CLA-2 CO:R:C:T 951259 jb

Harold I. Loring, Esquire
Grunfeld, Desiderio, Lebowitz & Silverman
12 East 49th Street
New York, NY 10017

RE: Country of Origin determination for girls' knit set (sweatshirt and coordinated pants), girls' knit T-shirt and girls' reversible sweatshirt.

Dear Mr. Loring:

This letter is in response to your inquiry of February 28, 1992, on behalf of your client, Mamiye Brothers, Inc., requesting a country of origin determination for various girls' knit garments. Samples were submitted for examination.

FACTS:

The submitted samples consist of three types of garments which you describe as follows:

Style 1: Girls' knit set consisting of 70 percent polyester/30 percent cotton fleece sweatshirt- like, screen-printed top and coordinated pants;

Style 2: Girls' knit T-shirt-like top of 65 percent polyester/35 percent cotton interlock with screen print;

Style 3: Girls' reversible sweatshirt of 65 percent polyester/35 percent cotton jersey knit with a screen-print shell and all-over print shell, separated by polyfill.

According to your submissions, Mamiye Brothers, Inc. is contemplating a multi-country processing whereby fabric will be sourced in Malaysia, sent to Singapore for cutting and screen- printing, and then sent to Indonesia where the cut components will be assembled by sewing.

Specifically, Style 1 will begin with fabric produced and dyed in Malaysia. The fabric (on bolts with no cutting lines) will then be sent to Singapore where paper pattern/markers will be created and then applied to the fabric which will be cut into identifiable component parts. The components will then be shipped from Singapore to Indonesia for assembly and finishing.

Style 2 would follow the same procedure: Malaysian-produced and dyed fabric, cut and screen-printed in Singapore and assembled in Indonesia.

Style 3 likewise will be derived from Malaysian fabric. In Malaysia, the fabric will be dyed and the portion intended for one of the shells will be all-over printed. The unmarked bolts will then be sent to Singapore where they will be cut and where the component intended for the other shell front will be screen- printed. The polyfill layer will also be cut into components in Singapore. The finished components will then be bundled and sent to Indonesia for assembly.

ISSUE:

What is the country of origin of the merchandise at issue?

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

Section 12.130 of the Customs Regulations (19 CFR 12.130), sets forth the principles of country of origin for textile and textile products subject to section 204 of the Agricultural Act of 1956, as amended (7 U.S.C. 1854). According to T.D. 85-38, the final rule document which established 19 CFR 12.130, the principles of country of origin for textiles and textile products contained in 19 CFR 12.130 are applicable to such merchandise for all purposes, including duty and marking (50 FR 8714 (1985)).

This regulation, which became effective in 1985, came about as a result of Executive Order No. 12475 (49 FR 19955 (1984)), which directed the Secretary of Treasury, in accordance with policy guidance provided by the Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements, to issue regulations governing the entry, or withdrawal from warehouse for consumption, of textile and textile products subject to section 204. The regulations were to include clarifications in, or revisions to, the country of origin rules for textiles and textile products subject to section 204 in order to avoid circumvention of multilateral and bilateral textile agreements.

Section 12.130(b) of the Customs Regulations provides that a textile product that is processed in more than one country or territory shall be a product of that country or territory where it last underwent a substantial transformation. A textile product will be considered to have undergone a substantial transformation if it has been transformed by means of substantial manufacturing or processing operations into a new and different article of commerce.

Section 12.130(d) of the Customs Regulations sets forth criteria in determining whether a substantial transformation of a textile product has taken place. This regulation states that these criteria are not exhaustive; one or any combination of criteria may be determinative, and additional factors may be considered.

Section 12.130(d)(1) states that a new and different article of commerce will usually result from a manufacturing or processing operation if there is a change in: (i) Commercial designation or identity, (ii) Fundamental character or (iii) Commercial use.

