Facts of the Case

The proceedings arose from a large batch of writ appeals, tax revisions and writ petitions concerning the interpretation, validity and operation of Section 42(3) of the Kerala Value Added Tax Act, 2003.

The lead proceeding, W.A. No. 676 of 2020, was instituted by the State of Kerala and the Commercial Tax Officer against MCP Enterprises. The appeal arose from the judgment in W.P.(C) No. 13673 of 2017.

The central controversy concerned the statutory consequence attached to a dealer’s failure to comply with specified obligations under Section 42(3), including failures connected with audited accounts, revised annual returns, annexures, statements and declaration of transactions. Under clauses (i) to (iv) of Section 42(3), the assessment for the relevant year was stated to be “treated as pending” without reference to the limitation stipulated under Section 25(1) of the KVAT Act.

The dispute acquired significance because Section 25 separately governed reassessment and prescribed limitation periods applicable to reopening assessments. The State’s interpretation of Section 42(3) could effectively result in assessments remaining pending indefinitely and could remove the limitation otherwise applicable under the statutory reassessment framework.

The controversy therefore required the Court to determine how the legal fiction created by the expression “treated as pending” should operate, particularly in relation to past assessment years and the limitation framework contained in the KVAT Act.

The Court also considered the practical and legal consequences of permitting reassessment without a definite temporal limit, especially after the GST regime came into force with effect from 1 July 2017.

Issues Involved

The principal issues before the Court were:

  1. Whether Section 42(3)(i) to (iv) of the KVAT Act could be interpreted to treat assessments as pending indefinitely, without reference to the limitation prescribed under Section 25.
  2. Whether the expression “treated as pending” created a legal fiction capable of retrospectively reopening or continuing assessments from earlier periods without any reasonable time limitation.
  3. Whether the Legislature was competent to enact a retrospective provision affecting assessments under the KVAT Act.
  4. Whether the retrospective operation of Section 42(3) was required to remain within a reasonable period consistent with the broader scheme and limitation provisions of the KVAT Act.
  5. Whether an interpretation permitting indefinite reassessment would create inconsistency between Sections 22 and 25 on one side and Section 42(3)(i) to (iv) on the other.
  6. Whether the statutory fiction could erase the certainty created by limitation provisions and expose dealers to reassessment at any future point of time.
  7. Whether the expression “fails to file” could, by interpretation, be extended backwards so as to operate upon completed or time-barred periods in an unlimited manner.
  8. Whether the impugned provision required harmonious construction to avoid contradiction, uncertainty, hardship and unreasonable consequences.

Petitioner’s / State’s Arguments

The State broadly defended the legislative competence and operation of Section 42(3) of the KVAT Act.

The State’s position was that the Legislature possessed competence to enact retrospective legislation and to create a statutory fiction by using expressions such as “treated as pending.”

It was contended that where a dealer failed to fulfil the obligations specified under Section 42(3), including filing the prescribed audited accounts, revised annual return, annexures or statements, or properly declaring relevant transactions, the statutory consequence contemplated by the provision could follow.

The State relied upon principles of statutory interpretation and judicial precedents in support of the proposition that statutory language should ordinarily receive its proper and literal meaning and that the legislative intention reflected in the enacted provision must be respected.

The State’s interpretation, in substance, sought recognition of the legal effect of the phrase “treated as pending” and the retrospective operation contemplated by the amended statutory framework.

The State also challenged the limitation placed by the learned Single Judge upon the retrospective operation of the provision.

Respondent’s / Dealers’ Arguments

The dealers contended that Section 42(3) could not be interpreted in a manner that would permit assessments or reassessments to remain pending indefinitely.

It was argued that the KVAT Act itself contained a structured assessment and reassessment mechanism, particularly under Sections 21, 22 and 25. Section 25 prescribed limitation periods for reassessment, and those statutory periods could not effectively be erased through an unlimited interpretation of the phrase “treated as pending.”

The dealers argued that the same or similar factual situations could otherwise produce contradictory outcomes: one proceeding would be governed by limitation, while another would have no limitation merely because Section 42(3) was invoked.

It was further contended that such an interpretation would destroy certainty and expose dealers to reassessment at any time, including for old assessment periods.

The dealers emphasised the practical hardship of requiring books and records to be retained indefinitely and the unfairness of exposing completed tax periods to perpetual uncertainty.

They also challenged the retrospective operation and constitutional implications of the provision, including grounds associated with Article 14 of the Constitution.

Court’s Findings

The High Court examined the statutory scheme, the language of Section 42(3), the legal fiction created by the words “treated as pending,” the limitation structure under Section 25 and established principles governing retrospective legislation and statutory interpretation.

1. Meaning of “Fails to File”

The Court examined the expression “fails to file” appearing in Section 42(3)(i) to (iv).

The Court observed that the expression refers to failure or neglect to file the prescribed material and is framed in the simple present tense. The Court found difficulty in treating that language as automatically operating in the past tense for all periods dating back to the commencement of the VAT legislation.

2. “Treated as Pending” Is a Legislative Fiction

The Court recognised that the expression “treated as pending” creates a legal fiction.

