BON-2-CO:R:C:E 223804 PH
Ms. Rebecca Fredricks
Bond Administrator
Boise Cascade Corporation
One Jefferson Square
Boise, Idaho 83728
RE: Category 1 (Entry) Bond; Addition of Co-Principal; Right to
Make Entry; 19 U.S.C. 1484; 19 U.S.C. 1641; 19 CFR 113.34
Dear Ms. Fredricks:
In your letter of March 9, 1992, you ask our advice about
your company's Customs General Term Bond. Our advice follows.
FACTS:
You state that a Canadian company [Corporation B] is a
wholly owned subsidiary of your company [Corporation A]. You
state that you have added two Canadian locations to the General
Term Bond of Corporation A. Your intent in doing this was to
allow an employee (we assume that this employee is employed by
Corporation A) in International Falls, Minnesota, to sign for
imports from the two Canadian locations. Copies of your
company's General Term Bond and of a Rider to that Bond, enclosed
with your letter, show that the two Canadian locations are
facilities of Corporation B and that the Rider was intended to
amend the "[p]rincipal names and locations" on the General Term
Bond to include Corporation B at these facilities.
You state that Customs advised you that the International
Falls employee could not sign for imports from the two Canadian
locations because the employee is paid by Corporation A and not
Corporation B. You ask whether this is so and, if so, whether
your intent could be achieved if the International Falls employee
had a power of attorney from Corporation B.
ISSUES:
(1) May an employee of one corporation sign the entry
documents for a second corporation when the second corporation is
a wholly-owned subsidiary of the first corporation?
(2) If the answer to ISSUE (1) is negative, may an employee
of the parent corporation sign the entry documents for the
subsidiary corporation if the latter corporation grants a power
of attorney to the employee?
LAW AND ANALYSIS:
Initially, we note that there may be co-principals on a
Customs bond (i.e., more than one principal) (see 19 CFR 113.34;
see also, Treasury Decision (T.D.), T.D. 84-213, at pages 606
through 609, Volume 18 (1984) of the bound Customs Bulletin).
However, the addition of a co-principal after execution of a bond
may not be accomplished by a bond rider; it may only be
accomplished by the execution of a new bond (see 19 CFR 113.24;
see also T.D. 84-213, at pages 606 and 607, Volume 18 (1984) of
the bound edition of the Customs Bulletin). In this case, as
stated in the FACTS portion of this ruling, the rider purports to
add Corporation B as a principal on the bond. As stated above,
this may not be done. A bond rider may only be used for the
purposes set forth in 19 CFR 113.24 (i.e., to change the name of
the principal when the change in name does not change the legal
identity or status of the principal; to change the address of the
principal; or to add or delete from a bond trade names and the
names of unincorporated divisions of a corporate principal which
do not have a separate and distinct legal status).
Basically, we understand the proposal in this case to be to
have an employee of Corporation A make entry for Corporation B
when the latter is a non-resident, wholly-owned subsidiary of
Corporation A. We assume, for purposes of this ruling, that
Corporation B has the right to make entry under 19 U.S.C. 1484
(i.e., that Corporation B qualifies as the "importer of record",
that it is either the owner or purchaser of the imported
merchandise). In order to make entry as the importer of record,
Corporation B must have a Category 1 (entry) bond, either in its
own right or as a co-principal with Corporation A on a newly
executed bond (see 19 CFR 113.33; see also discussion above).
This is true even though Corporation B may be a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Corporation A (i.e., because it is a basic
principle of corporate law that a corporation is a separate and
distinct legal being (a proposition which has been adopted for
Customs purposes, Moberly v. United States, 4 Cust. Ct. 91, 94-
95, C.D. 294 (1940)), and because "a parent corporation and a
subsidiary are in law separate and distinct entities", Tennessee
Valley Authority v. Exxon Nuclear Co., Inc., 753 F.2d 493, 497
(6th Cir. 1985); see also 18 C.J.S. (1990) Corporations, sections
8 and 15).
Pursuant to the principles of law discussed in the preceding
paragraph, Corporation A may not make entry (through its
employee) for Corporation B, even though the corporations are
parent and subsidiary corporations, because they are separate
legal entities. Unless Corporation A is the "importer of record"
(see above), it may not make entry (see 19 U.S.C. 1484; see also
19 U.S.C. 1641, under which no person other than a Customs broker
may conduct Customs business (including the making of an entry)
other than solely on behalf of that person).
Even if Corporation B has the right to make entry and
obtains the proper bond, still to be resolved is the question of
whether an employee of Corporation A may make entry for
Corporation B if the latter corporation gives a power of attorney
to the employee. To resolve this issue, we must examine the law
governing the principal and agent relationship.
When two principals may have differing interests (as is
possible with regard to Corporation A and B in this case), it is
a general rule of agency law that an agent may act as such for
more than one of the principals only if there is full disclosure
to, and consent, by both principals (see Amoco Production Co. v.
Jacobs, 746 F.2d 1394 (10th Cir. 1984); Naviera Despina, Inc. v.
Cooper Shipping Co., Inc., 676 F. Supp. 1134 (S.D. Ala. 1987); 2A
C.J.S. Agency Section 32; Restatement (Second) of Agency (1958),
Sections 391, 394). We have issued a ruling consistent with the
foregoing (see Customs Service Decision (C.S.D.) 81-40, copy
enclosed).
In C.S.D. 81-40 we held that a parent corporation could not
enter merchandise consigned to its subsidiary. However, we
stated that an officer of both corporations could file an entry
on behalf of the subsidiary, provided the officer was doing so in
his capacity as an officer of the subsidiary. We also stated
that a person who was employed by both corporations, but not
employed as an officer, could file an entry on behalf of the
subsidiary, provided that a power of attorney from the subsidiary
was filed with Customs and that the power of attorney stated that
the employee was an employee of the subsidiary and had the
authority to file entries on behalf of the subsidiary (in this
regard, note the special power of attorney requirements for non-
resident principals in 19 CFR 141.36 and 141.37).
Our conclusions, based on the foregoing, are summarized in
the HOLDINGS portion of this ruling, below.
HOLDINGS:
(1) Generally (i.e., unless the circumstances listed in
ISSUE (2) are present), an employee of one corporation may not
sign the entry documents for a second corporation when the second
corporation is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the first
corporation.
(2) An employee of the parent corporation may sign the
entry documents for the subsidiary corporation only if:
(a) The employee is employed by the subsidiary
corporation (the employee may be employed by both
corporations insofar as Customs is concerned);
(b) The employee signs the entry documents in his or her
capacity as employee of the subsidiary corporation;
(c) The subsidiary corporation grants a power of
attorney to the employee specifically stating that the
employee is an employee of the subsidiary and that the
employee has the authority to file entries on behalf of the
subsidiary;
(d) The subsidiary corporation meets the special
requirements for non-resident principals in 19 CFR 141.36
and 141.37;
(e) The subsidiary corporation qualifies as the
"importer of record" for the merchandise under
consideration; and
(f) The subsidiary corporation has a satisfactory
Category 1 (entry) bond as either principal or co-principal
(in this regard, the subsidiary corporation may not be
added, as principal or co-principal, to the existing bond of
the parent corporation by means of a rider).
Sincerely,
John Durant, Director
Commercial Rulings Division
Enclosure