Section 12.130(d)(2) of the Customs Regulations states that in determining whether merchandise has been subjected to substantial manufacturing or processing operations, the following will be considered:

(i) The physical change in the material or article as a result of the manufacturing or processing operations in each foreign territory or country, or insular possession of the U.S.

(ii) The time involved in the manufacturing or processing operations in each foreign territory or country, or insular possession of the U.S.

(iii) The complexity of the manufacturing or processing operations in each foreign territory or country, or insular possession of the U.S.

(iv) The level or degree of skill and/or technology required in the manufacturing or processing operations in each foreign territory or country, or insular possession of the U.S.

(v) The value added to the article or material in each foreign territory or country, or insular possession of the U.S., compared to its value when imported into the U.S.

Section 12.130(e)(1) of the Customs Regulations describes manufacturing or processing operations from which an article will usually be considered a product of the country in which those operations occurred. Section 12.130(e)(1)(v) provides the following:

Substantial assembly by sewing and/or tailoring of all cut pieces of apparel articles which have been cut from fabric in another foreign territory or country, or insular possession, into a completed garment (e.g. the complete assembly and tailoring of all cut pieces of suit-type jackets, suits and shirts).

According to T.D. 85-38, the final document rule establishing 19 CFR 12.130:

The assembly of all the cut pieces of a garment usually is a substantial manufacturing process that results in an article with a different name, character, or use than the cut pieces. It should be noted that not all assembly operations of cut garment pieces will amount to a substantial transformation of those pieces. Where either less than a complete assembly of all the cut pieces of a garment is performed in one country, or the assembly is a relatively simple one, then Customs will rule on the particular factual situation as they arise, utilizing the criteria in section 12.130(d).

We have previously held that cutting of fabric into pattern pieces constitutes a substantial transformation of the fabric, resulting in the apparel pieces becoming a product of the country where the fabric is cut (see: HQ 084979, dated October 23, 1989; HQ 731036, dated July 17, 1989; HQ 555730, dated February 19, 1991; HQ 556030, dated August 29, 1991; and HQ 089834, dated September 26, 1991).

Customs has long held that the mere assembly of goods, entailing simple combining operations, trimming or joining together by sewing is not enough to substantially transform the components of an article into a new and different article of commerce (see HQ 082787, dated March 9, 1989 and HQ 082747, dated February 23, 1989).

Because the articles in question are textile products subject to section 204 of the Agricultural Act of 1956, as amended (7 U.S.C. 1854), 19 CFR 12.130 is applicable.

The sewing operation performed in Indonesia involves the simple assembly of several cut pattern pieces to form either girls' knit set, girls' T-shirt or girls' reversible sweatshirt. The sewing does not involve the complex sewing operation required when manufacturing a suit, suit jacket, or tailored shirt contemplated by section 12.130(e)(v). The cutting in Singapore, materially changes the garment into designated garment parts. This constitutes a substantial transformation of that fabric. Since assembly of the three samples does not result in a substantial transformation, the cutting process in Singapore is considered the time at which substantial transformation occurs.

HOLDING:

The country of origin of the submitted merchandise is Singapore. It is at the cutting process, in Singapore, that the textile product undergoes a substantial transformation and is transformed into a new and different article of commerce.

The holding set forth above applies only to the specific factual situation and merchandise identified in the ruling request. This position is clearly set forth in section 177.9(b)(1), Customs Regulations (19 CFR 177.9(b)(1) ). This section states that a ruling letter is issued on the assumption that all of the information furnished in the ruling letter, either directly, by reference, or by implication, is accurate and complete in every material respect.

Should it be subsequently be determined that the information furnished is not complete and does not comply with 19 CFR 177.9(b)(1), the ruling will be subject to modification or revocation. In the event there is a change in the facts previously furnished this may affect the determination of country of origin. Accordingly, it is recommended that a new ruling request be submitted in accordance with section 177.2, Customs Regulations (19 CFR 177.2).


Sincerely,

John Durant, Director
Commercial Rulings Division