Compounding of offences lacks an appeal remedy, requiring applicants to pursue relief by filing writ petitions. Compounding of offences under the Central Excise/indirect tax framework provides no statutory appeal against orders of the compounding authority; consequently, an aggrieved applicant must seek relief by filing a Writ Petition to obtain judicial review of the compounding order.
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.
Compounding of offences lacks an appeal remedy, requiring applicants to pursue relief by filing writ petitions.
Compounding of offences under the Central Excise/indirect tax framework provides no statutory appeal against orders of the compounding authority; consequently, an aggrieved applicant must seek relief by filing a Writ Petition to obtain judicial review of the compounding order.
Full Summary is available for active users!
Note: It is a system-generated summary and is for quick reference only.