CLA-2 OT:RR:CTF:TCM H007440 ADK
Mr. R. Kevin Wiliams
Rodriguez O'Donnell Ross Fuerst
Gonzalez Williams & England, P.C.
1211 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20036
RE: Country of Origin Marking of an Artist Canvas; Modification of New York Ruling (NY) L89513
Dear Mr. Williams:
On December 12, 2006, the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (CBP) received a ruling request for merchandise substantially similar to your artist canvas classified in NY Ruling Letter (NY) L89513. We have since reviewed NY L89513, dated December 27, 2005, and although the classification determination in that ruling was correct, we find the country of origin determination to be in error.
Pursuant to section 625(c), Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. §1625(c)), as amended by section 623 of Title VI (Customs Modernization) of the North American Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act, Pub. L. 103-182, 107 Stat. 2057, 2186 (1993), notice of the proposed modification was published on May 30, 2007, in the Customs Bulletin, Volume 41, No. 23. Three comments were received in response to this notice and are addressed in the Law and Analysis section of this ruling.
FACTS:
The subject article, imported by Design Ideas, Ltd, is a prepared, framed artist canvas. The manufacturing process is as follows:
India
The 100% cotton fabric is woven from Indian yarn and is produced in two weights: 225 grams per square meter and 310 grams per square meter.
The fabric canvas is then primed with gesso1 to make the material suitable for painting.
The primed canvas is shipped to China for further fabrication.
China
The primed rolls of canvas are cut to the appropriate size for framing.
The cut canvas is then stretched over a wooden frame which is produced in China.
The edges of the canvas are folded into a groove on the back of the frame and a spline2 is inserted to hold the stretched canvas in place.
The canvas and spline are then stapled to hold them in place.
The completed canvas is finally labeled and packaged for shipment to the United States.
ISSUE:
What is the country of origin of the artist canvas?
LAW AND ANALYSIS:
Section 334 of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act (URAA) (codified at 19 U.S.C. §3592), enacted on December 8, 1994, provided rules of origin for textiles and apparel entered, or withdrawn from warehouse for consumption, on or after July 1, 1996. Section 102.21, CBP Regulations (19 C.F.R. §102.21), published September 5, 1995, in the Federal Register, implements Section 334 (60 FR 46188). Section 334 of the URAA was amended by section 405 of the Trade and Development Act of 2000, enacted on May 18, 2000, and accordingly, §102.21 was amended (68 FR 8711). Thus, the country of origin of a textile or apparel product shall be determined by the sequential application of the general rules set forth in paragraphs (c)(1) through (5) of §102.21. The relevant provisions are set forth below. We will consider each of these rules in turn:
(c) General rules. Subject to paragraph (d) of this section, the country of origin of a textile or apparel product shall be determined by sequential application of paragraphs (c) (1) through (5) of this section and, in each case where appropriate to the specific context, by application of the additional requirements or conditions of §§ 102.12 through 102.19 of this part.
(1) The country of origin of a textile or apparel product is the single country, territory, or insular possession in which the good was wholly obtained or produced.
(2) Where the country of origin of a textile or apparel product cannot be determined under paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the country of origin of the good is the single country, territory, or insular possession in which each foreign material incorporated in that good underwent an applicable change in tariff classification, and/or met any other requirement, specified for the good in paragraph (e) of this section.
(3) Where the country of origin of a textile or apparel product cannot be determined under paragraph (c)(1) or (2) of this section:
(i) If the good was knit to shape, the country of origin of the good is the single country, territory, or insular possession in which the good was knit; or
(ii) Except for goods of heading 5609, 5807, 5811, 6213, 6214, 6301 through 6306, and 6308, and subheadings 6209.20.5040, 6307.10, 6307.90, and 9404.90, if the good was not knit to shape and the good was wholly assembled in a single country, territory, or insular possession, the country of origin of the good is the country, territory, or insular possession in which the good was wholly assembled.
(4) Where the country of origin of a textile or apparel product cannot be determined under paragraph (c)(1), (2) or (3) of this section, the country of origin of the good is the single country, territory, or insular possession in which the most important assembly or manufacturing process occurred.
* * *
In NY L89513, CBP concluded that the country of origin could not be determined by application of paragraphs §102.21 (c) (1) to (c) (3). With respect to paragraph (c)(3) specifically, CBP determined that the artist canvas component pieces did not exist in essentially the same condition as found in the finished good. As a result, the country of origin was found to be "the single country in which the most important assembly or manufacturing process occurred." §102.21 (c)(4). We now find that the analysis of the term "wholly assembled," as it pertains to paragraph (c)(3), was in error.
