Jammu & Kashmir High Court | WP(C) No. 2765/2025 | CM(7329/2025)
Date of Order: November 10, 2025
Case:G.N.T. Constructions Company vs. Union Territory of J&K & Others
Citation: 2025 (11) TAXREPLY 15009
Coram:Hon’ble Mr. Justice Sanjeev Kumar &Hon’ble Mr. Justice Sanjay Parihar
Counsel for Petitioner: Mr. A.M. Mir & Mr. Mir Umar, Advocates
Counsel for Respondents: Mr. MohdYounis Hafiz, Assisting Counsel vice Mr. MohsinQadri,
The petitioner, G.N.T. Constructions Company, was a registered taxpayer under the Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 (GST Act).
With no statutory remedy left, the petitioner approached the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution, seeking restoration of the cancelled GST registration.
The Hon’ble Bench noted that similar petitions had previously been decided by the High Court, where GST registrations were restored conditionally.
The court referred to previous orders dated 1st April 2024 (WP(C) No.182/2024) and 29th April 2024 (WP(C) No.873/2024), where restoration was permitted subject to compliance with statutory dues.
The Government Counsel did not oppose restoration in principle, provided the taxpayer:
After hearing both sides, the High Court held:
Provision | Description |
|---|---|
| Section 29, CGST Act | Power to cancel registration by the proper officer. |
| Section 107(1), CGST Act | Right to appeal against orders passed under the Act. |
| Article 226, Constitution of India | Power of High Court to issue writs for enforcement of rights and judicial review of administrative actions. |
This decision provides practical relief for taxpayers whose registrations were cancelled due to procedural lapses, especially when appeals are dismissed as time-barred. It enables genuine businesses to resume compliance instead of facing permanent exclusion.
The Court balanced leniency with responsibility by mandating strict compliance within seven days - ensuring that relief is extended only to those willing to regularize their pending obligations.
This judgment continues the pattern of pro-compliance judicial reasoning seen in prior High Court rulings, reinforcing that registration restoration is not a right, but a conditional relief based on bona fide conduct.
By directing the petitioner to approach the competent officer directly, the Court ensured expeditious disposal without unnecessary litigation or remand procedures.
The Jammu & Kashmir High Court’s ruling in G.N.T. Constructions Company vs. Union Territory of J&K underscores a consistent judicial approach:
Relief under GST is available to compliant taxpayers, not defaulters seeking indefinite extensions.
The decision reiterates that while procedural rigidity should not stifle genuine businesses, compliance with tax obligations remains the foundation for restoration of privileges under GST law.
Dr. Muhammed Mustafa C T
Senior Tax Consultant, BRQ Associates
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