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Issues:
Appeal against judgment allowing writ petition, confiscation of goods under Customs Act, interpretation of term "rags" in trade, legality of imported goods, interference with findings of fact in absence of statutory definition. Analysis: The appeal was filed by the Union of India against a judgment allowing a writ petition challenging the confiscation of goods under the Customs Act. The case involved the interpretation of the term "rags" in the trade and the legality of imported goods. The firm in question was engaged in the manufacture of woollen textiles and had imported rags through the State Trading Corporation. The Customs Department seized bags of rags from the premises, alleging they were second-hand clothes illegally imported. The writ petitioner contended that the seized material was rags, not second-hand clothes. The Single Judge held in favor of the petitioner, emphasizing the absence of a statutory definition of "rags" and relying on trade understanding of the term. The Single Judge observed that the seized goods were described as "woollen rags" in the seizure memo, and the petitioner had legally imported woollen rags previously. The judgment highlighted that the material seized was within the total legally imported quantity and had been cleared by Customs. The Court agreed with a Bombay High Court judgment emphasizing the trade understanding of the term "rags." The Court rejected the argument that the finding of fact regarding the nature of the confiscated goods should not have been interfered with, citing precedents that allow interference under Article 226 if the finding is arbitrary. The Court upheld the Single Judge's conclusion that the confiscated articles were indeed "rags" and not subject to confiscation. In conclusion, the Court dismissed the appeal, directing the release of the confiscated material to the respondent-firm. The judgment reaffirmed the importance of trade understanding in interpreting terms like "rags" in the absence of a statutory definition.
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