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2020 (6) TMI 396

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....fiscating 626 gms of gold jewellery, comprising of one gold chain and 10 gold bangles, valued at Rs. 19,71,900/- under section 111 (d) and 111 (1) of Customs Act, 1962 and imposition of penalty of Rs. 1,95,000/- under section 112 (a) of Customs Act, 1962, has been upheld while dropping the penalty imposed by the original authority under section 114AA of Customs Act, 1962. 2. At the outset, the Learned Authorised Representative objected to the disposal of this appeal on the ground that the jurisdiction in a dispute relating to 'baggage' vested with the Government of India, in its revisionary authority, and was not under the appellate jurisdiction of the Tribunal. 3. In our opinion, this view is misplaced as 'baggage' undoubtedly vests ....

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.... Hon'ble High Court of Madras in which the Tribunal has been directed to dispose off the appeal without any delay. Before the Hon'ble High Court, Revenue did not appear to have expressed its reservations about the jurisdiction of the Tribunal and it is much too late in the day to raise this  plea before the Tribunal. 4. Turning to the facts of the dispute, the appellant travelled from Kuala Lumpur by Malaysian Airlines flight no. MH 180 on 4^th September 2016 and was intercepted with the impugned goods which has been certified by the assayer to be gold of '24 carat' purity. The goods were seized and, after waiver of show-cause notice by the appellant herein, offence was adjudicated upon with the consequence that was carried before C....

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....nreliable as '24 carat' gold jewellery cannot be manufactured as a durable article, she insists that failure to furnish the certificate is another reason to discard its evidentiary value. Her final contention is that section 125 of Customs Act, 1962 has been misdirected in the present instance because it is only on prohibited goods, and, that too, not mandatorily, can the denial of redemption be fastened. She places reliance on the decision of the Hon'ble High Court of Gujarat in Ambalal Moraji Soni v. Union of India & Other [AIR 1972 Guj 126], the decision of Hon'ble High Court of Kerala in Vigneswaran Sethuraman v. Union of India [2014 (308) ELT 394 (Ker)] and the decision of Hon'ble High Court of Telengana in Ahmed Abdul Farees v. Union ....

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....strained to note that concealment has not been established. Furthermore, there is no statement of anyone that could warrant the conclusion of deliberate intent to smuggle gold in any form. It is also seen that the proceedings have been based on the erroneous presumptions of the imported jewellery having been gold of '24 carat' purity which is practically not possible. 8. There is nothing on record to establish that the import of gold jewellery is prohibited either under the Customs Act, 1962 or under any other law for the time being in force. Under section 33 of the Foreign Trade, Development and Regulation Act, 1992, it is only such goods, to which an order under section 32 of the same Act has been issued by the Central Government, that....