THE HONOURABLE SRI JUSTICE GODA RAGHURAM AND THE HONOURABLE SRI JUSTICE RAMESH RANGANATHAN WRIT PETITION No. 25332 of 2009 Dated: 02-02-2010 Between: M/s Bharat Mines and Minerals,, rep. by its Law Officer, Mr.Prashant Rajaram Hegde. …Petitioner and The Asst. Commissioner of Customs, Kakinada (Customs) I Division, Port Area, Kakinada and others …Respondent. Oral order: (Per GR, J) The order of the learned Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal, South Zonal Bench at Bangalore dated 3-4-2009 dismissing the COD Application No. 66 of 2009 in Customs Appeal No. 174 of 2009, communicated to the petitioner on 4-8-2009 is assailed in this writ petition. The petitioner a company registered under the Companies Act engaged in the export of iron ore fines had filed a shipping bill No. 20 dated 29-5-2007 before the 1st respondent for export of 34,000 MTs of iron ore fines. Under the Customs Tariff Act, 1975, export duty on iron ore and concentrates is specified at Rs.300/- per MT. However, the Central Government issued a notification dated 3-5-2007 by way of an exemption in terms whereof iron ore fines of FE content of 62% and below is subjected to export duty of Rs.50/- per MT as against the tariff rate of Rs.300/- per MT. An inspection agency namely M/s Inspectorate Griffith India Pvt. Ltd., had certified the FE content in the iron ore fines exported by the petitioner to be 61.90 %. The petitioner therefore claimed export duty liability at Rs.50/- per MT, in terms of the notification of Government of India dated 3-5-2007. The 1st respondent assessed the ore exported by the petitioner provisionally on payment of duty at the rate of Rs.50/- per MT pending the test report and on a Provisional Duty Bond furnished by the petitioner undertaking to pay the differential duty of Rs.85,00,000/- (at the rate of Rs.250/- per MT) along with interest in case the FE content is eventually found to be more than 62% on testing. The 1st respondent allowed export of the consignments after drawal of a representative sample. On examination by the Chemical Examiner, Customs House Laboratory, Visakhapatnam the FE content percentage was certified to be 62.59% by weight. Based on the such Chemical Examiner’s report, the1st respondent directed the petitioner to remit the differential duty along with interest, failing which the Bank guarantee furnished by the petitioner would be appropriated. At the personal hearing accorded by the 1st respondent on 18-9-2009, the petitioner contested the method of drawal of samples and requested for re-testing by the Central Revenue Laboratory (CRL), New Delhi while undertaking to keep the Bank guarantee alive till the Departmental proceedings are completed. Eventually the sample was sent to the CRL for re-testing. However, by an order dated 27-9-2007 the 1st respondent confirmed the demand for differential duty on the basis of the Chemical Examiner’s test report and initiated steps to encash the Bank guarantee furnished by the petitioner. By an interim order dated 11-10-2007 in W.P.No. 21933 of 2007 filed by the petitioner this Court restrained the 1st respondent from encashing the Bank guarantee, until further orders. The writ petition was however disposed of by the order dated 3-3-2008 relegating the petitioner to an appellate remedy. The petitioner preferred an appeal to the 2nd respondent, who, eventually passed Order-in-Appeal No. 34 of 2008 (V-II) CUS dated 13-6-2008 rejecting the appeal of the petitioner while refusing the plea of the petitioner to keep the appeal pending till the report of the re- test by the CRL is obtained. The petitioner received the report of the re- test by the CRL dated 5-5-2008 under the covering letter of the 1st respondent dated 3-2-2009. Aggrieved by the appellate order dated 13-6- 2008 passed by the 2nd respondent, the petitioner preferred an appeal before the CESTAT, Bangalore enclosing the test report of the CRL and seeking the substantive relief in the matter of the duty payable i.e., claiming the liability at only Rs.50/- per MT. The appeal was however filed belatedly along with an application COD No. 66 of 2009 seeking condonation of delay of 146 days in preferring the appeal. The reason for the delay as stated in the affidavit accompanying COD Application No. 66 of 2009 is stated to be a communication gap between the petitioner/appellant and its authorised representative who handles the legal affairs of the petitioner. By the order impugned, the CESTAT found no reasonable cause to condone the delay and hence dismissed COD Application No. 66 of 2009 and consequently the appeal would also stand dismissed. Hence the writ petition. That the CRL, New Delhi’s report dated 5-2-2008 has certified the FE content in the iron ore fines exported by the petitioner was 61% is borne out by the letter dated 5-5-2008 addressed by the 1st respondent to the petitioner. In the circumstances, the petitioner may perhaps be entitled to duty of Rs.50/- per MT only, in terms of the Government of India exemption notification dated 3-5-2007. The petitioner has thus an eminently arguable case on merits before the CESTAT in the appeal preferred against the order of the 2nd respondent dated 13-6-2008 rejecting the appeal preferred by the petitioner. Though the reasons set out by the petitioner for seeking condonation of the delay of 146 days in preferring the appeal do not appear to be wholly satisfactory, we are of the view that having regard to the petitioner having on the merits of the appeal before the CESTAT, an eminently arguable case and the delay not being inordinate, discretion ought to have been exercised by the CESTAT to condone the delay on terms. Having heard the counsel for the petitioner and Sri A.Rajasekar Reddy, learned counsel for respondents 1 and 2, we consider it appropriate, in the facts and circumstances of this case, to allow the writ petition. The delay of 146 days in the petitioner’s appeal to the CESTAT, South Zonal Bench, Bangalore against the order of the 2nd respondent dated 13-6-2008 is condoned on the condition that the petitioner deposits with the 1st respondent Rs.25,000/- (Rupees Twenty five thousands) towards costs for the said delay, within a period of three weeks from today. On proof of such deposit with the 1st respondent being presented before the 3rd respondent, the CESTAT, South Zonal Bench, Bangalore shall process Customs Appeal No. 174 of 2009 in accordance with law and may consider expeditious disposal of the same. In default of the deposit of costs as directed herein and within the time stipulated, the writ petition shall stand dismissed. The writ petition is allowed. There shall however be no order as to costs. __________________________ GODA RAGHURAM, J ________________________________ RAMESH RANGANATHAN, J 2nd February, 2010. GRR