SCHEDULE 1
(Article 2)
the common transit procedure
part 1
COMMON TRANSIT PROCEDURES STARTING
OUTSIDE JERSEY
1 Common transit
procedure: preliminary
(1) Goods subject to a
common transit procedure which commenced outside Jersey are deemed to be
declared for a transit procedure when those goods are brought into Jersey.
(2) If the goods are dutiable goods, they are
deemed to be declared for a transit procedure and no additional declaration is
necessary either before or upon importation, for the purposes of that
importation.
(3) Where the common transit procedure does not
end in Jersey, the continuation of the procedure outside Jersey has the effect
of discharging the procedure.
(4) Where goods transported by a fixed
transport installation enter Jersey through that installation, those goods are
deemed to be subject to the common transit procedure.
(5) Dutiable goods may be moved within Jersey
without being subject to duty, if that movement takes place in accordance with
the common transit procedure.
2 Presentation of goods
to Jersey customs office of transit
(1) Goods mentioned in paragraph 1(1),
together with the MRN of the declaration, must, once brought into Jersey, be
presented to the customs office of transit.
(2) The MRN must be accompanied by any
corresponding transit document such as described in paragraph 25(6), and
provided by the customs office of departure.
(3) The Agent must –
(a) record the border passage
of the goods on the basis of the particulars of the common transit procedure
received from the customs office of departure pursuant to the Convention; and
(b) notify that passage to
the customs office of departure.
(4) Where goods are carried via a customs
office of transit which is not the one declared, the Agent must –
(a) request the particulars
of the common transit procedure (if the Agent does not already have those
particulars) from the customs office of departure; and
(b) notify the border passage
of the goods to the customs office of departure.
(5) Any inspection of the goods at a customs
office of transit must be carried out mainly on the basis of the particulars of
the common transit procedure received from the customs office of departure.
3 Incidents in Jersey
during movements of goods subject to the common transit procedure
(1) A carrier must present the goods together
with the MRN of the declaration to the Agent if, within Jersey –
(a) the carrier is obliged to
deviate from a route prescribed by the customs office of departure due to
circumstances beyond the carrier’s control;
(b) the seals are broken or
tampered with in the course of the transport operation for reasons beyond the
carrier’s control;
(c) goods are transferred
from one means of transport to another means of transport;
(d) imminent danger
necessitates partial or total unloading of the sealed means of transport;
(e) there is an incident
which may affect the ability of the holder of the procedure, or of the carrier,
to comply with their respective obligations; or
(f) any of the elements
constituting a road vehicle accompanied by each of its trailers or
semi-trailers is changed.
(2) Where, despite such an incident as
described in paragraph (1), the Agent considers that the common transit
procedure concerned may continue, the Agent may take any necessary steps.
(3) In the case of an incident such as
described in paragraph (1)(c), presentation of the goods and MRN under
that paragraph is not required if –
(a) the goods are transferred
from a means of transport that is not sealed; and
(b) the holder of the procedure
or the carrier on behalf of the holder of the procedure provides relevant
information concerning the transfer, to the satisfaction of the Agent.
(4) In the case of an incident such as
described in paragraph (1)(f), where the tractor unit of a road vehicle is
changed without its trailers or semi-trailers being changed, presentation of
the goods and MRN under that paragraph is not required if the holder of the
procedure, or the carrier on behalf of the holder of the procedure, provides
relevant information concerning the composition of the road vehicle, to the
satisfaction of the Agent.
(5) In the case of any incident such as
described in paragraph (1), the carrier must make the necessary entries in
any transit accompanying document.
(6) Relevant information concerning incidents
during common transit procedures must be recorded by the Agent in the
electronic transit system.
(7) For the purposes of this Part –
(a) the “electronic transit
system” is any system used by the common transit states for the completion of
customs formalities of the common transit procedure; and
(b) the “holder” of a common
transit procedure means –
(i) in the case of a fixed transport
installation, the operator of the installation who is established either in the
common transit state where the goods are placed in the installation at the
start of the common transit procedure, or in the common transit state in the
territory of which the goods first enter a common transit state (and in each
such case the operator must agree with the Agent the methods of customs control
over the goods transported), or
(ii) in any other case, the
person who lodges the declaration for the common transit procedure, or on whose
behalf the declaration is lodged.
4 End of the common
transit procedure in Jersey: obligation of the holder of the procedure and of
the carrier and recipient of goods
(1) The holder of the common transit procedure
is responsible for all of the following –
(a) presentation of the goods
intact, and the required information in paragraph 5(1)(c), at the customs
office of destination within the time-limit set by the customs office of
departure and in compliance with the measures taken by the Agent and other
customs authorities outside Jersey to ensure identification of the goods;
(b) observance of customs
provisions relating to the procedure;
(c) providing any guarantee
mentioned in the Convention in order to ensure payment of any import duty and
other charges which may be incurred in respect of the goods.
(2) Except in a case covered by sub-paragraph (4)
or (5), the obligation of the holder of the procedure imposed by sub-paragraph (1)
is met, and the common transit procedure ends, when the goods subject to that
procedure and the required information are available at the customs office of
destination in accordance with paragraph 2.
(3) A carrier or recipient of goods who accepts
goods knowing that they are subject to the common transit procedure is also
responsible for presentation of the goods intact at the customs office of
destination within the time-limit set by the customs office of departure and in
compliance with the measures taken by the Agent and other customs authorities
outside Jersey to ensure identification of the goods.
(4) The common transit procedure is deemed to
have ended when the appropriate entry is made in the commercial records of the
consignee, or of the operator of a fixed transport installation, certifying
that goods transported by the fixed transport installation –
(a) have arrived at the
consignee’s plant;
(b) are accepted into the
distribution network of the consignee; or
(c) have left Jersey for a
country other than a common transit state.
(5) If an electronic transport document is used
as the declaration if so authorised under provision corresponding to
paragraph 18(4), the common transit procedure ends when both –
(a) the goods are presented
at the customs office of destination for Jersey airport; and
(b) the particulars of the
electronic transport document have been made available to that customs office
in accordance with the means defined in the authorisation.
(6) The holder of the common transit procedure
for the purposes of a case such as described in sub-paragraph (5) must
notify the Agent, at the customs office of destination, of all offences and
irregularities related to the common transit procedure.
5 End of the common
transit procedure in Jersey: further provisions as to the presentation of the
goods
(1) Subject to sub-paragraph (2), where
goods subject to the common transit procedure arrive at the customs office of
destination, the following must be presented to the Agent at that office during
its official opening hours –
(a) the
goods;
(b) the
MRN of the declaration; and
(c) any
information required by the Agent.
(2) The Agent may, at the request of the person
concerned, allow the presentation to take place outside the official opening
hours of that office or at any other place.
(3) Where the presentation has taken place
after the expiry of the time-limit set by the customs office of departure, the
holder of the common transit procedure is deemed to have complied with the
time-limit where the holder or the carrier proves to the satisfaction of the Agent
that the delay is not attributable to the holder or carrier.
(4) The Agent must notify the customs office of
departure of the arrival of the goods on the day that the goods and the MRN of
the declaration are presented in accordance with sub-paragraph (1).
(5) At
the request of the person presenting the goods to the customs office of
destination, the Agent must endorse a receipt which certifies the presentation
of the goods at that customs office and contains a reference to the MRN of the
declaration.
(6) The
receipt must be provided as stipulated by paragraph 8 and must be
completed in advance by the person concerned.
(7) The
receipt must not be used as proof of the common transit procedure having ended.
6 End of the common
transit procedure in Jersey: goods received by an authorised consignee
(1) Upon application, the Agent may authorise
the following simplification regarding the end of the common transit procedure
in Jersey, allowing the holder of the authorisation (the “authorised
consignee”) to receive goods moved under the common transit procedure at an
authorised place to end the procedure under paragraph 4(2).
(2) The authorisation may be granted only to an
applicant fulfilling the following conditions, namely that –
(a) the
applicant is established in Jersey;
(b) the
applicant will regularly receive goods subject to the common transit procedure;
(c) neither
the applicant, nor any director or senior employee of the applicant (as the
case may be), have been involved in a breach of an obligation relating to tax
or a customs obligation, which in the opinion of the Agent is –
(i) a serious breach having regard to the
circumstances and nature of any breach and the number of any breaches, and
(ii) relevant to the
suitability of the applicant to be an authorised consignee;
(d) neither
the applicant, nor any director or senior employee of the applicant (as the
case may be), has a criminal conviction which in the opinion of the Agent
is –
(i) serious, having regard to the type of
conviction, and
(ii) relevant to the suitability of the
applicant to be an authorised consignee;
(e) the
applicant maintains a logistical system and records that identify the movement
of, and transactions in, chargeable goods and domestic goods and facilitate
compliance with customs obligations;
(f) the
applicant meets such professional standards of competence as the Agent may
direct; and
(g) the
applicant is able to comply with any condition, additional to those in clauses (a)
to (f), which the Agent considers will be a justified condition of the
authorisation if granted,
and only if the Agent considers that customs officers will be able
to exercise control of the goods subject to the common transit procedure
without introducing administrative measures disproportionate to the
requirements of the person concerned.
7 End of the common
transit procedure in Jersey: further provisions as to the arrival of goods at
an authorised place
(1) When the goods arrive at the authorised
place under paragraph 6(1), the authorised consignee must –
(a) immediately
notify the Agent about the arrival of the goods and inform them of any
irregularities or incidents that occurred during transport;
(b) unload
the goods, but only after obtaining permission to do so from the Agent;
(c) after
unloading, enter the results of the inspection and any other relevant
information relating to the unloading into the authorised consignee’s records
without delay; and
(d) notify
the Agent of the results of the inspection of the goods and inform the Agent of
any irregularities, no later than the third day following the day on which
permission from the Agent to unload the goods was received.
(2) When the Agent has received notification of
the arrival of the goods at the premises of the authorised consignee under
sub-paragraph (1), the Agent must notify the customs office of departure
of the arrival of the goods.
(3) When
the goods have been presented intact to the authorised consignee at the authorised
place under paragraph 6(1) within the time-limit set by the customs office
of departure –
(a) the
holder of the common transit procedure is deemed to have fulfilled the
applicable obligations in paragraph 4(1); and
(b) the
common transit procedure is deemed to have ended in accordance with paragraph 4(2).
