Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
The legal definition of these occurs in the Customs Act of the country.
An example from a Customs Act is:
Explanatory notes to the Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act 2005.
Changes in 2001 to the Australian Customs Act means that it is also illegal to import the book into Australia.
This offence was abolished and replaced by the Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act 2005.
Its importation into India was prohibited in March 1911, under the Sea Customs Act."
The Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act 2005, as amended from the National Archives.
The Customs Act 1901 was passed soon after federation, and like previous British and colonial legislation, required the use of a customs flag.
Dietrich was tried in the County Court of Victoria in 1988 for a trafficking offence under the Customs Act 1901 and certain less serious charges.
Section 112 of the Customs Act 1901 (Cth) prohibited the exportation of mineral sands unless authorised by the Minister.
It was registered under the Commonwealth Commerce (Meat Export) Regulations made under the Customs Act 1901-1960.
In return, the UK and Australian Governments will be required to take steps to improve their export control laws (such as the Australian Customs Act).
CBSA officers are given their authority by the Customs Act and the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.
HMRC is a non-ministerial department established by the Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act (CRCA) 2005.
In March 1956, Goossens was arrested attempting to bring 800 erotic photographs, some film and ritual masks into Australia from London, and was charged under Section 233 of the Customs Act.
It was held that the Customs Act, which gave broad powers to customs inspectors to exclude "obscene" materials, violated the right to freedom of expression under section 2 but was justifiable under section 1.
In Mead, it was questioned whether the court should defer to the U.S. Customs Services interpretation of the Customs Act, as manifested through the many classification decisions its regional offices made annually.
In April 1937 the Canadian government passed the Foreign Enlistment Act, outlawing participation by Canadians in foreign wars, and the Customs Act, which provided for government control over arms exports.
As illegal gold smuggling was in contravention of India's Sea Customs Act, the ship was liable to be confiscated, despite the gold having been smuggled on board by a crewman without the company's knowledge.
The bookstore challenged the section of the Customs Act which prohibited the importation of obscene material as well as a section of the Act that put the onus on the importer to disprove obscenity.
To better collect the new taxes, the Commissioners of Customs Act of 1767 established the American Board of Customs Commissioners, which was modeled on the British Board of Customs.
Some Muslims filed a criminal case against Goel, alleging that it violated Sections 153A and 295A of the Indian Penal Code and similar articles of the Indian Customs Act.
Section 18 of the Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act 2005 (CRCA) makes it clear that you must not give ('disclose') HMRC information to anyone, unless you have lawful authority to do so.
But it also declared that customs officials had unfairly singled out homosexual pornography as opposed to heterosexual material, and it struck down one section of the Customs Act to put the onus of proof on the government, not the importer.
After referring to a section of the relevant Customs Act which was said to give an importer an opportunity to obtain his goods without making an irrevocable payment of the duty claimed O'Connor J. continued, at p. 277: