DRA-2-01-RR:IT:EC 224420
Port Director of Customs
U.S. Customs Service
1 East Bay Street
Savannah GA 31401
RE: Production by agent for principal; 19 U.S.C. 1313(b);
Evidence of ownership by principal before production;
Identification of goods to sales contract; Sufficiency of
evidence; HQ 221914; HQ 223431; Protest 1703-92-100120.
Dear Sir:
The above protest was forwarded for further review. There are
two other protests at your port which involve the same issue. Our
decision here should be applied to those protests.
FACTS:
There were 40 drawback claims filed which were liquidated
without drawback on May 8, 1992. This protest was filed on August
6, 1992, 90 days after the liquidation. The protest would be
timely within the requirement of 19 U.S.C. 1514(c). Under
19 U.S.C. 1514(a)(6), a protest may be filed against a refusal to
pay a claim for drawback.
The protestant, Savannah Foods & Industries, Inc. (Savannah),
asserts that it employed an agent, Michigan Sugar Company
(Michigan), to produce the refined sugar that was exported so
that it, Savannah, could claim (l) that it was the sole
manufacturer for drawback purposes. Savannah submitted evidence
to show it actually and legally used the imported, designated
raw sugar at its sugar refinery in Georgia to make refined
sugar.Savannah is identified as the manufacturer on the
manufacturer's statement under 19 CFR 191.21 - 191.34 and T.D.
83-59. Michigan identified itself as an occasional agent of
Savannah on its manufacturer's statement.
The dispute centers on whether the evidence supports
Savannah's assertion that the exported refined sugar was made
from Savannah's raw sugar or whether the evidence shows that
Savannah merely bought refined sugar from Michigan. If Savannah
cannot show that the refined sugar that it exported was produced
from raw sugar that it owned before processing was begun by
Michigan as its agent, Savannah cannot meet the requirements of
19 U.S.C. 1313(b).
Although these claims were the subject of two earlier
decisions; HQ 221914 and HQ 223431, further review was requested
on the grounds that new evidence was available that had not been
considered in the prior decisions and that new legal issues were
raised that were not considered in the prior decisions. Further
review appears warranted on those grounds. Evidence has been
furnished on the records of the agent which were not previously
considered by Headquarters.
Two distinct formulas are involved. The mass balance formula
determines the amount of raw beet sugar that results in the
production of refined sugar. The agency formula separates the
respective ownership of that sugar between Savannah and Michigan.
That is, with respect to the refined sugar that can be attributed
by the mass balance formula to raw sugar, the agency formula
allocates 100 pounds of refined sugar to Savannah for every 110
pounds of Savannah's raw sugar that Michigan refined as
Savannah's agent.
As discussed below, the mass balance formula separates the
starting materials in terms of the finished refined sugar.
Savannah and Michigan found that when 100 pounds of refined
sugar is made, about 64 pounds of that refined sugar is
attributable to raw beet sugar, the remainder being refined
sugar that is produced from thick juice that itself is produced
directly from sugar beets without going to the raw sugar step.
The agency formula further separates the refined sugar
between the principal, Savannah, and its agent, Michigan.
If 100 pounds of refined sugar was produced, 64 pounds of that
refined sugar was attributable to raw beet sugar. If all the
raw sugar belonged to Savannah, then as a result of the agreement between Savannah and Michigan, Michigan would have had to use
70 pounds of Savannah's raw sugar(64 x 1.1 = 70) to make those 64
pounds.
SEGREGATION OF SAVANNAH AND MICHIGAN'S RAW SUGAR
Savannah asserts that it purchased the raw sugar in advance
of the creation of that raw sugar by Michigan. Savannah asserts
that the processing of that raw sugar by Michigan should be
attributed to production by Savannah to meet the statutory
criterion of 19 U.S.C. 1313(b) that one manufacturer use both the
designated imported merchandise and the merchandise that is the
source of the export articles.
Savannah asserts that all of the refined sugar carried on
Michigan's inventory records for export was produced from
Savannah's raw sugar. Savannah and Michigan assert that if
Michigan is processing beets into refined sugar all of refined
sugar that is made from raw sugar, produced up to the amount of
Savannah's advance payment, is produced for Savannah. Refined
beet sugar is manufactured from raw sugar juice, which contains
raw beet sugar. A "mass balance formula" is used to calculate the
quantity of raw sugar used to make the refined sugar.
The mass balance formula is asserted by Savannah to show the
amount of raw sugar owned by Savannah. Savannah asserts that as a
result of the formula's application to daily production, the
production records show that about 64 percent of the end product
comes from raw sugar belonging to Savannah.
The explanation of the mass balance formula is contained in
Exhibit T to counsel's letter of November 29, 1993 and Exhibit 4
to counsel's letter of September 21, 1995. Savannah asserts, in
its counsel's letter of November 29, 1993, that the results of
application of the mass balance formula are recorded, for the
protested claims, in Michigan's perpetual inventory for fiscal
years 1985 through 1988. The Michigan perpetual inventory records
are based on the daily production records from each of Michigan's
plants.
The payment records indicate that Savannah bought 20 million
pounds of future raw sugar from Michigan by virtue of sales
documents dated October 31, 1984. Savannah's inventory records
run from October 1 of one year to September 30 of the following
year. The payment records indicate that Savannah also bought 25
million pounds of future raw sugar from Michigan on January 2,
1985. The total shown by those records would be 45 million pounds
of raw sugar. The Michigan inventory is carried in refined
pounds. The conversion ratio used by Savannah and Michigan is
that 110 raw pounds would make 100 refined pounds. In addition,
Savannah and Michigan assert that Savannah's ownership in the
refined pounds can be calculated by applying the mass balance
formula of 64 percent to the amount of total refined pounds made
during a period.
Ownership by Savannah of Raw Sugar
Savannah asserts that its payments in advance of the
production by Michigan, shows that Savannah owned the raw sugar
before that sugar was refined. Customs has taken the position
that the raw sugar from beets is susceptible of being owned for
drawback purposes. The evidence offered in support of Savannah's
assertion are: (1) an agency contract between Savannah and
Michigan, (2) purchase contracts for future delivery between
Savannah and Michigan of raw sugar,(3) records of checks issued
by Savannah to Michigan,(4) the inventory allocation on
Michigan's perpetual inventory records of refined sugar available
for export, and (5) the records which are said to show Michigan's
credits of exported sugar against Savannah's raw sugar advance
payments.
In addition, Savannah in its counsel's letter of March 24,
1995 asserts an alternative theory: Savannah did not need
Michigan, as an agent in order to show that the production at
Michigan's plants was production by Savannah. That is, Savannah
asserts that its total ownership of Michigan's stock and its
method of consolidated finances among its wholly-owned
subsidiaries show an equivalency in identity between Savannah and
Michigan. However, that argument was not further developed and
has not been considered.
The agency contract between Savannah and Michigan is in Exhibit
V to counsel's letter of November 29, 1993.
The agency contract is dated September 28, 1984 and is signed
by both Savannah and Michigan. The contract provides for an
effective date of September 30, 1984.
The contract provides for Savannah to buy raw sugar from
Michigan and for Michigan to refine 100 pounds of refined sugar
from each 110 pounds of raw sugar owned by Savannah. Any
residuals or byproducts belonged to Michigan.
There is a memorandum dated October 31, 1984 recording the
sale of 20 million pounds of future raw sugar from Michigan to
Savannah. The terms are $21.50 for the raw sugar plus a tolling
charge that would be the difference between the average gross
sales price of refined product and the $21.50 price. Exhibit V
to counsel's letter of November 29, 1993 contains invoices and
memoranda said to show the purchase of future raw sugar by
Savannah from Michigan.
Mich. to Savannah invoice 10/31/84 No. Illegible 20 mill.$21.60/100
($4,300,000)
Michigan memorandum 01/3/85 25 million $20.67/100
Michigan to Savannah invoice 01/2/85 25 million $20.67/100
($5,167,500)
Savannah confirmation 10/1/85
38 million $18.23/100
Michigan to Savannah invoice 10/01/85 1001 38 million $18.23/100
($6,927,400)
Savannah memorandum 09/30/86 60 million $20.88/100
Michigan memorandum 09/26/86 60 million $20.88/100
Michigan to Savannah invoice 09/26/86 1001 60 million $20.88/100
($12,900,000)
Michigan to Savannah invoice 09/29/87 1001 60 million $21.50/100
Savannah confirmation 09/30/87 60 million $21.50/100
Savannah letter and memorandum 10/06/87 30 million $21.50/100
Michigan letter 12/09/87 30 million
Savannah memorandum 12/11/87 ($6,450,000)
Michigan to Savannah invoice 10/05/87 1002 30 million $21.50/100
($6,450,000)
Michigan to Savannah invoice 09/29/88 1001 80 million $21.77/100
($17,406.000)
Savannah memorandum 09/19/88 80 million $21.77/100
Exhibit W to counsel's letter of November 29, 1993 contains
canceled checks said to represent payment for the future raw
sugar.
Invoice No.
Illegible
Check 45675 Nov. 12, 1984 $4,300,000
Check 49241 Jan. 14, 1985 $5,167,500 1107
Check 586 Oct. 9, 1985 $6,927,400 1001
Check 32630 Oct. 3, 1986 $12,528,000 1001
Check 71520 Oct. 16, 1987 $12,900,000 1001
Check illegible Nov. 11, 1988 $18,504,500 1001
By letter dated April 12, 1996, counsel asserted that
evidence of Savannah's ownership of raw sugar at Michigan
was set forth in certain listed pages to Savannah's submission
of November 29, 1993. The information on those pages relative
to Savannah are listed above except the following:
Page 03781 and 03785 are duplicates of the Michigan to Savannah
invoice 1001 of 9/24/87.
Page 03773, 03774, 03780, 03783 and 03787 contain material
involving Great Lakes Sugar Company which is claimed to have been
bought by Savannah and be part of Michigan. There is no apparent
basis for considering that material in connection with these
drawback claims.
Savannah also asserts that all of Savannah's accounting records
were available for reexamination during the audit.
By its counsel's letter of July 18, 1995, Savannah asserts
that the October 31, 1984 date for the memorandum of sale and the
Michigan invoice in Exhibit V to its letter of November 29, 1993
is not indicative of the date of the sale of sugar in 1984.
Savannah asserts that the sale actually occurred before the date
shown on that evidence submitted. Savannah characterizes the
evidence as a memorializing of a prior act.