(4) At the carrier’s request, the authorised
consignee must issue a receipt as stipulated by paragraph 8 which
certifies the arrival of the goods at the authorised place in accordance with
paragraph 6(1) and contains a reference to the MRN of the declaration.
8 Receipt endorsed by
Jersey customs office and receipt issued by authorised consignee
A
receipt under paragraph 5(6) or 7(4) must be in such form as the Agent may
direct.
9 Verification and
administrative assistance
(1) The Agent may use the Agent’s powers to
carry out post-release controls of the information supplied and of any
documents, forms, authorisations or data relating to the common transit
procedure in order to check that the entries, the information exchanged and the
stamps are authentic.
(2) The Agent must respond without delay upon
receiving a request for such controls from the customs authority of another
common transit state.
(3) Where the competent customs authority of
the place of departure makes a request to the Agent for a post-release control
of information related to the common transit procedure, the conditions laid
down in paragraph 13(1) for discharging the common transit procedure are
deemed not to have been fulfilled until the authenticity and accuracy of the
data have been confirmed.
(4) For
the purposes of this paragraph, “post-release control” is a specific act
performed by the Agent in order to verify compliance with customs and other
legislation governing the common transit procedure.
10 Controls and issuing of
alternative proof
(1) Where the common transit procedure ends in
Jersey, the Agent must carry out customs controls on the basis of the particulars
of the common transit procedure received from the customs office of departure.
(2) Where –
(a) the
common transit procedure ends in Jersey;
(b) no
irregularity has been detected by the Agent; and
(c) the
holder of the procedure presents the transit accompanying document,
the Agent must endorse that document at the request of the holder of
the procedure for the purpose of providing alternative proof of the ending of
the procedure.
(3) The endorsement must consist of –
(a) the
Jersey customs office stamp;
(b) the
signature of the Agent;
(c) the
date; and
(d) the
phrase: “Alternative proof – 99202”.
11 Sending the control
results
(1) Subject to sub-paragraph (2), the Agent
must notify the control results to the customs office of departure within a
time-limit of 3 days following the day on which the goods are presented in
accordance with paragraph 5(1).
(2) In
exceptional circumstances, the Agent may extend the time-limit in sub-paragraph (1)
by up to 6 days.
(3) Where
goods are received by an authorised consignee as described in paragraph 6,
the customs office of departure must be notified within a time-limit of 6 days
following the day on which the goods were delivered to the authorised
consignee.
12 Enquiry procedure for
goods moved subject to the common transit procedure
(1) The Agent must send the control results
immediately after receiving a request from the customs office of departure
where that request is made because that office has not received notification of
the control results in accordance with paragraph 11.
(2) Where this sub-paragraph applies, the Agent
must send a reply within a period of 28 days from the day on which a
request was sent to the Agent by the customs office of departure for one or
more of the following reasons –
(a) the
customs office of departure has not received the notification of arrival of the
goods by the expiry of the time-limit for the presentation of the goods under
paragraph 5;
(b) the
customs office of departure has not received the control results requested in accordance
with sub-paragraph (1);
(c) the
customs office of departure becomes aware that the
notification of arrival of the goods was, or the control results were, sent in
error.
(3) Sub-paragraph (2) applies only if –
(a) the
request is sent to the Agent within a period of 7 days after the expiry of
the time-limit under paragraph 5 or, in a case falling within
sub-paragraph (2)(b), of the time-limit applicable under
paragraph 11; or
(b) the
request is sent without delay to the Agent before the expiry of a relevant time-limit,
if the customs office of departure receives information that the common transit
procedure has not ended correctly, or suspects that to be the case.
(4) The Agent must, within 40 days from
the date on which a request was sent, reply to a request from the customs
office of departure where –
(a) the
request indicates that the Agent has not provided sufficient information for
the common transit procedure to be discharged;
(b) that
customs office of departure has, no later than 28 days after initiating
the enquiry procedure, requested the holder of the common procedure to provide
that information;
(c) the
request indicates that the information provided in reply from the holder of the
procedure is not sufficient to discharge the common transit procedure; and
(d) that
customs office of departure has immediately sent the request for supplementary
information to the Agent.
13 Discharge of the common
transit procedure
(1) The common transit procedure ending in
Jersey is discharged when the Agent and the customs authority for the customs
office of departure outside Jersey are in a position to establish, on the basis
of a comparison of the data available to the customs office of departure and
the Agent, that the procedure has ended correctly.
(2) Accordingly,
where the common transit procedure is discharged the deemed transit procedure
in paragraph 1(1) is then deemed to be similarly discharged.
(3) The
Agent, acting with other customs authorities as appropriate and as the case
requires, must take all the measures necessary and within the Agent’s powers to
regularise the situation of the goods in respect of which a common transit
procedure has not been discharged under the conditions prescribed.
(4) In
the case of a common transit procedure ending in Jersey under paragraph 4,
that common transit procedure is deemed to be discharged unless the Agent has
received information or has established that the procedure has not ended
correctly.
(5) Accordingly,
where the common transit procedure is deemed to be discharged, the deemed
transit procedure in paragraph 1(1) is then deemed to be similarly
discharged.
14 Consequences of
discharge of common transit procedure
On
the discharge of a common transit procedure in Jersey, except under
paragraph 1(3), the goods which were subject to the procedure become
subject to obligations and liabilities under the Customs Law, including
liability to pay any duty, and the obligation to make entry of goods on importation
or report of goods on export.
15 Controls and seals
Whenever
a seal needs to be removed in Jersey to allow customs inspection for the
purposes of this Part, the Agent must –
(a) endeavour to reseal as necessary with a
customs seal of at least equivalent security features; and
(b) note the particulars of the action
including the new seal number on the cargo documentation.
part 2
COMMON TRANSIT PROCEDURES STARTING IN
JERSEY
16 Preliminary
(1) Where goods are in Jersey and are to be transported
by a fixed transport installation, those goods are deemed to be subject to the
common transit procedure once placed into the fixed transport installation.
(2) Dutiable
goods may be moved within Jersey without being subject to import duty if the
movement takes place in accordance with the common transit procedure.
17 Application of common
transit procedure
(1) The common transit procedure applies to
goods passing through a country or territory outside Jersey if at least one of
the following conditions is fulfilled –
(a) the
country or territory is a common transit state; or
(b) carriage
through that country or territory is effected under cover of a single transport
document drawn up in Jersey (but the common transit procedure is suspended in
territory that is not part of a common transit state).
(2) This Part does not authorise any export of
goods from Jersey otherwise than in accordance with applicable export
provisions of Jersey law.
18 Formalities in Jersey
(1) The Agent may authorise simplification,
such as described in sub-paragraph (3), (4), (6) or (7), regarding the
common transit procedure or the end of that procedure.
(2) In each case, authorisation under
sub-paragraph (1) may be granted only to an applicant fulfilling the
following conditions, namely that –
(a) the
applicant is established in Jersey;
(b) the
applicant will regularly use the common transit procedure;
(c) neither
the applicant, nor any director or senior employee of the applicant, has been
involved in a breach of an obligation relating to tax or a Customs obligation,
which in the opinion of the Agent is –
(i) a serious breach having regard to the
circumstances and nature of any breach and the number of any breaches, and
(ii) relevant to the
suitability of the applicant to be permitted to benefit from the simplification
in question;
(d) neither
the applicant, nor any director or senior employee of the applicant, has a criminal
conviction which in the opinion of the Agent is –
(i) serious having regard to the type of
conviction, and
(ii) relevant to the
suitability of the applicant to be permitted to benefit from the simplification
in question;
(e) the
applicant maintains a logistical system and records that identify the movement
of, and transactions in, chargeable goods and domestic goods and facilitate
compliance with customs obligations;
(f) the
applicant meets such professional standards of competence as the Agent may
direct; and
(g) the
applicant is able to comply with any condition, additional to those in clauses (a)
to (f), which the Agent considers will be a justified condition of the
authorisation if granted,
and only if the Agent considers that the customs officers will be
able to exercise control of the goods subject to the common transit procedure
without introducing administrative measures disproportionate to the
requirements of the person concerned.
(3) Where a person is authorised to provide a
comprehensive guarantee or to use a guarantee waiver, the Agent may authorise
that person (an “authorised consignor”) to declare goods for the common transit
procedure without presenting them to the Agent.
(4) The
Agent may authorise, in the case of air transport, an applicant to use an
electronic transport document as a declaration for the common transit
procedure, provided that it contains the particulars of such declaration and
those particulars are available to the Agent and the customs authority for the
place of destination to allow the customs control of the goods and the
discharge of the procedure.
(5) The authorisation in sub-paragraph (4)
must not be granted unless –
(a) the
Agent has consulted the customs authority for the airport of destination and has
received no notification from that authority, within 45 days from the
communication, that the applicant does not fulfil one or more of the conditions
for granting the authorisation;
(b) the
applicant operates a significant number of flights between common transit state
airports; and
(c) the
applicant demonstrates the ability to ensure that the particulars of the
electronic transport document are available to the Agent for the airport of
departure, and to the customs office of destination for the airport of
destination, and that those particulars are the same.
(6) The Agent may authorise an applicant to use
seals of a special type as set out in the application, where sealing is
required to ensure the identification of the goods subject to the common
transit procedure.
(7) The
Agent may authorise a person (an “authorised consignee”) to receive goods moved
under the common transit procedure at an authorised place to end the procedure
under paragraph 29(4), but only if satisfied that that person will
regularly receive goods subject to the common transit procedure.
19 Declarations for the
common transit procedure
(1) Each declaration for the common transit
procedure must include only goods subject to that procedure which are moved, or
are to be moved, from one customs office of departure to one customs office of
destination on a single means of transport, in a container or in a package.
(2) A declaration must, in particular,
correctly declare the goods for the T1 or T2 procedure as provided for in the
Convention.
(3) However,
one declaration for the common transit procedure may include goods moved, or to
be moved, from one customs office of departure to one customs office of
destination in more than one container, or in more than one package, where the
containers or packages are loaded on a single means of transport.
(4) For
the purposes of this paragraph, a road vehicle accompanied by each of its
trailers or semi-trailers constitutes a single means of transport, provided
that the goods are dispatched together.
