CON-9-04-CO:R:C:E 224682 PH

Richard J. Little, Esq.
Assistant General Counsel
Mitsubishi Electric America, Inc.
5665 Plaza Drive
Post Office Box 6007
Cypress, California 90630

RE: Temporary Importation Bond (TIB); Exportation; Automated Insertion Process for Printed Wire Boards; Repacking; Testing; Shipment to Maquiladora Facility; Subheading 9813.00.05, 9813.00.30, HTSUS

Dear Mr. Little:

In your letter of April 30, 1993, you request a ruling on the applicability of a TIB provision (subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS) to an operation involving your company. You requested confidentiality for certain information in your ruling request. The request for confidentiality was discussed and resolved in our letters of May 10 and June 21, 1993, and your letters of May 18 and June 29, 1993. Pursuant to these letters, it was agreed that the following specific information would be accorded CONFIDENTIAL treatment:

(1) The prices specified on the three parts lists enclosed as Exhibits A, B, and C to the ruling request;

(2) The cost information contained in the last paragraph on page four of the ruling request; and

(3) Exhibit F, which you state includes price data and discloses a proprietary system or process of manufacturing and documenting and controlling that manufacturing.

Our ruling, in response to your request for a ruling, follows.

FACTS:

You state that your company is engaged in the production of projection television receivers at its Santa Ana, California, factory. Your company proposes to transfer some assembly work for television chassis to a "maquiladora" facility operated in Mexico. Under the operation, your company will import unpopulated printed wire boards ("PCB's") and the electronic components to be inserted thereon. At the Santa Ana factory, approximately 2700 components (a majority of the total components) will be mounted, but not soldered, onto the PCB's by an automated insertion process. Five different PCB's are used for each television chassis.

This automated insertion process consists of feeding the unpopulated PCB's into insertion machines with machine heads into which taped components are fed. The machine heads form the components into specified configurations and insert them through pre-drilled holes on the PCB's. The leads of the components are then clinched and excess lead material is trimmed. After all automatically inserted parts have been permanently secured to the PCB's, the PCB's are subjected to electrical testing of the circuits to verify that quality standards have been met.

The PCB's, along with the 300 remaining components which must be manually inserted into the 5 PCB's making up a chassis will be packaged in kit form and sent to the maquiladora facility. The shipments of the partially populated PCB's from the Santa Ana factory to the maquiladora will consist of 30 PCB's per box. The 300 manual insertion parts for the 5 PCB's making up a chassis will be boxed separately but included in the same shipment. Depending on available space, additional manual insertion parts kits may be added to some shipments.

At the maquiladora facility, flux will be cleaned from the PCB's and the leads of the manually inserted parts will be cut. After the manually inserted parts are mounted, the fully populated PCB's will be wave soldered. The PCB's will then undergo electrical testing to insure that they meet quality and performance standards. One of the 5 PCB's will be mounted on a chassis frame, to which the other 4 PCB's will be attached later at Santa Ana, and the completed but unassembled chassis will then be returned to the Santa Ana factory as television chassis under subheadings 8529.90.1500 and 8529.90.2000, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS). Defective PCB's will be returned to Santa Ana to be scrapped.

You state that your company proposes to import both the automated insertion parts and the manual insertion parts under the TIB provision in subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS.

ISSUES:

(1) Are the automatically inserted components described in the FACTS portion of this ruling "repaired, altered or processed" within the meaning of subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS, when they are mounted onto the PCB's by the automatic insertion process, as described in the FACTS portion of this ruling?

(2) Are the components which are mounted onto the PCB's by the manual insertion process at the maquiladora facility "repaired, altered, or processed" within the meaning of subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS, when they are sorted and repacked in the United States, as described in the FACTS portion of this ruling?

(3) If the answer to issue (1) or (2) is negative, may the components qualify for any other TIB provision in Subchapter XIII of Chapter 98, HTSUS?

(4) Are the components exported, for purposes of the applicable TIB provision(s) in Subchapter XIII of Chapter 98, HTSUS, when they are sent to the maquiladora facility for the mounting onto the PCB's of the components mounted by the manual insertion process and for the other operations described in the FACTS portion of this ruling?

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

Subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS, provides for the temporary duty-free entry of:

Articles to be repaired, altered or processed (including processes which result in articles manufactured or produced in the United States).

Subheading 9813.00.30, HTSUS, provides for the temporary duty-free entry of:

Articles intended solely for testing, experimental or review purposes ....

Pursuant to U.S. Note 1(a) of Subchapter XIII of Chapter 98, HTSUS, which contains subheadings 9813.00.05 and 9813.00.30:

The articles described in the provisions of this subchapter, when not imported for sale or for sale on approval, may be admitted into the United States without the payment of duty, under bond for their exportation within 1 year from the date of importation, which period, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury, may be extended, upon application, for one or more further periods which, when added to the initial 1 year, shall not exceed a total of 3 years ....

As for the components which will be mounted on the PCB's in the United States by the automatic insertion process, we have consistently held that operations such as this meet the requirement for repair, alteration, or processing in subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS, and its predecessors (e.g., in a January 30, 1975, ruling (File: 202313) we held that the loading of plastic video cassettes with magnetic tape met the requirements of the predecessor of the subheading; see also, letters dated March 29, 1988 (File: 220251), and July 19, 1974 (File: 034552)). Although you do not raise this issue, on the same basis, the unpopulated PCB's onto which the automatically inserted components are mounted would also meet the requirement for repair, alteration, or processing in subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS.

