Facts of the Case
The appellants were dealers who had approached the Kerala High
Court challenging proceedings initiated or continued by the State Tax
authorities in relation to periods governed by the pre-GST Kerala Value Added
Tax regime.
With effect from 1 July 2017, the GST regime became
operational. The Kerala State Legislature enacted the Kerala State Goods and
Services Tax Act, 2017, under which specified earlier State tax enactments,
including the KVAT Act to the extent provided by law, were repealed. Section
174 of the KSGST Act contained detailed repeal-and-saving provisions.
The Revenue authorities, invoking Section 174(2) of the
KSGST Act read with Sections 25(1), 42(3) and/or 67 of the KVAT Act, issued
notices or pursued proceedings proposing reopening of assessments,
best-judgment assessment, penalty and other statutory action relating to the
earlier VAT regime.
The dealers challenged such notices and assessment/penalty
proceedings as illegal and without jurisdiction. Their principal constitutional
objection was that, after the Constitution (One Hundred and First Amendment)
Act, 2016 and the transition to GST, the Kerala State Legislature lacked
legislative competence to enact a saving clause of the width contained in
Section 174(2) of the KSGST Act.
The writ petitions were rejected by the learned Single Judge
through the common judgment dated 11 January 2019. The dealers therefore
preferred the writ appeals before the Division Bench. The uploaded judgment
expressly records that the controversy concerned legislative competence under
Articles 246 and 246A, Article 265, repeal and saving, transitional provisions
and the alleged sunset effect of Section 19 of the Constitution Amendment Act.
Issues Involved
- Whether
the Kerala State Legislature possessed legislative competence to enact
Section 174(2) of the KSGST Act, 2017?
- Whether
Section 19 of the Constitution (One Hundred and First Amendment) Act, 2016
operated as a sunset clause extinguishing the State’s competence or
preventing continuation of pre-GST proceedings after expiry of one year?
- Whether
substitution of Entry 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule deprived the
State Legislature of competence to save liabilities and proceedings
arising under the KVAT Act?
- Whether
Article 246A could support the legislative transition from the earlier VAT
regime to GST, including repeal-and-saving provisions?
- Whether
assessment, reassessment, investigation, inquiry, verification, penalty,
adjudication, appeal, revision and recovery proceedings relating to the
repealed VAT regime could be instituted, continued or enforced under
Section 174(2)?
- Whether
the Revenue’s power to initiate reassessment or penalty proceedings after
repeal constituted merely an unaccrued right or power incapable of being
preserved?
- Whether
accrued limitation rights in favour of dealers remained protected
notwithstanding the saving clause?
Appellants’ / Dealers’ Arguments
The appellants contended that the State Legislature had
originally derived its power to enact the KVAT Act from Article 246 read
with the then-existing Entry 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule.
It was argued that after the Constitution (One Hundred and
First Amendment) Act, 2016, Entry 54 stood substantially altered and confined
to specified commodities. Consequently, according to the dealers, the State
Legislature no longer possessed legislative competence over the former field of
tax on sale or purchase of goods generally.
The appellants further argued that Article 246A concerns
GST on the supply of goods or services or both, whereas the saved KVAT
proceedings related to the earlier taxable event of sale or purchase.
Therefore, Article 246A could not be relied upon to preserve old VAT powers.
A central submission concerned Section 19 of the
Constitution (One Hundred and First Amendment) Act, 2016. According to the
appellants, inconsistent pre-GST laws could continue only until amended or
repealed by a competent Legislature or until expiry of one year from
commencement of the constitutional amendment. On that reasoning, the one-year
period functioned as a sunset limitation.
The dealers contended that Section 174(2) impermissibly sought
to preserve proceedings beyond that constitutional transitional period and was
therefore unconstitutional.
They also relied upon Article 265 of the Constitution,
arguing that authority of law and legislative competence must exist throughout
the taxation process, including levy, assessment, quantification and recovery.
A further submission was that after expiry of the transitional
period, the KVAT Act became a “dead enactment” for the disputed purposes and
could not be revived through Section 174.
The appellants additionally argued that the Revenue’s mere
power to reopen an assessment, investigate, reassess or impose penalty was not
necessarily an “accrued right.” According to them, where no proceeding had been
validly initiated before repeal or expiry of the relevant constitutional
period, subsequent proceedings could not be sustained merely by relying on the
saving clause.
Respondents’ / Revenue’s Arguments
The State defended the constitutional validity and operation
of Section 174(2) of the KSGST Act.
The Revenue contended that the GST transition required a
comprehensive legislative mechanism for repeal, amendment and preservation of
liabilities, rights, obligations and pending or future proceedings concerning
transactions occurring under the former tax regime.
It was argued that Section 19 of the Constitution (One
Hundred and First Amendment) Act, 2016 was a transitional enabling provision,
intended to facilitate migration to the GST constitutional framework rather
than to destroy accrued liabilities or prohibit saving provisions after one
year.
The State maintained that the Legislature was competent to
enact Section 174 and that the repeal-and-saving mechanism legitimately
preserved:
- previous
operation of repealed enactments;
- rights,
privileges, obligations and liabilities already acquired, accrued or
incurred;
- tax,
surcharge, penalty, fine and interest due or capable of becoming due;
- investigation,
inquiry, verification, scrutiny and audit;
- assessment
and reassessment proceedings;
- adjudication
and other legal proceedings;
- recovery
of arrears and remedies;
- appeals,
revisions, reviews and references.
