Gold Not Smuggled Without Evidence or Foreign Markings | CESTAT

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Case Details: Rajan Kumar Sahani vs. Commissioner of Customs (Preventive), Lucknow (2026) 38 Centax 314 (Tri.-All)

Judiciary and Counsel Details

  • S/Shri P.K. Choudhary, Member (J) & P. Anjani Kumar, Member (T)
  • Shri Vineet Kumar Singh, Adv., for the Appellant.
  • Shri A.K. Choudhary, Authorized Representative, for the Respondent.

Facts of the Case

The assessee was a bullion trader based at Gorakhpur. Gold carried by its employees while travelling to Delhi was intercepted and seized by the Department. The seized gold was covered by vouchers issued by the trader. The Central Revenue Control Laboratory (CRCL) reported varying purity levels in the seized gold, which were below 99.99%. Investigation showed that the trader had purchased gold from registered bullion traders through banking channels. Certain bullion traders in Delhi and Lucknow stated that they had ordered gold from the Gorakhpur trader but disputed the signatures on sale invoices produced by the trader and furnished copies of invoices issued by them. The employees made general statements alleging that the gold was smuggled, without stating how or by whom it was smuggled, the border crossed, or the mode of transport and finance, and such statements were later retracted. There were no foreign markings on the gold, no call records showing contact with any person abroad, and no material establishing from where or how the gold had entered India. The adjudicating authority held the gold to be smuggled, relying on the retracted statements. The matter was accordingly placed before the Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (CESTAT).

CESTAT Held

The CESTAT held that the purity of gold alone is insufficient to determine its foreign origin or smuggled nature. It observed that the seizure took place at a location far from a Customs station, airport or seaport, that the gold bore no foreign markings, and that no evidence was gathered to establish where the gold had come from, who had smuggled it, or the manner in which it was brought into India. The Tribunal held that, in the absence of such material, the Department failed to establish a reasonable belief so as to attract Section 123 of the Customs Act, 1962, particularly when the trader had produced documents and accounts. It was further held that reliance on retracted statements recorded under Section 108, without compliance with Section 138B of the Customs Act, 1962, deprived such statements of evidentiary value, and therefore, the seizure and confiscation were unsustainable.

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