This is a brief case where Cannon Industries Pvt. Ltd. and others filed a writ petition in the Punjab and Haryana High Court challenging certain letters issued by the GST (Goods and Service Tax) authorities. However, before the court could even get into the merits of the case, the petitioners’ lawyer decided to withdraw the petition — choosing instead to first approach the tax authority directly with a detailed representation. The court allowed the withdrawal and gave the petitioners the freedom to pursue other legal remedies available to them.
Get the full picture - access the original judgement of the court order here
Cannon Industries Pvt. Ltd. and others v. Commissioner of Goods & Service Tax, Ludhiana
Court Name: High Court of Punjab and Haryana at Chandigarh
Case No.: CWP-1974-2019
Decided on: 24th January 2019
The central question before the court was:
Were the letters dated 11.06.2018 and 15.06.2018 issued by the Deputy Commissioner, GST Division, Ludhiana, legally valid and should they be quashed?
However, this question was never answered by the court because the petitioners withdrew the petition before the court could rule on it.
1. Cannon Industries Pvt. Ltd. and others (the petitioners) were aggrieved by two letters — dated 11.06.2018 and 15.06.2018 — issued by the Deputy Commissioner, Goods and Service Tax Division, Central Savitri Complex – II, Dada Motor, G.T. Road, Ludhiana (referred to as Annexure P-5 and P-6 in the petition).
2. The petitioners approached the Punjab and Haryana High Court by filing a writ petition under Articles 226/227 of the Constitution of India, seeking a writ of certiorari to quash those two letters.
3. When the matter came up for hearing on 24.01.2019, the petitioners’ lawyer argued for some time but then changed course — he requested the court to allow withdrawal of the petition.
4. The reason for withdrawal was that the petitioners wanted to first approach the respondent (GST Commissioner) directly by filing a detailed and comprehensive representation, bringing all the facts mentioned in the writ petition to the authority’s notice.
5. The court allowed the withdrawal and dismissed the petition accordingly.
Since the petition was withdrawn before full arguments, there isn’t much to report here. But here’s what we know:
Petitioners’ Side (Cannon Industries Pvt. Ltd. and others):
Respondent’s Side (Commissioner of GST, Ludhiana):
The judgment is very brief and does not cite any legal precedents or case laws. No specific sections of the GST Act or any other statute were discussed in the judgment, as the case was withdrawn before any substantive legal analysis could take place.
The only constitutional provisions referenced are:
The court’s decision was simple and clean:
Q1: Why did the petitioners withdraw the case?
The petitioners’ lawyer felt it was better to first approach the GST authority directly with a detailed representation, rather than continuing with the High Court petition. This is a common strategy — exhaust administrative remedies before going to court.
Q2: Does this judgment mean Cannon Industries lost the case?
Not really! The case was simply withdrawn — the court did not rule against them on merits. They still have the right to pursue all available legal remedies.
Q3: What were the two letters about?
The judgment does not reveal the specific content of the letters dated 11.06.2018 and 15.06.2018. We only know they were issued by the Deputy Commissioner, GST Division, Ludhiana, and the petitioners found them objectionable enough to challenge in the High Court.
Q4: Can Cannon Industries come back to the High Court later?
Yes, absolutely! The court specifically preserved their right to pursue remedies “as may be available in accordance with law.” So if the GST authority doesn’t resolve their grievance, they can approach the High Court again.
Q5: Does this case set any legal precedent?
No. Since the case was withdrawn without any ruling on the merits, it does not establish any legal precedent on GST law or any other legal issue.
Q6: What is a writ of certiorari?
A writ of certiorari is a legal order issued by a higher court (like the High Court) to a lower court or authority, directing it to send up the records of a case for review. In this context, the petitioners wanted the High Court to review and quash the letters issued by the GST authority.

1. The petitioners inter alia have approached this Court under Articles 226/227 of the Constitution of India for issuance of a writ in the nature of certiorari for quashing the letters dated 11.06.2018 and 15.06.2018 (Annexure P-5 and P-6) respectively issued by the Deputy Commissioner, Goods and Service Tax Division, Central Savitri Complex – II, Dada Motor, G.T. Road, Ludhiana.
2. After arguing for sometime, learned counsel for the
petitioners submitted that he may be allowed to withdraw the present
petition with liberty to the petitioners to approach the respondent-
authority by filing a detailed and comprehensive representation at the
first instance bringing the facts as stated in the writ petition to his notice.
3. Dismissed as withdrawn. However, it shall be open to the
petitioners to take recourse to the remedies as may be, available to it, in
accordance with law.
(AJAY KUMAR MITTAL)
JUDGE
(MANJARI NEHRU KAUL)
JUDGE