MAR-2-05 CO:R:C:V 731676 jd

Mr. Gary Hodnett
Import Manager
The Lane Company, Inc.
Box 151
Altavista, Virginia 24517-0151

RE: Country of origin marking requirements applicable to imported unfinished wood table legs and rails

Dear Mr. Hodnett:

This is in reply to your letters of March 24 and June 9, 1988, to the Customs office in New York, concerning the application of country of origin marking requirements to imported unfinished wood table legs and rails. Your first letter was prompted by a marking notice received at the port of Norfolk, but you state in your second submission that the marking problem was resolved. Both of your letters and the attachments were forwarded to this office for reply. The following is the prospective ruling you requested to avoid similar problems with future importations. We regret the delay.

FACTS:

Your company imports carved mahogany table legs and rails from the Philippines. The pieces as imported are unfinished and unassembled. You assemble the pieces into a table base, add a domestically produced wood veneered top and finish the article at your U.S. location. A hangtag is attached to each table which states that components from the Philippines were used in its manufacture.

ISSUE:

Are unfinished wood table legs and rails substantially transformed by their assembly into a table base, addition of a domestically produced table top and finishing, so as to make the importer/processor the ultimate purchaser of the legs and rails for country of origin marking purposes?

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

Section 304 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1304), provides that every article of foreign origin (or its container) imported into the United States shall be marked in a conspicuous place as legibly, indelibly, and permanently as the

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nature of the article (or container) will permit, in such a manner as to indicate to an ultimate purchaser in the United States the English name of the country of origin of the article. Part 134, Customs Regulations (19 CFR Part 134), implements the requirements and exceptions of 19 U.S.C. 1304.

Section 134.35, Customs Regulations (19 CFR 134.35), implementing the principle of U.S. v. Gibson-Thomsen Co., Inc., 27 C.C.P.A. 267 (C.A.D. 98), provides that an article used in the U.S. in manufacture which results in an article having a name, character, or use differing from that of the imported article will be considered substantially transformed, and therefore the manufacturer or processor in the U.S. who converts or combines the imported article into the different article will be considered the ultimate purchaser of the imported article within the contemplation of 19 U.S.C. 1304(a). Accordingly, the article shall be excepted from marking. However, in accordance with 19 U.S.C. 1304(b) and { 134.22, Customs Regulations (19 CFR 134.22), the outermost container of the imported article shall be marked to indicate the country of origin of the article.

In Carlson Furniture Industries, James G. Wiley & Co. v. United States, C.D. 4126, the U.S. Customs Court decided that the ultimate purchaser of certain wood furniture parts, both finished and unfinished, was the company that assembled the parts into chairs. In T.D. 71-77 (March 8, 1971), Customs agreed with the Carlson court that "the company which assembles imported wood chair parts into chairs is the 'ultimate purchaser' of such parts", but limited the decision to the case of parts imported in an unfinished condition. Headquarters ruling 709561 (January 16, 1979), applied the decision of T.D. 71-77 and determined that imported unfinished parts of a "Captain's bed" were substantially transformed by surface finishing, and assembly with domestic components so as to make the importer the ultimate purchaser of the parts for country of origin marking purposes.

It is the opinion of this office that your company is the ultimate purchaser of the imported unfinished table legs and rails. You substantially transform the parts by assembly with domestic components into a finished table and the surface finishing of the completed table.

HOLDING:

In consideration of the facts described above, the importer/processor of unfinished wood table legs and rails is the ultimate purchaser of the articles for country of origin marking

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purposes. Accordingly, the pieces are excepted from individual country of origin marking. However, the outermost container of the legs and rails must be marked to indicate their country of origin.

Sincerely,

Marvin M. Amernick
Chief, Value, Special Programs
and Admissibility Branch

cc: Asst. Area Director, NIS
your file 830734