20 Powers of the Agent
(1) The Agent must set a time-limit within
which goods must be presented at the customs office of destination, taking into
account the following –
(a) the
route;
(b) the
means of transport;
(c) transport
legislation or other legislation which might have an impact on setting a
time-limit;
(d) any
relevant information communicated to the Agent by the holder of the common
transit procedure.
(2) Goods subject to the common transit
procedure must be moved to the customs office of destination along an
economically justified route.
(3) Where
the Agent or the holder of the procedure considers it necessary, the Agent must
prescribe a route for the movement of goods during the common transit procedure
taking into account any relevant information communicated to the Agent by the
holder of the procedure.
(4) When
prescribing a route, the Agent must enter in the electronic transit system at
least the indication of the common transit states through which the transit is
to take place.
21 Sealing as an
identification measure
(1) Subject to paragraph 24, where goods
are to be subject to the common transit procedure, the Agent must seal –
(a) where
the means of transport or container has been recognised by the Agent as
suitable for sealing, the space containing the goods; and
(b) in
any other case, each individual package.
(2) The Agent must record the number of the
seals and the individual seal identifiers in the electronic transit system.
22 Suitability for sealing
(1) The Agent must recognise a means of
transport or a container as suitable for sealing if the Agent is satisfied that
it fulfils the following conditions –
(a) seals
can be simply and effectively affixed to the means of transport or container;
(b) the
means of transport or container is so constructed that when goods are removed
or introduced, the removal or introduction leaves visible traces, the seals are
broken or show signs of tampering, or an electronic monitoring system registers
the removal or introduction;
(c) the
means of transport or container contains no concealed spaces where goods may be
hidden; and
(d) the
spaces reserved for the goods are readily accessible for inspection by a
customs authority.
(2) Road vehicles, trailers, semi-trailers and
containers approved for the carriage of goods under customs seal in accordance
with the Convention, or any other international agreement to which Jersey is a
party and to similar effect, are also suitable for sealing.
23 Details of seals
(1) Customs seals, including seals of a special
type such as described in sub-paragraph (5), must at least –
(a) have
the following essential characteristics, namely that the seals –
(i) remain intact and securely fastened in
normal use,
(ii) are easily checkable and
recognisable,
(iii) are
so manufactured that any breakage, tampering or removal leaves traces visible
to the naked eye,
(iv) are designed for single use or, if intended
for multiple use, so designed that they can be given a clear, individual
identification mark each time they are re-used, and
(v) bear individual seal identifiers which are
permanent, readily legible and uniquely numbered; and
(b) comply
with the following technical specifications, namely that –
(i) the form and dimensions of seals may vary
with the sealing method used but the dimensions are such as to ensure that
identification marks are easy to read,
(ii) the identification marks of seals are impossible
to falsify and difficult to reproduce, and
(iii) the material used is resistant to
accidental breakage and such as to prevent undetectable falsification or reuse.
(2) Where seals, including seals of a special
type such as described in sub-paragraph (5), have been certified by a
competent body in accordance with ISO International Standard No 17712:2013
‘Freight containers – Mechanical Seals’ published by the International
Organization for Standardization in May 2013, Edition 2 (or any later
edition), those seals are deemed to fulfil the requirements laid down in
sub-paragraph (1).
(3) The Agent must ensure that seals used for
containerised transports are, to the widest possible extent, seals with
high-security features.
(4) The
customs seal must bear the following indications –
(a) the
word “Customs” or a corresponding abbreviation; and
(b) the
United Kingdom country code, in the form of the ISO-alpha-2 country code, “GB”.
(5) A seal of a special type must bear either
of the following indications –
(a) the
name of the person authorised in accordance with paragraph 18(6) to use
it; or
(b) the
corresponding abbreviation or code on the basis of which the Agent can identify
the person concerned.
(6) The holder of the procedure must enter the
number and the individual seal identifiers of the seals of a special type in
the declaration and those seals must be affixed no later than when the goods
are released for the common transit procedure.
(7) The
Agent must –
(a) notify
the customs authorities of the other common transit states of seals of a
special type which the Agent has decided to approve, or has decided not to
approve for reasons of irregularities or technical deficiencies;
(b) review
any seals of a special type which have been approved and are in use, when the
Agent receives information that another customs authority has decided not to
approve a particular seal of a special type;
(c) conduct
a mutual consultation in order to reach a common assessment; and
(d) monitor
the use of seals of a special type.
24 Alternative
identification measures to sealing
(1) By way of derogation from paragraph 21,
the Agent may decide not to seal the goods subject to the common transit
procedure and instead rely on the description of the goods in the declaration
or in the supplementary documents, provided that the description –
(a) is
sufficiently precise to permit easy identification of the goods; and
(b) states
their quantity, nature and any special features such as serial numbers of the goods.
(2) By way of derogation from paragraph 21,
where the goods are carried by air, the means of transport and the individual
packages containing the goods need not be sealed, unless the Agent decides
otherwise, where either –
(a) labels
are affixed to each consignment bearing the number of the accompanying airway
bill; or
(b) the
consignment constitutes a load unit on which the number of the accompanying
airway bill is indicated.
25 Release of goods for
the common transit procedure
(1) Only goods –
(a) which
have been sealed in accordance with paragraph 23; or
(b) in
respect of which alternative identification measures have been taken in
accordance with paragraph 24,
may be released for the common transit procedure.
(2) On release of the goods, the Agent must
transmit the particulars of the common transit procedure –
(a) to
the declared customs office of destination;
(b) to
each declared customs office of transit that corresponds in another common
transit state to the Jersey customs office of transit mentioned in
paragraph 27(1).
(3) The particulars in sub-paragraph (2)
must be based on data derived from the declaration, as amended where
appropriate.
(4) Sub-paragraph (2) does not apply in
the case of a declared office that is a Jersey customs office.
(5) The Agent must notify the holder of the
procedure of the release of the goods for the common transit procedure.
(6) At the request of the holder of the common
transit procedure, the Agent must provide to that holder a transit accompanying
document which complies with such data requirements as may be stipulated in a
directive issued by the Agent.
(7) In the case of an electronic transport
document used as a declaration for air transport in paragraph 18(4), the
goods may be released for the common transit procedure by the Agent when the
particulars of the electronic transport document have been made available to
the customs office of departure for the airport in accordance with the means
identified in the authorisation.
(8) Where the goods are to become subject to
the common transit procedure, the holder of the procedure must enter the
appropriate codes next to all items in the electronic transport document.
(9) Goods subject to the common transit
procedure are subject to the control for customs purposes of the Agent,
pursuant to this Part or otherwise.
(10) Where dutiable goods are released and
subject to a common transit procedure starting in Jersey –
(a) the
goods are deemed to be declared for a transit procedure; and
(b) goods
remaining under the common transit procedure need not be presented to the Agent
on re-importation when they are brought into Jersey, and for the purposes of
that re-importation, no additional declaration is necessary.
26 Goods declared for
the common transit procedure by an authorised consignor
(1) An
authorised consignor intending to declare goods for the common transit
procedure must lodge a declaration at the Jersey customs office of departure
and await the expiry of the time-limit specified for this purpose in the
authorisation under paragraph 18(3).
(2) The
authorised consignor must enter the following information into the electronic
transit system –
(a) any route prescribed in accordance with
paragraph 20(3);
(b) the time-limit set in accordance within
paragraph 20(1) within which the goods must be presented at the customs
office of destination; and
(c) the numbers and the individual seal
identifiers of the seals, where appropriate.
(3) The
authorised consignor must print a transit accompanying document that complies
with such data requirements as may be stipulated in a directive issued by the
Agent, but only after receipt of the notification of the release of the goods
for the common transit procedure.
27 Presentation of goods moved subject to the
common transit procedure to Jersey customs office of transit
(1) Goods
moved subject to the common transit procedure must be presented, together with
the MRN of the declaration relating to the goods, at each Jersey customs office
of transit.
(2) The
MRN presented under sub-paragraph (1) must be accompanied by any
corresponding transit accompanying document under paragraph 25(6) or 26(3).
(3) The Agent must record the border passage of
the goods on the basis of the particulars of the common transit procedure
appearing on the declaration accepted by them at Jersey customs office of
departure.
(4) Where goods are carried via a Jersey
customs office constituting a Jersey customs office of transit which is not the
one declared, the Agent must amend the relevant records accordingly.
(5) Any
inspection of the goods at a Jersey customs office of transit must be carried
out mainly on the basis of the particulars of the declaration for the common
transit procedure accepted by the Agent.
28 Incidents in Jersey during movement of
goods subject to the common transit procedure
(1) A
carrier of goods subject to a common transit procedure must present the goods
together with the MRN of the declaration to the Agent if, within Jersey –
(a) the carrier is obliged to deviate from a
route prescribed by the Agent, due to circumstances beyond the carrier’s
control;
(b) the seals are broken or tampered with in
the course of the transport operation for reasons beyond the carrier’s control;
(c) goods are transferred from one means of
transport to another means of transport;
(d) imminent danger necessitates partial or
total unloading of the sealed means of transport;
(e) there is an incident which may affect the
ability of the holder of the common transit procedure, or of the carrier, to
comply with their respective obligations; or
(f) any of the elements constituting a road
vehicle accompanied by each of its trailers or semi-trailers is changed.
(2) Where
the Agent considers that the common transit procedure concerned may continue,
the Agent may take any necessary steps.
(3) In the case of an incident referred to in
sub-paragraph (1)(c), presentation of the goods together with the MRN of
the declaration is not required if the following conditions are fulfilled –
(a) the goods are transferred from a means of
transport that is not sealed; and
(b) the holder of the common transit procedure
or the carrier on behalf of that holder provides relevant information
concerning the transfer to the satisfaction of the Agent.
(4) In
the case of an incident referred to in sub-paragraph (1)(f), where the
tractor unit of a road vehicle is changed without its trailers or semi-trailers
being changed, presentation of the goods together with the MRN of the
declaration is not required if the holder of the common transit procedure, or
the carrier on behalf of that holder, provides relevant information concerning
the composition of the road vehicle to the satisfaction of the Agent.
(5) In the cases referred to in sub-paragraph (1),
the carrier must make the necessary entries in the transit accompanying
document.
