ENT-5-01/1-03-1-07-RR:IT:EC 114071 CC

Port Director of Customs
U.S. Customs Service
Commercial Operations
198 West Service Road
Champlain, NY 12919

RE: Revocation of HQ 226322; Tariff-rate quota; Release under immediate delivery; 19 CFR  142.23; 19 CFR  142.21(e); Entry summary must be filed prior to 10 working days from release or end of quota period, whichever expires first

Dear Sir:

Protest 0712-95-100534 was filed with you, contesting the date of entry for merchandise subject to a tariff-rate quota. The protest was forwarded to our office and we issued Headquarters Ruling (HQ) 266322 on August 7, 1996. In that decision we granted the protest, finding that the date of entry for quota-class merchandise released under the immediate delivery procedure is the date the entry summary is filed, permitting the protestant to pay duty at the rate of the tariff-rate quota under the new quota period when entry summary was filed, rather than the rate due at the time of release. We have reviewed HQ 226322 and believe that it is incorrect.

Pursuant to section 625(c)(1), Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. 1625(c)(1)), 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), notice of the proposed revocation of HQ 226322 was published on December 10, 1997, in the CUSTOMS BULLETIN, Volume 31, Number 50.

FACTS:

According to the facts presented in HQ 226322, protest was made against the assessment of duty charged at the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) tariff-rate quota. The protestant asserted that Customs erred in demanding payment of duties at the 1994 rate of duty on a tariff-rate quota entry of apparel goods from Canada to the United States. The protestant also asserted that the 1995 NAFTA tariff-rate quota rate of duty was applicable, and the status of quota should have been determined based on the date entry summary was filed.

The entry summary was filed on January 13, 1995. The subject merchandise was exported from Canada under a Certificate of Eligibility for a Tariff Preference Level (TPL) on December 30, 1994. Customs computer records indicated that the merchandise from the subject entry was also released under a special permit for immediate delivery on December 30, 1994. The subject merchandise was classified under one of the following subheadings under the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS): 6204.39.30, 6206.40.30, 6204.69.25, 6204.59.30, 6211.43.00, or 6211.49.00. Also, the merchandise was subject to a special statistical reporting number, either 9999.00.51 or 9999.00.50, HTSUS, for apparel goods imported from Canada under the terms of Additional U.S. note 3 to section XI of the HTSUS.

ISSUE:

May an importer have merchandise subject to a tariff-rate quota released under a special permit for immediate delivery near the end of a quota period and file entry summary after the close of that quota period, in order to have the date of entry and presentation established in the new quota period at a more favorable duty rate.

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

The effective rates of duty for merchandise imported into the United States are provided for in 19 U.S.C.  1315. That statute, as amended, provides, in pertinent part, the following:

(a) Except as otherwise specially provided for, the rate or rates of duty imposed by or pursuant to this chapter or any other law on any article entered for consumption or withdrawn from warehouse for consumption shall be the rate or rates in effect when the documents comprising the entry for consumption or withdrawal from warehouse for consumption and any estimated or liquidated duties then required to be paid have been deposited with the Customs Service by written, electronic or such other means as the Secretary by regulation shall prescribe, except that-- (1) ... (2) ... (3) any article for which duties may, under section 1505 of this title, be paid at a time later than the time of making entry shall be subject to the rate or rates in effect at the time of entry. 19 U.S.C.  1505(a) provides, in pertinent part, "[u]nless merchandise is entered for warehouse or transportation, or under bond, the importer of record shall deposit with the Customs Service at the time of making entry or at such later time as the Secretary may prescribe by regulation, the amount of duties and fees estimated to be payable thereon....

Customs Regulations issued pursuant to, or that are relevant to, the above statutes, are set forth, in part, below. 19 CFR  141.69 provides, "[t]he rates of duty applicable to merchandise shall be the rates in effect at the time of entry, as specified in  141.68, except [in cases not pertinent in this case]..."

19 CFR  141.68 provides the time of entry for merchandise imported into the United States. Subsection (a) of section 141.68 provides the general rule for establishing the time of entry when entry documentation is filed without an entry summary, and subsection (b) of section 141.68 provides the rule for establishing the time of entry when an entry summary serves as both the entry documentation and entry summary. Subsection (c) specifically provides for merchandise released under the immediate delivery procedure (the time of entry is the time the entry summary is filed in proper form, with estimated duties attached). Subsection (d) specifically provides for the time of entry for quota-class merchandise (i.e., "[t]he time of entry for quota-class merchandise shall be the time of presentation of the entry summary or withdrawal for consumption in proper form, with estimated duties attached or, if the entry/entry summary information and a valid scheduled statement date... have been successfully received by Customs via [ABI], without estimated duties attached, as provided in [19 CFR  132.11a]").

19 CFR  132.1(e) defines quota-class merchandise as "any imported merchandise subject to limitations under an absolute or a tariff-rate quota." 19 CFR  132.1(d) defines presentation as the delivery in proper form to the appropriate Customs officer of essentially the required information and documentation listed above in 19 CFR  141.68(d). 19 CFR  132.11(a) provides that the time of presentation is the time of delivery in proper form of the above-described information and documentation.

