✨ Customs Regulations and Forms
Nov 26.]
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
the produce or manufactures of which are entitled to be entered for duty
under the British Preferential Tariff, and/or labour performed in such
countries, calculated in accordance with Regulation 6 hereof, is not less
than one-half of the factory or works cost of such article in its finished
state; and provided further that, except with the special permission of the
Comptroller, such certificates shall not be accepted after the 30th day of
September, 1926.
FIRST SCHEDULE.
| No. of Form. | Date on which Order in Council gazetted by | Nature and Extent of |
|---|---|---|
| which Form was prescribed. | Amendment. | |
| 19 | 2nd July, 1914 | |
| 32 | "" "" | By adding after the words "or Notary Public" in the declaratory clause the words "or Justice of the Peace." |
| 33 | "" "" | |
| 35 | "" "" | |
| 53 | "" "" | |
| 60 | "" "" | |
| 1 | 7th December, 1922 | |
| 8 | "" "" | |
| 9 | "" "" | |
| 1 | 6th September, 1923 | |
| 2 | "" "" |
SECOND SCHEDULE.
FORM 1.
FORM OF INVOICE.
[Here insert usual particulars, including place and date, name and address of supplier, &c.]
| Country of Origin. | Marks and Numbers on Packages. | Quantity and Description of Goods. | Current Domestic Values in Currency of Exporting Country. (See Paragraphs 3 and 4 of Certificate.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| At |
| Selling-price to Purchaser. | At | Amount. |
Enumerate the following charges, and state whether each amount has been included
in or excluded from the above current domestic value:-
| (1.) Cartage to rail and/or to docks. | Amount in Currency of Exporting Country. | State if included in above Current Domestic Value. |
|---|---|---|
| (2.) Inland freight (rail or canal) and other charges to the dock area, including inland insurance | ||
| (3.) Labour in packing the goods into outside packages | ||
| (4.) Value of outside packages | ||
| (5.) If the goods are subject to any charge by way of royalties [State full particulars of royalties below.] |
NOTES.--(1.) If all the goods shown on the invoice have the same country of origin,
such country need not be shown in a separate column, provided that it is clearly indicated
in a conspicuous place on the invoice—e.g., “Country of origin: England.”
(2.) Goods of British origin admissible in New Zealand under the British Preferential
Tariff must not be shown on the same invoice as goods not so admissible (see subsection (1)
of section 16 of the Customs Amendment Act, 1921).
(3.) The current domestic values shown above should be the duty-paid current
domestic values. The trade and cash discounts allowed in the domestic market should
be shown on the face of the invoice and deducted from the gross values set forth
thereon.
(4.) When drawback or remission of duty is allowable (see paragraph 4 of certificate)
the invoice, if containing more than one item, should indicate to which items such drawback
or remission relates, and also the amount allowable in respect of each item.
FORM 2.
CERTIFICATE OF VALUE TO BE WRITTEN OR PRINTED ON INVOICES
OF GOODS FOR EXPORTATION TO NEW ZEALAND.
I, [Full name], [Here insert Manager, Chief Clerk, or as the case may be] of [Here insert
name of firm or company], of [Here insert name of city or country], manufacturer/supplier
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Online Sources for this page:
VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1925, No 82
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1925, No 82
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🏭
Additional Customs Regulations (C. No. 34)
(continued from previous page)
🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry21 November 1925
Customs Regulations, Tariff Preference, Import Declarations, British Preferential Tariff
🏭 First Schedule of Customs Forms
🏭 Trade, Customs & IndustryCustoms Forms, Schedule, Amendments
🏭 Second Schedule: Form 1 - Invoice Form
🏭 Trade, Customs & IndustryInvoice Form, Customs, Import Declarations
🏭 Second Schedule: Form 2 - Certificate of Value
🏭 Trade, Customs & IndustryCertificate of Value, Customs, Exportation