(6) Relevant information concerning incidents
during common transit procedures must be recorded by the Agent in the electronic
transit system.
29 End of the common transit procedure:
obligations of the holder of the procedure, and of the carrier and recipient of
goods
(1) The
holder of the common transit procedure is responsible for all of the following –
(a) presentation of the goods intact, and any
required information under paragraph 30(1)(c), at the customs office of
destination within the time-limit set under paragraph 20(1), and in
compliance with the measures taken by the Agent and other customs authorities
to ensure their identification;
(b) observance of the customs provisions
relating to the procedure;
(c) unless otherwise provided for, provision of
a guarantee in order to ensure payment of the amount of any customs debt which
may be incurred in respect of the goods.
(2) A
carrier, or recipient of goods who accepts goods knowing that those goods are
moving subject to the common transit procedure, is also responsible for
presentation of the goods intact at the customs office of destination within
the time-limit set under paragraph 20(1), and in compliance with the
measures taken by the Agent and other customs authorities to ensure their
identification.
(3) The operator of a fixed transport
installation who is established in Jersey is the carrier for the purposes of
sub-paragraph (2).
(4) Except
in a case covered by sub-paragraph (5) or (6), the obligation of the
holder of the procedure in sub-paragraph (1) is met and the common transit
procedure ends when the goods subject to the common transit procedure and the
required information are available at the customs office of destination, in
accordance with paragraph 30.
(5) The
common transit procedure is deemed to have ended when the appropriate entry is
made in the commercial records of the consignee, or of the operator of a fixed
transport installation, certifying that the goods transported by fixed
transport installation –
(a) have arrived at the consignee’s plant;
(b) are accepted into the distribution network
of the consignee; or
(c) have left Jersey for a country other than a
common transit state.
(6) If
an electronic transport document is used as the declaration where so authorised
under paragraph 18(4), the common transit procedure ends when both –
(a) the goods are presented at the customs
office of destination for the airport; and
(b) the particulars of the electronic transport
document have been made available to that customs office in accordance with the
means defined in the authorisation.
(7) The
holder of the common transit procedure for the purposes of a case covered by
sub-paragraph (6) must notify –
(a) the Agent; and
(b) the customs office of destination (if
outside Jersey),
of all offences
and irregularities related to the common transit procedure.
30 End of the common transit procedure:
further provisions
(1) Subject
to sub-paragraph (2), where goods subject to the common transit procedure
arrive at the customs office of destination, the following must be presented to
the Agent or, if different, the competent customs authority at that office –
(a) the goods;
(b) the MRN of the declaration; and
(c) any information required by the Agent or
that other customs authority.
(2) The
presentation under sub-paragraph (1) must take place during the official
opening hours of the office, unless –
(a) the customs office of destination is in Jersey;
and
(b) the Agent allows, at the request of the
person concerned, the presentation to take place outside the official opening
hours of that office or at any other place.
(3) Where
the presentation has taken place after the expiry of the time-limit set by the
Agent under paragraph 20(1), the holder of the common transit procedure is
deemed to have complied with the time-limit where the holder or the carrier
proves to the satisfaction of the Agent or other customs authority that the
delay is not attributable to the holder or carrier.
(4) The
common transit procedure may be ended at a customs office other than that in
the declaration, in which case –
(a) that office is then the customs office of
destination; and
(b) the Agent must notify the arrival to any
customs office of destination outside Jersey in the declaration.
(5) Where
the common transit procedure is ended at a Jersey customs office other than
that declared in the declaration, the Agent must amend the relevant records
accordingly.
(6) At
the request of the person presenting the goods to the Jersey customs office of
destination, the Agent must endorse a receipt which certifies the presentation
of the goods at that customs office and contains a reference to the MRN of the
declaration.
(7) The receipt must be provided as stipulated
by paragraph 32 and must be completed in advance by the person concerned.
(8) The
receipt must not be used as proof of the common transit procedure having ended.
31 End of the common transit procedure: goods
received by an authorised consignee in Jersey
(1) When
the goods arrive at the place authorised under paragraph 18(7), the
authorised consignee must –
(a) immediately notify the Agent of the arrival
of the goods and inform them of any irregularities or incidents that occurred
during transport;
(b) unload the goods, but only after obtaining
permission to do so from the Agent;
(c) after unloading, enter the results of the
inspection and any other relevant information relating to the unloading into
the authorised consignee’s records without delay; and
(d) notify the Agent about the results of the
inspection of the goods and inform the Agent of any irregularities, no later
than the third day following the day on which permission from the Agent to
unload the goods was received.
(2) When
the Agent has received notification of the arrival of the goods at the premises
of the authorised consignee under sub-paragraph (1), or of a person
similarly authorised as such by a customs authority in another common transit
state, the Agent must update the relevant records accordingly.
(3) When the Agent has received the results of
the inspection of the goods in sub-paragraph (1)(d), the Agent must update
the relevant records accordingly no later than the sixth day following the day
the goods were delivered to the authorised consignee.
(4) When
the goods have been presented intact to the authorised consignee at the
authorised place as provided for in paragraph 18(7), or to a person
similarly authorised as such by a customs authority in another common transit
state, within the time-limit set by the Agent under paragraph 20(1) –
(a) the holder of the common transit procedure
is deemed to have fulfilled the applicable obligations in paragraph 29(1);
and
(b) the common transit procedure is deemed to
end in accordance with paragraph 29(5).
(5) At
the carrier’s request, the authorised consignee must issue a receipt, as
stipulated by paragraph 32, which certifies the arrival of the goods at
the authorised place mentioned in paragraph 18(7) and contains a reference
to the MRN of the declaration.
32 Receipt endorsed by Jersey customs office
of destination, and receipt issued by authorised consignee
A receipt under
paragraph 30(6) or 31(5) must be in such form as the Agent may direct.
33 Verification and administrative assistance
(1) The
Agent may use the Agent’s powers to carry out post-release controls of the
information supplied and of any documents, forms, authorisations or data
relating to the common transit procedure in order to check that the entries,
the information exchanged and the stamps are authentic.
(2) The Agent must respond without delay upon
receiving a request for such controls from the customs authority of another
common transit state.
(3) Where
the Agent makes a request to the competent customs authority of another common
transit state for a post-release control of information related to the common
transit procedure, the conditions laid down in paragraph 38(1) for
discharging the common transit procedure are deemed not to have been fulfilled
until the authenticity and accuracy of the data have been confirmed.
(4) For
the purposes of this paragraph, “post-release control” is a specific act
performed by the Agent in order to verify compliance with customs and other
legislation governing the common transit procedure.
34 Controls
(1) Where
the common transit procedure ends in Jersey, the Agent must carry out customs
controls on the basis of the particulars of the common transit procedure known
to the Agent.
(2) Where –
(a) the common transit procedure ends in Jersey;
(b) no irregularity has been detected by the Agent;
and
(c) the holder of the procedure presents the
transit accompanying document,
the Agent must
endorse that document at the request of the holder of the procedure for the
purpose of providing alternative proof of the ending of the procedure.
(3) The
endorsement must consist of –
(a) the Jersey customs office stamp;
(b) the signature of the Agent;
(c) the date; and
(d) the following phrase: “Alternative proof –
99202”.
35 Alternative proof of ending the common
transit procedure
(1) The
common transit procedure is to be regarded as having been ended correctly where
the holder of the procedure presents, to the satisfaction of the Agent, at
least one of the following documents identifying the goods –
(a) a document certified by the customs
authority of a common transit state of destination which identifies the goods
and establishes that the goods have been –
(i) presented at the customs office of
destination, or
(ii) delivered to a person who is an authorised
consignee or is correspondingly authorised by a customs authority in another
common transit state;
(b) a document or a customs record, certified
by the customs authority of a common transit state, which establishes that the
goods have physically left Jersey;
(c) a customs document issued in a third
country where the goods are subject to a customs procedure (and here and in clause (d),
“third country” means any country except a common transit state);
(d) a document issued in a third country,
stamped or otherwise certified by the customs authority of that country and
establishing that the goods are considered to be in free circulation in that
country.
(2) For
the purposes of sub-paragraph (1), copies certified as being true copies
by the body which certified the original documents may be provided as proof.
(3) The
notification of arrival of the goods received by the Agent corresponding to the
one referred to in paragraph 5(4) or 7(2), or a receipt corresponding, in
relation to another common transit state, to the one referred to in
paragraph 32, is not to be considered as proof that the common transit
procedure has been ended correctly.
36 Enquiry procedure for goods moved subject
to the common transit procedure
(1) Where,
after receiving the notification of the arrival of the goods, the Agent has not
received any control results from the customs office of destination outside
Jersey within 6 days of the goods being presented to that office, or of
the goods being presented to the person in another common transit state as
mentioned in paragraph 31(2), the Agent must immediately request the
control results from the customs office of destination.
(2) For
the purposes of sub-paragraph (1), “control results” are those controls or
alternative proofs corresponding, in another common transit state, to those set
out in paragraphs 34 and 35.
(3) Where
the Agent has not yet received information that allows for the discharge of the
common transit procedure or for the recovery of the customs debt, the Agent may
request the relevant information from the holder of the procedure or, where
sufficient particulars are available at the place of destination outside
Jersey, from the customs office of destination outside Jersey, in the following
cases –
(a) the Agent has not received the notification
of arrival of the goods, corresponding to that in paragraph 31(1), by the
expiry of the time-limit set for the presentation of the goods under paragraph 20(1);
(b) the Agent has not received the control
results requested in accordance with sub-paragraph (1);
(c) the Agent becomes aware that the
notification of arrival of the goods was, or the control results were, sent in
error.
(4) The
Agent must send –
(a) requests for information in accordance with
sub-paragraph (3)(a) within a period of 7 days after the expiry of
the time limit referred to there; and
(b) requests for information in accordance with
sub-paragraph (3)(b) within a period a period of 7 days after the
expiry of the applicable time-limit referred to in sub-paragraph (1).
(5) However
if, before the expiry of those time-limits, the Agent receives information that
the common transit procedure has not been ended correctly, or suspects that to
be the case, the Agent must send the request without delay.
(6) Where, following a request in accordance
with sub-paragraph (3), the customs office of destination outside Jersey
has not provided sufficient information for the common transit procedure to be
discharged, the Agent must require the holder of the procedure to provide that
information, at the latest 28 days after initiating the enquiry procedure.
