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- Cases at a Glance
- The Problem These Cases Solve
- Legal Framework: ITC Conditions and Rectification LimitsSection 16, Section 16(2)(aa), Sections 37(3) and 39(9) explained
- Case 1: CBIC v. Aberdare Technologies Pvt. Ltd.
- Case 2: Union of India v. Brij Systems Ltd.
- What the Supreme Court Established: Core Principles
- A Practical Example: How ITC Denial Due to Supplier Error Works
- How Courts Across India Have Applied These Principles
- What CBIC Is Directed to Do: The Pending Systemic Question
- What Businesses Should Do: A Practical Guide
- What Has Changed and What Has Not
- Frequently Asked Questions
Cases at a Glance
| Detail | Case 1: Aberdare Technologies | Case 2: Brij Systems |
|---|---|---|
| Full Case Name | Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs v. Aberdare Technologies Pvt. Ltd. & Ors. | Union of India & Ors. v. Brij Systems Ltd. & Ors. |
| SC Case Number | SLP (C) No. 7903/2025 | SLP (C) Diary No. 6334/2025 (Reg. No. 8559/2025) |
| SC Date of Order | 21 March 2025 | 24 March 2025 |
| SC Bench | Chief Justice Sanjiv Khanna and Justice Sanjay Kumar | Chief Justice Sanjiv Khanna, Justice Sanjay Kumar and Justice K.V. Viswanathan |
| Underlying HC | Bombay HC: W.P. No. 7912 of 2024, decided 29 July 2024 (Justices K.R. Shriram and Jitendra Jain) | Bombay HC: W.P. No. 783/2022, decided 2 July 2024 |
| Core Facts | Aberdare filed GST returns on time. In December 2023, discovered clerical errors causing no revenue loss. Rectification refused beyond Section 39(9) deadline. | Brij Systems’ supplier made errors in GSTR-1. ITC denied to Brij Systems (buyer). Rectification window under Sections 37(3) and 39(9) had expired. |
| Outcome | SC dismissed CBIC’s SLP. Bombay HC direction to allow rectification upheld. SC directed CBIC to re-examine timelines. | SC dismissed Revenue’s SLP. Issued notice to CBIC. Amicus Curiae (Mr. Arvind P. Datar, Sr. Advocate) appointed. Re-listed for week of 28 April 2025. |
| Sequence | Aberdare was decided first (21 March). Brij Systems order (24 March) cited Aberdare as already decided. | Followed Aberdare. Additional systemic directions issued. |
The Problem These Cases Solve
GST is built on a chain of credit. A supplier collects tax from the buyer. The buyer claims that tax as Input Tax Credit. The government receives the revenue once but allows the buyer to offset it against her own tax liability. This prevents double taxation and keeps the system clean.
The chain depends entirely on return filing. The supplier reports outward supplies in GSTR-1. The buyer’s credit ledger, GSTR-2B, is auto-populated based on the supplier’s GSTR-1. If the supplier files correctly, the buyer’s ITC appears in GSTR-2B and she claims it in GSTR-3B.
Now consider what happens when the supplier makes a mistake. She reports the wrong GSTIN. She enters an incorrect invoice number. She mentions the buyer’s branch in a different city instead of the correct one. In all these situations, the buyer’s GSTR-2B does not reflect the correct ITC. The department then denies ITC to the buyer.
Legal Framework: ITC Conditions and the Rectification Limits
How ITC Works Under the CGST Act
Section 16 of the CGST Act, 2017 sets four basic conditions for claiming ITC. The buyer must hold a valid tax invoice. The goods or services must have been received. The supplier must have paid the tax to the government. And the buyer must have filed her own return. Section 16(2)(aa), inserted with effect from 1 January 2022 by the Finance Act, 2022, added a fifth condition: ITC is available only to the extent it appears in the buyer’s GSTR-2B. When a supplier’s GSTR-1 has errors, the buyer’s GSTR-2B suffers directly.
The Rectification Limits: Sections 37(3) and 39(9)
Section 37(3) governs corrections to GSTR-1 (outward supply statement). Section 39(9) governs corrections to GSTR-3B. Both permit rectification only up to 30 November of the financial year following the one in which the error occurred, or the date of filing the annual return, whichever is earlier.
A supplier makes an error in her GSTR-1 for July 2022 (FY 2022-23). She can correct it only until 30 November 2023. After that, the portal does not permit changes. If the buyer’s ITC was denied because of this error, and the correction window has closed, the Revenue’s position was that nothing can be done. It is exactly this position that the Supreme Court found unacceptable in both Aberdare and Brij Systems.
