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    <title>Central Excise Officers Can Recover Customs Duty from EOUs, but Evidence and Procedures Must Be Solid</title>
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    <description>CESTAT held that Central Excise officers possess jurisdiction to issue show cause notices for recovery of customs duty from EOUs under their administrative control, affirming the validity of notifications and circulars delegating such authority. However, the department failed to substantiate the clandestine removal allegations with credible evidence or proper documentation, rendering duty demands unsustainable. Procedural lapses, such as expired warehousing licenses during stock transfers between EOUs, were deemed insufficient to justify duty recovery. Consequently, demands and penalties related to shortages and clearances were set aside. The tribunal remanded issues concerning duty on deemed exports to certain parties for fresh adjudication. The appeal was allowed in part, quashing most demands while directing reconsideration of specific deemed export claims.</description>
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    <pubDate>Mon, 07 Jul 2025 08:42:49 +0530</pubDate>
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      <title>Central Excise Officers Can Recover Customs Duty from EOUs, but Evidence and Procedures Must Be Solid</title>
      <link>https://www.taxtmi.com/highlights?id=90188</link>
      <description>CESTAT held that Central Excise officers possess jurisdiction to issue show cause notices for recovery of customs duty from EOUs under their administrative control, affirming the validity of notifications and circulars delegating such authority. However, the department failed to substantiate the clandestine removal allegations with credible evidence or proper documentation, rendering duty demands unsustainable. Procedural lapses, such as expired warehousing licenses during stock transfers between EOUs, were deemed insufficient to justify duty recovery. Consequently, demands and penalties related to shortages and clearances were set aside. The tribunal remanded issues concerning duty on deemed exports to certain parties for fresh adjudication. The appeal was allowed in part, quashing most demands while directing reconsideration of specific deemed export claims.</description>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 07 Jul 2025 08:42:49 +0530</pubDate>
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