(7) The
holder of the procedure, if in Jersey, must reply to that requirement within 28 days
from date on which it was sent.
(8) If the information provided in a reply from
the holder of the procedure in accordance with sub-paragraph (7) is not
sufficient to discharge the common transit procedure, but the Agent considers
it sufficient in order to continue the enquiry procedure, the Agent must
immediately send a request for supplementary information to the customs office mentioned
in sub-paragraph (6).
(9) Where, during the steps of an enquiry
procedure under this paragraph, it is established that the common transit
procedure was ended correctly, the Agent must discharge the common transit
procedure and must immediately inform the holder of the procedure and, where
appropriate, any customs authority outside Jersey that may have initiated
recovery proceedings for the customs debt.
(10) Where, during the steps of an enquiry
procedure under this paragraph, it is established that the common transit
procedure cannot be discharged, the Agent must establish whether a customs debt
has been incurred.
(11) If
a customs debt has been incurred, the Agent must –
(a) identify the debtor; and
(b) determine the customs authority responsible
for notifying the customs debt to the debtor.
37 Duties if a customs debt arises in another
common transit state
(1) Sub-paragraphs (2)
and (3) apply where the Agent obtains evidence during the enquiry procedure
that the place where the events occurred, from which the customs debt arises,
is in another common transit state.
(2) The Agent must as soon as possible, and in
any event within the time-limit in sub-paragraph (3), send all the
available information to the competent customs authority at that place outside
Jersey.
(3) The time-limit is 7 months from the
latest date on which the goods should have been presented at the customs office
of destination, unless before the expiry of that time-limit a request to
transfer the recovery of the customs debt was sent by the authority responsible
for the place where, according to the evidence obtained by the Agent, the
events from which the customs debt arises occurred, in which case, that time-limit
is extended by 1 month.
(4) If the Agent has not within 28 days
received information from that competent customs authority acknowledging the
information and informing the Agent whether it is responsible for the recovery
of the customs debt, the Agent must immediately resume the enquiry procedure or
start the recovery of that customs debt in Jersey.
38 Discharge of the common transit procedure
(1) The
common transit procedure is discharged when the Agent and any customs authority
for the customs office of destination outside Jersey are in a position to
establish, on the basis of a comparison of the data available to the Agent and
any customs office of destination, that the procedure has ended correctly.
(2) Accordingly,
where the common transit procedure is discharged, the deemed transit procedure
in paragraph 25(10) is then deemed to be similarly discharged.
(3) The
Agent, acting with any customs authority for any customs office of destination
outside Jersey, must take all the measures necessary and within the Agent’s
powers to regularise the situation of the goods in respect of which a common
transit procedure has not been discharged under the conditions prescribed.
(4) In
the case of a common transit procedure ending in accordance with
paragraph 29(6), that common transit procedure is deemed to be discharged
unless the Agent has received information or has established that the procedure
has not ended correctly.
(5) Accordingly,
where the common transit procedure is deemed to be discharged, the deemed
transit procedure in paragraph 25(10) is then deemed to be similarly
discharged.
39 Consequences of common transit procedure
discharge
On the discharge of a common
transit procedure, the goods which were subject to the procedure become subject
to obligations and liabilities under the Customs Law, including liability to
pay any duty, and the obligation to make entry of goods on importation or
report of goods on export.
40 Controls and seals
Whenever a seal needs to be removed
in Jersey to allow customs inspection for the purposes of this Part, the Agent must –
(a) endeavour
to reseal as necessary with a customs seal of at least equivalent security
features; and
(b) note the particulars of the action
including the new seal number on the cargo documentation.
PART 3
SIMPLIFICATIONS
FOR THE PAPER-BASED COMMON TRANSIT PROCEDURE FOR GOODS CARRIED BY AIR
41 Authorisations for the use of a
paper-based common transit procedure for goods carried by air
(1) The Agent may grant authorisation for the
use of the paper-based common transit procedure for goods carried by air, to an
applicant meeting the following conditions, namely that –
(a) the applicant is an airline company;
(b) the applicant is established in Jersey;
(c) the applicant regularly uses the common
transit procedure, or the Agent knows that the applicant can meet the
obligations under the procedure;
(d) neither the applicant, nor any director or
senior employee of the applicant, have been involved in a breach of an
obligation relating to tax or a Customs obligation, which in the opinion of the
Agent is –
(i) a serious breach having regard to the
circumstances and nature of any breach and the number of any breaches,
(ii) relevant to the suitability of the
applicant to be authorised under this paragraph; and
(e) neither the applicant, nor any director or
senior employee of the applicant, has a criminal conviction which in the
opinion of the Agent is –
(i) serious having regard to the type of
conviction, and
(ii) relevant to the suitability of the
applicant to be authorised under this paragraph.
(2) The
authorisation for the use of the paper-based common transit procedure for goods
carried by air only applies in the common transit states specified in the authorisation.
(3) The
authorisation operates as a simplification of the common transit procedure in
Parts 1 and 2.
42 Manifest as declaration for the use of the
paper-based common transit procedure for goods carried by air
(1) The
Agent may authorise an airline company to use the goods manifest as a
declaration where it corresponds in substance to the form set out in Appendix 3
of Annex 9 to the Convention on International Civil Aviation, done at
Chicago on 7 December 1944, Ninth Edition.
(2) The authorisation must indicate the form of
the manifest and the airports of departure and destination for common transit
procedures.
(3) The
airline company authorised in accordance with paragraph 41 must send an
authenticated copy of that authorisation to the competent customs authorities
for each of the airports concerned.
43 Formalities to be carried out by the
airline company
(1) The
airline company must enter the following information into the manifest –
(a) the relevant code, being –
(i) T1, in accordance with
Article 109(1)(a) of Appendix 1 to the Convention, or
(ii) T2 or T2F, in accordance
with Article 109(1)(b) of Appendix 1 to the Convention;
(b) the name of the airline company
transporting the goods;
(c) the flight number;
(d) the date of the flight; and
(e) the airport of departure and the airport of
destination.
(2) In
addition to the information in sub-paragraph (1), the airline company must
for each consignment enter into that manifest the following information –
(a) the number of the air waybill;
(b) the number of packages;
(c) the trade description of the goods,
including all the details necessary for their identification; and
(d) the gross mass.
(3) Where
goods are grouped –
(a) the goods’ description in the manifest must
be replaced, where appropriate, by the entry ‘Consolidation’, which may be
abbreviated; and
(b) the air waybills for consignments on the
manifest must –
(i) contain the trade description of the
goods, including all the details necessary for their identification; and
(ii) be attached to the manifest.
(4) The
airline company must date and sign the manifest.
(5) At
least 2 copies of the manifest must be presented to the competent customs
authority for the airport of departure, and if that is in Jersey, the Agent
must retain one copy.
(6) A copy of the manifest must be presented to
the competent customs authority for the airport of destination, which is the Agent
if that airport is in Jersey.
44 Verification of a list of manifests used
as a paper-based declaration for goods carried by air
(1) Once
a month, the Agent must authenticate a list of manifests drawn up by the
airline companies which were presented to the Agent during the previous month,
and must transmit it to the customs authority for each airport of departure.
(2) That
list must include the following information for each manifest –
(a) the number of the manifest;
(b) the code identifying the manifest as a
declaration in accordance with paragraph 43(1)(a);
(c) the name of the airline company which
transported the goods;
(d) the flight number; and
(e) the date of the flight.
(3) The
authorisation as referred to in paragraph 41 may also provide that the
airline company itself may transmit the list referred to in sub-paragraph (1)
to the competent customs authorities of each airport of departure outside
Jersey.
(4) In the event of irregularities found in
connection with the information on the manifests appearing on the list, the Agent
must inform –
(a) the competent customs authority for the
airport of departure (if not in Jersey); and
(b) the competent customs authority which
granted the authorisation (if not granted in Jersey),
referring in
particular to the air waybills for the goods in question.
45 Provision relating to authorisations for
the use of the paper-based common transit procedures
for goods carried by air
An authorisation referred to in
paragraph 41 not be granted unless –
(a) the
Agent considers that it will be possible to exercise control of the goods
subject to the common transit procedure without introducing administrative
measures disproportionate to the requirements of the person concerned;
(b) the applicant keeps records which enable
the Agent to carry out effective controls; and
(c) the applicant is able to comply with any
condition additional to paragraphs (a) and (b) which the Agent considers
will be a justified condition of the authorisation if granted.
46 Liability to import duty under the Customs
Law
Nothing in this Schedule affects
any incurrence of liability to import duty from a common transit procedure, or
the person liable, under the Customs Law except that, in situations covered by
paragraph 4(3) or 29(2), the recipient of the goods is also jointly and
severally liable with any person liable by or under the Customs Law.
47 Establishing the customs status of goods,
etc.
For the purposes of Article 8(2),
9(4), 9(7), 10(3) or 12(1) of Appendix II to the Convention, the Agent may
carry out the functions of the “competent office”, “customs office”, or “customs
office of departure” if in each respective case that office is in Jersey.
48 Authorisation to issue data for the
purposes of the Convention
(1) A
person able to be authorised under paragraph 18(2) may be authorised by
the Agent to issue T2L or T2LF data for the purposes of the Convention without
having to present such data to the Agent for endorsement.
(2) Authorisation
under sub-paragraph (1) only applies to a person who –
(a) will
regularly issue the data and use it for a proper purpose; and
(b) is able to comply with any condition
additional to sub-paragraph (a) which the Agent considers will be a
justified condition of the authorisation if granted.
(3) The
authorisation may stipulate that the front of the forms used in issuing the T2L
or T2LF data and any continuation sheet or sheets must be –
(a) stamped in advance with the stamp of the
office referred to in Article 15(1)(a) of Appendix II to the
Convention and signed by an officer of that office; or
(b) stamped by the authorised issuer under sub-paragraph (1)
with a special metal stamp approved by the competent authorities and conforming
to the specimen in Annex B9 of Appendix III to the Convention.
(4) The
stamp of the authorised issuer may be pre-printed on the forms if the printing
is entrusted to a printer approved for that purpose.