The general rules set forth in paragraphs (c)(1) through (5) of §102.21 must be applied sequentially. Applying paragraph (c)(1), we agree with the conclusion in NY L89513 that it is inapplicable. The subject canvas was neither wholly obtained nor wholly produced in a single country.
Paragraph (c)(2) is similarly inapplicable. According to (c)(2), the country of origin is the single country in which the good underwent a tariff change specified in 19 C.F.R. §102.21(e). The relevant tariff change rules are as follows:
5901-5903 (1) Except for fabric of wool or of fine animal hair, a change from greige3 fabric of heading 5901 through 5903 to finished fabric of heading 5901 through 5903 by both dyeing and printing when accompanied by two or more of the following finishing operations: bleaching, shrinking, fulling4, napping5, decating6, permanent stiffening, weighting, permanent embossing, or moireing7; or
(2) If the country of origin cannot be determined under (1) above, a change to heading 5901 through 5903 from any other heading, including a heading within that group, except from heading 5007, 5111 through 5113, 5208 through 5212, 5309 through 5311, 5407 through 5408, 5512 through 5516, 5803, 5806, 5808, and 6002 through 6006, and provided that the change is the result of a fabric making process.
(Emphasis added)
The canvas was not subjected to any of the processes detailed in subsection (1) in either India or China. It is not dyed and printed, nor does it undergo any of the processes listed. Furthermore, the canvas did not undergo a tariff shift, as mandated by subsection (2). When exported from India to China, the 100% cotton fabric is classifiable under heading 5901, HTSUS, which provides for "[t]extile fabrics coated with gum or amylaceous substances, of a kind used for the outer covers of books or the like; tracing cloth; prepared painting canvas; buckram and similar stiffened textile fabrics of a kind used for hat foundations." Through the processing in China, the fabric becomes the artist canvas. There is no tariff shift at all because the fabric and finished artist canvas are classifiable in the same heading. As a result, the country of origin cannot be determined according to (c)(2).
We next consider (c)(3). As a threshold matter, we note that subsection (i) is prima facie inapplicable because the cotton canvas was not knit to shape. Only subsection (ii) is potentially applicable to the subject artist canvas. Subsection (ii) identifies the country of origin for goods which are "wholly assembled" in a single country. The term "wholly assembled" is defined in §102.21(a)(6), which provides, in pertinent part:
The term "wholly assembled" when used with reference to a good means that all components, of which there must be at least two, preexisted in essentially the same condition as found in the finished good and were combined to form the finished good in a single country, territory, or insular possession....
(Emphasis added).
The subject merchandise is comprised of a one-piece cotton canvas and a wooden frame. It therefore satisfies the §102.21(a)(6) requirement that there be at least two preexisting components. At issue is whether these components exist in essentially the same condition as found in the finished good.
Counsel for the importer, argues that "the two or more preexisting components do not exist in this situation. The gesso primed canvas is imported into China in bulk rolls and is cut to the proper shape in China8." Counsel misinterprets the relevant test. With regards to "wholly assembled," CBP looks to the condition of the component pieces immediately prior to completion. Stated differently, the test requires that if the completed merchandise were disassembled, the disassembled components would exist in the same condition as they did immediately prior to assembly. See Headquarters Ruling Letter (HQ) 968229, dated July 18, 2006 (holding that the components of an imported two-layer fabric laminate consisting of a face fabric with a membrane laminated to its back would preexist in essentially the same condition before and after the lamination process, although permanently joined).
Applying this test, we find that the component pieces - the canvas, the wooden frame, the spline and the staples - preexisted in essentially the same condition as found in the finished good. Prior to assembly, the primed canvas was cut and stretched and the wooden frame was fully formed. If disassembled, the component pieces would consist of a primed, cut and stretched piece of canvas, and a fully formed wooden frame. As a result, the subject article meets the definition of "wholly assembled," and the country of origin may be determined according to (c)(3).
