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GST & Allied Laws

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Short Description :

GST & Allied Laws is a comprehensive and interdisciplinary commentary that situates GST interpretation within the larger framework of Indian commercial, regulatory, and private law. It advances a first-principles methodology, emphasising legally verifiable facts, enforceable rights, and substantive characterisation over form or accounting description. The 4th Edition (updated till February 2026) incorporates recent judicial developments, insolvency reforms, cross-border structuring issues, and emerging digital economy concerns. Spanning foundational private law, tax and corporate interfaces, and sector-specific regulations, the book provides structured, litigation-ready reasoning for complex GST advisory and dispute scenarios.

Subject :

GST & Allied Laws

Author :

CA A Jatin Christopher

Feature :

GST & Allied Laws is a deeply analytical and interdisciplinary commentary that repositions GST interpretation within the broader framework of Indian commercial, regulatory, and private law. Rather than viewing GST as an isolated statute, this work operates on the foundational premise that every taxable supply stems from a legally recognisable relationship—whether contractual, proprietary, corporate, statutory, or regulatory—and that accurate GST outcomes can only be achieved by first understanding the true legal nature of that underlying relationship. The book establishes a first-principles framework for GST analysis. It stresses that facts must be verified, rights must be legally enforceable, documentation must hold legal significance, and regulatory assertions under other statutes may greatly influence GST consequences. It differentiates between mere accounting disclosures and legally provable facts, between commercial descriptions and legal substance, and between statutory fiction and genuinely enforceable rights. In doing so, it elevates GST interpretation from a provision-based task to a jurisprudence-oriented discipline. This edition incorporates contemporary judicial developments, evolving commercial practices, cross-border structuring trends, insolvency reforms, digital economy challenges, and sector-specific regulatory modifications. It aims not only to explain GST law but also to equip professionals with solid reasoning that can withstand scrutiny before adjudicating authorities, appellate tribunals, and courts.

This book is intended for the following audience:

Chartered Accountants, Cost Accountants, and Indirect Tax Advisors

GST Litigation Specialists and Legal Practitioners

Corporate In-House Tax and Legal Departments

Insolvency Professionals and Restructuring Advisors

Senior Executives responsible for compliance, contracting, and structuring

Advanced Students of indirect taxation and commercial law

It is particularly valuable in complex, high-stakes matters where GST positions intersect with contract enforceability, corporate restructuring, sectoral regulation, cross-border presence, valuation disputes, or exemption classification

The Present Publication is the 4th Edition, updated through February 2026. It is authored by CA. A Jatin Christopher, with the following noteworthy features:

[First-principles Methodology] The work starts with a ‘Background’ chapter that sets out interpretative principles—examining the role of facts, legal fiction, judicial notice, statutory interpretation, evidentiary standards, and the constitutional requirement that no tax be imposed without lawful authority. It warns against mechanical reliance on disclosures or mismatches and stresses the importance of reconstructing GST issues through legally defensible reasoning

[Allied Laws as Interpretative Frameworks] Allied statutes are regarded not as mere references but as interpretative frameworks for GST. The book systematically shows how principles from:

Contract law

Property law

Corporate law

Income-tax law

Insolvency law

Securities regulation

SEZ and Customs law

Intellectual property law

Banking and insurance regulation

Education and medical regulation

Digital and internet intermediary frameworks

Gaming and criminal law

directly impact GST liability, valuation, classification, exemption, credit eligibility, recovery, and procedural aspects

[Fact-Discipline and Evidentiary Sensitivity] A key aspect of this work is its emphasis on the integrity of factual assertions. It examines how statements made to one regulator may influence GST exposure with respect to another—while carefully differentiating between comparable and non-comparable statutory contexts. This makes the book particularly relevant in multi-regulatory environments

[Integration of Recent Legal Developments] The 2026 Edition includes recent developments such as:

Amendments affecting insolvency resolution processes and how government dues are handled

Evolving jurisprudence on valuation, legal fictions, and the principles of substance over form

Sector-specific regulatory developments influencing GST classification

Contemporary issues related to virtual digital assets and modern digital business models

[Sector-specific Analytical Depth] Few GST commentaries attempt the level of sectoral granularity presented here. The book covers:

Real estate and RERA implications

Special Economic Zones and zero-rated structures

Corporate restructuring, mergers, and insolvency waterfalls

Securities transactions and the boundaries of GST exclusion

Intellectual property assignments, goodwill, and virtual assets

Healthcare exemptions and medicament classification

Education services and edtech models

Internet intermediaries and e-commerce operator liability

Banking, FEMA, merchanting trade, wallets, and loyalty programmes

Insurance sector peculiarities

Online gaming models and Rule 31A controversies

Criminal procedure, burden of proof, and investigative exposure under GST

This breadth makes it a practical tool for addressing real-world commercial complexity.

The architecture of the book reflects deliberate progression:

Foundational Framework

Background principles of interpretation

Legal fiction and statutory construction

Evidentiary value of documents and disclosures

Core Private Law Foundations

Indian Contract Act

Sale of Goods Act

Transfer of Property Act

Registration Act

Easements Act

Limitation Act

These chapters define the legal aspects of supply, enforceable rights, the transfer of title, immovable property interests, the validity of documentation, and restrictions on exposure—essential to GST characterisation

Tax and Corporate Interface

Income-tax Act (legal fictions, PE concepts, valuation implications)

Customs Act and SEZ Act (border tax interplay, zero-rating, debonding)

Companies Act and Securities Contracts Act (corporate personality, restructuring, securities exclusion)

Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (moratorium, waterfall, extinguishment of dues)

Sectoral and Regulatory Laws

Real Estate Regulation

Carrier and Motor Vehicle laws

Competition law

Intellectual Property laws

Medical and healthcare regulation

Education law

Internet intermediaries and digital platforms

Insurance and banking laws

FEMA and cross-border trade

Gaming regulation

Criminal law implications

General Clauses Act

Each chapter isolates the ‘Relevance to GST,’ establishes doctrinal essentials under that statute, and then analyses applied GST implications

The book follows a consistent analytical template within chapters:

Identification of why the statute matters to GST

Doctrinal essentials under that law

Practical and sectoral illustrations

Jurisprudential insights

GST consequence analysis

This structure mirrors the problem-solving approach required in advisory and litigation practice

Dispatch :The Book shall be Dispatched by standard Courier Service within 2 working Days.


Author:

CA A Jatin Christopher

Publisher:
Taxmann
Date of Publication :
March 2026
Edition :

4th Edition

No of Pages :

658

A Jatin Christopher

A Jatin Christopher is a seasoned professional with a diverse background as a Chartered Accountant, Cost Accountant, and Law graduate. Since qualifying as a Chartered Accountant in 1996, he has been in practice since 2000, specialising in indirect tax advisory and litigation for Central and State tax legislation.

Jatin is a sought-after resource for the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) and the government, particularly in Customs, Foreign Trade Policy, and GST. His insights and contributions are widely published in numerous respected forums. He practices at a full-service firm based in Bangalore, providing comprehensive tax and legal services.

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