CLA-2 CO:R:C:G 087724 MBR

Mr. Gary Chisamore
Nexus Engineering Corp.
7000 Lougheed Highway
Burnaby, B.C., Canada
V5A 4K4

RE: Satellite Cable Television Headend; Receiver/ Descrambler; Transmission apparatus; 8525

Dear Mr. Chisamore:

This is in reply to your letter of July 10, 1990, on behalf of Nexus Engineering Corp., requesting reconsideration of PC 849379, dated February 7, 1990, regarding the Nexus satellite television receiver/ descramblers, and headends.

FACTS:

The merchandise at issue are "headends" and "receiver- descramblers."

A "headend" is a cable television industry term for a combination of television signal transmission apparatus. Each system is individually configured for a particular customer. Generally, the merchandise receives satellite television signals, modifies the signal, and then transmits the signal into a cable television or closed circuit television system. Thus, the headend serves an integral function in the cable TV transmission chain. Headends contain combinations of modulators/ demodulators, converters, signal processors/ generators, combiners, amplifiers, and receivers.

The receiver/ descramblers are commercial grade signal processors which process one television signal. They are not packaged, designed, sold, (or even usable) for residential use. They are used in closed circuit/ cable television applications for receiving, decoding and retransmitting a television signal. The receiver/ descrambler does not convert an NTSC (standard television broadcast signal) into the end point signal intended to be displayed on a television picture tube. Instead, it decodes a scrambled signal and produces an NTSC signal for further transmission, reception, and subsequent display.

ISSUE:

What is the classification of a satellite television transmission headend and receiver/ descrambler, under the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States Annotated (HTSUSA)? Is the appropriate classification under heading 8525, HTSUSA, which provides for: "[t]ransmission apparatus...", or under 8528, HTSUSA, which provides for: "[t]elevision receivers...?"

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

The General Rules of Interpretation (GRI's) to the HTSUSA govern the classification of goods in the tariff schedule. GRI 1 states, in pertinent part:

...classification shall be determined according to the terms of the headings and any relative section or chapter notes...

Pre-classification ruling 849379, dated February 7, 1990, held that the instant merchandise was classifiable under subheading 8528.10.80, HTSUSA, which provides for: "[t]elevision receivers...: [c]olor: [o]ther television receivers: [n]ot having a picture tube."

However, subsequently, HQ 088255, dated December 17, 1990, held that an integrated receiver/ decoder was properly classifiable under heading 8525, HTSUSA, which provides for transmission apparatus.

The headend is prima facie classifiable under the following headings:

8525 Transmission apparatus for... television, whether or not incorporating reception apparatus...:

8525.10.20.20 Transmission apparatus: Television: Converters, decoders, pre-amplifiers, line amplifiers, distribution amplifiers and other amplifiers; directional couplers and other couplers; all the foregoing designed for cable or closed circuit television applications

* * * * * * * * * * * * *

8528 Television receivers (including video monitors and video projection television receivers),...:

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8528.10.80.55 Color: Other television receivers: Not having a picture tube

HQ 088255, dated December 17, 1990, held that an Integrated Receiver/ Decoder for cable or closed circuit television applications was properly classifiable under heading 8525, HTSUSA, which provides for transmission apparatus.

Clearly, there has been a certain amount of confusion as to what this merchandise is and how it functions. Additionally, the scope of the two competing provisions is at issue.

However, the headend and receiver/ descramblers do not convert a NTSC (standard television broadcast signal) into the end point signal intended to be displayed on a television picture tube. Instead, they decode a scrambled signal and produce an NTSC signal for further transmission and final reception and display.

Heading 8528, HTSUSA, which provides for television receivers is actually a more narrow heading than it may at first appear. The Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System Explanatory Notes (EN) to heading 8528, page 1378, state in pertinent part:

This heading covers television receivers (including video monitors and video projectors), whether or not combined, in the same housing, with radio-broadcast receivers or sound or video recording or reproducing apparatus.

The heading includes:

(1) Television receivers of the kind used in the home (table models, consoles, etc.) including coin-operated television sets.

