The Kerala High Court has dismissed a delayed writ petition seeking the refund of demanded Goods and Services Tax ( GST ) and penalty paid during the interception of jewellery as no confiscation order was passed.
The Petitioner is a private limited Company and, according to the averments made in the writ petition, it is engaged in the business of jewellery. The petitioner’s consignment of jewellery worth Rs.58,21,206/- was intercepted as it was not accompanied with relevant documents as is mandated under the provisions of the Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST)/State Goods and Services Tax (SGST) Act and the Rules made thereunder.
The jewellery items were seized and an order was passed determining tax and penalty. The petitioner had remitted the demanded tax and penalty of Rs.3, 59,750/- and thereafter the ornaments seized were released to the petitioner, as per order dated 18.12.2017.
The petitioner filed an appeal against the said order on 25.5.2019 which came to be rejected on the ground of delay.
In 2024, the petitioner approached the Court seeking following prayers:
However, Justice Dinesh Kumar Singh, presiding over a Single bench, deemed the belated writ petition lacking in substance and subsequently dismissed it. Consequently, any pending interlocutory application associated with the current writ petition has also been dismissed.
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