Import of Second-Hand Capital Goods: Legal Regime and Judicial Trends in India

Import of Second-Hand Capital Goods: Legal Regime and Judicial Trends in India

Introduction

The liberalisation of India’s foreign trade regime after 1991 included a calibrated opening for the import of used plant and machinery. Today, the principal legal tension concerns the scope of the expression “second-hand capital goods” and the extent to which such goods may be imported freely or only against a specific licence. A robust body of case law – spearheaded by Atul Commodities Pvt. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Customs[3] – has clarified several normative and procedural questions. Yet, recurrent litigation before Customs, the CESTAT, and the High Courts reveals persisting ambiguities. This article critically analyses the statutory architecture, policy instruments, and judicial pronouncements governing the import of second-hand capital goods in India.

Statutory and Policy Framework

1. Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992

Section 5 empowers the Central Government to “formulate and announce” the Foreign Trade Policy (FTP) and to amend it by notification in the Gazette of India[1]. The power is exclusive; subordinate authorities such as the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) may clarify but not amend the FTP[3].

2. Foreign Trade Policy & Handbook of Procedures

Para 2.17 of the FTP 2004-09 declared that “import of second-hand capital goods shall be allowed freely” while simultaneously classifying other second-hand goods as “restricted”[2]. The procedural complement lay in Para 2.33 of the Handbook of Procedures (HBP), which echoed the principle of free import, subject only to an age cap of ten years in the 2002-07 edition and a Chartered Engineer certificate requirement for refurbished spares[2].

The policy position was materially altered only on 19 October 2005 by Notification No. 31/2005, whereby certain items – notably photocopiers, air-conditioners, and diesel generator sets – were shifted to the “restricted” list[5]. Successive FTPs (2009-14 and 2015-20) have retained the overarching dichotomy: free import for capital goods, restricted import for specific enumerated items[6].

Jurisprudential Evolution

1. The Atul Commodities Trilogy

In the 2005 Larger Bench decision (Atul Commodities – CESTAT) the Tribunal held that photocopiers are “capital goods” because they are used to render a service (commercial photocopying)[4]. The Supreme Court affirmed this classification in 2009, stressing three principles: (i) policy circulars cannot override the FTP; (ii) a clear dichotomy exists between “second-hand goods” and “second-hand capital goods”; and (iii) only a notification under Section 5 can legitimately impose new restrictions[3]. Because the disputed imports pre-dated Notification 31/2005, they were held to be freely importable.

2. High-Court Consolidation: 2012-2014

Post-2009, disputes shifted to digital multifunction print and copying machines. In Shrishti Digital Solution v. Addl. Commissioner of Customs[6] the Madras High Court held that, despite being listed under the “restricted” sub-category in FTP 2009-14, such machines could still be imported freely if the importer satisfied the procedural requirements of Para 2.33 HBP. The Court reasoned that the FTP and HBP must be construed harmoniously; where the HBP provides a mechanism for import, the substantive restriction in Para 2.17 is deemed fulfilled.

The ruling was endorsed in Commissioner of Customs v. City Office Equipment[7], where the Division Bench reiterated that the HBP is integrally linked to, and not subordinate to, the FTP for purposive interpretation.

3. Definitional Breadth of “Capital Goods”

Recent Tribunal decisions have tested the elasticity of the definition. In Asia Power Projects Ltd.[8] and Warburg Pincus India Pvt. Ltd.[9] goods such as hand tools and office furniture were claimed as capital goods by service providers. Both decisions underscored the inclusive language of Para 9.10 FTP, which extends to equipment used “directly or indirectly” in rendering services. Although factual matrices differ, the doctrinal thrust remains: service-sector use does not disqualify an article from capital-goods status.

4. Ancillary Guidance from G.M. Exports

While Commissioner of Customs v. G.M. Exports[10] centres on anti-dumping duty, the Supreme Court’s insistence on harmonising domestic law with WTO obligations lends interpretive guidance. Restrictions on second-hand goods must respect India’s multilateral commitments, reinforcing the need for clear statutory authority and procedural fairness.

Principles Emerging from Jurisprudence

  • Rule of Free Import: Import of second-hand capital goods is permissive unless a specific notification places the item in the restricted or prohibited category.
  • Hierarchy of Instruments: Central Government notifications under Section 5 FTDR Act prevail; DGFT circulars are merely clarificatory and cannot curtail substantive rights.
  • Harmonious Construction: The FTP and HBP must be read together; the latter cannot defeat the former but can prescribe procedural safeguards.
  • Breadth of “Capital Goods”: The definition is function-oriented, extending to goods used indirectly in manufacture or service provision; age and residual life requirements are procedural, not substantive.
  • Environmental & Consumer-Safety Concerns: The power under Para 2.6 FTP permits the State to impose restrictions for public health or environmental reasons, but such measures must be notified and proportionate.

Critical Assessment

The prevailing doctrine strikes a balance between industrial necessity and regulatory control. However, three systemic shortcomings persist:

  1. Regulatory Uncertainty: Frequent, item-specific notifications (e.g., Notification 31/2005) create a patchwork of restrictions that complicates compliance planning.
  2. Over-reliance on Chartered Engineer Certification: While useful, the mechanism lacks uniform standards, leading to inconsistent determinations of residual life.
  3. Environmental Externalities: Existing policy focusses on economic criteria, leaving gaps relating to end-of-life disposal. A cohesive linkage with the E-Waste (Management) Rules and Basel obligations would enhance sustainability.

Policy reform could therefore: (i) publish a consolidated negative list updated annually; (ii) adopt internationally benchmarked testing protocols for residual life assessment; and (iii) embed circular-economy principles to manage the after-use trajectory of imported machinery.

Conclusion

Indian trade law has progressively affirmed that used machinery, integral to industrial growth and services modernisation, deserves liberal import treatment. The Supreme Court’s decision in Atul Commodities crystallised the doctrinal foundations, while subsequent High-Court and Tribunal rulings have refined the contours. The guiding thread is clear: restrictions must be rooted in statutory authority, proportionate, and transparent. As India navigates the twin imperatives of economic expansion and environmental stewardship, a nuanced, principle-based regime for second-hand capital goods remains indispensable.

Footnotes

  1. Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992, s 5.
  2. Foreign Trade Policy 2004-09, para 2.17; Handbook of Procedures 2002-07, para 2.33.
  3. Atul Commodities Pvt. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Customs (2009) 5 SCC 46 (SC).
  4. Atul Commodities Pvt. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Customs 2005 (184) ELT 135 (Tri-LB).
  5. Notification No. 31 (RE-2005)/2004-09, Ministry of Commerce & Industry, 19 Oct 2005.
  6. Shrishti Digital Solution v. Additional Commissioner of Customs 2013 (298) ELT 197 (Mad).
  7. Commissioner of Customs v. City Office Equipment 2014 ELT (Mad) 302.
  8. Asia Power Projects Ltd. v. Commissioner of Customs (CESTAT 2019).
  9. Warburg Pincus India Pvt. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Customs (CESTAT 2017).
  10. Commissioner of Customs v. G.M. Exports (2016) 1 SCC 91.