the amendment was not unreasonable or excessive.
The High Court had correctly observed that proceedings which have attained finality due to limitation can be revived if the amended provision is clearly given retrospective operation.
The Statement of Objects and Reasons for the 2013 amendment clearly indicated its purpose: to address heavy workload, staff shortage, and tax dues nearing limitation expiry, and to obviate consequences of High Court judgments that quashed Commissioner’s extension orders on technical grounds (like lack of prior notice), leading to revenue loss.
The High Court correctly held that the opening part of the amended Section 29(4) was retrospective, as a prospective interpretation would render the proviso and Explanation (1) otiose. It affirmed the legislature’s power to enact retrospective tax laws and to remove the basis of prior judgments without encroaching on judicial domain.
The Supreme Court concurred with the High Court’s reliance on Additional Commissioner (Legal) & Another v. Jyoti Traders & Another, affirming that a Legislature can extend the assessment period even after the original period has expired.
For the Transferred Cases, the Supreme Court, considering the significant tax amounts and specific assessment years (2005-2006 to 2011-2012 for Punjab; 2009-2010 to 2015-2016 for UT Chandigarh)23, chose not to re-evaluate the correctness of the Nokia judgment2324. This decision also factored in the subsequent amendments to State Acts in Punjab since 2013.
However, the Court explicitly limited the ramification and implication of the Nokia judgment to the relevant assessment years in Punjab and UT Chandigarh only, clarifying that it may not be a binding precedent for other States’ enactments, especially if their provisions differ.
Holding
The Civil Appeals challenging the amendments to the PVAT Act are dismissed, as the Supreme Court found no reason to interfere with the High Court’s orders.
Liberty is reserved for the appellants/assessees to avail appellate remedies within three months, with no issue of limitation to be raised by the State or Appellate Authorities.
For the Transferred Cases concerning Punjab and UT Chandigarh, appellants are directed to pay only the principal amount of outstanding tax dues, excluding interest and penalty, by 30.06.2025.
The applicability of the Nokia judgment is restricted to the Acts of Punjab and UT Chandigarh for these specific cases and assessment years.
Liberty is reserved for any aggrieved party to contend that the Nokia judgment is not applicable or is distinguishable in other States if their statutory provisions differ.
The Transferred Cases arising from Andhra Pradesh are re-transferred and restored to the High Court of Andhra Pradesh for fresh consideration in accordance with law, including the possibility of remanding to Revenue Officers or allowing appellants to avail alternate remedies.
The Andhra Pradesh High Court is requested to expedite the hearing and disposal of these cases.
M/S. Naresh Kumar Gupta V. State Of Punjab And Another
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 719: (DoJ 01-05-2025)