ENT-1-09 CO:R:C:E 222654 TLS
District Director
U.S. Customs Service
477 Michigan Avenue Suite 200
Detroit, Michigan 48266
RE: Request for further review of protest #3801-9-002515
concerning exemption from duty under the Automotive Products
Trade Act as applied to automobile parts from Canada
Dear Sir:
We have received your memorandum of February 14, 1990, which
was forwarded to us from the Customs Information Exchange in New
York. Upon review of information and documents sent to us, we
submit the following ruling.
FACTS:
The protestant, Hamilton-Pax, Inc., wishes to import
automobile components from Canada under the Automotive Products
Trade Act (APTA). The components are to be installed into
vehicles manufactured in the United States. Upon entry into the
Customs territory, the protestant requested duty-free treatment
for the parts under APTA by submitting with the entry documents a
"declaration of the importer". No purchase order was submitted
(nor required at the time) with the declaration. The subject
entry [xxxxxxxxxxxxx] was made on January 16, 1989, and was
liquidated on July 28, 1989.
You notified the importer that you required a purchase order
verifying the claim for duty-free treatment. In particular, you
state that your office notified the protestant's agent in writing
and by telephone, both directly and through the importer's
broker. The protestant argues that it did not receive a Notice
of Proposed Action making such a request. In fact, the
protestant claims to have only received a notice of a rate
advance taken by your office, dated June 21, 1989. Charles Laue,
Ltd., Canada, the parent company of the protestant, contends that
the Notice of Proposed Action, dated August 26, 1988, was sent to
the wrong address (Laue states in a letter to Customs Atlanta
office dated August 14, 1989, that John V. Carr & Sons, Inc.
ceased to represent Hamilton-Pax as a broker as of November 26,
1988). You argue that the original request for APTA duty-free
treatment of the entry was incomplete and unclear; you therefore
considered the purchase order an essential document to the
request. Your office sought to verify whether or not the subject
parts were destined for a bona fide motor-vehicle manufacturer in
the United States as defined under General Note 3(c)(iii)(4) of
the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States Annotated
(HTSUSA).
Hamilton-Pax did not provide the purchase order to you
within the time allotted, which led to the rate advance decision.
The protestant claims that the purchase order is a strictly
confidential document that is not subject to release. The claim
for duty-free treatment was subsequently denied and this protest
was soon after filed.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the district director has the authority to
disallow duty-free treatment of merchandise entered under an
exemption claim provided for by the Automotive Products Trade
Act.
LAW AND ANALYSIS:
At the center of the dispute is the interpretation of 19
CFR 10.84 (1988) and how much authority it gives district
directors in making decisions on claims for duty-free treatment
under APTA. Section 10.84 of the Customs Regulations provides
the following:
(a) When total exemption from duty on automotive
products is claimed on the ground that an importation
consists of "Canadian articles" as defined in General
Headnote 3(d), Tariff Schedules of the United States,
this fact must be established to the satisfaction of
the chief Customs officer at the port of entry. Such
Customs officer may accept as satisfactory evidence
that an article is a "Canadian article" a certificate
executed by the exporter in the approximate form
specified in paragraph (b) of this section, subject to
any verification he may deem necessary, or he may
satisfy himself of such fact by other means if, taking
into consideration the kind and value of the goods and
the circumstances of importation, he deems a
certificate unnecessary. (emphasis added.)
In the present case, the district director is the chief Customs
officer in charge of making the initial determination. The
director first received a declaration of importer from the
protestant without asking for or receiving copies of the purchase
orders for the merchandise. The declaration received by the
director comports with the requirements for such under section
10.84 and its contents and effect are not in dispute.
The director's requirement for copies of the purchase orders
in this case is not consistent with normal procedures for APTA
claims, however. You acknowledge such in your submission to us,
stating, "[i]n most cases, we do not require the production of
the actual purchase order. In this instance, we considered it to
be an essential document [in] order to verify Hamilton-Pax's APTA
claims." In particular, you found the importer's declarations to
be insufficient because lack of clarity and incompleteness. You
contend that from the information submitted by the importer it
cannot be determined that the merchandise is destined for use by
a bona fide automotive manufacturer. Section 10.84(c) gives the
director the authority to require a copy of "the written order,
contract, or letter of intent" either with the declaration or
within three (3) years from the entry date or withdrawal from a
warehouse. Thus, while the request for production of the
purchase orders here might be considered extraordinary, the
director was well within legal bounds to make such a request.
The Automotive Products Trade Act provides for duty-free
treatment upon entry of automotive parts from Canada that meet
the following criteria:
1) the article must be a Canadian product;
2) it must be obtained from a Canadian supplier;
3) it must be acquired through a purchase order
agreement;
4) the buyer must be a bona fide motor vehicle
manufacturer in the United States;
5) the article must be a fabricated component;
and (6) it must be intended for use as original
equipment in the manufacture in the United States of a
motor vehicle.
