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2025 (7) TMI 420 - AT - CustomsRefund claim - time limitation - entitlement to the benefit of section 14 of limitation Act - filing of refund claim without getting self assessed BOE. Whether the appellant is entitled for the benefit of section 14 of limitation Act? - HELD THAT - The assessing officer/appraiser herein could reassess the BOE only prior the good imported are not cleared for home consumption. Therefore it is an appeal only which is maintainable in terms of Section 128 of the Customs Act - It becomes clear that the appellant filed the application before original adjudicating authority in good faith. However the authority did not consider itself competent. Hence the time taken for getting the order with respect to request for reassessment of BOE is held to be the cause of the like nature of jurisdiction issue. The benefit under Section 14 of Limitation Act be awarded to the applicant/appellant. The Commissioner (Appeals) has not given any finding with respect to Section 14 of Limitation Act - the issue decided in favour of the appellants. Whether the refund claim filed by appellant without getting self assessed BOE is rightly rejected? - HELD THAT - The remedy of seeking refund of excess paid duty is available to the importer. Admittedly the application seeking reassessment of impugned BOE was filed by the appellant before the original adjudicating authority and that it could not be filed before assessing officer after goods were cleared. The original adjudicating authority has not properly exercised its jurisdiction as already held above. The request of appellant for reassessment of BOE was rather rejected on the ground of procedural lapses by the appraiser. It is the settled law that substantial benefit shall not be denied based on procedural lapses. Support drawn from the decision of Hon ble Supreme Court in the case of Ramnath Exports (P) Ltd. v. Vinita Mehta 2022 (7) TMI 1594 - SUPREME COURT the Apex Court held that substantive rights accrued to a litigant should not be defeated by citing a procedural defect that is capable of being cured. The Court emphasized that procedural defects should not be allowed to defeat substantive rights without affording a reasonable opportunity. Reverting to the facts of this appeal it is observed that the appellant vide letter dated 12.10.2022 while requesting for reassessment of the Bill of Entry had exercised the appropriate remedy. The Notification No. 51/2021 exempts import of Aluminum Foil of 6.3 microns from payment of ADD. But apparently the appellant had added the amount of ADD while self assessing the customs duty liability. Hence the ADD added to the amount of duty while self assessing the BOE cannot take the character of duty. In terms of Article 265 of Constitution of India the authority cannot retain the said amount. The excess payment is rather apparent from BOE itself. The amount in question should not have been retained by the department was therefore refundable. The order under challenge is not sustainable - appeal allowed.
The core legal questions considered in this appeal are as follows:
(i) Whether the appellant is entitled to the benefit of Section 14 of the Limitation Act, 1963, which allows exclusion of time spent prosecuting a proceeding in a court or authority lacking jurisdiction, for the purpose of limitation in filing an appeal against the Bill of Entry (BOE) assessment? (ii) Whether the refund claim filed by the appellant for excess Anti-Dumping Duty (ADD) and differential Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST) paid, without first obtaining reassessment of the self-assessed BOE, was rightly rejected by the authorities? Issue-wise Detailed Analysis Issue (i): Entitlement to Benefit under Section 14 of the Limitation Act The appellant imported aluminum foil and self-assessed the customs duty including ADD, which was later found to be exempt under Notification No. 51/2021-Cus (ADD). The appellant filed an application for reassessment of the BOE and a refund claim for excess duty paid. The original adjudicating authority rejected the reassessment application on the ground that it lacked jurisdiction and directed the matter to the appraiser. The refund claim was also rejected. The appellant contended that the time spent pursuing the reassessment application before the original authority should be excluded under Section 14 of the Limitation Act when computing limitation for filing the appeal. Section 14 of the Limitation Act provides for exclusion of time during which a litigant has been prosecuting another proceeding in good faith before a court or authority lacking jurisdiction, provided the proceeding relates to the same matter in issue. The Court examined whether the original adjudicating authority's rejection of the reassessment application for want of jurisdiction amounted to prosecution before a forum unable to entertain the matter, thus entitling the appellant to exclusion of that period. The