Counsel's letter of July 18, 1995 also acknowledges that for
the week ending November 3, 1984 at the Croswell plant
application of the mass balance formula for export sugar, which
is asserted to be Savannah's sugar, results in more sugar
available than is actually recorded. Counsel asserts that the
quantity in the last week of export production was adjusted
accordingly.
Counsel and Mr. John Yuill of Savannah in a telephone
conference on February 14, 1996 stated that the daily records of
production are accurate as to the amounts processed. They
acknowledge, however, that the 64 percent mass balance figure is
an average, and that the actual daily mass balance calculations can vary. Attachment 4 to Counsel's letter of September 21, 1995
contains a Michigan memorandum dated September 20, 1995 which
showed the variations in raw sugar usage on a daily basis and
showed how a weekly average of 64 percent was calculated. During
the week of November 1 - 7, 1985 the white sugar produced from
raw sugar was 61.96, 72.41, 66.36, 65.28, 68.93, 55.26, and
62.21. Those daily amounts average 64.60 for the week. Attachment
T to Savannah's letter of November 29, 1993 contains the
methodology that Michigan uses to calculate the percent of raw
sugar used to make the refined white sugar. In the telephone
conference call of February 14, 1996, Savannah's counsel and
Mr. Yuill confirmed that the calculation could not be made from
the daily records alone because the detailed daily 12-page report
from each plant would be needed. Also, in that conference call
Savannah's counsel and Mr. Yuill confirmed that there is no
written record between Savannah and Michigan which reflects an
agreement between the parties to use the mass balance formula
which results in a 64 percent average.
Essentially, it is Savannah's assertion that all of
Michigan's production of refined sugar that was shown by the mass
balance formula to have been made from raw sugar from the date of
Savannah's advance purchase until the amount bought was
satisfied. Since, on average, 64 percent of the refined sugar is
asserted to be attributable to the use of raw sugar, then
verification depends on the evidence of purchase, the daily
records used to make the claims, the evidence that the 64 percent
weekly average was used consistently, in recording the Michigan
inventory, and the claimed dates of production for the export
shipments.
The evidence of purchases for the period October 1, 1984 to
September 30, 1985 is as follows:
The Michigan to Savannah invoice dated October 31, 1984
covers the purchase of 20 million pounds of raw sugar. A second
purchase of sugar for that period is covered by a Michigan to
Savannah invoice dated January 2, 1985 on 25 million pounds of
raw sugar. The payment amounts match the invoices.
A summary for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1985
reflects the following: 45 million raw pounds (20 million plus 25
million pounds) divided by the raw-to-refined conversion rate of
1.10 equals 40,909,090 pounds of refined sugar. That summary
which was provided to Customs by Savannah on December 22, 1993
also shows that the amounts were allocated to three Michigan
plants expressed in refined pounds: Caro (9,090,909), Croswell
(29,545,455) and Carrollton (2,272,727 pounds).
The Michigan inventory records show the following: export
production occurred during the weeks of:
Caro
October 28, 1984 to November 3, 1984 4,120,128
November 4, 1984 to November 10, 1984 425,328
January 6, 1985 to January 12, 1985 3,305.472
January 13, 1985 to January 19, 1985 1,239,983
9,090,909
Croswell export production occurred during the weeks of:
October 28, 1984 to November 3, 1984 1,401,189
November 4, 1984 to November 10, 1984 1,446,131
November 11, 1984 to November 17, 1984 2,726,080
November 18, 1984 to November 24, 1984 1,888,320
November 25, 1984 to December 1, 1984 2,391,680
December 2, 1984 to December 8, 1984 1,984,000
December 9, 1984 to December 15, 1984 2,168,000
December 16, 1984 to December 22, 1984 1,951,040
December 23, 1984 to December 29, 1984 2,077,760
December 30, 1984 to January 5, 1985 1,940,800
January 6, 1985 to January 12, 1985 1,612,800
January 13, 1985 to January 19, 1985 2,048,000
January 20, 1985 to January 26, 1985 1,484,600
January 27, 1985 to February 2, 1985 2,048,653
February 3, 1985 to February 9, 1985 1,561,613
February 10, 1985 to February 16, 1985 814,609
29,545,455
Carrollton export production records were furnished February 14,
1996 by Savannah and show that export production occurred during
the week of:
December 30, 1984 to January 5, 1985 2,272,727
The 20 million pound purchase of raw sugar covered by the invoice
of October 31, 1984 would equal 18,181,818 refined pounds
(20,000,000 divided by 1.10). The export production at Caro for
the period October 28, 1984 to November 10, 1984 is 4,545,456.
The export production at Croswell for the period October 28, 1984
to December 29, 1984 is 18,034,200. There also was export
production at Croswell during the week of December 30, 1984 to
January 5, 1985 of 1,940,800 pounds. Savannah asserts that the
total of export production that was shipped prior to January 2,
1985 was 1,710,000 pounds.
Savannah asserts that the perpetual records it prepared
showing weeks of export production were prepared solely for the
customs audit of its claims and were not the records it used to
make its drawback claims. Instead, Savannah asserts that the
claims were based on its daily records of production.
Consequently, Savannah asserts that its daily production records
for the corrected production dates should be used by Customs to
evaluate the validity of the claims covered by this protest.
Savannah relies on the daily production records for the
corrected production dates to show compliance with 19 USC
1313(b). For those corrected dates, Savannah asserts that the
application of the mass balance formula average of 64 percent
will show use of Savannah's raw sugar by Savannah's agent,
Michigan, as the source of the exports of refined sugar.
The daily records for fiscal year 1986 (October 1, 1985 to
September 30, 1986) show the following:
Caro
October 6, 1985 741,500
7 636,700
8 766,000
9 677,200
10 764,400
11 742,600
12 700,000
5,028,400
October 13 848,900
14 705,600
15 744,000
16 849,000
17 839,300
18 864,300
19 840,000
5,691,100
October 20 673,900
21 850,500
22 783,200
23 831,600
24 904,600
25 810,800
26 862,700
5,717,300
October 27 733,100
28 731,800
29 777,900
30 852,200
31 831,400
Nov. 01 823,000
02 896,500
5,645,900
Croswell
September 29, 1985 n/a
30 n/a
October 1 n/a
3 n/a
4 None
5 None
6 None
7 None
8 None
9 None
10 None
11 None
12 None
October 13, 1985 None
14 None
15 198,000
16 213,000
17 323,600
18 405,600
19 345.000
1,485,200
October 20, 1985 403,800
21 448,300
22 380,400
23 304,800
24 313,200
25 420,100
26 420,000
2,690,600
October 27, 1985 313,500
28 385,600
29 435,300
30 369,700
31 394,500
Nov. 01 459,900
02 459,900
2,818,400
Nov. 03, 1985 460,800
04 466,100
05 449,100
06 559,100
07 420,900
08 440,500
09 372,000
3,168,500
Nov. 10, 1985 510,000
11 414,000
12 470,300
13 480,000
14 432,900
15 428,000
16 168,000
2,903,200
Nov. 17, 1985 416,300
18 465,000
19 555,000
20 462,100
21 440,000
22 437,100
23 483,000
3,258,500
Nov. 24, 1985 402,000
25 363,000
26 468,400
27 480,000
28 500,600
29 484,700
30 541,000
3,239,700
December 1, 1985 510,000
2 470,000
3 450,000
4 360,000
5 361,000
6 419,000
7 350,000
2,920,000
Dec. 8, 1985 315,000
9 420,000
10 485,000
11 376,000
12 510,000
13 400,200
14 412,000
2,918,200
Carrollton
Oct.6, 1985 532,000
7 583,200
8 660,900
9 661,200
10 614,100
11 645,000
12 673,800
4,370,200
Oct. 13, 1985 630,600
14 643,200
15 690,900
16 636,000
17 630,000
18 664,000
19 691,200
4,585,900
Sebewaing
Oct. 6, 1985 602,500
7 515,000
8 603,200
9 934,800
10 910,700
11 895,500
12 769,600
5,231,300
The Caro daily records for the period October 28, 1984 to
November 3, 1984 show the following:
October 28, 1984 943,900
29 901,100
30 914,300
31 992,900
Nov. 1 761,300
2 947,700
3 974,00Q
6,435,200
Nov. 4, 1984 960,000
5 855,500
6 938,300
7 826,400
8 908,200
9 813,500
10 688,200
5,990,100
Jan. 6, 1985 769,300
7 745,100
8 811,000
9 735,100
10 789,000
11 721,000
12 568,200
5,138,700
January 13, 1985 492,000
14 725,300
15 756,000
16 705,400
17 773,300
18 818,100
19 742,200
5,012,300
The Croswell daily records for the period October 28, 1984 to
February 16, 1985 show the following:
October 28, 1984 495,000
29 420,000
30 510,000
31 480,000
November 1, 1984 479,600
2 407,500
3 480,00Q
3,272,100
November 4, 1984 495,000
5 397,500
6 457,500
7 482,500
8 487,000
9 420,000
10 512,500
3,252,000
November 11, 1984 489,000
12 468,500
13 455,500
14 487,000
15 534,500
16 507,500
17 483,000
3,425,000
November 18, 1984 510,000
19 472,500
20 443,000
21 502,000
22 497,000
23 485,500
24 427,500
3,337,500
November 25, 1984 390,000
26 477,500
27 477,500
28 480,000
29 472,500
30 440,000
December 01 413,000
3,150,500
December 2, 1984 372,000
3 423,500
4 474,000
5 505,000
6 465,000
7 519,000
8 473,500
3,232,000
December 9, 1984 471,500
10 516,000
11 480,000
12 462,500
13 452,000
14 383,000
15 369,000
3,134,000
December 16, 1984 456,000
17 480,000
18 457,000
19 451,500
20 444,000
21 450,500
22 444,500
3,183,500
December 23, 1984 450,000
24 482,500
25 480,000
26 495,000
27 435,000
28 487,500
29 425,000
3,255,000
December 30, 1984 440,000
31 425,000
January 01, 1985 480,000
02 340,000
03 440,000
04 369,000
05 451,000
2,945,000
January 6, 1985 380,000
7 432,000
8 448,000
9 480,000
10 500,000
11 460,000
12 440,000
3,140,000
January 13, 1985 400,000
14 500,000
15 420,000
16 412,500
17 367,500
18 412,500
19 352,500
2,865,000
January 19, 1985 352,500
20 420,000
21 355,000
22 427,500
23 417,500
24 395,000
25 331,000
26 369,000
3,067,500
January 27, 1985 460,000
28 387,500
29 413,500
30 389,700
31 393,300
February 1, 1985 377,500
2 436,500
2,858,000
February 3, 1985 420,000
4 423,000
5 310,500
6 360,000
7 270,000
8 33,100
9 24,000
1,840,600
February 10, 1985 0
11 0
12 0
13 0 (final)
14 not produced
15 not produced
16 not produced
The Carrollton daily records for the period of December 30,
1984 to January 5, 1985 show the following:
December 30, 1984 676,500
31 714,000
January 1, 1985 694,500
2 696,900
3 744,300
4 714,300
5 700,500
4,941,000
PRODUCTION DATE DISCREPANCY
The 11 sample claims listed dates of production for export
shipments that were produced when no export production was
recorded as having occurred in Michigan's perpetual inventory
records. If the production dates listed on the drawback claims
were accurate, then Savannah's basis for asserting ownership of
that raw sugar would be faulty since Savannah's basic assertion
is that the export production was produced solely with raw sugar
that Savannah had bought from Michigan before it was made into
refined sugar.
