• Type : Entry • HTSUS :

WAR-3-01/WAR-3-02/FOR-2-01/CON-9-04
CO:R:C:E 225490 TLS

District Director
U.S. Customs Service
P.O. Box 1490
St. Albans, Vermont 05478

RE: Internal Advice request concerning manipulation or manufacture in a foreign trade zone (FTZ); admissibility of exported domestic merchandise in an FTZ; transfer of bonded warehouse inventory to an FTZ; 19 U.S.C. 1562; 19 U.S.C. 81c(a); 19 CFR 146.33; 19 CFR 141.2; 19 CFR 146.44(d); United States v. National Sugar Refining Co., 39 CCPA 96 (1951); Tropicana Food Products, Inc. v. United States, 789 F. Supp. 1154 (CIT 1992); M.H. Garvey Co. v. United States, 15 Cust. Ct. 130 (1945).

Dear Sir:

This office has received the above-referenced request for internal advice as provided for under Customs regulations. We have considered the request and have made the following decision.

FACTS:

Your letter of June 16, 1994 states that a company has proposed that certain operations be performed in an FTZ. The company operates an FTZ in your district. It manufactures milk supplements, two of which, Enercal and Promil, are manufactured in a bonded warehouse in another district. Some of the product manufactured in the bonded warehouse was recently rejected upon arrival after exportation because it was discovered that some of it may contain salmonella. These products are also manufactured in the subject FTZ on an export-only basis.

The company would like to import the rejected merchandise into the subject FTZ and move its existing inventories from the bonded warehouse to the FTZ. The inventories would be reworked into the manufacturing the process. The products are in powder form and require reliquefying, mixing with existing raw materials, drying, and repackaging for export. The inventory product being introduced into the process for reprocessing would be the same as the product being produced by this process.

ISSUES:

Whether the proposed transaction is a manipulation or remanufacture.

Whether the inventory product from the class-6 bonded warehouse that was exported and returned may be entered into the FTZ for reprocessing.

Whether the exported product from the class-6 bonded warehouse may be imported directly to the FTZ for reprocessing.

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

There are two groups of products. The infant food product that was exported and the infant food product that was made in a class 6 bonded warehouse.

The proposal is to bring both groups into a subzone for heat-treatment to eliminate salmonella contamination. It is clear that the product sent abroad was exported. There was an intent to join that product to the commerce of a foreign country and it had actually reached the countries involved. The rejection of importation by those countries would not nullify the fact of exportation. In the case of U.S. v. National Sugar Refining Co., 39 CCPA 96 (1951), the court held that sugar which was returned to the U.S. after a shipwreck had been exported based on the company's intent to join that sugar to a foreign country when coupled with the physical movement out of the U.S. The same principles are applicable here. It is equally clear that the subsequent return to the U.S. would be an importation. See 19 CFR 141.2. As such, that exported product is eligible for admission into the subzone.

The second group has not been exported and is in a Customs bonded warehouse. Generally, goods in a Customs bonded warehouse are not eligible for admission into a foreign trade zone except under the fourth proviso to 19 U.S.C. 81c(a). That statute has been implemented by 19 CFR 146.44(d). It provides that goods which had been entered for warehousing so as to avoid entry into U.S. commerce may be removed from such a warehouse for admission only in zone-restricted status. Admission in zone-restricted status is limited to storage, destruction, or exportation. Admission of the infant food product for heat-treatment would not be eligible if the product was in zone-restricted status. However, there is an exception to that general rule. Goods can be put into a zone temporarily for manipulation under 19 U.S.C. 1562. That statute permits a product to be cleaned, sorted, repacked, or otherwise changed in condition, but not manufactured. The question is whether the heat treatment of the infant food product falls within those exemplars. The statutory language was interpreted in the case of Tropicana Food Products, Inc. v. United States, 789 F. Supp. 1154 (CIT 1992). In that case, the court held that blending of orange juice concentrates to achieve desired Brix to acid ratios changed the fundamental character of the imported unblended concentrate. In concluding that the blending operation was not a permitted manipulation, the court analyzed the exemplars in the statute. Clearly, "blending" was not one of the listed terms. The court also held that "blending" was not analogous to "cleaning, sorting, or repacking" so that the phrase "or otherwise changed in condition" did not apply.

In this case, the 22-second heat treatment does not change the structure or purpose of the infant food product. In the case of M.H. Garvey Co. v. United States, 15 Cust. Ct. 130 (1945), the court defined cleaning to be the process of mechanically or otherwise eliminating dirt or other foreign substances from imported merchandise. That court, at pages 138-140, noted with approval various cases involving bleaching, combing, and washing with water and acids that are considered to be cleaning. The proposed heat treatment to eliminate the salmonella contamination is analogous. Therefore, the infant food product at the Customs bonded manufacturing warehouse is eligible to be temporarily deposited in the subzone in accordance with 19 CFR 146.33.

HOLDING:

The heat treatment process to remove salmonella contamination is a manipulation as cleaning.

The infant food product that was exported may be admitted into a foreign trade zone as imported merchandise.

The infant food product in a bonded warehouse may be temporarily deposited in a foreign trade zone pursuant to 19 CFR 146.33 to be cleaned as permitted by 19 U.S.C. 1562.

This decision should be mailed by your office to the internal advice requester no later than 60 days from the date of this letter. On that date the Office of Regulations and Rulings will take steps to make the decision available to Customs personnel via the Customs Rulings Module in ACS and to the public via the Diskette Subscription Service, Lexis, Freedom of Information Act, and other public access channels.

Sincerely,

John Durant, Director
Commercial Rulings Division