|
Tuesday 19th March 2013 |
Text too small? |
Cut-price petrol retailer Gull Petroleum has won the right to appeal to the Supreme Court in its stoush with the Customs Department over the rate of excise duty it should charge on butane added to petrol arriving at the wharf in New Zealand.
The excise rates on locally produced butane are lower than for imported product, but the import rate should be levied if the company is deemed to have been "manufacturing" petrol, Customs has argued.
The excise rates on locally produced butane are lower than for imported product, but the import rate should be levied if the company is deemed to have been "manufacturing" petrol, Customs has argued.
Some $20 million of revenue is at stake.
Customs lost its argument in the High Court, won in the Court of Appeal in December, and now faces a Supreme Court hearing.
The issue came to light when BP New Zealand applied to do as Gull had been doing and was turned down. Customs then sought to claim alleged unpaid excise from Gull's subsidiary, Terminals New Zealand.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
No comments yet
TRU - Results Guidance FY2026
TRU - Results Guidance FY2026
MEE - Me Today announces six-month results to 31 December 2025
HGH - Heartland announces 1H2026 result
BRW - FY26 Half Year Results Announcement
February 25th Morning Report
Genesis completes NZ$100m Placement
MCY - Invests heavily in renewables; delivers strong performance
PFI Announces Interim Results
February 24th Morning Report