(3) Video tuners, intended to be used with or incorporated in, e.g., video recording or reproducing apparatus or video monitors. These tuners convert high-frequency television signals into signals usable by video recording or reproducing apparatus or video monitors. However, devices which simply isolate high-frequency television signals (sometimes called video tuners) are to be classified as parts in heading 8529.

(4) Television receivers for industrial use (e.g., for reading instruments at a distance, or for observation in dangerous localities). With this apparatus the transmission is often by line.

(5) Video monitors which are receivers connected directly to the video camera or recorder by means of co-axial -4-

cables, so that all the high frequency circuits are eliminated. They are used by television companies or for closed circuit television (airports, railway stations, steel plants, hospitals, etc.).

(6) Video projectors, which enable the image normally reproduced on the screen of a video receiver to be projected on a large screen.

(7) Television apparatus of all types equipped to receive, memorize and display texts and messages.

Thus, the EN to Heading 8528, HTSUSA, delineates end point apparatus where the image is received and displayed, such as: television receivers used in the home, video tuners intended to be used with or incorporated in video recording or reproducing apparatus or video monitors, video projectors, apparatus to memorize and display texts and messages.

The instant headend and receiver/ descramblers are in the transmission path, but are not at the end of the transmission path where final reception and viewing takes place. Its function is to receive and decode a scrambled signal that is subsequently transmitted or relayed, in the form of an NTSC signal, to be received and displayed at the end of the transmission path. Therefore, the headend and the receiver/ descramblers cannot be considered "television receivers," as provided for under heading 8528, HTSUSA.

You assert that the headend and receiver/ descramblers are "Transmission apparatus...," as provided for in heading 8525. We agree. The Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System Explanatory Notes (EN) to heading 8525, page 1374, state:

This group includes:

(1) Transmitters of all kinds.

(2) Relay apparatus used to pick up a broadcast and retransmit it and so increase the range

(3) Relay television transmitters for transmission, by means of an aerial and parabolic reflector, from the studio or site of an outside broadcast to the main transmitter.

(4) Television transmitters for industrial use (e.g., for reading instruments at a distance...)

The function of the headend and receiver/ descramblers is to receive the scrambled signal, to decode the signal, and then to relay the signal (which has only been converted to NTSC) to the -5-

final consumer's "television receiver" for final reception and display. Almost all transmitters and relay apparatus must, by their very nature, contain a receiver, since they must receive a signal before they can transmit or relay it. Heading 8525, HTSUSA, envisioned this and provides for: "transmission apparatus for... television, whether or not incorporating reception apparatus."

A headend consists of a number of machines combined together to perform a specific function. Section XVI, Note 4, requires the classification of "functional units" to be within the heading appropriate to the function of the unit. Section XVI, Note 4, states:

Where a machine (including a combination of machines) consists of individual components (whether separate or interconnected by piping, by transmission devices, by electric cables or by other devices) intended to contribute together to a clearly defined function covered by one of the headings in chapter 84 or chapter 85, then the whole falls to be classified in the heading appropriate to that function.

In the instant case, the headend is a combination of machines, interconnected by electric cables, intended to contribute together to the clearly defined function of "transmission apparatus for... television, whether or not incorporating reception apparatus."

The instant receiver/ descrambler appears to be of the same design and function as the Integrated Receiver/ Decoder ("IRD") ruled upon in HQ 088255, dated December 17, 1990, which held that an Integrated Receiver/ Decoder for cable or closed circuit television applications was properly classifiable under heading 8525, HTSUSA, which provides for transmission apparatus. Therefore, we find that the instant receiver/ descrambler is also properly classifiable under heading 8525, HTSUSA.

HOLDING:

The headend and the receiver/ descrambler are classifiable under 8525.10.20.20, HTSUSA, which provides for: "[t]ransmission apparatus for... television, whether or not incorporating reception apparatus...: [t]ransmission apparatus: [t]elevision: [c]onverters, decoders, pre-amplifiers, line amplifiers, distribution amplifiers and other amplifiers; directional couplers and other couplers; all the foregoing designed for cable or closed circuit television applications."

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EFFECT ON OTHER RULINGS:

PC 849379, dated February 7, 1990, is modified under authority of Section 177.9(d), Customs Regulations.

Sincerely,

John Durant, Director
Commercial Rulings Division