(5) In the event of the misuse by any person of
T2L or T2LF data issued under sub-paragraph (1), the authorised issuer
shall be liable, without prejudice to any criminal proceedings, for the payment
of duties and other charges payable in respect of goods carried under cover of
such data, unless the Agent is satisfied that the authorised issuer took all
necessary security measures required under Article 16 of Appendix II
to the Convention.
(6) Subject to sub-paragraph (7), the
authorised issuer under sub-paragraph (1) may be authorised by the Agent
of the Impôts not to sign such T2 or T2LF data as are issued by using the
special metal stamp mentioned in sub-paragraph (3)(b) and drawn up by an
electronic or automatic data processing system.
(7) The
authorisation in sub-paragraph (6) is subject to the authorised issuer
previously having given to the Agent a written undertaking acknowledging
liability for the legal consequences arising from all such T2L and T2LF data.
(8) Each item of T2L or T2LF data drawn up in
accordance with sub-paragraph (6) must contain, in place of the authorised
issuer’s signature, the endorsement: “Signature waived”.
49 Business continuity procedure for the
common transit procedure
The Agent must, by a directive,
stipulate the business continuity procedure for use by the holder of the common
transit procedure, including an authorised consignor, in the event of a
temporary failure of –
(a) the
electronic transit system mentioned in Parts 2 and 3;
(b) the computerised system used by the holders
of the procedure for making the declarations for the common transit procedure
by means of electronic data-processing techniques; or
(c) the electronic connection between the
computerised system used by the holders of the procedure for making the
declarations for the common transit procedure by means of electronic
data-processing techniques and the electronic transit system.
50 Authorisation provision for airlines
(1) The
Agent may authorise, in the case of air transport, an applicant to use an
electronic transport document as a declaration for the common transit
procedure, provided it contains the particulars of such declaration and those
particulars are available to the customs authorities for the place of departure
and destination to allow the customs control of the goods and the discharge of
the procedure.
(2) Authorisation
under sub-paragraph (1) is subject to paragraph 18(1) to (3)
(but only in relation to paragraph 18(4) and (5)) and must not be granted
unless –
(a) the Agent has consulted the customs
authorities for the airports of departure and destination and has received no notification
from either authority, within 45 days from the communication, that the
applicant does not fulfil one or more of the conditions for granting the authorisation;
(b) the applicant operates a significant number
of flights between common transit state airports; and
(c) the applicant demonstrates the ability to
ensure that the particulars of the electronic transport document are available
to the customs office of departure for the airport of departure and to the
customs office of destination for the airport of destination, and that those
particulars are the same.
(3) Expressions
used in this paragraph have the same meaning as corresponding expressions in
Part 2.
SCHEDULE 2
(Article 3)
THE
TIR TRANSIT PROCEDURE
PART 1
GENERAL
PROVISION FOR THE TIR TRANSIT PROCEDURE
1 Interpretation and general provision for
purposes of Schedule 2
(1) The “carrier” for the purposes of the TIR
transit procedure is –
(a) the person who brings the goods, or assumes
responsibility for the carriage of the goods, to a customs office in Jersey; or
(b) a person who takes the goods from, or
assumes responsibility for the carriage of the goods from, the British Islands.
(2) A
single TIR transit procedure must not include more than 4 customs offices
of departure or destination, whether or not Jersey customs offices, in total.
2 The TIR transit procedure: introduction
(1) Under
the TIR transit procedure provided for by this Schedule, dutiable goods may be
moved within the British Islands without being subject to import duty if the
movement takes place in accordance with the TIR Convention, provided that the
movement –
(a) begins or ends outside the British Islands;
or
(b) is effected between two points in the
British Islands through territory outside those Islands.
(2) The
TIR transit procedure may also be used for the export of domestic goods from
the British Islands under such export provisions as may be applicable.
PART 2
TIR
TRANSIT PROCEDURES STARTING OUTSIDE THE BRITISH ISLANDS
3 TIR transit procedure: preliminaries
(1) Goods
subject to the TIR transit procedure are deemed to be declared for a transit
procedure when those goods are brought into the British Islands.
(2) If
the goods mentioned in sub-paragraph (1) are dutiable goods, they are
deemed to be declared for a transit procedure and no additional declaration is
necessary either before or on importation for the purposes of the importation.
(3) The
goods in sub-paragraph (1) must be presented to the Agent at the Jersey
customs office of entry by or on behalf of the holder of the TIR Carnet in
question.
(4) The TIR Carnet counterfoils completed by
customs authorities outside the British Islands in the course of the TIR
transit procedure are sufficient evidence of the goods being subject to the TIR
transit procedure.
4 Formalities to
be completed at Jersey office of entry
(1) The
TIR Carnet holder must without delay submit the TIR Carnet for the TIR transit
procedure to the Agent at the Jersey customs office of entry.
(2) The
Agent may set a time-limit within which the goods must be presented to the
customs office of destination, taking into account the following –
(a) the route;
(b) the means of transport;
(c) transport legislation or other legislation
which might have an impact on setting a time-limit; and
(d) any relevant information communicated to the
Agent by the TIR Carnet holder.
(3) The
Agent may prescribe a route for the TIR transit procedure, if the Agent
considers this necessary, taking into account any relevant information
communicated to the Agent by the TIR Carnet holder.
(4) Where
the goods are then released by the Agent for the TIR transit procedure in the
British Islands (including Jersey), the Agent must notify the TIR Carnet holder
of the release of the goods for the TIR transit procedure.
(5) The
provision made by Articles 16 and 17 of, and Annex 5 to, the TIR
Convention (“TIR” plates on vehicles, proper use of TIR Carnets), applies to a
TIR transit procedure in Jersey.
5 Incidents during movement of goods
(1) The
carrier must present without undue delay, after any incident occurring in
Jersey (or, if the place of the incident cannot be established, detected in
Jersey) during the TIR transit procedure, the goods together with the road
vehicle, the combination of vehicles or the container, and the TIR Carnet of
the TIR transit procedure to the Agent at the nearest Jersey customs office,
where –
(a) the carrier is obliged to deviate, due to
circumstances beyond the carrier’s control, from the route prescribed under
paragraph 4(3); or
(b) there is an incident or accident within the
meaning of Article 25 of the TIR Convention.
(2) Where
the Agent considers that the TIR transit procedure concerned may continue, the
Agent may take any necessary steps, and must disregard minor breaches of
time-limits or routes.
(3) Where
the Agent considers that the TIR transit procedure concerned should not
continue, the procedure terminates and the Agent must proceed according to paragraph 10.
(4) Relevant
information concerning the incidents referred to in sub-paragraph (1) must
be recorded in the TIR Carnet by the Agent.
6 Presentation of goods at Jersey customs
office of destination
(1) Where
goods moved subject to a TIR transit procedure arrive at a Jersey customs
office of destination, the following must be presented to the Agent at that
office during its official opening hours –
(a) the goods together with the road vehicle,
the combination of vehicles or the container;
(b) the TIR Carnet; and
(c) any information required by the Agent.
(2) The
Agent may, at the request of the person concerned, allow the presentation to
take place outside the official opening hours of that office or at any other
place.
(3) Where
the presentation has taken place at Jersey customs office of destination after
expiry of the time-limit set by the Agent, the TIR Carnet holder is deemed to
have complied with the time-limit where the holder or the carrier proves to the
satisfaction of the Agent that the delay is not attributable to the holder or
the carrier.
(4) A
TIR transit procedure may be terminated at a customs office in the British
Islands (including at a Jersey customs office) other than the one specified in
the TIR Carnet, in which case that customs office is then the customs office of
destination in the British Islands.
7 Formalities at Jersey customs office of
destination
(1) The
Agent must terminate the TIR transit procedure in accordance with Articles 1(d)
and 28(1) of the TIR Convention, in particular by –
(a) completing counterfoil No. 2 of the
TIR Carnet;
(b) retaining Voucher No. 2 of the TIR
Carnet; and
(c) returning the TIR Carnet to the TIR Carnet
holder or to the person acting on that holder’s behalf.
(2) Where
paragraph 6 applies, the Agent must return the appropriate part of Voucher
No. 2 of the TIR Carnet to the customs office of departure without delay.
8 Formalities for goods received by an authorised
consignee
(1) When
the goods arrive at the authorised place in the authorisation under
paragraph 25, the authorised consignee must –
(a) immediately notify the Agent about the
arrival of the goods and inform the Agent of any irregularities or incidents
that occurred during transport, in each case within the time-limit for the
purpose set in that authorisation;
(b) unload the goods, but only after obtaining
permission from the Agent to do so, and enter the results of the inspection and
any other relevant information relating to the unloading into the authorised
consignee’s records without delay; and
(c) notify the Agent about the results of the
inspection of the goods, and inform the Agent of any irregularities, no later
than the third day following the day on which permission from the Agent to
unload the goods was received.
(2) The
authorised consignee must ensure that the TIR Carnet for the TIR transit
procedure is presented, within the time-limit laid down in the authorisation,
to the Agent at the Jersey customs office of destination for the purposes of
terminating the TIR transit procedure in accordance with paragraph 7(1).
(3) The
TIR Carnet holder is considered to have fulfilled the obligations under Article 1(o)
of the TIR Convention where the TIR Carnet together with the road vehicle, the
combination of vehicles or the container and the goods have been presented
intact to the authorised consignee at the place specified in the authorisation
under paragraph 25.
9 Alternative proof of termination of the
TIR transit procedure
(1) The
TIR transit procedure is to be regarded as having been terminated correctly,
within the time-limit set in accordance with provision corresponding to paragraph 14(2),
where the TIR Carnet holder or the guaranteeing association (as defined in
Article 1(q) of the TIR Convention) presents, to the satisfaction of the
Agent, at least one of the following documents identifying the goods –
(a) a document certified by the Agent which
identifies the goods and establishes that the goods have been presented at the
customs office of destination, or have been delivered to an authorised
consignee in paragraph 25;
(b) a document or a customs record, certified
by the Agent, which establishes that the goods physically left the British
Islands;
(c) a customs document issued in a country
outside the British Islands, where the goods are placed under a customs
procedure; or
(d) a document issued in a country outside the
British Islands, stamped or otherwise certified by the customs authority of
that country and establishing that the goods are considered to be in free
circulation in that country.
(2) For
the purposes of sub-paragraph (1), copies certified as being true copies
by the body which certified the original documents may be provided as proof.