Three comments were received in response to publication of the proposed revocation. The first two commenters argue that the 19 CFR §102.21 was incorrectly applied to the present matter. Instead, they claim that CBP should have utilized the rules of origin for textile and apparel products, set forth in section 334 of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act, and codified in 19 USC §3592. As with 19 CFR §102.21, the §3592 rules are applied sequentially. They provide, in pertinent part:
§3592. Rules of origin for textile and apparel products
(b) Principles
(1) In general. Except as otherwise provided for by statute, a textile or apparel product, for purposes of the customs laws and administration of quantitative restrictions, originates in a country, territory, or insular possession, and is the growth, product, or manufacture of that country, territory, or insular possession, if -
(A) the product is wholly obtained or produced in that country, territory, or possession;
(B) the product is a yarn, thread, twine, cordage, rope, cable, or braiding and -
i. the constituent stable fibers are spun in that country, territory, or possession, or
ii. the continuous filament is extruded in that country, territory or possession;
(C) the product is a fabric, including a fabric classified under chapter 59 of the HTS, and the constituent fibers, filaments, or yarns are woven, knitted, needled, tufted, felted, entangled, or transformed by any other fabric-making process in that country, territory, or possession; or
(D) the product is any other textile or apparel product that is wholly assembled in that country, territory, or possession from its component pieces.
(Emphasis added)
All parties concede that the subject canvas does not meet the terms of (b)(1)(A) or (b)(1)(B). It was not "wholly obtained or produced" in one country, nor is it a "yarn, thread, twine, cord, rope, cable, or braid." The commenters instead contend that section (b)(1)(C) should be used to determine origin because the artist canvas is a "fabric." Specifically, the first comment states that "the artist canvases are 'fabrics' as defined under the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS). They are classified in HTSUS chapter 59, which covers 'impregnated, coated, covered, or laminated textile fabrics that are impregnated or coated with primer." Classification under chapter 599, however, does not necessitate a determination that an article is a simple fabric.
The term "fabric" is not specifically defined in the HTSUS or its legislative history. When a tariff term is not defined, the term's correct meaning is presumed to be its common meaning in the absence of evidence to the contrary. See Rohm & Haas Co. v. United States, 727 F.2d 1095 (CAFC 1984). The first commenter argues that the term "fabric" is defined by 19 CFR §102.21(b)(5). That provision10, however, identifies the meaning of the term "textile and apparel products," not "fabric." At issue is the correct meaning of the specific term "fabric."
The Court of International Trade has defined the term fabric as "a cloth produced [especially] by knitting, weaving, or felting fibers." Pac Fung Feather Company and Natural Feather & Textiles v. United States, 19 CIT 1451, 1459 (1995) citing The American Heritage Dictionary 484 (2d 1982)11. This definition applies only to the cotton component of the subject article, prior to its assembly with the wooden frame. The cotton itself is a "cloth produced...by weaving...." Contrary to counsel's assertion, however, the completed artist canvas is not a mere "fabric." After assembly, the woven cotton loses its individual identity as a fabric and becomes an integral part of the completed article - the framed artist canvas. The exact point in the processing at which the fabric became an integral part of the finished article occurred when the canvas was permanently stapled to its wooden frame. Coraggio Design, Inc. v. United States, 12 CIT 143, 145 (1988) (The point in the processing at which material becomes a partly finished article must be determined on the basis of the circumstances of each case). From that point, the identity of the cotton fabric is permanently altered because it has only one potential application - its use as a framed painting surface. See HQ 956965, December 13, 1994. Because the artist canvas does not meet the definition of the term "fabric," §3592 (b)(1)(C) is inapplicable. The country of origin for the artist canvas cannot be determined by the country in which the fabric was produced.
The second commenter asserts that the application of §102.21 (c)(3) is inconsistent with our conclusion in HQ 96822912. In that ruling, CBP determined the country of origin of certain laminated fabrics. We noted:
We recognize that if 19 C.F.R. §102.21, as it currently stands, is applied to the certain laminated fabrics at issue, their country of origin would not be Taiwan. Rather, if the general rules of the Regulation (19 C.F.R. §102.21(c)) are applied in sequential order, 19 C.F.R. §102.21(c)(3)(ii) would be applicable to the fabrics.... We recognize the inconsistency between 19 U.S.C. §3592(b)(1)(C) and 19 C.F.R. §102.21(c) and intend to take necessary action to make the Regulation consistent with the statute in regard to laminated fabrics like those at issue.
