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Issues Involved:
1. Construction and applicability of Heading No. 84.66 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975. 2. Registration of contracts for the supply of spares as part of the original contracts for plant and machinery. 3. Procedural versus mandatory requirements for registration under Heading No. 84.66. 4. Interpretation of ambiguous provisions in favor of the appellant. 5. Impossibility of compliance with the registration requirement. Detailed Analysis: 1. Construction and Applicability of Heading No. 84.66: The primary issue in this appeal was the construction and applicability of Heading No. 84.66 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975. The appellant contended that the contracts for the supply of spares should be considered part of the original contracts for the supply of plant and machinery, thereby qualifying for concessional duty under Heading No. 84.66. However, the Assistant Collector and the Collector (Appeals) refused this registration, stating that the contracts for spares were separate and could not be correlated with the main contract for plant and machinery. 2. Registration of Contracts for Spares: The appellant argued that the contracts for the supply of spares contained references to the earlier contracts for plant and machinery, and the sellers were identical. The DGTD Certificate recommended the spares, indicating their necessity for the plant and machinery. Despite this, the Assistant Collector refused registration on the grounds that the contracts for spares were separate and not part of the original contracts for plant and machinery. 3. Procedural vs. Mandatory Requirements: The appellant argued that the requirement for registration under Heading No. 84.66 was merely procedural and not mandatory. They relied on various judicial decisions to support their claim that procedural requirements should not defeat justice. However, the Tribunal emphasized that the statutory requirements for registration were mandatory. The language of Heading No. 84.66 was clear and unambiguous, requiring the registration of both the contracts for plant and machinery and the spares as part of the same contract. 4. Interpretation of Ambiguous Provisions: The appellant contended that if there was any ambiguity in the statutory provision, it should be interpreted in favor of the appellant. However, the Tribunal found no ambiguity in the language of Heading No. 84.66. The provision clearly required the registration of contracts for both plant and machinery and spares as part of the same contract. Therefore, the decisions cited by the appellant were deemed inapplicable. 5. Impossibility of Compliance: The appellant argued that it was impossible to apply for registration of the contracts for spares at the time of the original registration because the requirements for spares were not yet determined. The Tribunal rejected this argument, stating that Regulation 5 of the Project Imports (Registration of Contracts) Regulations, 1965, allowed for amendments to the registered contracts. The appellant could have amended the original contracts to include the spares before the clearance of plant and machinery. Conclusion: The Tribunal held that the requirements for registration under Heading No. 84.66 were mandatory and not merely procedural. The appellant failed to comply with these requirements by not registering the contracts for spares as part of the original contracts for plant and machinery. Therefore, the appeal was dismissed, and the refusal to register the contracts for spares was upheld. The Tribunal also noted that there were previous decisions on identical facts that supported their conclusion.
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