10 Enquiry procedure
(1) Where
the TIR transit procedure terminates under paragraph 5(3), or under paragraph 7(1)
but with an irregularity, the Agent must request information about that irregularity
from the TIR Carnet holder.
(2) The TIR Carnet holder must provide the
information no later than 28 days after receiving the request.
(3) If the Agent remains unable to discharge
the TIR transit procedure upon receiving that information, the Agent must
immediately notify the guaranteeing association in question and invite it to
provide proof that the procedure should be discharged.
11 Discharge of the TIR transit procedure
The Agent must discharge the TIR
transit procedure where –
(a) it
is properly terminated under paragraph 7(1) without irregularity; or
(b) any
irregularity is resolved following receipt of the information in paragraph 10(2)
or 10(3).
PART 3
TIR
TRANSIT PROCEDURES STARTING IN JERSEY
12 Place for controls and formalities for
goods leaving and re-entering the British Islands
Where, in the course of movement of
goods from one point to another point in the British Islands, goods leave and
re-enter the British Islands, the customs controls and formalities applicable
in accordance with the TIR Convention must be carried out by the competent
customs authorities at the points where the goods –
(a) temporarily
leave; and
(b) subsequently re-enter,
the British Islands, including
controls to be carried out by the Agent where goods leave or re-enter the
British Islands through Jersey subject to the TIR transit procedure.
13 Route for movements of goods
(1) Goods
moved subject to the TIR transit procedure must be transported to the customs
office of destination along an economically justified route.
(2) Where
the Agent considers it necessary, the Agent may prescribe a route for the TIR
transit procedure taking into account any relevant information communicated to
the Agent by the TIR Carnet holder.
14 Formalities to be completed at Jersey
customs office of departure
(1) The
TIR Carnet holder must submit the TIR Carnet for the TIR transit procedure to
the Agent at the Jersey customs office of departure.
(2) The
Agent may set a time-limit within which the goods must be presented to the
customs office of departure, taking into account the following –
(a) the route;
(b) the means of transport;
(c) transport legislation or other legislation
which might have an impact on setting a time-limit; and
(d) any relevant information communicated to
the Agent by the TIR Carnet holder.
(3) The
Agent must notify the TIR Carnet holder of the release of the goods for the TIR
transit procedure in Jersey.
(4) The goods in sub-paragraph (2) must
then be presented to the Agent at the Jersey customs office of departure by or
on behalf of the holder of the TIR Carnet in question.
(5) The
goods moved subject to the TIR transit procedure must then be presented to the
competent customs authorities at the designated customs office of exit in the
British Islands (including the Agent at the Jersey customs office of exit where
the goods are due to exit the British Islands from Jersey), and the following
must be presented at that office during its official opening hours –
(a) the goods together with the road vehicle,
the combination of vehicles or the container;
(b) the TIR Carnet; and
(c) any information required by the Agent or
the competent customs authorities at the customs office of exit elsewhere in
the British Islands (as the case may be).
(6) The
Agent or the competent customs authorities at the customs office of exit
elsewhere in the British Islands (as the case may be) may, at the request of
the person concerned, allow the presentation to take place outside the official
opening hours of that office or at any other place.
(7) The provision made by Articles 16 and 17
of, and Annex 5 to, the TIR Convention (“TIR” plates on vehicles, and proper
use of TIR Carnet) applies to a TIR transit procedure in Jersey.
15 Incidents during movement of goods
(1) The
carrier must present without undue delay, after any incident occurring in
Jersey (or, if the place of the incident cannot be established, detected in
Jersey) during the TIR transit procedure, the goods together with the road vehicle,
the combination of vehicles or the container and the TIR Carnet of the TIR
transit procedure to the Agent at the Jersey customs office, where –
(a) the carrier is obliged to deviate from a
route prescribed in accordance with paragraph 13(2) due to circumstances
beyond the carrier’s control; or
(b) there is an incident or accident within the
meaning of Article 25 of the TIR Convention.
(2) Where
the Agent considers that, despite the incident, the TIR transit procedure
concerned may continue, the Agent may take any necessary steps, and must
disregard minor breaches of time-limits or routes.
(3) Where
the Agent considers that the TIR transit procedure concerned should not
continue, the procedure terminates and the Agent must proceed according to
paragraph 22.
(4) Relevant
information concerning the incidents referred to in sub-paragraph (1) must
be recorded in the TIR Carnet by the Agent.
16 Returning goods subject to the TIR transit
procedure
(1) In
the case of dutiable goods subject to a TIR transit procedure starting in
Jersey, the goods are deemed to be declared for a transit procedure
and no additional customs declaration is necessary, either before or on
re-import, for the purposes of that re-importation.
(2) The
goods in sub-paragraph (1) must be presented by or on behalf of the holder
of the TIR Carnet in question to –
(a) if Jersey is the first point of entry into
the British Islands, the Jersey customs office of entry; or
(b) if the goods have arrived from within the
British Islands, the Jersey customs office of destination.
(3) The
TIR Carnet counterfoils completed by competent customs authorities outside
Jersey in the course of the TIR transit procedure are sufficient evidence of
the goods being subject to the TIR transit procedure.
17 Formalities to be completed at Jersey
customs office of entry
(1) The
TIR Carnet holder must without delay submit the TIR Carnet for the TIR transit
procedure to the Agent at the Jersey customs office of entry.
(2) The Agent may set a time-limit within which
the goods must be presented to Jersey customs office of destination, taking
into account the following –
(a) the route;
(b) the means of transport;
(c) transport legislation or other legislation
which might have an impact on setting a time-limit;
(d) any relevant information communicated to the
Agent by the TIR Carnet holder.
(3) The
Agent may prescribe a route for the TIR transit procedure, if the Agent
considers this necessary, taking into account any relevant information
communicated to the Agent by the TIR Carnet holder.
(4) Where
the goods are then released by the Agent for the TIR transit procedure in the
British Islands, the Agent must notify the TIR Carnet holder of the release of
the goods for the TIR transit procedure.
(5) The
provision made by Articles 16 and 17 of, and Annex 5 to, the TIR
Convention (“TIR” plates on vehicles, proper use of TIR Carnets), applies to a
TIR transit procedure in Jersey.
18 Presentation of goods at Jersey customs
office of destination
(1) Where
goods moved subject to a TIR transit procedure arrive at the Jersey customs
office of destination, the following must be presented to the Agent at that
office during its official opening hours –
(a) the goods together with the road vehicle,
the combination of vehicles or the container;
(b) the TIR Carnet; and
(c) any information required by the Agent.
(2) The
Agent may, at the request of the person concerned, allow the presentation to
take place outside the official opening hours of that office or at any other
place.
(3) Where
the presentation has taken place at the Jersey customs office of destination
after expiry of the time-limit set by the customs office of exit in the British
Islands (including the Agent in Jersey), the TIR Carnet holder is deemed to
have complied with the time-limit where the holder or the carrier proves to the
satisfaction of the competent customs authorities (including the Agent) that
the delay is not attributable to the holder or the carrier.
(4) A
TIR transit procedure may be terminated at a customs office in the British
Islands (including at a Jersey customs office) other than the one specified in
the TIR Carnet, in which case that customs office is then the customs office of
destination in the British Islands.
19 Formalities at Jersey customs office of
destination
(1) The
Agent must terminate the TIR transit procedure in accordance with Articles 1(d)
and 28(1) of the TIR Convention, in particular by –
(a) completing counterfoil No. 2 of the
TIR Carnet;
(b) retaining Voucher No. 2 of the TIR
Carnet; and
(c) returning the TIR Carnet to the TIR Carnet
holder or to the person acting on that holder’s behalf.
(2) Where
paragraph 18 applies, the Agent must return the appropriate part of
Voucher No. 2 of the TIR Carnet to the customs office of departure without
delay.
20 Formalities for goods received in Jersey
by an authorised consignee
(1) When
the goods arrive at the authorised place in the authorisation under
paragraph 25, the authorised consignee must –
(a) immediately notify the Agent of the arrival
of the goods and inform the Agent of any irregularities or incidents that
occurred during transport, in each case within the time-limit for the purpose
set in that authorisation;
(b) unload the goods, but only after obtaining
permission from the Agent to do so, and enter the results of the inspection and
any other relevant information relating to the unloading into the authorised
consignee’s records without delay; and
(c) notify the Agent of the results of the
inspection of the goods, and inform the Agent of any irregularities, no later
than the third day following the day on which permission from the Agent to
unload the goods was received.
(2) The
authorised consignee must ensure that the TIR Carnet of the TIR transit
procedure is presented, within the time-limit laid down in the authorisation,
at the Jersey customs office of destination for the purposes of terminating the
TIR transit procedure in accordance with paragraph 23.
(3) The
TIR Carnet holder must be considered to have fulfilled the obligations under Article 1(o)
of the TIR Convention, where the TIR Carnet together with the road vehicle, the
combination of vehicles or the container and the goods have been presented
intact to the authorised consignee at the place specified in the authorisation under
paragraph 25.
21 Alternative proof of termination of the
TIR transit procedure
(1) The
TIR transit procedure started under paragraph 14 must be considered as
having been terminated correctly, within the time-limit set in accordance with paragraph 14(2),
where the TIR Carnet holder or the guaranteeing association (as defined in Article 1(q)
of the TIR Convention) presents, to the satisfaction of the Agent, at least one
of the following documents identifying the goods –
(a) a document certified by the Agent which
identifies the goods and establishes that the goods have been presented at the
customs office of destination, or have been delivered to an authorised
consignee under paragraph 25;
(b) a document or a customs record, certified
by –
(i) the Agent, which establishes that the
goods physically left the British Islands from Jersey, or
(ii) the competent customs authorities in the
British Islands, which establishes that the goods left the British Islands from
elsewhere in the British Islands;
(c) a customs document issued in a country
outside the British Islands, where the goods are placed under a customs
procedure;
(d) a document issued in a country outside the
British Islands, stamped or otherwise certified by the customs authority of that
country and establishing that the goods are considered to be in free
circulation in that country.
(2) For
the purposes of sub-paragraph (1), copies certified as being true copies
by the body which certified the original documents may be provided as proof.