According to the commenter, the "same inconsistency between statute and regulation arises from the proposed modification of New York Ruling Letter L89513 and must be resolved by following the statute." We disagree. Unlike the subject artist canvas, the merchandise under consideration in HQ 968229 was composed entirely of fabric. For the reasons stated above, §3592 (b)(1)(C) was therefore applicable. Section 3592 (b)(1)(C) cannot be utilized in this instance, however, because the artist canvas is not a fabric. The inconsistency between 19 U.S.C. §3592(b)(1)(C) and 19 C.F.R. §102.21(c) is not relevant to the subject consideration.
As with §102.21, the rules of §3592 are applied sequentially. Based on the above analysis, subsections (b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(B), and (b)(1)(C) are inapplicable to the subject article. If §3592 is to be applied, we must next consider subsection (b)(1)(D), which identifies the country of origin as the country, territory, or possession in which a textile or apparel product was "wholly assembled." In the proposed revocation, CBP determined that the manufacturing process in China satisfied the definition of "wholly assembled" as applied to §102.21 (c)(3). The component pieces of the artist canvas, of which there were more than two, "preexisted in essentially the same condition as found in the finished good and were combined to form the finished good in a single country...." The same analysis applies to the term "wholly assembled" in §3592
(b)(1)(D). Under §3592 (b)(1)(D), the country of origin of the subject artist canvas would also be China.
The second commenter suggests that the term "wholly assembled," as used in §102.21 (c)(3) and §3592(b)(1)(D) applies only to "textile components and disregards non textile components." Counsel notes that:
...the strict application of 19 CFR 102.21(c)(3)(ii) would result in the country of assembly being the country of the products assembled from textile and non-textile components. This result is inconsistent with the statute....This inconsistency...can only be eliminated by interpreting the definition of 'wholly assembled' to encompass only textile components.
As a threshold matter, CBP does not concur that this country of origin result is inconsistent with the statute. Furthermore, there is no justification for the conclusion that the term "wholly assembled" encompasses only textile components. The tariff shift rules of §102.21 specify that the term "wholly assembled" is not limited to textile components. For example, the rule for heading 5909, HTSUS, provides, in pertinent part:
A change to textile hosepiping with...accessories of nontextile material, of heading 5909, from any heading, including a change from another good of heading 5909, provided that the change is the result of the good being wholly assembled in a single country, territory, or insular possession.
(Emphasis added)
As shown by this rule, the term "wholly assembled," as used in §102.21 applies to both textile and non-textile components of finished merchandise.
In addition, CBP has previously determined that the assembly of textiles with non-textile components confers origin under the §102.21 rules. In NY K86934, dated July 7, 2004, CBP issued a country of origin determination for certain polypropylene belts. The belts at issue were manufactured from polypropylene made in Taiwan. The fabric was then shipped to China where it was cut to length and attached to metal grommets and a metal buckle. The relevant tariff shift rule for the subject belt was as follows:
6215-6217 (1) If the good consists of two or more component parts, a change to an assembled good of heading 6215 through 6217 from unassembled components, provided that the change is the result of the good being wholly assembled in a single country, territory, or insular possession.
(Emphasis added)
CBP determined that the belt satisfied this rule because it was "assembled in a single country, that is China, as per the terms of the tariff shift requirement." CBP reached the same conclusion in NY G84367, dated December 11, 2000. In that case, the nylon webbing for a belt was manufactured in Spain, the belt buckle was manufactured in Taiwan, and the textile and non-textile components were assembled in China. Pursuant to the tariff shift rules for heading 6215-6217, CBP found that the assembly procedure in China conferred origin. Based on these rulings, it is clear that the "wholly assembled" requirement is not limited to textile components.
The third commenter argues that the components did not pre-exist in essentially the same condition, as required by §102.21(a)(6). Counsel believes that "the stretching of the canvas over the frame initiates the assembly process and that a stretched canvas is not in essentially the same condition as the canvas before stretching." Counsel does not offer any justification for this argument. In addition, this argument overlooks CBP's current understanding of the phrase "pre-existed in essentially the same condition." CBP looks to the condition of the component pieces immediately prior to completion. Stated differently, the test requires that if the completed merchandise were disassembled, the disassembled components would exist in the same condition as they did immediately prior to assembly. See HQ 968229. Prior to assembly, the canvas was primed, cut and stretched and the wooden frame was fully formed. If disassembled, the component pieces would consist of a primed, cut and stretched piece of canvas, and a fully formed wooden frame.