Case 1CBIC v. Aberdare Technologies Pvt. Ltd.
Background and Bombay High Court
Aberdare Technologies Pvt. Ltd. is a Mumbai-based company. It filed its GST returns on time. However, in December 2023, the company discovered clerical errors in its already-filed GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B returns. Crucially, these errors caused no loss of revenue to the government. The underlying transactions were genuine and the tax had been paid correctly.
Aberdare approached the GST authorities with a request to rectify the returns. The authorities refused, citing the expired Section 39(9) deadline. Aberdare filed W.P. No. 7912 of 2024 before the Bombay High Court. A Division Bench of Justice K.R. Shriram and Justice Jitendra Jain decided the matter on 29 July 2024. The court relied on its earlier judgment in Star Engineers (I) Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India (W.P. No. 15368 of 2023, decided 14 December 2023), which held that if there is no loss of revenue, corrections to GSTR-1 must be allowed even after the November deadline.
Supreme Court Order: 21 March 2025
CBIC challenged the Bombay HC order before the Supreme Court. A bench of the Chief Justice and Justice Sanjay Kumar dismissed the SLP on 21 March 2025. The court found no reason to interfere. It noted that no revenue loss arose from the errors. More importantly, it directed CBIC to re-examine the timelines fixed for correcting bona fide errors under Sections 37(3) and 39(9) and held that the right to correct genuine clerical or arithmetical mistakes flows from the right to do business and should not be denied without good justification.
The court also observed that certain High Court decisions, specifically Bar Code India Limited v. Union of India and Yokohama India Private Limited v. State of Telangana, prima facie do not lay down good law on this issue. This is a notable adverse observation against rulings that had previously supported the Revenue’s rigid stance.
Case 2Union of India v. Brij Systems Ltd.
Background and Bombay High Court
Brij Systems Ltd. is a Maharashtra-based company. Its supplier made errors in GSTR-1 filings for FY 2017-18. These errors caused mismatches that resulted in ITC being denied to Brij Systems. The company approached the GST portal to correct the GSTR-1. The portal rejected the request because the Section 37(3) rectification period had elapsed. Brij Systems filed W.P. No. 783/2022 before the Bombay High Court. The court decided the matter on 2 July 2024, ruling in favour of Brij Systems and holding that ITC could not be denied to the buyer on account of mistakes or errors or mismatches in the supplier’s returns.
Supreme Court Order: 24 March 2025
The Union of India and CBIC challenged the Bombay HC order before a three-judge bench of the Chief Justice, Justice Sanjay Kumar, and Justice K.V. Viswanathan. The court dismissed the SLP on 24 March 2025, referring to its own earlier dismissal of the Aberdare Technologies SLP (SLP (C) No. 7903/2025), already decided on 21 March 2025.
The court’s order recorded a significant observation from the proceedings: in all such cases, even the Revenue accepted that the underlying mistake was a clerical or arithmetical error. Yet the Revenue’s position was that correction is not possible after expiry of the period under Sections 37(3) and 39(9). The court found this stance unacceptable. The bench issued notice to CBIC to address the broader systemic issue and appointed Senior Advocate Mr. Arvind P. Datar as Amicus Curiae. The case was re-listed for the week commencing 28 April 2025.
What the Supreme Court Established: Core Principles
| Principle | Source | What It Means in Practice |
|---|---|---|
| ITC cannot be denied to a buyer for the supplier’s clerical or arithmetical error | Both SC orders | Where the error is accepted as genuine and the underlying transaction is real, denial of ITC to the buyer is not sustainable. |
| The right to correct clerical errors flows from the right to do business | Aberdare SC order | Error rectification is not a departmental favour. It is an inherent right. It cannot be refused without good justification. |
| Rectification timelines under Sections 37(3) and 39(9) must be realistic. CBIC directed to re-examine them. | Aberdare SC order | The current statutory windows may be widened. CBIC must respond to the court’s direction. |
| Portal limitations are not valid justifications for denying corrections | Aberdare SC order | GSTN portal limitations cannot override taxpayer rights. Manual corrections must be accepted where the portal does not permit online changes. |
| No double taxation: buyers who paid tax cannot be made to pay again | Aberdare SC order: “Purchaser is not at fault, having paid the tax amount. He suffers because he is denied the benefit of tax paid by him.” | Denial of ITC in such circumstances amounts to double payment. The GST design does not permit this outcome. |
| Barcode India Ltd. and Yokohama India HC decisions do not lay down good law | Aberdare SC order | HC decisions that had supported the Revenue’s rigid stance are implicitly overruled by this observation. |
A Practical Example
Situation: ABC Pvt. Ltd. (Delhi) purchases raw materials in October 2022 from XYZ Ltd. (Mumbai). Invoice value: Rs 10 lakh. GST at 18%: Rs 1.8 lakh. ABC pays XYZ Rs 11.8 lakh in full.
