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Issues: Grant of refund of duty paid for ex-bond clearance, applicability of limitation period for filing refund claim, unjust enrichment regarding passing on of duty burden to customers, captively consumed goods, relevance of date of actual clearance for quantifying excess duty, interpretation of Section 15(1)(b) and Section 68 of the Customs Act.
The judgment pertains to an appeal regarding the grant of a refund of duty paid for ex-bond clearance. The appellants paid duty for bonded goods on 22-2-1993 but cleared the goods on 4-3-1993 when the duty rate had decreased. The issue centered on the relevant date for demanding duty, which, as per Section 15(1)(b) and Section 68 of the Customs Act, is the date of actual clearance from the warehouse. The lower authority deemed the refund claim untimely, relying on a different date for the limitation period calculation and citing Section 11B(2) due to the lack of evidence that duty burden was not passed on to customers. The appellant's advocate argued that since the goods were captively consumed in manufacturing computers, the decision in Solar Pesticides v. U.O.I. and Vardhaman Spinning & General Mills v. Collector of Customs should apply. He contended that the lower authority failed to differentiate the case law's application and wrongly focused on the duty burden passing to customers without evidence of direct sale. The advocate emphasized that if goods are captively consumed, the unjust enrichment provision does not apply, as established by the Bombay High Court's judgment in Solar Pesticides. The respondent's representative highlighted that the Solar Pesticides case was under appeal at the Supreme Court and suggested that the duty element might have been included in the end product's cost, thus passed on to customers. However, the Tribunal noted that the Bombay High Court ruled that if goods are captively consumed, the unjust enrichment provisions do not apply, thereby relieving the appellants from proving non-passing of duty burden to customers. Regarding the limitation issue, the Tribunal clarified that the duty payable for ex-bond clearance is determined at the actual clearance date, not the assessment date. In this case, the duty rate changed between assessment and clearance, making the date of actual clearance crucial for quantifying excess duty. Therefore, the relevant date for the limitation period was deemed to be the date when the cause of action for refund arose, which was the clearance date of 4-3-1993. Consequently, the refund claim filed on 2-9-1993 was within the time limit. The Tribunal set aside the lower authority's decision and remanded the matter for fresh consideration based on the clarified interpretation of the relevant provisions. Ultimately, the appeal was allowed by remand.
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