The discrepancy is illustrated by Drawback entry 86-xxx 0401.
The first export shipment on that entry occurred on April 30,
1986. The refined sugar exported is listed on the entry itself
and on the export shipment documents as having been produced on
November 14, 1985 at Michigan's Caro refinery. Michigan's
perpetual inventory records show that export production ceased at
Caro on the week ending November 2, 1985.
Thus, if as Savannah asserts, the recordation of export
production on Michigan's perpetual inventory shows the use of
Savannah's raw sugar, any production after the November 2, 1985
period could not have been with use of Savannah's raw sugar.
Savannah acknowledged the above and asserted that the dates
of production shown on the drawback entry and the export
documents were erroneous. Savannah submitted a new list of
production dates asserting that the date shown on the drawback
entry and the export shipping documents was the date that the
refined sugar was removed from bulk storage in preparation for
shipment and not the actual date of production. The new evidence
was supplied on August 25, 1995. The new evidence uses the
customer order number that is listed next to each export shipment
on the drawback entries and on each of the respective export
shipping documents associated with the drawback entries and
purports to show the actual date of production. Savannah asserts
that it assigned the production amounts by export customer order
in a chronological sequence. Thus, on Drawback entry 86-xxx-040-1, the adjusted production date for the first export shipment is
October 25, 1985. Because Savannah is relying on an accounting
method of attribution rather than records that would actually
identify and trace the use of Savannah's sugar, the only
acceptable method of verification is to determine if there was
export production recorded on the amended date in an amount
sufficient to account for the shipped amount. Because of the
potential for double payments for the same refined sugar,
Savannah also compiled a list purporting to be a list of all
exports that were claimed for drawback based on the amended
dates, by customer order, invoice, amount and date.
ISSUES:
(1) Whether the submission of additional information to add
the certificate of manufacture and abstract numbers to each claim
to show use of the duty-paid, imported raw sugar was a
permissible amendment of the drawback claim?
(2) Whether the submission of more information on the export
shipments of refined sugar that were listed on the claims was a
permissible amendment of the drawback claim?
(3) Whether the manufacturing records of the claimant and its
agent show that the exported sugar on which drawback was claimed
was made from raw sugar that belonged to the claimant before the
claimant's agent began to process that raw sugar into refined
sugar so that requirement of 19 U.S.C. 1313(b) of manufacture by
one entity was satisfied?
LAW AND ANALYSIS:
Paragraph (r) of 19 U.S.C. 1313, as amended by the Act of
December 8, 1993 (107 Stat. 2057, Pub. L. 103-182) pertinently
provides that a drawback claim be completed within 3 years after
the date of exportation. The text follows 19 CFR 191.61
(4-1-84 to 4-1-96 ed.). Under 19 CFR 191.64(4-1-84 to 4-1-96 ed),
a drawback claim or entry may be amended or corrected.
Paragraph (b) of 19 U.S.C. 1313 requires that one
manufacturer use both the imported, duty-paid merchandise that is
designated as the basis for the refund and the merchandise that
actually is used to make the articles that are exported for which
drawback is claimed. Under 19 CFR 191.34(4-1-84 to 4-1-96 ed.),
the requirement that one manufacturer use both the designated and
the substituted merchandise can be met if both the designated
merchandise and the merchandise actually used to make the
exported articles are owned by one entity and the actual
processing is done by an agent on behalf of that entity.
There were several amendments of the protested claims.
In each of the sample drawback claims, the claimant stated
in block 28 of CF 331 (Quantity/Description of Merchandise used)
for the New York Certificate of Manufacturing Number "N/A". In
each of the sample drawback claims covered by this protest in
block 24 of the CF 331 (CM/CD Number) the protestant wrote "N/A".
Despite these patent deficiencies, Customs accepted the claims. The CM/CD number is required under paragraph 14 of T.D. 83-59,
the general manufacturer's drawback contract for raw sugar. The
requirement provides a quick verification of dates, amounts, and
ownership of the raw sugar involved. It is particularly important
where the manufacturer employs an agent to meet the requirements
of 19 U.S.C. 1313(b) or where the manufacturer is an agent for
another person who will be enabled to claim drawback by the
manufacturer's processing. The importance of requiring that
information was illustrated in this protest. The protestant
provided certificate numbers that could not possibly cover the
raw sugar involved because of discrepancies between the dates of
processing shown on the claim and the dates shown on the
certificates and the factory location shown on the claim and the
factory location shown on the certificates. The protestant
subsequently resubmitted correct certificate numbers. Also, a
comparison between the corrected certificate numbers with the
same certificate numbers that were used to support another
company's drawback claim enabled Customs to determine that there
was no duplication with respect to the same lots of raw sugar on
the two different entities respective drawback claims.
For each of the sample claims, the production dates for the
designated raw sugar were compared to the ownership, quantity,
and dates shown in the corrected certificates of manufacture and
corresponding abstract number. To illustrate, drawback claim 86-xxx 040-1 designated the raw sugar imported on import entry 83-xxx 912-2, which, on the drawback claim was stated to be the
protestant's sugar imported on May 3, 1983 and used during the
period from May 5, 1983 to July 7, 1983. The corrected cert-
ificate certificate and abstract numbers were 28099, 28098, and
28336 and 478, 479, and 480, respectively. Certificate 28099
(abstract 478) listed the relevant import entry number, 83-xxx
912-2, showed the same import date as on the claim, and showed
that 30,339,046 pounds of raw sugar were melted during the period
from May 5, 1983 to May 18, 1983. Certificate 28098 (abstract
479) also listed the designated import entry and recorded that
4,069,812 pounds of raw sugar was processed during the period
from June 30, 1983 to July 1, 1983. Certificate 28336 (abstract
480) also listed the designated import entry and recorded that
176,940 pounds of raw sugar was processed on July 7, 1983. The records filed with Customs on November 7, 1983, account for the
sugar imported as shown on the import entry which was verified by
this office. Those records show, years before these drawback
claims were filed, that duty-paid raw sugar was imported and used
by the protestant in an amount sufficient to meet the terms of
the statute. A similar analysis was done for each entry on each
of the drawback claims in the sample.
The protestant also submitted amendments for the production
dates of the refined sugar that was exported. The protestant did
not attempt, nor would such a request have been approved, to
amend or change the export shipments themselves. The discrepancy
in the export shipments was that the export sugar processing was
done by a company other than the protestant during periods when
no export production was recorded. Consequently, the protestant
had to show that the refined sugar exported belonged to the
protestant before any processing began. Otherwise, the protestant
could not meet the requirement of 19 U.S.C. 1313(b) that the
substituted merchandise from which the exported shipments were
processed was used in manufacture or production by the
protestant. If records showed that the protestant simply bought
refined sugar from another person and then exported that refined
sugar, it would not be able to designate its earlier imports of
raw sugar on a claim under 19 U.S.C. 1313(b), because it could
not assert that it used in manufacture or production both the
imported, duty-paid raw sugar and the raw sugar that was used to
make the exported refined sugar.
The shipment of April 30, 1986 that was listed in drawback
claim 86-xxx 040-1 illustrates the discrepancy. The export
shipping documents consisting of a CF 7512, a Canadian Customs
duty form, and a commercial bill of lading show that 45,000
pounds of granulated sugar were shipped, to a Canadian buyer on
April 30, 1986 from Michigan's sugar refinery at Croswell,
Michigan. On the drawback claim the protestant asserted that the
sugar in that shipment was produced on January 28, 1986. The
production records for the Michigan Sugar refinery at Croswell,
Michigan showed that export production ceased during the week
beginning on December 14, 1985 and did not begin again until
September 25, 1986.
To meet this deficiency, the protestant provided a written
acknowledgment from the Vice President of Operations stating that
the date asserted on the claims and shipment documents as the
date of production was actually the date that the refined sugar
was withdrawn from the bulk storage facility rather than the date
that it was refined. The protestant also submitted a concordance
which collated each of the claimed export shipments by the export
customer's purchase order number, the claimed, but admitted
erroneous, date of production, and corrected date of production,
based on the existing production records. Those production
attributions are based on the companies' asserted mass balance
formula which was discussed under "Facts" dealing with the
ownership of the sugar.
Also, as described under "Facts", the protestant changed the
methodology in order to show that the processing performed by
Michigan to make the export sugar was done with the use of raw
sugar owned by the protestant before Michigan started to process
that raw sugar.
1. AMENDMENT OF CLAIMS
The first legal issue is whether any of these changes is
permissible. Under 19 CFR 191.64, Customs permits a claimant to
amend or correct a drawback entry. However, previously by
regulation, 19 CFR 191.61, Customs required a claimant to
complete its drawback claim within three years from the date of
export. The substance of that regulation was adopted by
Congress and by the Act of December 8, 1993 (107 Stat. 2057,
Pub. L. 103-182) enacted as 19 U.S.C. 1313(r). The relevant
legislative history states that the provision sets a period of
three years from the date of exportation to file a complete
claim. H. Rpt. 103-361, Part 1, 130 (November 15, 1993). In that
report Congress acknowledged that Customs would not be able to
verify every claim or every aspect of each claim. Op. Cit.,
pp. 131-132. Because of that fact Customs can not permit a
claimant to substitute new import entries or export shipments
outside the three-year period set by 19 U.S.C. 1313(r).
In this protest, the additional information submitted on the
import entries supplemented the material on those entries. No
attempt was made to substitute new import entries. The entries,
the dates of importation, dates of use, and the identity of the
importer and manufacturer(the protestant here) remained the same.
