

🎓 Subscribe for Free Classes & Book Reviews
Subscribe on YouTubeFormat |
Printed Books |
Book Language |
English |
Faculty Name |
A Jatin Christopher |
Package Details |
7th Edition (2026). How to Deal with GST Show Cause Notices with Pleadings is a practitioner's manual for the decisive moment of any GST dispute—when a notice lands and the reply must be drafted. Instead of restating the statute, it teaches a method: trace every notice to its enabling provision ('Under which section?'), expose the defects that are 'incurable and fatal to the demand,' and plead with precision rather than volume. Across 30 chapters in two divisions, it works through every notice type—sections 25/29, 63, 73, 74, the new 74A and 76, plus system-generated, refund, e-way-bill, penalty and confiscation notices—and the full remedy chain from adjudication and appeal to revision and the GST Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT). A dedicated second division then converts that commentary into a bank of ready-to-adapt model pleadings for replies, departmental engagement, appeal memos and Tribunal grounds. Fully updated for the Finance Act 2026 (section 74A, Rules 88C/142B/88D and the GSTAT Procedure Rules), it is built to serve CAs, CMAs, CSs, advocates, consultants and in-house tax teams as both a cover-to-cover read and a desk-side reference. Paperback Book |
Item Code |
9789375612322 |
Exams |
PROFESSIONAL BOOKS |
Delivery |
Home Delivery within 7-10 days from the date of Payment Confirmation. |
Brand |
Taxmann |
No of Pages |
840 |
Taxmann's How to Deal with GST Show Cause Notices with Pleadings - Book by A Jatin Christopher
Edition : 7th (2026)
How to Deal with GST Show Cause Notices with Pleadings is a practitioner's manual on the most decisive phase of a GST dispute—the moment a notice arrives and a reply must be drafted. Rather than restating the statute, it teaches a method: read what a notice actually alleges, pin down the precise provision that authorises it (the book's recurring test is 'Under which section?'), expose the deficiencies and discrepancies that are 'incurable and fatal to the demand,' and then plead the case with precision instead of volume.
The book is built on a hard-won philosophy. It warns against the reflex of filing 'reams of submissions without making a single clinching point,' argues that an over-eager response to a preliminary enquiry can hand the department its own case, and insists the 'accept and discharge' versus 'dispute and litigate' choice is a commercial decision best deferred until the notice is formally issued. Its opening chapter, Background, sets the constitutional spine—procedures established by law and due process—anchored in authorities such as Mohinder Singh Gill v. CEC (AIR 1978 SC 851), and that lens runs through every later chapter. It is, in the author's words, 'a work that draws from years of making mistakes so that no one needs to make the same old ones.'
This Edition covers the new section 74A demand regime, system-generated notices, revisionary proceedings, and the GST Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT)—its structure, procedure, and the GSTAT Procedure Rules.
This book is intended for the following audience:
The Present Publication is the 7th Edition | 2026, amended by the Finance Act 2026. It is authored by CA. A Jatin Christopher with the following noteworthy features:
The coverage of the book is as follows:
The book is organised into two complementary divisions totalling 30 chapters.
USE COUPON : DIS10
* valid on selected products