The third commenter also argues that the securing of the canvas to the frame is a minor process and should be disregarded under 19 CFR §102.1713. Although the assembly process is simple, it is a crucial step in the formation of the artist canvas. Furthermore, the assembly process does not satisfy any of the enumerated "non-qualifying operations" of §102.17. At the time the canvas is secured to the wooden frame, it is not dismantled or disassembled, simply packed, diluted or collected. It does not undergo a change in end-use because the canvas's properties have been dedicated to use as a painting surface after it has been coated with gesso in China. Even if the canvas did undergo a change in end use, however, it still meets the terms of §102.21 because the assembly process is the origin conferring operation, not the final use of the cotton canvas.
Finally, the third commenter asks that "in the event Customs chooses to revoke the prior treatment...it delay the effective date of the ruling for a six-month period." According to the commenter, this delay will enable importers to comply with CBP's determination in the present matter. This request is based on an obsolete concept which was known as detrimental reliance. The rule of law defining detrimental reliance was clearly delineated in 19 CFR 177.9(e)(1)14. This subsection has now been deleted. See HQ 961213, dated January 30, 1998. On December 8, 1993, the President signed into law the North American Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act (Pub. L. 103-182, 107 Stat. 2057). Title VI of that Act contained provisions pertaining to Customs Modernization and thus is commonly referred to as the Customs Modernization Act or "Mod Act." The Mod Act included, in section 623, an extensive amendment of section 625 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. 1625) which, prior to that amendment, simply required that the Secretary of the Treasury publish in the Customs Bulletin, or otherwise make available to the public, any precedential decision with respect to any customs transaction within 120 days of issuance of the decision.
On August 16, 2002, CBP published its final amendments to those provisions of the Customs Regulations that concern the issuance of administrative rulings and related written determinations and decisions on prospective and current transactions arising under the customs and related laws15. Pursuant to those amendments, 19 CFR 177.9(e)(1), which previously allowed CBP to delay a ruling for up to 90 days from the date of issuance, was eliminated and replaced by 19 CFR §177.9(c). That regulation provides, in pertinent part:
Reliance on ruling letters by others. Except when public notice and comment procedures apply under § 177.12, a ruling letter is subject to modification or revocation by Customs without notice to any person other than the person to whom the ruling letter was addressed. Accordingly, no other person should rely on the ruling letter or assume that the principles of that ruling will be applied in connection with any transaction other than the one described in the letter. However, any person eligible to request a ruling under § 177.1(c) may request information as to whether a previously-issued ruling letter has been modified or revoked by writing the Commissioner of Customs, Attention: Office of Regulations and Rulings, Washington, DC 20229....
Thus, we no longer have the authority to delay the implementation of a classification ruling, such as requested here, based upon an importer's showing of reliance. See HQ 966344, dated February 13, 2004. Rather, the delayed effective date provision of 19 USC §1625 will be applicable.
HOLDING:
The manufacturing process in China satisfies the definition of "wholly assembled" and that the country of origin determination in NY L89513 should therefore have concluded with paragraph (c)(3). By application of §102.21 (c)(3), the country of origin for the prepared artist's canvas is China. The canvas or its outer container should be marked conspicuously, legibly and permanently pursuant to 19 U.S.C. §130416.
Consistent with NY L89513, the subject artist canvas is classifiable under heading 5901, HTSUS. Specifically, it is classifiable under subheading 5901.90.40, HTSUS, which provides for: "Textile fabrics coated with gum or amylaceous substances, of a kind used for the outer covers of books or the like; tracing cloth; prepared painting canvas; buckram and similar stiffened textile fabrics of a kind used for hat foundations: Other: Other." The 2007, column one, general rate of duty is 4.1 percent ad valorem.
The subject artist canvas of fibers other than man-made, falls within textile category designation 229. At the present time goods produced in China and falling within this textile category are subject to quota and visa requirements. Quota and visa status are the result of international agreements that are subject to frequent renegotiations and changes. To obtain the most current information as to whether quota and visa requirements apply to this merchandise, we suggest that you check, close to the time of shipment, the "Textile Status Report for Absolute Quotas" available at our web site at www.cbp.gov. In addition, you will find current information on textile import quotas, textile safeguard actions and related issues at the web site of the Office of Textiles and Apparel, at otexa.ita.doc.gov.