The additional information was needed by Customs to verify that
the same imports were not the subject of other drawback claims.
Accordingly, the additional information is within 19 CFR 191.64
and does not violate 19 U.S.C. 1313(r).
Likewise, the submission of additional information on the
export shipments listed in the claims does not violate 19 U.S.C.
1313(r). There was no attempt to substitute different shipments.
Instead, the information submitted was given to bolster the
protestant's claim that those shipments were of refined sugar
produced from raw sugar that belonged to the protestant before
the protestant's agent started to process that raw sugar.
2. AMENDED EXPORT SHIPMENT INFORMATION
The next issue is whether that additional information on the
export shipments is satisfactory to show that they were produced
with the use of protestant's raw sugar so as to permit the
protestant to satisfy 19 U.S.C. 1313(b), albeit under the agency
concept in 19 CFR 191.34.
As stated in the "Facts" the protestant provided different
dates and asserts that, by use of the mass balance formula, it
will be able to show that on the corrected dates of production
there was sufficient use of raw sugar in total production of
refined sugar to account for use of raw sugar owned by it.
Based on the submission of information by the protestant,
Customs scientists determined that the protestant's assertion
that the average production value of 64% of the total white sugar
production is correct. However, to protect the revenue, the
Customs Service has not permitted the use of an average.
Since the actual values are known or can be computed, either
those actual values for each day must be used or the least
possible conversion factor could be used.
The protestant contends that its agent accounts for the use
the Protestant's raw sugar by applying the mass balance formula
average of 64% to the quantity of refined sugar produced. The
protestant's counsel stated, that while it is possible to compute
the actual amount of raw sugar processed, the parties, protestant
and Michigan, simply do random verifications and use the average
figure to segregate their respective ownership interests. There
is no contrary evidence.
This is a separation of property interests on the merchandise
used rather than an attempt by a drawback claimant to claim on
average output. That is, by application of the formula, Michigan
is obligated to the protestant for that raw sugar usage.
Consequently, the 64 per cent average, between the parties, is
asserted to be the refined sugar made by Michigan from the
Protestant's raw sugar. As such, the use of that formula is
distinguishable from the situation in C.S.D. 89-20 (in which a
"weighted average value method" was held unacceptable as a means
of calculating drawback).
3. PURCHASES OF RAW SUGAR
The next issue is whether the evidence shows that the
protestant bought raw sugar from Michigan. That is, whether there
is sufficient evidence of a sale of raw sugar from Michigan to
the protestant before any processing into the exported refined
sugar began or whether the protestant bought refined sugar from
Michigan.
As outlined under Facts", the Michigan sales invoices to the
protestant generally were issued before Michigan began to use the
raw sugar. The protestant issued checks to Michigan as listed
under "Facts" in payment of those invoices, and those checks were
negotiated. The first paragraph of the Protestant's agency
contract with Michigan states that protestant will from time to
time purchase raw sugar manufactured by Michigan. The second paragraph of that contract provides that the protestant would
receive 100 pounds of refined sugar for each 110 pounds of its
raw sugar.
The protestant provided a mass balance formula, asserted to
be standard in the sugar beet refining industry, in which they
show that during the manufacture of their refined sugar from
beets they also produce raw sugar. The raw sugar is re-introduced
in their process and converted to refined sugar. In the stated
process, the amount of refined sugar from a given quantity of
raw sugar averaged 64 per cent. That is, if 100 pounds of refined
sugar was produced, 64 pounds of refined sugar would be
attributable to raw beet sugar. Customs laboratory scientists
reported that, based on the refining records provided by the
protestant, the formula appeared to be valid and resulted in a 64
per cent average as asserted by the protestant.
The protestant had access to the production records of
Michigan. In fact, the protestant provided copies of those
records as noted under "Facts".
The protestant also provided Michigan accounting records that
involved the protested claims, but those records did not relate
to the sample claims. Those records relate to the September, 1986
transaction listed under "Facts". They show a purchase of 60
million pounds of raw sugar for $12,528,000. The above Michigan
accounting records show at page 0558 of the Michigan General
Ledger for the period from October, 1985 to September, 1986,
records for account 495-00 "Raw Sugar Sales" a credit of
$12,528,000.00, posted on September 28, 1986. Interestingly,
there are sales recorded against that credit which appear to have
been posted before the credit. Since the period was not involved
in the sample claims, no verification was made against the sales
invoices. Further, Michigan sales invoices 50919 and 50920, which
were the first two export shipments in protestant's drawback
claim 86-XXX040-1, do not reflect a credit against a prior
purchase of raw sugar. The protestant admits that such failures
occurred. Export invoice 147068, which is said to be involved in
the protest, but is not involved in the sample claims reviewed,
does show a credit of $10,335.60 against a sale of $12,037.50 for the protestant. While inconclusive as to the sample claims
reviewed, and there is a question as to the shipments that
reduced the credit, the records tend to show that Michigan did
record the transactions as advance payments for raw sugar.
In HQ 221914, based on the evidence presented, Customs
determined that Michigan did not sell raw beet sugar to the
protestant so that the production of refined sugar at Michigan's
refineries could not be claimed by the protestant as its own
processing to satisfy 19 USC 1313(b). The key points of the
decision turned on the lack of evidence to show "delivery" to the
protestant so as to identify the protestant's raw sugar and
whether there was consideration passing from the protestant to
Michigan to support the sale.
The protestant requested a reconsideration asserting that
critical evidence was missing. In HQ 223431 Customs reconsidered
the sale issue and reached the same conclusion. That is, based on
the evidence presented, there was no sale of raw sugar from
Michigan to the protestant to enable the protestant to claim
Michigan's processing as its own processing to satisfy 19 U.S.C.
1313(b).
A sub-issue in HQ 221914 was whether the raw sugar asserted
to have been sold to Savannah by its agent, Michigan, could be
identified as belonging to Savannah before that raw sugar was
refined. If Savannah merely bought refined sugar from Michigan,
it could not designate its earlier imports against the exported
refined sugar because that processing would not have met the
requirements of 19 USC 1313(b).
The use of the mass balance formula to show what per cent of
raw sugar was used to make refined sugar, and the application of
that formula on the daily records of production are set forth in
the "Facts". Before analyzing the export shipments against the
corrected production dates, the legal basis of identification
needs review.
On the issue of the legal basis for identification, the
protestant relies on:
Martin Marrietta Corp, v, N.J.~ Natl Bank; 612 F.2d.745, 749
(3rd Cir. 1979)
K.L. Rewes v. Pillsbury Co., 229 Kan. 423, 625 P.2d 440,
445 (1981)
Harney v. Spellman, 113 Ill. App. 2d 463, 251 N.E. 2d. 265
(1969)
Bowman v. American Home Assur. CO,, 190 Neb. 810, 213 N.W.
2d.446 (1973)
Goodpasture Inc. v. M/V Pollux, 688 F.2d 1003 (5th Cir.
1982)
Cone Mills Corp. v. A.G. Estes Inc., 377 F. Supp. 222 (N.D.
Ga. 1974)
Great Western Sugar Co. v. Pennart Products, 748 P.2d. 1359
(Co. Ct. App. 1987)
Henry Heide. Inc. v. Atlantic Nat. Inc. Co., 80 Misc. 2d.
485, 363 NYS 2d. 515 (Sup. Ct. 1975)
U.S v. Amalgamated Sugar Co., 72 F. 2d 755 (10th Cir, 1934)
In Martin Marietta Corp. v. N.J. Nat'l Bank, there was a
dispute over the ownership of sand. Plaintiff bought about
140,000 tons of sand from a company whose inventory was subject
to the defendant bank's security interest. Plaintiff took
delivery on about half of the sand and left the other half with
the company which had given the defendant bank a security
interest on its inventory. That company defaulted on repayment of
the bank's loan to it. The defendant bank took over that
company's inventory, which included sand left with that company
by the plaintiff. The plaintiff had placed signs on some of the piles of sand which stated that the sand was the property of the
plaintiff. The court decided that there was sufficient
identification and remanded back to the district court. On
remand, Martin Marietta Corp. v. N.J. Nat'l Bank, 505 F. Supp.
946, 949 (N.J. 1981), the district court noted that the record
was unclear as to when the identification occurred. The appellate
court had considered the factors of an oral contract between the
plaintiff and the seller, the plaintiff's sign demarcations and
the seller's written confirmation of inventory. There also was a
record of the seller's acknowledgment in the business records of
the seller. In the present case no similar piles of raw sugar
existed at Michigan. Because of a difference in significant
facts, it is unclear how the Martin Marietta case helps the
protestant.
In Reeves v. Pillsbury Co., the dispute concerned wheat
belonging to plaintiff that was stored in Pillsbury's grain
elevator. Pillsbury on accepting the grain, issued checks to
Brownsville grain company on the belief that the grain was the
grain involved in a sale by Reeves to Brownsville. The court
found that the wheat was not identified to the Reeves-Brownsville
sale. The court found that Reeves had more than the quantity to
satisfy the Reeves-Brownsville contract at another location. The
court found that when Reeves delivered the grain to Pillsbury,
Reeves did not notify Brownsville of the delivery or present the
elevator receipt to Brownsville for payment. The contract between
Reeves and Brownsville required Brownsville to make trucks
available for Reeves tender of delivery. The court found there
was no evidence in support of that event. There were five
delivery tickets. Four were not marked for "storage" by defendant
Pillsbury's elevator employees. Pillsbury argued that title
vested in Brownsville when the contract was executed. There was
no dispute that the wheat existed when the contract was executed.
There was a dispute that the contract identified the 5,000
bushels involved in the contract with the 20,000 bushels Reeves
had when the contract was executed. The court found no
identification to the contract because the contract failed to
refer to the wheat involved within the 20,000 existing bushels.
There was no shipment to Brownsville, nor was the shipped wheat
marked or designated by Reeves as belonging to Brownsville. Again, unlike the situation in Reeves, there are no identified
piles of raw sugar at Michigan. In view of the significant
factual differences, the Reeves decision is not persuasive.
Harney v. Spellman involved a suit between a landlord asserting
a rent lien against a kitchen appliance company that sold various
appliances to the landlords tenant. The seller delivered the
appliances to the tenant but failed to perfect its security
interest provided under a conditional sales contract. Inasmuch as
the issue here involves goods not in existence, goods asserted to
be fungible, and goods asserted to be left in the possession of
the asserted agent, the protestant's reliance on Harney v.
