A bench of Justices S Muralidhar and Pratibha M Singh also posed several queries regarding the release issued by the finance ministry subsequent to the high court's July 12 order asking the government to clarify on which legal services the GST was to be paid on reverse charge basis.
Reverse charge basis means that the tax will have to be paid by the service recipient which will be litigants under the present circumstances.
Narula was also asked yesterday by the court to ascertain whether a lawyer or law firm registered under the Finance Act, before the service tax regime was replaced by the GST, could surrender the registration, and if yes, what was the mechanism.
This query was posed after the petitioner advocate, J K Mittal, claimed there was no mechanism to surrender the registration.
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The court also said that till further orders, all the legal services provided by the advocates, including senior counsel, law firms and LLPs will continue to be governed by the reverse charge mechanism.
The court was hearing Mittal's plea seeking quashing of the notifications issued by the Centre and the Delhi government acclording to which the GST would be paid by the advocates and law firms on all services offered by them, except representing their clients in the courts.
Mittal has claimed that the decisions of the two governments were contrary to the recommendation of the GST Council which had recommended that on all services offered by a lawyer or law firm, the service recipient would pay the GST.
The petition also alleged that the council had recommended that the lawyers or law firms should be exempt from registration under the central and state GST laws, which has also not been followed by the two governments.