In applying the above law and regulations, in HQ 226322 we stated the following:

In interpreting these provisions, we are guided by the rule of interpretation that a general rule will not be held to apply to a matter specifically dealt with in another part of the same provision (Ginsberg & Sons, Inc. v. Popkin, 285 U.S. 204, 208 (1932); Green v. Bock Laundry Machine Co., 490 U.S. 504, 524 (1989). In this case, in 19 CFR 141.68(d), there is a specific rule pertaining to quota-class merchandise (we note that such merchandise includes merchandise subject to limitations under a tariff-rate quota as well as an absolute quota (19 CFR 132.1(e)). Under section 141.68(d), the date of entry for quota-class merchandise is the time of presentation of the entry summary or withdrawal for consumption in proper form with estimated duties attached (unless ABI procedures are used, in which case estimated duties need not be attached). As the more specific provision, this provision prevails over the more general provisions in paragraph (b) (i.e., when entry summary serves as entry and entry summary at the time of release) and (c) (i.e., when merchandise is released under the immediate delivery procedure) of section 141.68 when the merchandise entered is quota-class merchandise. Although the rule of interpretation stated above in applying a more specific provision over a general one is sound, after further analysis of HQ 226322 we believe the application of that rule of interpretation in that case was incorrect. Concerning the regulations provided for in 19 CFR  141.68, subsection (b) would not be applicable when goods are released under the immediate delivery procedure. Subsection (c) provides that the date of entry for merchandise released under the immediate delivery procedure is when entry summary is filed with estimated duties attached. As subsection (d) was interpreted in HQ 226322, presentation and the date of entry occurred when entry summary with estimated duties attached was filed, even for merchandise released under the immediate delivery procedure. Therefore, the result in HQ 226322 is the same in applying 19 CFR 141.68(c) as in applying  141.68(d), and there would be no need to resort to the rule of interpretation of applying a more specific provision.

There do exist regulations that are specific to the factual situation of HQ 226322, in other words, that apply to quota-class merchandise that has been released under the immediate delivery procedure. Those applicable regulations are 19 CFR  142.23 and 19 CFR  142.21(e).

19 CFR  142.23 provides the time limit for filing documentation after release under a special permit for immediate delivery, stating the following:

The applicable documentation described in  142.22(b) shall be filed, and estimated duties, if any, shall be deposited, within 10 working days after the merchandise or any part of the merchandise is authorized for release under a special permit for immediate delivery or, for quota class merchandise within the quota, whichever expires first (emphasis added). 19 CFR  142.21(e) provides that merchandise subject to a tariff-rate quota may be released under a special permit for immediate delivery, and states "[a]n entry summary shall be properly presented pursuant to 19 CFR  132.1 of this chapter within the time specified in 19 CFR  142.23, or within the quota period, whichever expires first." Clearly the regulations provide that for merchandise subject to a tariff-rate quota and released by immediate delivery near the end of a quota period, entry summary must be filed by the end of that quota period if it occurs prior to 10 working days of the date of release. In such a scenario, if the regulations are followed, entry summary would be filed and presentation would occur before the end of the quota period in which release occurred. Consequently, the purpose of the applicable regulations, 19 CFR  142.23 and 19 CFR  142.21(e), is clear: to ensure that importers may not gain release of merchandise subject to a tariff-rate quota at the end of a quota period and file entry summary after the close of that period in order to circumvent the tariff-rate quota in effect at the time of release.

In HQ 226322 the merchandise subject to a tariff-rate quota was released under a special permit for immediate delivery on December 30, 1994, near the end of a quota period. (The end of the quota period was December 31, 1994; the beginning of the new quota period was January 1, 1995.) Entry summary was filed on January 13, 1995. Thus, the importer violated the applicable regulations, 19 CFR  142.23 and 19 CFR  142.21(e), by not filing entry summary before the end of the quota period (which expired on December 31, 1994) in which the goods were released, since the end of the quota expired prior to 10 working days from the date of release. Therefore, it was proper for the port to demand duties due at the time of release for merchandise subject to a tariff-rate quota.

We note that in most cases it may not only be impractical, but impossible, to change the date of entry, and thus the date of presentation, from the date entry summary is filed in the new quota period to a date it was required to be filed under the old quota period. Thus it is Customs position, in order to effectuate the requirements and intent of 19 CFR  142.23 and 19 CFR  142.21(e), that importers who fail to file entry summary by the close of the quota period in which the goods are released are subject to liquidated damages equal to the difference between the tariff-rate quota in effect at the time of filing of the entry summary and the rate in effect at the time of release under the immediate delivery permit, plus late-file liquidated damages.

HOLDING:

An importer may not have merchandise subject to a tariff-rate quota released under a special permit for immediate delivery near the end of a quota period and file entry summary after the close of that quota period, in order to have the date of entry and presentation established in the new quota period at a more favorable duty rate.

HQ 226322 reflects the final determination with respect to a particular protest. As such, Customs recognizes that it cannot be modified or revoked with respect to the disposition of the entry in that protest. For the reasons stated above, however, the legal principles set forth in HQ 226322 are hereby revoked and no longer represent the position of the Customs Service concerning the release of merchandise under a special permit for immediate delivery that is subject to a tariff-rate quota.

In accordance with 19 U.S.C. 1625(c)(1), this ruling will become effective 60 days after its publication in the CUSTOMS BULLETIN. Publication of rulings or decisions pursuant to 19

U.S.C. 1625(c)(1) does not constitute a change of practice or position in accordance with section 177.10(c)(1) of the Customs Regulations (19 CFR 177.10(c)(1)).

Sincerely,

Jerry Laderberg
Chief
Entry Procedures and Carriers
Branch