Spellman is not persuasive.
Bowman v. American Home Assur. Co, involved a suit between an
insured and an insurance company on a damage policy for an
aircraft. The insurance company denied liability for damage to
the aircraft because the insured did not have title to the
aircraft. The court agreed that there was evidence to show that
the aircraft remained in possession of the insured and that the
insured and the aircraft's buyer had contracted to pass title
only when the Government's transfer requirements were met and the
full purchase price was paid. Again, there is a disparity between
the relevant facts here and in the court case, since seller who
retained possession was held to be the owner, the goods existed
when the contract was executed, and the protestant's position
that a transfer of ownership occurred despite Michigan's
possession of the raw sugar when it came into existence after the
erstwhile contract was executed, the protestant's reliance on the
case appears to be misplaced.
Goodpasture v. M/V Pollux also involved goods that were in
existence at the time of disputed ownership. The plaintiff loaded
wheat aboard the defendant vessel. The vessel asserted a maritime
lien against the wheat. The vessel had a time charter with a
foreign shipping company. The court found that the plaintiff had
not transferred title of the wheat to the buyer. Since title had
not passed to the vessel, the time charterer's seizure of the
wheat was an unlawful conversion. Because of the factual
differences in the court case--the existence of the wheat, the
physical movement without passage of title--it is far from clear how this case supports the protestant's position regarding
whether there was identification of raw sugar not in existence
purported to be sold by Michigan to Savannah even though it
remained in Michigan's custody.
Cone Mills Corp. v. A. G. Estes and Dabbs involved a suit on the
validity of a contract. Defendant Dabbs, a cotton grower, made a
future sale of cotton to defendant Estes. The written price was
at "twelve cents above loan". Defendant Dabbs asserted that there
was an oral agreement of one-half cent higher than the written
price. Estes denied the oral agreement's existence. The issue
before the court was a motion to dismiss defendant Dabbs counter
claim and cross claim on a suit for specific performance and
other injunctive relief. The plaintiff and defendant Estes also
filed identical motions to dismiss. The court denied both
motions. The court here simply concluded that under Georgia law
there could be a contract for the sale of goods in the future and
that the goods must both exist and be identified before any
interest can pass. The court did not discuss whether
identification occurred. That is a critical issue in this protest
and it is unclear how the court decision resolves that issue in
the protestant's favor. At best, it merely holds that such a
showing is possible as a matter of law; a point with which there
is no dispute.
Great Western Sugar Co. v, pennant Prods. concerned contracts
under which the defendant was to purchase refined sugar from
plaintiff's inventory. The contract allowed the defendant to
terminate by written notice. After ordering and receiving some
sugar, the defendant made no more orders. The plaintiff, at all
times, retained sugar in its inventory to cover the possible
orders. The defendant never sent any termination notice.
Plaintiff sued for damages. The court found that the existing
sugar was identified because it existed when the contract was
made and contracts called for periodic shipments of sugar at
specified prices. Again, because of the different facts, this
case is not persuasive.
Henry Heide Inc. v. Atlantic Mut. Ins. Co. involved an insurance
contract on bags of sugar that disappeared from the warehouse.
The warehouse was dispossessed and the sugar was found missing.
The insurer refused to honor its contract on the ground that
there was no showing that the sugar ever existed. The court found
that the defendant submitted no evidence to impeach the
plaintiff's evidence as to the existence of the sugar in the
warehouse. The insurer argued, but offered no supporting
evidence, that the sugar was not segregated by the warehouse. The
court noted the absence of evidence and held that segregation was
not needed for the plaintiff to collect on its insurance
contract. The court held that the delivery to the third party
warehouse and the issuance of receipts by that warehouse to the
plaintiff provided identification. In the court case there were
findings on the sugar's existence when the insurance contract was
issued, and the third party warehouse issued receipts to the
plaintiff to identify the sugar. The protestant's situation
differs from those facts in that at the time of the purchase no
raw sugar existed and the sugar did not leave Michigan's premises
until after it was refined.
In U.S. v. Amalgamated Sugar Co., the issue was whether a
sale occurred in 1917, as reported by the company, or in 1918, as
asserted by the Internal Revenue Service. The sugar in issue was
bagged and sold. The company was on an accrual tax basis. The
court held that the sale occurred in 1917 even though the sugar
remained in the company's warehouse until after the start of the
company's new tax year. The court was persuaded by the fact that
the contracts referred to the transaction as a sale, not an
agreement to sell at a future time; the company kept a memorandum
purporting to show, on a daily basis, the amount of sugar
manufactured, the amount sold, and the amount on hand. The latter
included both the amounts sold and delivered and the amounts paid
for but not delivered. The court found the transactions were
recorded as a charge to inventory cost of sugar sold with a
corresponding credit to inventory. The company's insurance policy
specified that it covered sugar sold but not delivered which the
court found was a recognition that the company regarded the sold,
but undelivered, sugar as property of another. While there is some evidence that Michigan recorded some advances made by the
protestant as sales of raw sugar, there has been no consistent
equivalent evidence presented by the protestant on these sample
entries to show consistent application of those procedures,
particularly, with respect to the export shipments covered by
Michigan invoices 50919 and 50920, as noted above. It seems clear
that if there was a consistent recordation of each sale as a sale
of raw sugar and if Michigan set up an inventory account, based
on production, which identified the refined sugar production from
that raw sugar, this dispute might have been avoided.
However, in this case the documentary evidence shows that
Michigan issued invoices for specified pounds of raw sugar, the
protestant issued checks on those invoices which Michigan
negotiated, the agency agreement obligated Michigan to furnish
100 pounds of refined sugar for each 110 pounds of the raw sugar
bought from Michigan, and the amount used in production would be
calculated by application of the mass balance formula, with the
protestant having access to Michigan's production records.
The protestant's cited court cases do not involve situations
of purchases for future production, other than the possible
exception of Martin Marietta Corp. v. N.J. Nat'l Bank, and the
sand in issue in that case was in piles some of which had Martin
Marietta's declaration of ownership. There are, however, other
decisions involving contracts for future production.
In Riegel Fiber Corp. v. Anderson Gin Co., 512 F. 2d 784,
791 (5th Cir. 1975), the court found that a contract provision
that listed the defendant farmer's acreage and projected yields
was sufficient identification for allocation of contract and non-contract cotton. See also footnote 18.
In the case of In re Quality v. Processing Inc., 9 F. 3d 1360
(8th Cir. 1993), the plaintiff buyers contended that Quality
identified certain beans to their contracts when Quality invoiced
specified quantities, the plaintiff buyers prepaid the invoices
and submitted shipping instructions to Quality and Quality
scheduled buyers contracts for processing. There was conflicting
evidence. The trial court found that the testimony of Quality's
operations manager to the effect that Quality did not designate beans to a particular buyer's contract before processing even for
prepaying buyers and that the plaintiff buyers' contracts were
never designated to be the most convincing. The appellate court,
noting that whether a seller has designated future goods to a
particular contract is a fact-intensive inquiry that turns on the
specific manner in which the seller conducts its business, upheld
the trial court. Here, the parties contend that all of the raw
sugar used from the time it was invoiced until the amount used
met the terms of the purchase was raw sugar that belonged to the
protestant. There is no direct evidence to contradict the
parties' contention other than there are unexplained reductions
in credit on claims that are not part of the sample selected for
review by the Customs auditor.
The case of Weisz Graphics v. Peck Industries, 403 S.E. 2d
146 (S.C. App. 1991), involved the manufacture of custom decals
by the plaintiff. The court found that there was an industry
practice of the decal manufacturer warehousing the finished
decals for up to a year to await shipping instructions by the
customer. The contracts referred to this practice by such terms
as "to be billed and shipped as released", "order as needed for a
period of 1 year 500 ship as release", and "break up into
multiple shipments". The court in noting that in the case of
goods manufactured to order, identification usually occurs when
the first step of production begins, found that the plaintiff
manufacturer identified the goods to the defendant buyer's
contracts even though the goods were not shipped. Here, the
nature of beet sugar refining is consistent with the parties'
contention that from the time of purchase until the time that the
amount purchased was used up, the raw sugar so used belonged to
the protestant.
On this point, the effective dates for the 1984-1985 year
must be determined. The protestant asserts that the invoice of
October 31, 1984 was a memorializing of an earlier purchase. As
noted in "Facts" the memorandum states:
An invoice for the sale of 200,000 cwts. of raw sugar
to Savannah Foods and Industries at a price of $21.50
on October 31, 1984 has been forwarded to SF & I for
payment. This is an interim sale and will ultimately be
consummated after the tolling charge to SF & I has been
established. It is understood that the tolling charge
for refined sugar (produced from "raw sugar" sold to SF
& I) will be established at the date of delivery of
refined sugar to SF & I for subsequent export.
The relevant invoice states:
To Savannah Foods & Industries Inc. Raw sugar to be tolled
into refined sugar for export sales. Weight 200,000 cwt unit
price $21.50, extension $4,300,000 Terms Net due 11-12-84.
The invoice date is 10-31-84.
The relevant canceled check has an issue date of November 12,
1984.
As noted above in the discussion on the agency contract
between the protestant and Michigan, the terms provide that the
protestant will from time to time purchase from Michigan raw
sugar manufactured by Michigan. There is no language in that
contract that specifies a specific purchase.
Based on the prior analysis, there is no evidence in support
of the protestant's assertion that it bought raw sugar before
October 31, 1984. Consequently, any production that occurred
before October 31, 1984 cannot involve use of the protestant's
raw sugar. In this regard the Michigan General Ledger with
respect to establishing a credit with respect to the September
26, 1986 purchase discussed above was posted on September 28,
1986. This illustrates that the invoices and payments relating to
the sale and the credit in Michigan's books were done together.
Also, the transaction of October 6, 1987, in which there was a
delay in payment agreed to by the parties, was recorded as such.
No similar evidence was presented to contravene the plain
language of the October, 1984 sales documents that the sale occurred on October 31, 1984. Consequently, any claim based on
production before October 31, 1984, has not been shown to be done
with the protestant's raw sugar and is to be denied for failure
to comply with 19 U.S.C. 1313(b).
The 1984-1985 year involved two purchases by the protestant.
The second purchase is evidenced by the Michigan memorandum of
January 3, 1985, Michigan invoice 1107 dated January 2, 1985, and
the protestant's check on invoice 1107 issued January 14, 1985.
For the same reason, the raw sugar involved in this sale could
not be used before January 2, 1985 to make any refined sugar that
would satisfy 19 U.S.C. 1313(b).