XYZ files its GSTR-1 for October 2022 but mistakenly enters the GSTIN of ABC’s Kolkata branch instead of the Delhi office. As a result, ABC Delhi’s GSTR-2B does not show the Rs 1.8 lakh ITC. ABC asks XYZ to correct the GSTR-1. By December 2023, the Section 37(3) window for FY 2022-23 has closed on 30 November 2023.
Before March 2025: ABC loses Rs 1.8 lakh ITC permanently. Its only option is costly litigation with uncertain outcome.
After March 2025: ABC can approach the authority for rectification. Aberdare and Brij Systems support the claim. Rectification must be allowed since the error is clerical, the transaction is genuine, and the tax has been paid.
How Courts Across India Have Applied These Principles
| Court and Case | Issue | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Bombay HC: Star Engineers (I) Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India (Dec 2023) | GSTR-1 correction sought after 30 November deadline. No revenue loss. | Correction allowed. Foundational precedent for Aberdare and subsequent cases. |
| Bombay HC: Aberdare Technologies (Jul 2024) | Clerical errors in GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B. Rectification refused post Section 39(9) deadline. | Rectification allowed. CBIC’s SLP dismissed by SC on 21 March 2025. |
| Bombay HC: Brij Systems (Jul 2024) | Supplier’s GSTR-1 errors denied ITC to buyer. Correction window lapsed. | ITC denial held unsustainable. Revenue’s SLP dismissed by SC on 24 March 2025. |
| Delhi HC: M/S B Braun Medical India Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India (Mar 2025) | Supplier entered wrong GSTIN (Mumbai instead of Delhi office). ITC demand of Rs 5.65 crore raised. | Demand set aside. Clerical GSTIN error does not justify ITC denial where transaction is genuine. |
| SC: Principal Chief Commr. of GST v. Deepa Traders (2025) | Rectification of GSTR-1 post deadline; clerical errors including wrong GSTIN and omitted invoices. | SLP dismissed by SC citing Aberdare Technologies as binding precedent. |
| Patna HC: Om Traders v. Union of India (2025) | Mismatch between GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B due to inadvertent error. | GSTR-3B rectification allowed to match GSTR-1 figures already on record. |
What CBIC Is Directed to Do
The Brij Systems SC order does not just dismiss the Revenue’s SLP. It issues notice to CBIC and appoints an Amicus Curiae to address the broader systemic issue. The Supreme Court is not merely ruling on one case. It is signalling that the GST rectification framework itself needs fixing.
Specifically, CBIC has been directed to respond on whether the timelines under Sections 37(3) and 39(9) are adequate and whether a more liberal rectification regime should be introduced for genuine clerical or arithmetical errors where no revenue loss occurs. Until CBIC acts, courts have been consistently directing authorities to either open the portal within one week of the order or accept manual correction requests, with a hearing before any rejection.
What Businesses Should Do: A Practical Guide
| Situation | Recommended Action |
|---|---|
| Supplier error in GSTR-1 and rectification window is still open | Ask your supplier to correct the GSTR-1 immediately. Monitor GSTR-2B for the corrected credit. File GSTR-3B accordingly. |
| Supplier error discovered after rectification window closed. Error is clerical. No revenue loss. | Document the nature of the error. Get written confirmation from the supplier. Approach the jurisdictional GST officer for manual rectification. Cite Aberdare Technologies and Brij Systems. |
| Officer refuses manual rectification citing portal limitations or statutory deadline | File a writ petition before the relevant High Court. The SC’s March 2025 orders, Aberdare, Brij Systems, and Star Engineers together provide strong grounds for relief. |
| ITC denied because supplier’s GSTR-2B mismatch due to wrong GSTIN | Cite B Braun Medical (Delhi HC). The genuineness of the underlying transaction matters more than the GSTIN mismatch. |
| ITC denied because supplier did not deposit GST | This is a separate issue from clerical errors. Cite the Calcutta HC position upheld by SC (2023): Revenue must first exhaust efforts to recover from the supplier. The buyer should not bear the cost of the supplier’s non-compliance. |
| Received a demand notice for ITC reversal due to supplier error | Do not ignore it. Respond within the deadline. Attach evidence of the genuine transaction, proof of GST payment to the supplier, and a note explaining the supplier’s error. Cite the March 2025 SC orders. |
What Has Changed and What Has Not
| Aspect | Before March 2025 | After March 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| ITC denial for supplier’s clerical error after correction window | Upheld by many officers and some HCs. Portal limitation treated as final. | Not sustainable. SC: buyer should not suffer for supplier’s accepted clerical error. |
| Manual rectification after portal window closes | Generally refused by departments. | Courts directing manual rectification. CBIC directed to revisit timelines. |
| Validity of Barcode India and Yokohama HC decisions | Treated as valid departmental authority in some jurisdictions. | SC in Aberdare observed these decisions prima facie do not lay down good law. |
| CBIC’s role in the rectification issue | Passive. Cited portal limitations and statutory deadlines. | Under direct SC direction to re-examine timelines. Amicus Curiae appointed. |
| Section 16(2)(aa) GSTR-2B condition | Enforced rigidly, even for genuine supplier errors. | Enforcement tempered by the right to rectification and strong judicial backing. |
Closing Thoughts
The GST system was built to be seamless. Tax paid at one stage should flow as credit to the next. When a supplier’s typing mistake severs that flow and leaves the buyer out of pocket, the system has failed its own design.