22 Enquiry procedure
(1) Where
the TIR transit procedure terminates under paragraph 15(3), or under paragraph 19(1)
but with an irregularity, the Agent must request information about that
irregularity from the holder of the TIR Carnet.
(2) The TIR Carnet holder must provide the
information no later than 28 days after receiving the request.
(3) If the Agent remains unable to discharge
the TIR transit procedure upon receiving that information, the Agent must
immediately notify the guaranteeing association in question and invite it to
provide proof that the procedure should be discharged.
23 Discharge of the TIR transit procedure
The Agent must discharge the TIR
transit procedure where it is properly terminated without irregularity under paragraph 19(1),
or any irregularity is resolved following receipt of the information mentioned in
paragraph 22(2) or (3).
PART 4
MISCELLANEOUS
PROVISION FOR THE PURPOSES OF THIS SCHEDULE
24 Irregularities: supplementary
(1) A
discrepancy between the TIR manifest of the goods covered by the TIR Carnet and
the actual contents of the road vehicle, combination of vehicles or container,
is not an irregularity by the TIR Carnet holder where the discrepancy is not
due to mistakes committed knowingly or through negligence, when the goods were
loaded or dispatched or when the TIR manifest was made out.
(2) The Agent must, on request from a customs
authority for a Contracting Party to the TIR Convention giving relevant
reasons, provide that authority with all the available information about
matters covered by sub-paragraph (1), and minor discrepancies covered by paragraph 15(2).
PART 5
AUTHORISATIONS
FOR THE TIR TRANSIT PROCEDURE
25 Authorisation of authorised consignees
(1) The
Agent may authorise the simplification in sub-paragraph (3) regarding the
TIR transit procedure or the end of that procedure.
(2) The authorisation may be granted to an
applicant fulfilling the following conditions –
(a) the applicant is established in Jersey;
(b) the applicant will regularly use the common
transit procedure;
(c) neither the applicant, nor any director or
senior employee of the applicant (as the case may be), has been involved in a
breach of an obligation relating to tax or a customs obligation, which in the
opinion of the Agent is –
(i) a serious breach having regard to the
circumstances and nature of any breach and the number of any breaches, and
(ii) relevant to the suitability of the
applicant to be permitted to benefit from the simplification in question;
(d) neither the applicant, nor any director or
senior employee of the applicant (as the case may be), has a criminal
conviction which in the opinion of the Agent is –
(i) serious having regard to the type of
conviction, and
(ii) relevant to the suitability of the
applicant to be permitted to benefit from the simplification in question;
(e) the applicant maintains a logistical system
and records that identify the movement of, and transactions in, chargeable
goods and domestic goods and facilitate compliance with customs obligations;
(f) the applicant meets such professional
standards of competence as the Agent may direct or, in the opinion of the
Agent, the applicant’s practical experience makes the applicant suitable to be
permitted to benefit from the simplification in question;
(g) the applicant is able to comply with any
condition additional to clauses (a) to (f) which the Agent considers will
be a justified condition of the authorisation if granted,
but only if the
Agent considers that the customs officers will be able to exercise control of
the goods subject to the common transit procedure without introducing
administrative measures disproportionate to the requirements of the person
concerned.
(3) The
Agent may authorise a person (an “authorised consignee”) to receive goods moved
under the common transit procedure at an authorised place to end the procedure,
but only if that person will regularly receive goods subject to the common
transit procedure.
26 Guaranteeing associations
(1) A
“guaranteeing association” for the purpose of this paragraph (other than
sub-paragraph (4)(b)) is an association approved by HMRC to act as surety
for any person using the TIR transit procedure.
(2) The
Agent must maintain a list of national guaranteeing associations approved by
HMRC.
(3) The Agent may provide to a guaranteeing
association information about –
(a) a person’s suitability for access to the
TIR transit procedure, given any relevant breach of a serious customs
obligation or other serious obligation relating to the importation goods, or
any relevant criminal conviction;
(b) the Agent’s decision under this paragraph
to exclude a person, temporarily or permanently, from access to the TIR transit
procedure on the basis of the matters set out in clause (a).
(4) The
Agent may share the information about the decision in sub-paragraph (3)(b)
with –
(a) a customs authority in a place outside
Jersey where the person is established;
(b) the guaranteeing association (if outside
the British Islands) in respect of the place where the matters in sub-paragraph (3)(a)
took place; and
(c) the TIR Executive Board for the TIR
Convention.
27 Approval of vehicles and containers,
controls etc. on heavy or bulky goods
(1) In
general, only road vehicles, combinations of vehicles or containers within Article 3(a)(i)
of the TIR Convention which have been approved in accordance with Chapter III(a)
of, and Annex 3, to the TIR Convention by –
(a) HMRC in respect of the British Islands; or
(b) the competent authorities in a contracting
state outside the British Islands,
may be used in
a TIR transit procedure.
(2) Any
certificate of approval must be carried with the vehicle during the TIR transit
procedure.
(3) In
the case of an approved demountable body or container, an approval plate must
be affixed to it.
(4) Other
road vehicles, other combinations of vehicles or other containers within Article 3(a)(ii)
of the TIR Convention may be used in a TIR transit procedure, subject to the
conditions in Chapter III(c) of that Convention (heavy or bulky goods).
(5) Vehicles mentioned in Article 3(a)(iii)
of the TIR Convention may be used in a TIR transit procedure, subject to the
conditions in Article 3(a)(iii) and Chapter III(c) of that Convention
(goods travelling by own means).
(6) Where the provisions of sub-paragraphs (4)
and (5) apply to the movement of heavy or bulky goods subject to a TIR transit
procedure that begins in Jersey, the Agent may allow heavy or bulky goods to be
carried by means of a non-sealable vehicle or container, provided that in the
Agent’s opinion, the heavy or bulky goods carried and any accessories carried
with them –
(a) can be easily identified by reference to
the description given; or
(b) can be provided with customs seals or
identifying marks so as to prevent any substitution or removal of the goods
without it being obvious.
(7) Where
the movement of goods subject to the TIR transit procedure concerns heavy or
bulky goods, the cover and all vouchers of the TIR Carnet must be endorsed “heavy
or bulky goods” in bold letters.
(8) Where
heavy or bulky goods subject to the TIR transit procedure are presented to the Agent
at the Jersey customs office of departure to begin the procedure, the Agent may
require a document, including a packing list, photograph, drawing or other
information, to be appended to the TIR Carnet as the Agent considers necessary
to enable the identification of any heavy or bulky goods carried.
(9) Where
a document is appended in accordance with sub-paragraph (8) –
(a) the Jersey customs office of departure must
endorse that document;
(b) the holder of the TIR procedure must attach
a copy of the endorsed document to the inside of the TIR Carnet; and
(c) all manifests concerning the TIR Carnet must
include a reference to the document.
PART 6
FURTHER
GENERAL PROVISION FOR THE PURPOSES OF THIS SCHEDULE
28 Consequences of TIR transit procedure
discharge
On the discharge of a TIR transit
procedure in Jersey for the purposes of Part 2 or 3 of this Schedule,
the goods which were subject to the procedure become subject to obligations and
liabilities under the Customs Law, including liability to pay any duty, and the
obligation to make entry of goods on importation or report of goods on export.
29 Controls, seals and identifying marks
(1) For
the purpose of Parts 2 and 3 of this Schedule, whenever a seal needs to be
removed in Jersey to allow customs inspection, the Agent must –
(a) endeavour to reseal as necessary with a
customs seal of at least equivalent security features; and
(b) note the particulars of the action
including the new seal number on the cargo documentation.
(2) For
the purpose of Parts 2 and 3 of this Schedule, whenever an identifying
mark needs to be removed in Jersey to allow customs inspection, the Agent
must –
(a) endeavour to reseal as necessary with a
customs seal of at least equivalent security features; and
(b) note the particulars of the action
including the new seal number on the cargo documentation.
(3) Where
an inspection concerns a road vehicle, combinations of vehicles or a container
within Article 3(a)(i) of the TIR Convention, the particulars of the
controls undertaken, together with the new seal number or identifying mark,
must be recorded on –
(a) the TIR Carnet voucher used in Jersey;
(b) the corresponding counterfoils; and
(c) the vouchers remaining in the TIR Carnet.
(4) Where
an inspection concerns heavy or bulky goods, the new seal number or identifying
mark must be recorded on the TIR Carnet voucher used in Jersey and the
corresponding counterfoils.
30 Miscellaneous
(1) Discharge
of the TIR procedure also discharges a deemed transit procedure such as
mentioned in paragraphs 3(2) and 16(1).
(2) A request for information under paragraph 10(1)
or 22(1) has effect as if made by the Agent under Article 6(3) of the Customs Law and to a person to whom that provision
applies.
SCHEDULE 3
(Article 4)
Procedure
for NATO forces
1 Place for controls and formalities for
NATO goods leaving and re-entering Jersey
Where, in the course of movement of
goods from one point to another point in Jersey, goods leave and re-enter
Jersey, the customs controls and formalities applicable in accordance with the
Agreement in Article 4 must be carried out by the Agent at the points
where the goods temporarily leave Jersey and where they re-enter Jersey.
2 Jersey customs office and form 302
(1) The Agent may designate Jersey customs
offices responsible for formalities and controls concerning the movement of
goods carried out by or on behalf of NATO forces.
(2) A designated Jersey customs office must
supply the NATO forces stationed in its area with forms known as 302 which –
(a) are pre-authenticated with the stamp and
official signature of the Agent;
(b) are serially numbered; and
(c) bear the full address of that designated
customs office for the return copy of the form known as “form 302”.
(3) In
this Schedule, “NATO forces” are those of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organisation eligible to use form 302 as provided for in or under the
Agreement in Article 4.
3 Procedural rules for the form 302
(1) The
procedural rules applying to, and to the use of, form 302 may be
stipulated by way of a directive by the Agent.
(2) Those
stipulations must provide for, in particular –
(a) the means by which the NATO forces must
lodge the form with the Agent;
(b) the means by which the Agent may
authenticate a form that is so lodged;
(c) the rules for use of the form, or a copy,
in relation to HMRC customs controls and formalities about NATO forces which
dispatch goods, or on whose behalf goods are dispatched;
(d) the rules for use of the form as an
accompanying document for movements of goods by or on behalf of NATO forces.