Finally, if the raw sugar that was purchased in the sale of
October 31, 1984 was accounted for by the mass balance formula
said to be used by the parties in the period from December 13,
1984 to January 2, 1985, any claim based on production that
occurred during that gap, as explained below, should also be
denied for the same reason. The protestant asserts that it bought
20 million pounds of raw sugar represented by the invoice of
October 31, 1984. Using the actual Michigan production records
and applying the mass balance formula which the parties agree
shows the amount of the protestant's raw sugar usage in the
refined amounts, that purchase was accounted for prior to the
second purchase of January 2, 1985. The Michigan daily production
records for the 1984-1985 year show that production occurred at
three of Michigan's refineries: Caro, Croswell and Carrollton.
However, production at Carrollton did not begin until
December 30, 1984. At Caro in the period from October 31, 1984 to
November 3, 1984 there was a total of 3,675,900 pounds of refined
sugar produced. Application of the mass balance formula shows
that 2,352,576 pounds of refined sugar was attributable to raw
sugar (3,675,900 x .64 = 2,352,576). Likewise, at Croswell for
that same period 1,847,100 pounds of refined sugar was made, of
which 1,182,144 pounds of refined sugar was attributable to the
use of raw sugar. During the period from November 4-10, 1984 at
Caro, Michigan produced 5,990,100 pounds of refined sugar, of
which 3,833,684 pounds of refined sugar is attributable to raw
sugar. Thereafter, for the raw sugar in issue, production
occurred only at the Croswell refinery. The following table shows
the usage in raw sugar pounds using the mass balance formula:
October 31, 1984 to November 3, 1984 Caro & Croswell 4,619,644
November 4, 1984 to November 10,1984 Caro & Croswell 6,506,438
11,126,082
November 11, 1984 to November 17, 1984 Croswell 2,411,200
13,537,282
November 18, 1984 to November 24, 1984 Croswell 2,349,600
15,886,882
November 25, 1984 to December 1, 1984 Croswell 2,217,952
18,104,834
December 2, 1984 to December 6, 1984 Croswell 1,576,608
19,681,442
December 7, 1984 Croswell 318,558
20,000,000
The actual pounds of refined sugar produced at Croswell on
December 7, 1984 was 519,000 pounds. The formulas would show that
the use of 318,558 pounds of raw sugar would use up Savannah's
raw sugar. The 20 million pound purchase of raw sugar(Savannah's
purchase of October 31, 1984)would be completely attributed when
only 318,558 pounds was introduced into production on that day.
(December 7, 1984)
Consequently, any production on December 7, 1984 in excess of
the usage of 318,558 pounds (which would equal 289,598 refined
pounds of raw sugar [318,558 รถ 1.1 = 289,598] must be disallowed
because it could not be made with the use of raw sugar owned by
Savannah. Any production thereafter could not have been with the
use of the protestant's raw sugar until the purchase of January
2, 1985.
A similar problem does not exist with respect to the 1985-1986 year since there was one purchase of 38 million pounds of
raw sugar as shown by the invoice of October 1, 1985 and
corresponding payment check of October 9, 1985. However, the
gross amounts for raw sugar usage in each Michigan plant for each
year must be checked to insure that the production did not exceed
the raw sugar purchased for each year.
The next point of dispute is whether the evidence shows that
the protestant bought and obtained title to raw sugar or refined
sugar. The protestant contends that it and Michigan explicitly
agreed that title would pass when the raw sugar came into
existence. The protestant argues that its explicit agreement is
stated in the protestant's agency agreement with Michigan in
which the protestant was to buy raw sugar from time to time from
Michigan and the Michigan invoices that list raw sugar as the
commodity. The protestant has not pointed to any text in which
the words "title will pass when the raw sugar comes into
existence" appear. Given this absence, reliance on the case of
Harney v. Spellman, supra, is not persuasive. In that case,
Harney sold a washer, dryer, range, refrigerator and a television
set to a Mr. Hupp, who rented from the defendant, Spellman. The
court found the contract between Harney and Hupp to include the
following language: "Title to the goods is vested in the Seller
and shall not pass to Buyer. . .until the time balance shall have
been fully paid". The court, in discussing the language quoted by
protestant observed: "The contract in question explicitly agreed
that title to the goods was vested in the seller until full
payment was made." See pages 265 and 266 of 251 N.E. 2d 265. The
protestant has pointed to no comparable language in the
contractual relationship between it and Michigan with respect to
the sale of the raw sugar.
In HQ 221914 Customs determined that the protestant bought
refined sugar rather than raw sugar from Michigan. Customs
determined that Michigan's records of crediting only refined
sugar sales against the earliest advances made by the protestant
indicated a sale of refined rather than raw sugar. Customs also
determined that Michigan did not keep a raw sugar inventory. The
protestant was found not to have recorded the processing as a
cost of sale.
In HQ 223431, HQ 221914 was simply affirmed since no new
evidence was made available.
The protestant attacks the determination by asserting that
Customs erred in finding that title did not pass between Michigan
and the protestant. That, of course, was not the determination.
In HQ 221914, Customs found that the sale consisted of a sale of
refined sugar rather than a sale of raw sugar. See discussion
pages 6-7 of HQ 221914 and discussion pages 7-8 of HQ 223431.
The protestant then contends that the explicit agreement with
respect to title transfer can be ascertained by examination of
the circumstances of the transaction. The protestant relies on
the following court decisions: Kamakazi Music Corp. v. Robbins
Music Corp., 534 F. Supp. 57 (S.D. NY, 1981); Crocker Nat. Bank
v. Ideco Div. Of Dresser Ind., 660 F. Supp. 186, aff'd and
remanded, 839 F. 2d 1104 (5th Cir. 1988), 702 F. Supp. 615, rev.
and remd. 889 F. 2d 1452 (5th Cir. 1990), cert. den. 495 US 919.
110A Sup. Ct. 1949 (1990).
The protestant cites Kamakazi Music Corp. v. Robbins Music
Corp.,for the proposition that the explicit agreement need not be
within the parties' written document but a court could consider
the factors of the parties' conduct, trade usages, and
circumstances in the case. That case involved an action for
copyright infringement. The language relied on by the protestant
related to a preliminary injunction request. Kamakazi sought to
bar Robbins from selling or printing certain music sheet folios,
unless Robbins made advance royalty payments. The dispute
concerned contract language which set a formula for royalty
payments. The motion for an injunction was denied. Moreover, the
court at pages 66-68 found that, based upon the delivery of
possession to Robbins with full right of disposition, Kamakazi's
challenge to the sale based solely on the contract was defeated.
Since the subject matter before the court dealt with property in
existence when the contract was made and there was an actual
delivery from the seller to the buyer, the support that the
protestant derives from this case is unclear.
The protestant's citation of Crocker Nat. Bank v. Ideco Div,
Of Dresser Ind., assumes that the 1988 opinion controlled. A
review of the case history in the 1990 Fifth Circuit decision and
the certiorari denial shows that assumption to be incorrect. The protest cites the 1988 Fifth Circuit opinion for the proposition
that bookkeeping procedures do not negate express agreements on
when title passes. In 1981, T.O.S. Industries agreed to buy 40
drilling rigs from defendant Ideco. In January, 1982, T.O.S. told
Ideco it did not need the rigs. Ideco told T.O.S. that it almost
completed 6 of the 40 and that T.O.S. would have to purchase
those. Ideco recorded the rigs as a sale showing an increase in
accounts receivable and a decrease in inventory. In July, 1987
the parties executed a mutual release, Ideco recorded an increase
in inventory and decrease in accounts receivable. Plaintiff bank
had a security interest in the inventory of T.O.S. Ideco
possessed the rigs. The court held seller's security interest
superior to that of plaintiff bank on ground that by retaining
possession, its security interest was perfected. The 1988 opinion
found the seller's retention of property critical.
The 1990 decision concerned title to certain engines which
were the subject of a remand in the 1988 appellate decision. The
court determined that the engines had been delivered to a T.O.S.
affiliate, which was covered by the plaintiff bank's security
interest on the inventory of T.O.S. Although Ideco delivered the
engines to the T.O.S. affiliate, Ideco was not paid. When T.O.S.
was in financial distress it returned the engines to Ideco. When
the engines were returned from the affiliate to Ideco, T.O.S.
received the credit from Ideco. The 1990 court reversed the
district court and held that the bank had the superior interest
because Ideco had delivered the engines, unlike the situation
with the drilling rigs.
Unlike the situation of the drilling rigs and engines, the
raw sugar did not move from Michigan's refineries to Savannah's.
The raw sugar never moved from Michigan's refineries until after
it was refined. As such, the case is not persuasive to advance
the protestant's argument.
There is evidence that tends to show that some raw sugar
credit was given to the protestant on Michigan's books of account
and some evidence that the protestant received an offset against
the price when the refined sugar was sent to the protestant's
customers.
The evidence with respect to Michigan invoice 147068 shows
that a credit of $10,335 was offset against the price $12,037.50
when the granular sugar was exported. The protestant asserts that
the difference between the $10,335 and $12,037.50 is the tolling
fee. The problem with respect to the sample claims is that
Michigan invoices 50919 and 50920 which are said to represent the
first two export shipments in drawback claim 88-xxx040-1, do not
show a similar raw sugar credit. Further, unlike the two of the
granular sugar listings for the protestant on page A15745 of the
Michigan A/R Invoice, invoices 147070, 147071, 147072, the
listing for liquid invert and liquid sucrose do not show a raw
sugar credit. The third granular sugar listing for the
protestant, invoice 147067, also does not show a raw sugar
credit.
The review of the export documents showed that many of the
invoices to Savannah from Michigan failed to reflect any credit
for the raw sugar advance payment. The lack of a credit was
particularly evident in the liquid sugar shipments from the Caro
refinery.
The protestant submitted additional evidence on October 30,
1996, December 10, 1996, January 3, 1997, January 30, 1997 and
February 4, 1997.
The protestant asserted that all of the raw sugar which was
bought by Savannah was held under Michigan's customer account
19134. The protestant also asserts that account 495-00 in
Michigan's General Ledger was the raw sugar advance payment
credits account. The protestant asserts that if the proper raw
sugar credit was shown on the Michigan to Savannah invoice,
Michigan General Ledger account 495-00 would have reflected that
credit. If, as was the situation with the liquid sugar shipments
from the Caro refinery, the raw sugar credit was not shown on the
Michigan to Savannah invoice, there was a periodic reconciliation
between Michigan and Savannah which applied that credit for each
involved shipment.