The Revenue’s position was therefore that valid liabilities
arising under the earlier VAT regime did not disappear merely because GST was
introduced.
Court Findings / Order
The Division Bench rejected the principal challenge to
legislative competence.
1. State Legislature Was Competent to Enact
Section 174
The Court held that the Kerala State Legislature was competent
to enact Section 174 of the KSGST Act. The judgment expressly rejected the
dealers’ argument and held that no contrary interpretation of Section 19 of the
Constitution Amendment Act was permissible.
The Court’s reasoning treated the GST transition as a
constitutional and legislative restructuring that necessarily contemplated
appropriate State legislation within the transitional framework.
2. Section 19 of the Constitution Amendment Act
Was Not Accepted as Destroying the Saving Power
The Court rejected the proposition that Section 19 should be
construed in the restrictive manner urged by the dealers.
The one-year transitional period was not treated as
automatically nullifying the Legislature’s competence to enact a
repeal-and-saving provision preserving consequences of the previous tax regime.
The Court noted that the State had undertaken the relevant
legislative steps within the constitutional transition: the KSGST Ordinance was
promulgated on 22 June 2017 and the KSGST Act was notified on 16 September
2017. The judgment addressed and rejected the contention that Section 174(2)
impermissibly “overshot” the one-year period.
3. Saving Clauses Under Section 174(2) Were Within
Legislative Competence
Having concluded that the State Legislature was competent to
enact Section 174(2), the Court further held that the individual clauses
contained in the saving provision fell within that competence.
The Division Bench therefore did not accept the broad argument
that proceedings under the repealed VAT enactment necessarily became void
merely because they were initiated or continued after the GST transition.
4. Pre-GST Liabilities and Proceedings Could
Survive Repeal
The judgment recognised the legal operation of the saving
mechanism in relation to liabilities and proceedings arising under the earlier
enactments.
Accordingly, investigation, inquiry, verification, assessment,
adjudication, penalty and recovery proceedings could survive in accordance with
Section 174(2), subject to the statutory conditions governing the particular
proceeding.
5. Repeal Did Not Automatically Erase Past Tax
Consequences
The Court did not accept the proposition that the introduction
of GST automatically extinguished tax liabilities or statutory consequences
validly arising under the KVAT regime.
The repeal-and-saving provision was capable of preserving
legal consequences connected with the previous operation of the repealed
enactments.
6. Important Limitation Protection in Favour of
Dealers
A particularly significant clarification concerned limitation.
The Court recognised that where the statutory limitation
period had already expired and a right had accrued in favour of the dealer
against reassessment, a subsequent amendment or saving provision could not
automatically destroy that accrued protection.
The judgment specifically discussed the principle that expiry
of the five-year limitation period under Section 25 of the KVAT Act could
create an accrued right in favour of a dealer against whom the reassessment
period had already expired.
Important Clarification / Legal Principle
Established
The judgment establishes an important transitional-tax
principle:
The introduction of GST and repeal of the earlier
VAT enactment do not, by themselves, extinguish liabilities, assessments,
investigations, penalties, adjudication, appeals or recovery proceedings
arising under the pre-GST regime where such matters are validly preserved by a
constitutionally competent repeal-and-saving provision such as Section 174(2)
of the KSGST Act.
At the same time, the judgment should not be understood
as granting unrestricted power to the Revenue to reopen every old assessment
indefinitely.
The saving provision remains subject to:
- the
substantive requirements of the repealed enactment;
- the
applicable statutory limitation period;
- accrued
or vested rights in favour of the dealer;
- jurisdictional
conditions for assessment, reassessment or penalty;
- constitutional
requirements under Article 265;
- the
precise language of the relevant saving clause.
Sections Involved
Kerala State Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017
- Section
173 — Amendment of specified enactments
- Section
174(1) — Repeal
- Section
174(2)(a) to (f) — Saving of prior operation, rights, liabilities, taxes,
penalties, proceedings and remedies
- Section
174(3) — Application of the Kerala Interpretation and General Clauses
framework
Kerala Value Added Tax Act, 2003
- Section
25(1) — Assessment/reassessment-related power
- Section
42(3) — Proceedings connected with statutory accounts/audit framework as
involved in the batch
- Section
67 — Penalty proceedings
- Section
98 — Saving-related provision discussed in the judgment
Constitution of India
- Article
246 — Distribution of legislative powers
- Article
246A — Special legislative power concerning GST
- Article
265 — No tax except by authority of law
- Article
269A — GST in course of inter-State trade or commerce
- Article
279A — GST Council
- Seventh
Schedule, List II, Entry 54 — State taxation field before and after
constitutional amendment
Constitution (One Hundred and First Amendment)
Act, 2016
- Section
19 — Transitional provisions
General Clauses / Interpretation Legislation
- General
Clauses Act principles concerning effect of repeal
- Kerala Interpretation and General Clauses provisions concerning repeal and saving
Link to download the order-https://mytaxexpert.co.in/uploads/1783150420_549compressed.pdf
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