Please note that the subject article may fall within the scope of an antidumping order concerning certain artist canvases from the People's Republic of China. See 71 FR 31154, June 1, 2006. Scope determinations are under the authority of the Department of Commerce (DOC). A list of AD/CVD proceedings at the Department of Commerce (DOC) and their product coverage can be obtained from the DOC website at: http://ia.ita.doc.gov, or you may write to them at the U.S. Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration, Office of Antidumping Compliance, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC 20230. Written decisions regarding the scope of AD/CVD orders are issued by the Import Administration in the Department of Commerce and are separate from tariff classification and origin rulings issued by CBP.
EFFECT ON OTHER RULINGS:
NY L89513, dated December 27, 2005, is hereby modified. In accordance with 19 USC §1625(c), this ruling will become effective 60 days after publication in the Customs Bulletin.
Sincerely,
Myles B. Harmon, Director
Commercial and Trade Facilitation Division
1 Gesso is used to prime the cotton canvas. The gesso seals the canvas and creates a smoother surface on which to paint. Modern gesso, which is a combination of calcium carbonate with an acrylic polymer medium and a pigment, is suitable for use on a canvas because it is flexible when dry. According to the importer, a separate stiffening agent was not used on the cotton canvas.
2 Splines are the plastic "springs" sometimes used to hold frames together.
3 A term used to describe fabrics in the unfinished state, after they have been woven and before dyeing or finishing. Fairchild's Dictionary of Textiles, 264 (2nd Ed. 1970).
4 A finishing process in the manufacture of woolens in which the newly woven cloth is felted or compressed into smooth, tight finish. Id. at 245.
5 A finishing process consisting of raising a nap (a fuzzy or downy surface of fabric covering either one side or both) on the fabric, which may be either woven or knitted. Id. at 391.
6 A method of sponging fabrics to set the width and length to improve luster and hand finish. Id. at 176.
7 A finishing process which produces a wavy or rippling pattern with engraved rollers which press the design into the fabric. Id. at 376.
8 Counsel also refers to the Substantial Transformation test, as relied upon by CBP prior to the promulgation of §102.21. §102.21, published on September 5, 1996 in the Federal Register, of CBP regulations provide objective standards with which to determine the "substantial transformation" of textiles and textile products. Counsel notes that under the prior interpretation of the substantial transformation test, the country or origin was the location in which the components were cut to shape. Even under that test, however, cutting to length or width alone was insufficient to constitute a substantial transformation. Furthermore, whether the fabric was "cut to shape" or merely "cut to length" is not relevant here.
9 Chapter 59 provides for "impregnated, coated, covered or laminated textile fabrics; textile articles of a kind suitable for industrial use."
10 19 CFR §102.21(b)(5) defines the term "textile and apparel products" as "any good classifiable in Chapters 50 through 63, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS)."
11 The term fabric, or cloth, is also defined as "a pliable material made usually by weaving, felting, or knitting natural or synthetic fibers and filaments." See www.m-w.com
12 In addition to HQ 968229, the second commenter also relies on HQ 966062, dated March 11, 2003 and HQ 959437, dated February 19, 1997. Both rulings determined the country of origin of certain laminated fabrics. As a result, they are inapplicable to the present matter.
13 §102.17 provides: Non-qualifying operations. A foreign material shall not be considered to have undergone an applicable change in tariff classification specified in §102.20 or §102.21 or to have met any other applicable requirements of those sections merely by reason of one or more of the following:
(a) A change in end-use;
(b) Dismantling or disassembly;
(c) Simple packing, repacking or retail packaging without more than minor processing;
(d) Mere dilution with water or another substance that does not materially alter the characteristics of the material; or
(e) Collecting parts that, as collected, are classifiable in the same tariff provision as an assembled good pursuant to General Rule of Interpretation 2(a), without any additional operation other than minor processing.
14 That rule provided: The Customs Service will from time to time issue a ruling letter covering a transaction or issue not previously the subject of a ruling letter and which has the effect of modifying the treatment previously accorded by the Customs Service to substantially identical transactions of either the recipient of the ruling letter or other parties. Although such a ruling letter will generally be effective on the date it is issued, the Customs Service may, upon application by an affected party, delay the effective date of the ruling letter, and continue the treatment previously accorded the substantially identical transaction, for a period of up to 90 days from the date the ruling letter is issued.
15 See 67 FR 53483
16 19 U.S.C. §1304 provides as follows: "Every article of foreign origin (or its container, as provided in subsection (b) hereof) imported into the United States shall be marked in a conspicuous place as legibly, indelibly, and permanently as the nature of the article (or container) will permit in such manner as to indicate to an ultimate purchaser in the United States the English name of the country of origin of the article."