The evidence offered in support of these assertions includes
a copy of Michigan customer account 19134, as well as other
customer accounts for Savannah. The account lists five U.S.
shipping points which Michigan asserts were listed in error.
Mr. Yuill, Michigan's Senior Tax accountant, stated that the five
U.S. customers of Savannah never received any shipments that were
credited to that account. If any such shipment occurred, the
amount of the raw sugar must be deducted from the amount
available for the drawback and any claim based on that raw sugar
is to be denied.
Also submitted were affidavits of a Joyce Sheredy-Bierlein
and a Barry Brown. Ms. Sheredy-Bierlein stated that she was a
sales clerk for Michigan from 1979 to April, 1986. She stated
that an account was set up for Savannah's export shipments. She
also stated that Mr. Brown was her supervisor. Mr. Brown stated
that he was the Michigan vice-president for sales and marketing
since 1982. He stated that Michigan account 19134 was established
solely for shipments of refined sugar to Savannah's Canadian
customers. Mr. Brown stated that "only transactions not other
than exports and drawbacks were to be posted to other Savannah
accounts." He also stated that account 19134 was set up beginning
with the 1984/1985 refining season.
Neither affiant referred to the presence of the five U.S.
"ship-to" locations in the accounts. See items 27/22, 38/17,
50/23, 57/22 and 68/13 listed in account 19134, a copy of which
will be provided. Also; only two of the five locations are
listed in any of the other customer accounts for Savannah. The
location identified as 27/22 in account 19134 is also listed as
item 4/22 in account 19125. The location identified as 50/23 is
also listed as item 50/23 is also listed as item 53/23 in account
19125. The evidence shows that account 19134 was opened 11-30-84
while account 19125 was opened 10-15-90. Further, account 19125
does list a Canadian location in item 63/61.
The evidence also shows that the export shipments reference
two contracts which are identified as MSC(presumably Michigan
Sugar Company) contract 8889 and 3062. Neither the protestant nor
Michigan was able to provide a copy of either contract. There was a concern that those contracts were sales contracts between
Michigan and the foreign buyer of the export shipment. In that
situation, the validity of the principal-agency manufacturing
set-up between the protestant and Michigan would be called into
question. Although copies of those contracts were not provided,
alternative evidence was which tends to show that the export
shipments were the result of a sales contract between a foreign
buyer and the protestant appeared on the shipping and Canadian
Customs documents. Moreover, in all of the claims involved in the
sample, that protestant-foreign buyer contract number is listed
on the export shipment listing under the heading titled "cont.
number." The evidence is consistent with the protestant's
assertion that the export sale was a sale between the protestant
and the foreign buyer.
The order and contract numbers provide a key to the
protestant's production and export records. An amendment of the
correct production dates must reflect the original contract and
order numbers. In the supplemental evidence, the order number was
also referenced as the invoice number on the summary listing of
exports on a drawback claim that was not part of the sample
claims on the protest. However, the difference in terminology has
no substantive importance for drawback verification purposes.
Despite the discrepancies noted above the evidence of the
reconciliation of the raw sugar account identified by customer
number 19134 on the commercial invoice covering each export
shipment is consistent with the protestant's assertion that the
export was not a sale of refined product.
To the extent that an export shipment is not barred as a
result of being refined in a period that Michigan could not have
the protestant's raw sugar, that is, before October 31, 1984, and
the period between December 7, 1984 and January 2, 1985, or
because the claim exceeds the amount of raw sugar processed on
the daily production records, the claim should be allowed if the
Michigan invoice and accounting records reflect a raw sugar
credit as does invoice 147068. Drawback on an export shipment
should be denied if the invoice fails to record the raw sugar
credit or evidence fails to show that the invoice and order was the subject of a raw sugar advance reconciliations. The
protestant is to be permitted to furnish that additional evidence
for every export on which the invoice fails to show a credit.
The sample entries in the protest involve shipments of
refined sugar said to be made during the 1985-1986 period. That
is, the refined sugar is said to have been made with the 38
million pounds of raw sugar that was the subject of the sale
evidenced by the protestant's confirmation of October 1, 1985,
Michigan's invoice to the protestant of that date, and
protestant's check 586 dated October 9, 1985.
The evidence indicates that the sale occurred no earlier than
October 1, 1985. The evidence discussed above, with respect to
the transactions for the 1986-1987 period, shows that Michigan
established a credit with respect to the September 26, 1986
transaction for the protestant on September 28, 1986. The
protestant offered that evidence as representative of its raw
sugar purchases from Michigan. If that is accurate, and we have
no evidence to the contrary, the sale would have occurred on
October 1, 1985 when there was a definite offer and acceptance
and the raw sugar was identified by the establishment of a credit
account. Sugar processed on and after that date that is evidenced
by a raw sugar advance payment credit by Michigan would be
eligible for drawback. That eligibility would depend also on the
protestant showing that the total of all such eligible shipments
did not exceed the 38 million pounds purchased in the October 1,
1985 transaction and that there was no export shipment that
exceeded the relevant daily refinery production records.
The relevant daily refinery records were examined against
each of the export shipments in the 11-drawback claim sample. The
dates of production involved in the drawback claims reviewed
began on October 5, 1985 and ended December 8, 1985.
October 5, 1985:
The production for this day involved claim 86-xxx419-3. There
were two shipments of 12,550, and 900 pounds totaling 13,400. The
sugar was refined at Michigan's Sebewaing refinery and shipped
from that place. The daily records for that day shows 317,500 pounds of refined sugar was produced. Using the attribution
formula it can be seen that 203,200 pounds of refined sugar are
said to have been Savannah's (317,500 x .64 = 203,200) Since the
total shipments of refined sugar produced on October 5, 1985 at
Sebewaing were less than the amount of refined sugar produced
through use of the raw sugar, those shipments would be eligible
so long as the Michigan invoices on those shipments reflect that
they were against the raw sugar purchase documents of October 1,
1985.
October 6, 1985 is the next date of production involved in
these claims. The amount produced on that date was claimed on
claim 86-xxx 419-3. The shipments were from Michigan's Sebewaing
refinery. The shipments total 30,418 pounds. The daily record for
October 6, 1985 for the Sebewaing refinery shows 602,500 pounds.
Use of the mass balance formula shows that 385,600 pounds of
refined sugar was made from raw sugar(602,500 x .64 = 385,600).
That amount exceeds the amount shipped and would be eligible
assuming evidence of a raw sugar credit.
The next day of production involved in these claims is
October 8, 1985. The amounts produced on that date were claimed
on drawback claim 86-xxx 040-1. This shipment was produced and
shipped from Michigan's Carrollton refinery. This shipment totals
177,811 pounds. The daily record for October 8, 1985 for the
Carrollton refinery shows 660,900 pounds. Use of the mass balance
formula shows that 422,976 pounds of refined sugar was made from
raw sugar (660,900 x.64 = 422,976). That amount exceeds the
amount shipped. This shipment would be eligible assuming the
Michigan invoices reflect credit for the October 1, 1985 advance.
October 9, 1985 is the next date of production involved in
these claims. The production was claimed in three of the claims:
86-xxx 421-6, 86-xxx 414-8, and 86-xxx 412-2. All of these
shipments were from Carrollton refinery. The daily records for
that date at Carrollton show that 661,200 pounds were produced.
Use of the mass balance formula shows that 423,168 pounds of
refined sugar was made from raw sugar (661,200 x.64 = 423,168).
The total of all shipments from Carrollton attributable to
production on that date is 132,222 pounds and would be consistent
with the protestant's assertions.
October 10, 1985 is the next involved production date. This
date was not asserted in the original listing provided as exhibit
II, which did not allocate production that occurred on two
consecutive days. On October 18, 1996 Savannah amended exhibit II
to reflect the amounts produced on each day. Again, that
amendment is permissible for the reasons stated in the discussion
on amendments; it does not attempt to substitute new imports or
export shipments but supplies additional information on the
shipments originally filed as the claim. The production is
relevant to claim xx-xxx 421-6. The shipment total 1,120 pounds.
The shipment was made from Michigan's Carrollton refinery. The
daily record for Carrollton on that date shows 614,100 pounds
were produced. Use of the mass balance formula shows that 393,024
pounds of refined sugar were made from raw sugar(614,100 x .64 =
393,024). That amount exceeds the amount shipped and would be
consistent with the protestant's assertions.
October 25, 1985 is the next date of production involved in
these claims. That production is relevant to three claims: 86-xxx
040-1, 86-xxx 419-3, and 86-xxx 420-3. All shipments were from
the Caro refinery. The daily records for Caro show 810,800 pounds
were produced. The mass balance formula shows that 518,912 pounds
of refined sugar were made from raw sugar (810,800 x.64 =
518,912). The total shipped in the three claims is 426,657, which
would be consistent with the protestant's assertions.
October 26, 1985 is the next involved date of production.
That production is relevant to four claims: 86-xxx 040-1, 86-xxx
419-3, 86-xxx 420-3 and 86-xxx 414-8. All of the shipments in
those claims were from the Caro refinery. The daily records for
Caro show 862,700 pounds were produced. Use of the mass balance
formula shows that 552,128 pounds of refined sugar were made from
Savannah's raw sugar (862,700 x.64 = 552,128). The exports
claimed total 522,508 pounds and would be consistent with the
protestant's assertions.
October 27, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to three claims: 86-xxx 419-3, 86-xxx 420-
3, and 86-xxx 414-8. All of the shipments were from the Caro
refinery. The daily records show 733,100 pounds were produced at Caro. Use of the mass balance formula shows that 469,184 pounds
of refined sugar were made from raw sugar (733,100 x.64 =
469,184). The exports attributed to production on October 27,
1986 total 433,493 pounds, and would be consistent with
protestant's assertions.
October 28, 1985 is the next relevant production date. That
production is relevant to three claims: 86-xxx 421-6, 86-xxx
419-3, and 86-xxx 412-2. The shipments were from the Caro
refinery. The daily records show 731,800 pounds were produced at
Caro. Use of the mass balance formula shows that 468,352 pounds
of refined sugar were made from raw sugar (731,800 x.64 =
468,352). The export shipments total 396,614 pounds which would
be consistent with protestant's assertions.
October 29, 1985 is the next relevant production date. That
production is relevant to six claims: 86-xxx 445-2, 86-xxx 421-6,
86-xxx 419-3, 86-xxx 420-3, and 86-xxx 413-5 and 86-xxx 412-2.
