Govt. of India
Ministry of Finance
Dept. of Revenue
Central Board of Excise & Customs
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Circular No. 20/ 2016 – Customs
New Delhi, dated 20th May, 2016
To,
All Principal Chief Commissioners Customs,
All Principal Chief Commissioners of Customs & Central Excise,
All Chief Commissioners of Customs,
All Chief Commissioners of Customs & Central Excise,
All Directors General,
All Principal Commissioners of Customs,
All Principal Commissioners of Customs & Central Excise,
All Commissioners of Customs,
All Commissioners of Customs & Central Excise.
Subject: Amendment to Ch IX of the Customs Act, 1962 – Insertion of Section 58A – clarification regarding transitional provisions relating to Duty Free Shops/Ship stores/Airline Stores/Diplomatic Stores – reg.
Sir / Madam,
The Finance Act, 2016 has inserted section 58 A in chapter IX of the Customs Act. Section
58 A reads as under:
SECTION 58A. Licensing of Special Warehouses – (1) The Principal
Commissioner of Customs or Commissioner of Customs may, subject to
such conditions as may be prescribed, license a special warehouse
wherein dutiable goods may be deposited and such warehouse shall be
caused to be locked by the proper officer and no person shall enter the
warehouse or remove any goods there from without the permission of
the proper officer.
(2) The Board may, by notification in the Official Gazette, specify the
class of goods which shall be deposited in the special warehouse
licensed under sub-section (1).
2. The Board has issued a notification under sub-section (2) of section 58A
(66 / 2016 – Cus
(NT) dated 14th May 2016) notifying the class of goods to which the provisions
shall apply. The
Board has also notified Special Warehouse Licensing Regulations, 2016 and the
Special
Warehouse (Custody and Handling of Goods) Regulations, 2016.
3. In order to facilitate the understanding of the transitional provisions by
the trade,
Commissionerates are advised to note the following:
- Licensees operating warehouses under erstwhile section 57 or 58 and storing
goods meant for
duty free shops/ship stores/diplomatic stores must apply for a license under
section 58A, if they
propose to continue to store such goods beyond the transitional period of three
months.
- In order to ensure a smooth and orderly transition, existing warehouses
engaged in supply of
such goods are allowed to continue operations during the transitional period,
under customs lock,
for a period of three months.
- The application under Special Warehouse Licensing Regulation, 2016 must be
made within one
month w.e.f. 14th May 2016.
- Any licensee who does not make an application under Special Warehouse
Licensing Regulation,
2016, shall not be permitted to store goods meant for the end use notified at
serial no. (2) of
notification 66/2016-Cus dated 14.5.2016 beyond the said three months.
- Principal Commissioners / Commissioners are advised that the following time
lines may be
strictly followed in processing of applications by existing licensees:
- Application to be received from existing licensees within one month along
with the
certificate/undertakings mentioned in sub regulation (1) of regulation 3 of the
Special Warehouse
Licensing Regulations 2016;
- Commissioners should process the applications within 15 days of receipt.
Since the due
diligence of existing licenses was carried out while granting the license, there
would be no need for
verifying compliance to the conditions under sub regulation (2) of regulation 3;
- Licensee shall thereafter comply with the obligations enjoined under
regulation 4 within
the next fifteen days.
- The license shall be issued immediately thereafter.
4. A question has been raised as to whether a Duty Free Shop in the airport
is to be licensed
as a warehouse or not. Attention is drawn to the erstwhile chapter IX of the
Customs Act where
section 62 stated:
SECTION 62. Control over warehoused goods. - (1) All warehoused
goods shall be subject to the control of the proper officer.
(2) No person shall enter a warehouse or remove any
goods there from without the permission of the proper officer.
(3) The proper officer may cause any warehouse to be locked with
the lock of the Customs Department and no person shall remove or
break such lock.
(4) The proper officer shall have access to every part of a warehouse and
power to examine the goods therein.
4.1 Further, the erstwhile section 64 stated:
SECTION 64. Owner's right to deal with warehoused goods. -
With the sanction of the proper officer and on payment of the prescribed fees,
the owner of any goods may either before or after warehousing the same -
- inspect the goods;
- separate damaged or deteriorated goods from the rest;
- sort the goods or change their containers for the purpose of
preservation, sale, export or disposal of the goods;
- deal with the goods and their containers in such manner as may be
necessary to prevent loss or deterioration or damage to the goods;
- show the goods for sale; or
- -------
4.2 It may be noted that a duty free shop cannot meet the ingredients of
sub-section (2) and (3)
of erstwhile section 62 of the Customs Act, or currently, the provisions of
section 58A. Similarly, the
provisions contained in erstwhile section 64 or as it now stands, do not permit
retail sales from a
warehouse. From this it flows that a duty free shop located in a customs area
should not be treated
as a warehouse. In fact, it is a point of sale for the goods which are to be
ex-bonded and removed
from a warehouse for being brought to a DFS in the customs area for sale to
eligible persons,
namely, international passengers arriving or departing from India.
4.3 It is gathered that Duty Free Shop operators store goods in large
warehouses in the city
and / or in smaller warehouses in and around the precinct of the airport to act
as a staging area for
replenishing stocks in the duty free shopping area. These warehouses in the city
and / or precinct
of the airport qualify to be licensed as bonded warehouses as they are capable
of being under the
lock of customs.
5. It is also clarified that warehouses licensed under section 58A can belong
to an importer of
ship stores / airline stores / diplomatic stores / duty free shop stores
(exclusive use).There could
also be warehouses under section 58A which could be catering to several parties
engaged in the
business of ship stores / airline stores / diplomatic stores / duty free shop
stores (non-exclusive).
Since it is the end use which determines whether a warehouse is eligible for
being licensed under
section 58A, there shall be no restrictions on the type of goods that can be
stored in such
warehouses, as long as they are meant for the end use notified at serial no. (2)
of
notification
66/2016-Cus dated 14.5.2016.
6. Clarifications have also been sought regarding regulation 3 (1) (e) and
the phrase ‘recovery
of costs’. Recovery of costs, accommodates both fee recovered under the Customs
(Fees for
Rendering Services by Customs Officers) Regulations, 1998 (Merchant Over Time)
or Cost
Recovery basis. To determine whether a Special Warehouse will require services
of a customs
officer on MoT basis or cost recovery basis, the Principal Commissioner /
Commissioner will have
to determine from the licensee the extent of requirements for services of a
customs officer.
Guidelines regarding determining where services are to be rendered on MoT basis
or Cost
Recovery basis are being issued separately.
7. It is requested that interactive sessions may be planned with
owners/operators of ship
stores / airline stores / diplomatic stores / duty free shops business to
familiarize them with the new
provisions and ensure a smooth transition.
8. A detailed circular relating to documentary processes with regard to duty
free shops / ship
& airline stores / diplomatic stores is being issued separately.
9. Difficulties, if any, should be brought to the notice of the Board
10. Hindi version follows.
F. No: 473/05/2015 – LC
(S. Kumar)
Commissioner (Customs)
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