There is no question that the subject merchandise was imported
from Canada; we can infer from the facts that these parts were
also produced in that country. Charles Laue, Ltd. is a Canadian
corporation that is in the business of supplying auto parts to
American-based companies. The buyer in this case is Bendix
Corporation, an American company in the business of manufacturing
and supplying auto parts to automobile manufacturers. Bendix
does not manufacture complete automobiles itself. The product in
this case is a piston to be used as part of a master cylinder.
Criteria 1, 2, 5, and 6 can be verified from the declaration and
other information submitted. Whether these parts are destined
for use by a bona fide automobile manufacturer in the United
States cannot be verified from the information submitted,
however. We also cannot verify the existence of the purchase
order without an actual copy, although the declaration does
include a purchase order number and original date.
Because the absence of the purchase order is not unusual,
other extraordinary circumstances must have presented themselves
in this case to require the production of the order. The
documents presented only show that Bendix is to receive the
subject parts from the importer; no other American manufacturing
company is mentioned within the information submitted. General
Note 3(c)(iii)(4) of HTSUSA defines "bona fide motor-vehicle
manufacturer" as follows:
(4) ...a person who, upon application to the Secretary
of Commerce, is determined by the Secretary to have
produced no fewer than 15 complete motor vehicles in
the United States during the previous 12 months, and to
have installed capacity in the United States to produce
10 or more complete motor vehicles per 40-hour week.
The Note also provides that the Secretary of Commerce shall
maintain a list of names and addresses of bona fide motor-vehicle
manufacturers which will be published in the Federal Register
"from time to time."
Bendix is not listed among those manufacturers published in
the Federal Register as a bona fide motor-vehicle manufacturer.
The protestant claims that the parts are shipped to Bendix to be
processed for ultimate use by General Motors Corporation, an
automotive manufacturer that is listed in the Register. To the
extent that the ultimate user would be a bona fide manufacturer,
an APTA claim could be found in this case. None of the official
documents reflect such, however. Customs has taken the
extraordinary step of requesting the purchase order to verify
Hamilton-Pax's claim. The protestant either could not or would
not honor Customs request, stating that confidentiality precluded
it from doing so. Whatever information Hamilton-Pax sought to
protect is not confidential to Customs, however. The legal right
of Customs to request such information is not qualified in any
respect to privacy concerns. Such information in the possession
of the U.S. Customs Service is protected from public display and
its contents cannot be divulged in any case. Furthermore,
Customs has received similar documents from other organizations
and has allowed them to edit out any information they wished to
keep secret while submitting only the information sought by
Customs. The importer has failed to compromise on this matter
even to that extent. Therefore, we find the protestant's
concerns about confidentiality to be baseless in light of the
various protections afforded to it by Customs.
The protestant has also claimed that it did not receive a
Notice of Proposed Action to inform it of Customs preliminary
finding that the APTA claim should be disallowed. A copy of
this Notice has been submitted and it shows that it was addressed
to Hamilton-Pax, Inc., c/o John V. Carr & Son, Inc. (Carr) in
Chicago, Illinois, dated August 26, 1988. Twelve (12) days
beforehand, the parent company of the protestant sent a letter to
Customs Atlanta office which stated that Carr no longer
represented Hamilton-Pax as a broker as of November 27, 1988.
The November date is two months after the Notice was sent to Carr
by Customs Detroit office. To the extent that the office
handling this particular matter, the Detroit Customs office, was
not notified of Hamilton-Pax's terminations of its relationship
with Carr, it had no reason to believe it should not be doing
business with the protestant through Carr. Furthermore, even if
Detroit had been properly notified of this fact, the fact that
its effective date comes two months after the Notice was sent to
Carr suggests that Carr continued to represent Hamilton-Pax at
that time. Given these facts, we cannot help but find Laue's
notification to Atlanta Customs to have no bearing on Detroit
Customs Notice of Proposed Action to the protestant through its
broker.
In summation, we find the Detroit Customs district director
to have legitimately exercised his right to request copies of
purchase orders concerning the subject merchandise as provided
for under 19 CFR 10.84. We also find the Notice of Proposed
Action to be valid in this case because it was sent to the
importer's agent who was authorized at the time to receive the
notice on behalf of the importer.
HOLDING:
The director of the Customs district office in Detroit
legitimately and properly exercised his right to request copies
of purchase orders from the protestant pursuant to 19 CFR 10.84.
The protestant was properly notified through a Notice of Proposed
Action that it should comply with the request. Notification was
properly sent to the protestant's agent who was authorized at the
time to receive such communications on behalf of the protestant.
This protest should be denied.
Sincerely,
John Durant, Director