All of the shipments were from the Caro refinery. The daily
records show that 777,900 pounds were produced at Caro. Use of
the mass balance formula shows 497,856 pounds of refined sugar
were made from raw sugar (777,900 x.64 = 497,856). The export
shipments total 445,218 pounds, which would be consistent with
the protestant's assertions.
October 30, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to four claims: C17xxxx 313-5, C17-xxxx
312-7, C17-xxxx 311-9, and 86-xxx 445-2. All of the shipments
were from the Caro refinery. The daily records show that 852,200
pounds were produced. Use of the mass balance formula shows
545,408 pounds of refined sugar were made from raw sugar (852,200
x.64 = 545,408). The export shipments total 432,085 pounds, which
would be consistent with the protestant's assertions.
October 31, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to two claims: C17-xxxx 313-5 and C17-xxxx
311-9. All of the shipments were from the Caro refinery. The
daily records show that 831,400 pounds were produced. Use of the
mass balance formula shows that 532,096 pounds of refined sugar
were made from raw sugar (831,400 x.64 = 532,096). The export
shipments total 293,154 pounds, which would be consistent with
the protestant's assertions.
November 28, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 040-1. The shipment was
from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show that 500,600
pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass balance formula
shows that 320,384 pounds of refined sugar were made from raw
sugar (500,600 x.64 = 320,384). The export shipments total 74,576
pounds, which would be consistent with the protestant's
assertions.
November 29, 1985 is the next involved production date. The
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 040-1. All of the
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show
that 484,700 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass
balance formula shows that 310,208 pounds of refined sugar were
made from raw sugar (484,700 x.64 = 310,208). The export
shipments total 305,640 pounds which would be consistent with the
protestant's assertions.
November 30, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 040-1. The export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show
that 541,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass
balance formula shows that 346,240 pounds of refined sugar were
made from raw sugar (541,000 x.64 = 346,240). The export
shipments total 204,784 pounds, which would be consistent with
the protestant's assertions.
December 1, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 414-8. All of the export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show
that 510,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass
balance formula shows that 326,400 pounds of refined sugar were
made from raw sugar (510,000 x.64 = 326,400). The export
shipments total 90,000 pounds, which is consistent with the
protestant's assertions.
December 2, 1985 is the next involved date. That production
is relevant to claim 86-xxx 414-8. All of the export shipments
were from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show that
470,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass balance
formula shows that 300,800 pounds of refined sugar were made from
raw sugar (470,000 x.64 = 300,800). The export shipments total
233,224 pounds, which is consistent with the protestant's
assertions.
December 3, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 414-8. All of the export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show
that 450,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass
balance formula shows that 288,000 pounds of refined sugar were
made from raw sugar (450,000 x.64 = 288,000). The export
shipments total 305,552,000 pounds. There is an overclaim of
17,552 pounds. The export shipment of June 2, 1986 (45,000) must
be disallowed to the extent of the 17,552 pounds over claimed.
December 4, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 414-8. All of the export
shipments are from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show
that 360,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass
balance formula shows that 230,400 pounds of refined sugar were
made from raw sugar (360,000 x.64 = 230,400). The export
shipments total 45,000 pounds, which would be consistent with the
protestant's assertions.
December 5, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 412-2. All of the export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily production
records show that 361,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use
of the mass balance formula shows that 231,040 pounds of refined
sugar were made from raw sugar(361,000 x.64 = 231,040). The
export shipments total 53,560 pounds, which would be consistent
with the protestant's assertions.
December 6, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 412-2. All of the export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily production
records show that 419,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. The
mass balance formula shows that 268,160 pounds of refined sugar
were made from raw sugar (419,00 x .64 - 268,160). The export
shipments total 37,664 pounds, which would be consistent with the
protestant's assertions.
December 7, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 412-2. All of the export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show
that 350,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass
balance formula shows that 224,000 pounds of refined sugar were
made from raw sugar (350,000 x.64 = 224,000). The export
shipments total 190,176 pounds which would be consistent with the
protestant's assertions.
December 8, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to two claims: 86-xxx 413-5 and 86-xxx
412-2. All of the export shipments were from Croswell refinery.
The daily production records show that 315,000 pounds were
produced at Croswell. Use of the mass balance formula shows that
201,600 pounds of refined sugar were made from raw sugar (315,000
x .64 = 201,600). The export shipments total 226,248 pounds.
There is an overclaim of 24,648 pounds. The export shipment of
July 3, 1986 (45,000) of claim 86-xxx 413-5 must be disallowed to
the extent of the overclaim of 24,648 pounds.
December 9, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to two claims: 86-xxx 413-5 and 86-xxx
412-2. All of the export shipments were from the Croswell
refinery. The daily records show that 420,000 pounds were
produced at Croswell. Use of the mass balance formula shows that
use of 268,800 pounds of refined sugar were made from raw sugar
(420,000 x.64 = 268,800). The export shipments total 293,352. There is an overclaim of 24,552 pounds. The last export shipment
involving that production was the shipment (45,000) made on July
10, 1986 covered by order 52882 in claim 86-xxx 413-5. That
shipment must be disallowed to the extent of the overage of
24,552 pounds.
December 10, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to three claims: 86-xxx 421-6, 86-xxx 420-
3, and 86-xxx 413-5. All of the export shipments were from
Croswell. The daily records show that 485,000 pounds were
produced at Croswell. Use of the mass balance formula shows that
310,400 pounds of refined sugar were made from raw sugar (485,000
x.64 = 310,400). The export shipments total 285,848 pounds which
would be consistent with the protestant's assertions.
December 11, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 421-6. All of the export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show
that 376,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass
balance formula shows that 240,640 pounds of refined sugar were
made from raw sugar(376,000 x.64 = 240,640). The export
shipments total 153,112 pounds, which would be consistent with
the protestant's assertions.
December 12, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 421-6. All of the export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily records
shows that 510,000 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the
mass balance formula shows that 326,400 pounds of refined sugar
were made from raw sugar (510,000 x.64 = 326,400). The export
shipments total 111,264 pounds, which would be consistent with
the protestant's assertions.
December 13, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim 86-xxx 445-2. The export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The daily records show
that 400,200 pounds were produced at Croswell. Use of the mass
balance formula shows that 256,128 pounds of refined sugar were
made from raw sugar (400,200 x.64 = 256,128). The export shipments total 45,000 pounds, which would be consistent with the
protestant's assertions.
December 14, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to two claims: C17-xxxx 313-5 and 86-xxx
445-2. All of the export shipments were from Croswell refinery.
The daily records show that 412,000 pounds were produced at
Croswell. Use of the mass balance formula shows that 263,680
pounds of refined sugar were made from raw sugar (412,000 x.64 =
263,680). The export shipments total 147,472 pounds, which would
be consistent with the protestant's assertions.
December 15, 1985 is the next involved production date. The
daily production records for that date were not provided.
However, the records for December 15, 16, and 17, 1985(the next
involved production dates)can be computed from the protestant's
daily to perpetual compilations. Since those compilations contain
the records for December 12, 13, and 14, 1985 and the use of the
mass balance figures match with our results, they have been
accepted for the purpose of this analysis. The export shipments
were from the Croswell refinery. That production is relevant to
two claims: C17-xxxx 313-5 and C17-xxxx 312-7. The amount of
refined sugar made from raw sugar at Croswell on December 15,
1985 is 257,920 pounds. The export shipments total 302,136
pounds. There is an overclaim of 44,216 pounds. The export
shipment of August 14, 1986 (45,000) in claim C17-xxxx 312-7 is
the latest export for the production. That shipment must be
disallowed to the extent of the 44,216 pounds overclaimed.
December 16, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to two claims: C17-xxxx 312-7 and C17-xxxx
311-9. As noted above with respect to December 15, 1985 there are
no daily records, but the protestant's mass balance calculation
of 268,800 pounds of refined sugar made from raw sugar at
Croswell is accepted for the purpose of this analysis. The export
shipments were made from the Croswell refinery. The export
shipments total 224,584 pounds, which would be consistent with
the protestant's assertions.
December 17, 1985 is the next involved production date. That
production is relevant to claim C17-xxxx 311-9. As noted above,
only the mass balance computation for that date was provided, but
it is accepted for this analysis. The export shipments were from
the Croswell refinery. The mass balance compilation shows that
266,880 pounds of refined sugar were made from raw sugar at
Croswell. The export shipments total 229,736 pounds, which would
be consistent with the protestant's assertions.
December 18, 1985 is the final involved production date.
That production is relevant to claim C17-xxxx 311-9. As noted
above, only the mass balance computation for that date was
provided, but it is accepted for this analysis. The export
shipments were from the Croswell refinery. The mass balance
computation shows that 221,643 pounds of refined sugar were made
from raw sugar. The export shipments total 61,072 pounds, which
would be consistent with the protestant's assertions.
HOLDINGS:
The protestant may provide additional records to support its
entitlement to drawback on the claimed exports and designated
imports.
The protest should be allowed if sufficient refined sugar was
produced for Savannah as noted in this analysis on pages 38
through 55, and the third and fourth paragraphs of these
Holdings, to the extent that no claim is based on export
production which occurred in excess of the usage of 318558
(289,598 refined pounds) pounds of raw sugar on December 7, 1984
until the purchase on January 2, 1985. Any export shipment
attributed to production in that December 7, 1984 to January 2,
1985 period is to be disallowed. Likewise, any export shipment
attributed to production before October 31, 1984 is to be
disallowed.
The protest is to be allowed for other export shipments if
the protestant furnishes copies of the Michigan-to-Savannah
export sales invoices or other records which show that the export
shipment was refined sugar that was credited against the relevant advance purchase by the protestant. Copies of the relevant
documents which are to be used as a basis of comparison to
implement this holding are enclosed. Since they are business
records they are protected from disclosure.
The protest is to be disallowed to the extent that there has
been an overclaim using the Michigan daily production records for
corrected production dates are not otherwise barred as noted in
the second paragraph of these Holdings. The last export shipment
working backwards is to be disallowed for each production date
until the amount over claimed has been taken into account.
The Office of Regulations and Rulings will take steps to make
this decision available to Customs personnel via the Customs
Rulings Module in ACS and the public via the Diskette
Subscription Service, Freedom of Information Act and other public
access channels 60 days from the date of this decision.
Sincerely,
Stuart P. Seidel
Assistant Commissioner
Office of Regulations and Rulings
Enclosures