Tribunal Waives Pre-Deposit for Cut Flower Duties The Tribunal granted the waiver of pre-deposit of duty and penalty in a case involving clearances of cut flowers in the Domestic Tariff Area under ...
Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
The Tribunal granted the waiver of pre-deposit of duty and penalty in a case involving clearances of cut flowers in the Domestic Tariff Area under Notification No. 126/94-Cus. The Tribunal held that the duty liability under the notification applied to inputs used in the production or packaging of the non-excisable cut flowers, not the flowers themselves. Consequently, the Tribunal found a strong prima facie case for waiver, leading to the decision to dispense with the pre-deposit of duty and penalty, thereby staying the recovery pending the appeal.
Issues: Waiver of pre-deposit of duty and penalty under Notification No. 126/94-Cus. dated 3-6-1994 for clearances of cut flowers in DTA.
Analysis: The case involved an application for waiver of pre-deposit of duty amounting to Rs. 22,70,904/- and a penalty of Rs. 50,000/- arising from a Commissioner of Central Excise (Appeals) order regarding clearances of cut flowers. The applicants were issued a show cause notice proposing recovery of the mentioned amounts due to the alleged ineligibility for exemption under Notification No. 126/94-Cus. dated 3-6-1994 for clearances of cut flowers in DTA. The adjudicating authority acknowledged that the flowers sold by the applicants in DTA were not excisable but held that they would be liable to duty under Para 3 of the notification, confirming the demand and imposing a penalty. The lower appellate authority upheld this decision, leading to the appeal and waiver application before the Tribunal.
Upon hearing both parties and examining the notification in question, the Tribunal observed that the exemption applied to goods imported into India for specific purposes related to export-oriented undertakings. As per Para 3 of the notification, liability to pay customs duty would arise on goods used for production, manufacture, or packaging of articles that are not excisable. In this case, the cut flowers cleared by the applicants to DTA were considered non-excisable articles, shifting the duty liability to the inputs used in the production or packaging of the cut flowers, not the flowers themselves. The Tribunal found a strong prima facie case for waiver based on a plain reading of the notification, leading to the decision to dispense with the pre-deposit of duty and penalty, thereby staying the recovery pending the appeal.
Full Summary is available for active users!
Note: It is a system-generated summary and is for quick reference only.