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Issues: Imposition of personal penalties under Sections 112(a) and (b) of the Customs Act, 1962 without a proposal in the show cause notice.
The judgment by the Appellate Tribunal CESTAT, Mumbai, involved the appeal of two individuals who were aggrieved by the imposition of personal penalties of Rs. 50,000 each under Sections 112(a) and (b) of the Customs Act, 1962. The appellants contended that the proposal to impose penalties was against the companies they were associated with, not against them personally. The Tribunal noted that penalties under Section 112 are personal in nature, and there should have been a specific proposal in the show cause notice to impose penalties on the individuals. Since no such proposal existed, the imposition of penalties on the appellants was deemed unlawful as it went beyond the scope of the notice. Consequently, the Tribunal set aside the impugned order of the Commissioner in relation to the two appellants, allowing their appeals and granting consequential relief. The stay petitions were also disposed of in light of this decision. In this case, the key issue revolved around the imposition of personal penalties under Sections 112(a) and (b) of the Customs Act, 1962 without a clear proposal in the show cause notice directed at the individuals concerned. The Tribunal emphasized that penalties under Section 112 are personal in nature, necessitating a specific proposal in the notice to impose penalties on the individuals. The absence of such a proposal in the present case led the Tribunal to conclude that the imposition of penalties on the appellants was legally flawed as it exceeded the scope of the notice, which only targeted the manufacturing units associated with the appellants, not the individuals themselves. As a result, the Tribunal set aside the Commissioner's order concerning the two appellants, highlighting the importance of adherence to procedural requirements in imposing personal penalties under the Customs Act, 1962. The judgment delivered by the Appellate Tribunal CESTAT, Mumbai, underscored the significance of procedural regularity and adherence to legal requirements in matters concerning the imposition of personal penalties under the Customs Act, 1962. The Tribunal clarified that penalties under Section 112 of the Act are personal in nature and necessitate a clear proposal in the show cause notice specifically targeting the individuals for whom the penalties are intended. In this case, the absence of such a proposal in the notice led the Tribunal to invalidate the imposition of penalties on the appellants, as the penalties were imposed without proper notice or legal basis. By setting aside the Commissioner's order in relation to the two appellants, the Tribunal reaffirmed the importance of procedural fairness and the need for strict compliance with legal provisions when imposing personal penalties under the Customs Act, 1962.
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