The Supreme Court’s March 2025 orders are a clear and overdue correction. The court has said in plain language: human errors happen, the system must accommodate them, and buyers who have paid their tax cannot be punished for their supplier’s mistakes.
The Brij Systems order is not the end of this story. With an Amicus Curiae appointed and CBIC under notice, a further Supreme Court direction, a CBIC circular, or a legislative amendment to Sections 37(3) and 39(9) is possible. Any of these could bring systemic relief to thousands of businesses currently fighting ITC denial cases across India’s tax tribunals and courts.
At FiscalZenith, we are watching this space closely. If you are dealing with an ITC denial due to a supplier’s error, the law is now squarely on your side. The March 2025 orders give you the foundation to push back. Use them.
Get written confirmation from your supplier acknowledging the error and confirming that the GST was deposited with the government. Document the genuine nature of the underlying transaction. Approach your jurisdictional GST officer with a formal request for manual rectification, citing Aberdare Technologies (SC SLP (C) No. 7903/2025, 21 March 2025) and Brij Systems (SC Diary No. 6334/2025, 24 March 2025). If the officer refuses on portal limitation grounds, file a writ petition before your state’s High Court. Courts have been consistently granting relief in such cases.
Yes, it does. The SC in Deepa Traders (2025) dismissed the Revenue’s SLP in a case involving omitted invoices in GSTR-1, citing Aberdare Technologies as binding precedent. The principle is the same: if the omission is a genuine mistake, not deliberate fraud, and the underlying transaction and tax payment are verifiable, the buyer should not lose ITC permanently. Approach the officer for rectification or the court for relief, with evidence of the genuine supply and tax payment.
No, this is a different situation. The Aberdare and Brij Systems rulings address clerical or arithmetical errors by the supplier where the tax has actually been paid. If your supplier has not deposited the GST collected from you, a different set of principles applies. The Calcutta High Court’s ruling (upheld by the Supreme Court in 2023) holds that the Revenue must first exhaust all efforts to recover the tax from the defaulting supplier before denying ITC to the buyer. You should challenge the demand on this basis, insisting the department proceed against the supplier first.
No. Section 16(2)(aa) ties ITC to GSTR-2B data. However, the SC’s March 2025 orders make clear that where the GSTR-2B data is incorrect because of a supplier’s clerical error, the buyer has the right to seek rectification. The GSTR-2B condition cannot be used as a permanent barrier against ITC that the buyer is legitimately entitled to. The right to correct genuine errors and have the GSTR-2B reflect accurate data is now judicially recognised.
The Supreme Court in Brij Systems has specifically directed CBIC to re-examine the timelines under Sections 37(3) and 39(9) for bona fide errors. Whether CBIC will issue a circular or whether Parliament will amend these provisions is not yet known. FiscalZenith is monitoring this development and will report as soon as any circular or amendment is issued. Until then, the judicial route via writ petitions remains the primary avenue for businesses whose correction window has lapsed.
This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or tax advice. All case citations and factual details are based on verified publicly available sources including the Supreme Court’s actual order in Brij Systems (Diary No. 6334/2025) and the Aberdare Technologies order (SLP (C) No. 7903/2025), verified as of June 2026. Readers should consult a qualified GST professional for guidance specific to their circumstances.








