Export And Import - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: export and importExport and Import
Export and Import, means, respectively, export from or import into India or any other country of goods or services, or both. [Export-Import Bank of India Act, 1981 (28 of 1981), s. 2(d); See also Spices Board Act, 1986 (10 of 1986), s. 2(g)]...
Export
Export, includes the taking or sending out of goods by land, sea or air, on consignment or by way of sale, lease, hire-purchase, or under any other arrangement by whatever name called, and in the case of software, also includes transmission through any electronic media. [The Foreign Exchange Management (Export of Goods and Services Regulations, 2000, s. 2 (iv)]Means--(i) taking goods, or providing services, out of India, from a Special Economic Zone, by land, sea or air or by any other mode, whether physical or otherwise; or(ii) supplying goods, or providing services, from the Domestic Tariff Area to a Unit or Developer; or(iii) supplying goods, or providing services, from one unit to another unit or Developer, in the same or different Special Economic Zones, Special Economic Zones Act, 2005, sec. 2(m).With the grammatical variations and cognate expression, means taking out of India of a place outside India, Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products (Prohibition of Advertisement and Regula...
Import
To bring in from abroad to introduce from without especially to bring wares or merchandise into a place or country from a foreign country in the transactions of commerce opposed to export We import teas from China coffee from Brazil etc...
Import
Import, in relation to any technology, means the bringing into India of, such technology from a place outside India. [Research and Development Cess Act, 1986, s. 2 (d)]Means bringing into any place within the territories to which this Act extends from a place outside those territories. [Insecticides Act, 1968 (46 of 1968), s. 3 (d)]Means bringing into India. [Aircraft Act, 1934 (22 of 1934), s. 2 (3)]Means to bring into India from a place outside India by land, sea or air. [Explosives Act, 1884 (4 of 1884), s. 4 (f)]With its grammatical variations and cognate expressions, means bringing into India from a place outside India. [Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962), s. 2 (23)]Means bringing into India from out of India, Gramophone Company of India Ltd. v. Birendra Bahadur Pandey, AIR 1984 SC 667: (1984) 2 SCR 664: (1984) 2 SCC 534. (Copyright Act, 1957, ss. 51, 53)In a sense, import may be said to be complete for certain purposes say, sales tax purposes on their clearance after assessment of du...
Import into and export out of
Import into and export out of, the words 'import into' and 'export out of' in this context do not refer to the article or commodity imported or exported. The reference to 'the goods' and to 'the territory of India' make it clear that the words 'export out of' and 'import into' mean the export out of the country and importation into the country respectively, State of Travancore-Cochin v. Shanmugha Vilas Cashewnut Factory, AIR 1953 SC 333: (1954) SCR 53. [Constitution of India, Art. 286 (1)(b)]...
Customs
Customs, duties charged upon commodities on their importation into, or exportation out of, a country. They seem to have existed in England before the Conquest, but the king's claim to them was first established by grant of Parliament in the reign of Edward I. These duties were at first, principally laid on wool, woolfels (sheep-skins) and leather when exported. There were also extraordinary duties paid by aliens both on export and import, which were denominated parva custuma, to distinguish them from the former, or magna custuma. The duties of tonnage and pound-age, of which mention is so frequently made in English history, were customs duties; the first being made onwine by the tun, and the latter being ad valorem duty of so much a pound on other merchandise. When these duties were granted to the Crown they were denominated subsidies, and as the duty of poundage had continued for a lengthened period at the rateof 1s. a pound, or five percent., a subsidy came, in the language of the cu...
In the course of export
In the course of export, the concept of export in Art. 286 of the Constitution of India postulates just as the word import, the existence of two termini as those between which the goods are intended to move or between which they are intended to be transported, and not a mere movement of goods out of the country without any intention of their being landed in specie in some foreign port, State of Kerala v. Cochin Coal Company Ltd., AIR 1961 SC 408: (1961) 1 SCR 219.It is only the sale under which the export is made that is protected by Article 286(12)(b) of the Constitution of India, and that a purchase which precedes such a sale does not fall within its purview though it is made for the purse of, or with a view to export, East India Tobacco Co. v. State of A.P., AIR 1962 SC 1733 (1737): (1963) 1 SCR 404....
smuggle
smuggle smug·gled smug·gling vt : to import or export secretly and illegally esp. to avoid paying duties or to evade enforcement of laws [ drugs] [convicted of smuggling weapons] vi : to export or import something in violation of customs laws ...
Bill of entry
Bill of entry, an account of the goods entered at the Custom House, both inwards and outwards. It must state the name of the merchant exporting or importing, the quantity and species of merchandise, and whither transported, and whence. Also the name of a daily statistical publication issued by the Customs giving the particulars of goods imported and exported. See (English) Customs Laws Consolidation Act, 1876 (39 & 40 Vict. c. 36).Means a bill of entry referred to in s. 46. [Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962), s. 2 (4)]...
Import and Export
Import and Export, means respectively bringing into, or taking out of India any goods by land, sea or air. [Foreign Trade (Development and Regula-tion) Act, 1992 (22 of 1992), s. 2 (e)]...
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