CUSTOMS APPEAL NO. 50033 OF 2024 (BHARTI AIRTEL LIMITED vs. PRINCIPAL COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS (ACC IMPORT)-NEW DELHI
Table of Contents
Summary
The order allows Bharti Airtel’s appeal, holds that the imported Juniper router cards are “parts” classifiable under CTI 8517 70 90, and sets aside the demand, interest, penalty, and extended limitation.
Case background
- Appellant: M/s Bharti Airtel Ltd. challenged an Order‑in‑Original dated 04.10.2023 of the Principal Commissioner of Customs, New Delhi.
- Dispute: Classification of various Juniper router components imported between 07.04.2017 and 09.03.2018 and consequential differential duty, interest, and penalty.
Goods and rival classifications
- Disputed items: Modular Port Concentrator (MPC)/Capacity Line Card, Modular Interface Cards (MIC)/Daughter Card, Fixed Configuration MPC, Switch Fabric/Switch Control Board.
- Airtel’s stand: These are parts of Juniper routers, classifiable as “Parts – Other” under CTI 8517 70 90, attracting NIL BCD at the relevant time.
- Department’s stand: They are network interface cards/other communication apparatus under CTI 8517 62 90 (machines for reception, conversion, transmission or regeneration of data, including switching and routing apparatus).
Tribunal’s reasoning on classification
- Router architecture: The order describes routers as consisting of routing processor, line cards (I/O ports), switch processor/SCB, and transceivers, all plug‑in PCBs needing the chassis for power and “intelligence.”
- Juniper certificate: OEM (Juniper Networks) certified that the disputed products are parts of routers, have no independent functional utility, cannot be used in any system other than a router, and cannot perform the complete function of a router on their own.
- “Part” test under Section Note 2 to Section XVI and HSN: The Tribunal applies the test whether the item (i) has a separate individual function distinct from the main machine, and (ii) can operate independently of the main machine. If not, it is a part, not an independent apparatus.
- Comparison with Vodafone Idea (CISCO routers): The Tribunal notes that structurally and functionally Juniper router components here are identical to the CISCO router line cards earlier held to be “parts” under 8517 70 90 in Vodafone Idea’s case.
- NIC distinction: Using dictionary and HSN definitions, the Tribunal explains that a NIC is a standalone interface card that lets a complete computer connect to a network and can perform its function independently; router line cards (including these Juniper cards) cannot work independently and require the router chassis. Hence they are not NICs.
- Conclusion on classification: Since the imported items do not satisfy the independent‑apparatus test and function only as inseparable components of a router, they merit classification as parts under CTI 8517 70 90, not as apparatus under CTI 8517 62 90.
Limitation, penalty, and demand
- Period and notice: Dispute period is 30.03.2013 to 07.03.2018; SCN issued on 06.04.2020 invoking extended period under section 28(4) alleging wilful mis‑statement and mala fide misclassification to avail NIL duty.
- Principal Commissioner’s view: Self‑assessment plus importer’s technical knowledge and repeated classification under 8517 70 90 were treated as evidence of willful mis‑statement and intent to evade, justifying extended limitation, demand, and penalty.
- Tribunal’s view:
- Mere incorrect self‑assessment/common classification dispute does not by itself amount to suppression or wilful mis‑statement; officers also have a duty to scrutinise self‑assessed returns.
- Following Raydean Industries and G.D. Goenka, self‑assessment errors do not automatically justify extended limitation.
- Relying on Stemcyte and Reliance Industries, the Tribunal holds that a bona fide legal‑interpretation dispute on valuation/classification cannot be treated as mala fide to invoke the extended period.
- Result: Extended period under section 28(4) is held not invokable; consequently, the demand of differential duty, interest, confiscation and penalties are unsustainable.
Final operative order
- The final order (No. 50003/2026) sets aside the Principal Commissioner’s order dated 04.10.2023 in entirety.
- The appeal filed by Bharti Airtel Ltd. is allowed, with the Tribunal accepting classification of the impugned Juniper router components under CTI 8517 70 90 as parts and holding extended limitation and associated liabilities as not invocable.