The Court explained that a legal fiction is created for a specific statutory purpose and must operate within its legitimate field. It cannot be extended beyond the purpose for which it was created, nor should it be interpreted so as to defeat the law, produce illegality or cause unjust consequences.

The Court emphasised that legal fiction requires restrictive and purpose-oriented interpretation.

3. Section 42(3) Cannot Be Read in Isolation

The Court considered Section 42(3) together with the wider statutory scheme.

Section 21 provides for self-assessment of returns filed under Section 20, while reassessment is governed by Section 25. The Court noted that the reassessment framework contains limitation periods applicable to the relevant return periods.

If Section 42(3) were interpreted in the manner suggested by the State, the phrase “treated as pending” would remove the limitation otherwise applicable and could leave assessments open indefinitely.

4. Indefinite Reassessment Creates Statutory Inconsistency

The Court found an inconsistency between the limitation-based framework under Sections 22 and 25 and an unlimited application of Section 42(3)(i) to (iv).

Such an interpretation would disturb certainty in reopening assessments and create uncertainty in reassessment proceedings.

The Court accepted the force of the dealers’ contention that similar eventualities could otherwise be subject to limitation in one situation and no limitation in another.

5. GST Transition Strengthened the Need for Certainty

The Court noted that the GST regime came into operation from 1 July 2017.

Despite the transition to GST, an unlimited interpretation of Section 42(3) could leave returns filed under the earlier KVAT regime exposed to reassessment uncertainty even after other statutory timelines had expired.

The Court considered this an uncertain and contradictory state of affairs.

6. Literal Construction Could Produce Excessive Hardship

The Court found that a literal interpretation allowing the statutory fiction to erase limitation would produce greater hardship than reasonably envisaged.

The Court therefore adopted a harmonious construction that aligned the legal fiction with the other provisions and the overall scheme of the KVAT Act.

7. Legislature Is Competent to Enact Retrospective Law

The Court affirmed that the Legislature is competent to enact retrospective legislation.

However, the Court agreed with the learned Single Judge that the retrospective operation in the present context had to remain consistent with a reasonable period provided within the statutory scheme of the VAT Act.

8. Reasonable Period of Five Years Upheld

The Court agreed with the conclusion that the retrospective operation should be confined to a reasonable period.

The judgment expressly recorded agreement with the view that the relevant period was five years, thereby preventing the threat of reassessment without timelines from continuing indefinitely against dealers for return periods extending from 2005-06 to 2016-17.

Court Order / Final Decision

The High Court upheld the essential reasoning and conclusion of the judgment under appeal.

The Court held that:

  • The Legislature is competent to enact retrospective legislation.
  • The retrospective effect of Section 42(3) cannot operate as an unrestricted mechanism for indefinite reassessment.
  • The legal fiction created by the words “treated as pending” must be interpreted reasonably and harmoniously with the limitation structure and overall scheme of the KVAT Act.
  • Retrospectivity must remain within a reasonable period.
  • The Court agreed with the conclusion limiting the relevant period to five years.
  • An interpretation exposing dealers to reassessment indefinitely for return periods from 2005-06 to 2016-17 was not accepted.
  • The State’s appeals failed and were dismissed.
  • W.A. No. 1206 of 2020 was also dismissed.
  • The appeals filed by both the State and the dealer were dismissed.
  • O.T. Rev. Nos. 52 of 2020 and 87 of 2022 were dismissed by following the reasoning in W.A. No. 676 of 2020.
  • The connected writ petitions were disposed of in terms of the judgment in W.P.(C) No. 13673 of 2017 as confirmed in W.A. No. 676 of 2020.
  • Interlocutory applications concerning interim matters were closed.

Important Clarification

This judgment does not hold that the Kerala Legislature lacked competence to enact retrospective tax legislation.

The crucial clarification is that although retrospective legislation is legally permissible, the legal fiction under Section 42(3) cannot be interpreted so broadly as to expose dealers to reassessment for an indefinite period without regard to the limitation structure and statutory scheme of the KVAT Act.

The expression “treated as pending” therefore cannot be used as an unrestricted device to erase limitation permanently.

The Court harmonised Section 42(3) with the remaining provisions of the KVAT Act and approved the approach that retrospectivity must operate within a reasonable period, identified in the judgment as five years.

The decision is particularly significant because it distinguishes between:

(a) legislative competence to enact retrospective law; and
(b) the permissible temporal reach and practical operation of such retrospective law.

Sections Involved

Kerala Value Added Tax Act, 2003 (KVAT Act):

  • Section 20 – Filing of Returns
  • Section 21 – Self-Assessment
  • Section 22 – Assessment-related statutory framework
  • Section 25 – Reassessment and statutory limitation
  • Section 25B – Extension-related power, where applicable in connected proceedings
  • Section 42(3) – Consequences arising from specified failures relating to audited accounts, revised annual returns, annexures, statements and declaration of transactions
  • Section 42(3)(i) to (iv) – Statutory situations in which assessment is stated to be “treated as pending”

Link to Download the Order

https://mytaxexpert.co.in/uploads/1783144253_534compressed.pdf

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