Customs and Excise Act 2018

Administrative provisions - Customs rulings

343: Cessation of Customs ruling, etc

You could also call this:

"When a Customs ruling stops being valid or useful anymore."

Illustration for Customs and Excise Act 2018

A Customs ruling stops being effective on the earliest of these dates: when the information it was based on is no longer correct, when the information or facts it was based on change, when there is a big change to the Tariff Act 1988, the Excise and Excise-equivalent Duties Table, or any applicable regulations, when the conditions of the ruling are no longer met, when you fail to meet the requirements of the chief executive under section 340, or three years after you are told about the ruling or any changes to it.

If the information used to make a Customs ruling was not correct, or if there was a big change in the information or facts, the ruling does not start. This means you cannot use a Customs ruling if it was based on wrong information or if something important changed. You can find more information about the Tariff Act 1988 to understand how it affects Customs rulings.

This text is automatically generated. It might be out of date or be missing some parts. Find out more about how we do this.

This page was last updated on

View the original legislation for this page at https://legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1986/0120/latest/link.aspx?id=DLM7039794.


Previous

342: Effect of amendment to Customs ruling, or

"What happens to goods when a Customs ruling is changed"


Next

344: Appeal from decisions of chief executive, or

"What to do if you disagree with a decision made by the chief executive"

Part 5Administrative provisions
Customs rulings

343Cessation of Customs ruling, etc

  1. A Customs ruling ceases to have effect on the earliest of the following:

  2. the date on which any information on which the Customs ruling was made ceases to be correct in all material respects:
    1. the date on which any of the information or facts on which the Customs ruling was made materially changes:
      1. the date of a material change to the Tariff Act 1988, the Excise and Excise-equivalent Duties Table, or any applicable regulations made under this Act or the Tariff Act 1988, if that date occurs before the importation or manufacture of the relevant goods (as the case may be):
        1. the date on which any of the conditions to which the Customs ruling was subject ceases to be met or complied with:
          1. the date of a failure to satisfy the requirements of the chief executive under section 340:
            1. 3 years after the date on which notice of the Customs ruling, or any amendment to that Customs ruling, is given to the applicant.
              1. A Customs ruling does not come into effect if—

              2. information on which it was made was not correct in all material respects; or
                1. a material change has occurred in any information or facts on which it was made.
                  Compare