Court noted that the reassessment of BOE under the Customs Act, 1962, is permissible only before clearance of goods for home consumption and that once the goods are cleared, reassessment is not maintainable before the assessing officer. Instead, an appeal under Section 128 of the Customs Act is the proper remedy. The original adjudicating authority improperly forwarded the reassessment application to the appraiser instead of deciding on it, effectively denying jurisdiction. This procedural irregularity caused delay. Given these facts, the Court held that the appellant had prosecuted the reassessment application in good faith before an authority lacking jurisdiction. Therefore, the time spent from filing the reassessment application until receipt of the Order-in-Original rejecting it must be excluded in computing limitation for filing the appeal. The Commissioner (Appeals) had erred in not applying Section 14 of the Limitation Act to exclude this period. Consequently, the appellant was entitled to the benefit of Section 14, and the appeal was held to be within limitation. Issue (ii): Validity of Rejection of Refund Claim for Excess Duty Paid The appellant's refund claim for the excess ADD and differential IGST paid was rejected by the authorities relying on two Supreme Court decisions: Priya Blue Industries Ltd. and ITC Ltd. In Priya Blue, it was held that a refund claim is not an appeal and that the officer considering a refund claim cannot review an assessment order. In ITC Ltd., the Court held that refund of duty paid pursuant to self-assessment could not be granted unless the assessment order was first challenged in appeal and modified. The Court carefully examined these precedents in light of the facts. It noted that the appellant had simultaneously filed an application for reassessment of the BOE along with the refund claim, thereby complying with the procedural requirement of challenging the assessment before seeking refund. The original adjudicating authority's rejection of the reassessment application on procedural grounds, without proper exercise of jurisdiction, was a procedural lapse. Drawing support from the Supreme Court's recent decision in Ramnath Exports (P) Ltd. v. Vinita Mehta, the Court emphasized that procedural defects should not defeat substantive rights, especially where the defect is curable and the substantive right is clear. The appellant had paid excess duty due to a clerical error and the exemption notification clearly applied to the imported goods. Retention of the excess duty by the department violated Article 265 of the Constitution of India, which prohibits taxation without legislative authority. The Court distinguished the ITC Ltd. and Priya Blue decisions on the ground that in the present case, the appellant had taken the necessary step of filing for reassessment, which was improperly rejected. The excess payment was apparent from the BOE itself, and the appellant had not passed on the burden of excess duty to any other party, fulfilling the principle against unjust enrichment. Therefore, the Court held that the refund claim was wrongly rejected on procedural grounds and that the appellant was entitled to refund of the excess ADD and differential IGST paid. The reliance on the earlier Supreme Court decisions was misplaced in this context. Significant Holdings "The time taken for getting the order with respect to request for reassessment of BOE is held to be the cause of the like nature of jurisdiction issue." "I hold that the benefit under Section 14 of Limitation Act be awarded to the applicant/appellant." "It is the settled law that substantial benefit shall not be denied based on procedural lapses." "The procedural defect may fall within the purview of irregularity and capable of being cured, but it should not be allowed to defeat the substantive right accrued to the litigant without affording reasonable opportunity." "The excess payment is rather apparent from BOE itself. The amount in question should not have been retained by the department was therefore refundable." "The decision in ITC Ltd. as well as in Priya Blue are distinguishable. These decisions have wrongly been relied upon for rejecting the impugned refund claim." The Court's final determinations are: (i) The appellant is entitled to the benefit of Section 14 of the Limitation Act, and the time spent prosecuting the reassessment application before an authority lacking jurisdiction must be excluded in computing limitation for filing the appeal. (ii) The refund claim for excess ADD and differential IGST was wrongly rejected on procedural grounds. The appellant had complied with the requirement of filing for reassessment simultaneously, and the excess payment was apparent and unjustly retained by the department. The appellant is entitled to refund. (iii) The impugned orders rejecting the reassessment application and refund claim are set aside, and the appeal is allowed accordingly.
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