CBIC Warns Against Mechanical Bank Account Attachments in Customs Cases

By By Rediff Money Desk, New Delhi
Jul 29, 2024 17:54
The Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) has instructed field offices to exercise caution when attaching bank accounts in customs violation cases, emphasizing a thorough examination of facts and timely completion of investigations.
New Delhi, Jul 29 (PTI) The Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) has said the power to attach bank accounts in customs violation cases should be exercised after careful examination of facts and not in a mechanical manner.

In an instruction to field formations, the CBIC said in cases where bank accounts have been attached, the investigation and adjudication should be completed at the earliest.

Under the Customs Act, Principal Commissioner or Commissioner of Customs can order in writing about the attachment of bank accounts for up to six months in cases where it is in the interest of revenue or for preventing smuggling. Such attachments can be extended by another six months.

The CBIC instruction said the tax officer should exercise due diligence by thoroughly considering and examining the facts of the case, including examining the nature of offence, amount of revenue involved or value of smuggled goods before going ahead with attachment and record the same in file.

"Moreover, it must contain the reasons to believe that the bank account holder may utilise the funds from the bank account if it is not provisionally attached," the CBIC said.

The CBIC further said that the principal commissioner of customs should make careful examination of facts of such attachment cases and the power of provisional attachment must not be exercised in a 'routine/mechanical manner'.

"As the provisional attachment of bank account is resorted to protect the interests of the revenue and may also affect the business and functioning of the person whose bank account is provisionally attached, it may be endeavoured that in all such cases, the investigation and adjudication are completed at the earliest, well within the period of attachment, so that the due liability of duty/tax as well as interest, penalty etc. arising upon adjudication can be recovered from the said person and the purpose of attachment is achieved," the CBIC said in an instruction dated July 22.
Source: PTI
Read More On:
cbiccustomsbank account attachmentcustoms violationrevenue protection
DISCLAIMER - This article is from a syndicated feed. The original source is responsible for accuracy, views & content ownership. Views expressed may not reflect those of rediff.com India Limited.

You May Like To Read

MORE NEWS

Punjab Seeks Korean Investment: Mann Visits Seoul

Punjab CM Mann urges Korean investment in Seoul, highlighting industry-friendly...

India-EU FTA Talks with Goyal: Key Issues &...

EU team meets Piyush Goyal to discuss India-EU Free Trade Agreement. Focus on steel,...

AI/ML in Power Distribution: Manohar Lal Keynote

Manohar Lal highlights AI/ML role in power distribution at national conference. Focus...

UIDAI Aadhaar Verification: New Rules & App

UIDAI to mandate registration for Aadhaar verification. New app & rules discourage...

Gold Price Outlook: Fed Decision & Rupee Impact

Gold prices to watch Fed meeting, rupee movement. Analysts predict potential gains amid...

Paint Makers Expect Q3 Uptick, Margin Improvement

Paint makers anticipate sales & volume growth in Q3 with improved margins due to benign...

Urban Vault Leases to Japanese Firms in Bengaluru

Urban Vault leases 21,000 sq ft office space in Bengaluru to Nachi, Pioneer, & Komatsu....

Dwarka Expressway Housing Prices Surge 3.5x in...

Dwarka Expressway property prices jumped 3.5 times in 5 years! Report by Square Yards...

Govt to Convert 40 GW Renewable Energy to FDRE:...

Suzlon expects the government to convert 40 GW of uncontracted renewable energy to...

Ola Electric Delivers 4680 Bharat Cell EVs

Ola Electric starts mass deliveries of 4680 Bharat Cell powered S1 Pro+ scooters....

Read More »

Sectoral Indices Market Indicators Listed Companies Gainers Losers Mutual Funds Portfolio Watchlist
© 2025 Rediff.com