In regard to the components which will be manually mounted onto the PCB's in the maquiladora facility, basically all that is done to them in the United States before being sent to the maquiladora facility is that they are sorted and repacked. We have consistently held that such operations are not considered to be repairs, alterations, or processing within the meaning of subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS, and its predecessors (e.g., ruling of November 26, 1976 (File: 207064), holding that the repacking of foreign language tape cassettes with foreign language books in special book boxes containing books and tapes did not meet the requirements of the predecessor of the subheading; see also Treasury Decision (T.D.) 78-77 and Customs Service Decision (C.S.D.) 80-234; United States v. Border Brokerage Co., 48 CCPA 10, C.A.D. 754 (1960), and John v. Carr & Son, Inc. v. United States, 69 Cust. Ct. 78, 347 F. Supp. 1390, C.D. 4377 (1972), aff'd 61 CCPA 52, 496 F.2d 1225, C.A.D. 1118 (1974)).

In regard to the manually mounted components, you cite a ruling dated August 16, 1974 (File: 201946), as precedent for the applicability of subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS, to these components. The referenced ruling concerned the applicability of the predecessor to subheading 9813.00.30, HTSUS (i.e., item 864.30, Tariff Schedules of the United States), to the importation of electronic parts which were imported into the United States for inspection. In the case under consideration, the manually mounted components are not tested in the United States before being sent to the maquiladora facility. Therefore, the cited ruling, and the referenced subheading, are inapplicable to the importation of the manually mounted components. There is no other TIB provision which could possibly be applicable to the manually mounted components in the described operation.

In regard to the exportation issue, "exportation" is defined in the Customs Regulations (19 CFR 101.1(k)) as "a severance of goods from the mass of things belonging to this country with the intention of uniting them to the mass of things belonging to some foreign country." This provision also provides that "[t]he shipment of merchandise abroad with the intention of returning it to the United States with a design to circumvent provisions of restriction or limitation in the tariff laws or to secure a benefit accruing to imported merchandise is not an exportation." This definition is consistent with the decision of the Supreme Court in the leading case of Swan v. Finch v. United States, 190 U.S. 143 (1903) (see also, 17 Op. Att'y Gen. 579 (1883)).

Customs has issued a number of rulings interpreting this definition. In C.S.D. 82-154, we ruled that an exportation occurred, for drawback purposes (i.e., under 19 U.S.C. 1313, also requiring exportation and using the definition of "exportation" referred to above), when finished watches were shipped to a distribution center (described as "essentially a bonded warehouse") in Canada for sale and shipment, even though some of watches may have been returned to the United States. In C.S.D. 82-155, we ruled that an exportation did not occur when the owner of an imported truck sent the trucks to Canada for disassembly and re-entry into the United States because the sole purpose of shipping the truck abroad was to obtain drawback and to take advantage of the difference in duty. In a ruling dated February 13, 1981 (File: 212451), we held that sugar refined in the United States was exported, for drawback purposes, when it was sent to Canada for packaging and thereafter returned to the United States for consumption.

On the basis of the foregoing interpretations, and noting that in the instant case there is a legitimate purpose for sending the PCB's and components abroad independent of cancelling the TIB, we conclude that the PCB's and the components already mounted thereon, as well as the components to be manually mounted onto the PCB's in the maquiladora facility, are exported.

Therefore, we conclude that the components imported to be mounted (by the automatic insertion process) onto the unpopulated PCB's at the Santa Ana factory may be imported under subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS, provided that the conditions in the subheading, in the applicable U.S. Notes to Subchapter XIII of Chapter 98 (see in particular U.S. Note 2(b)), and in the applicable Customs Regulations (19 CFR 10.31 et seq.) are met (as noted above, this is also true of the unpopulated PCB's). We conclude that the components which are not mounted at the Santa Ana factory and are sorted and repacked and sent to the Maquiladora facility for mounting onto the PCB's there may not be imported under subheading 9813.00.05 or 9813.00.30, HTSUS.

In regard to the components not qualifying for TIB treatment (i.e., those sent to the maquiladora facility to be manually mounted onto the PCB's), you may wish to consider the use of the drawback law (see 19 U.S.C. 1313(j) and 19 CFR 191.141) or the bonded warehouse law (see 19 U.S.C. 1557, 1562 and 19 CFR Parts 19 and 144). Also, in general regard to the described operation, you should be aware of the possible future impact on such operations of the North American Free Trade Agreement (see Article 303 and Annex 303.7). HOLDINGS:

(1) The automatically inserted components described in the FACTS portion of this ruling are "repaired, altered or processed" within the meaning of subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS, when they are mounted onto the PCB's by the automatic insertion process, as described in the FACTS portion of this ruling.

(2) The components which are mounted onto the PCB's by the manual insertion process at the maquiladora facility are not "repaired, altered, or processed" within the meaning of subheading 9813.00.05, HTSUS, when they are sorted and repacked in the United States, as described in the FACTS portion of this ruling.

(3) The components which are mounted onto the PCB's by the manual insertion process at the maquiladora facility may not qualify for any other TIB provision in Subchapter XIII of Chapter 98, HTSUS (specifically, the components may not be imported under subheading 9813.00.30, HTSUS, because they are not tested in the United States).

(4) The components [as well as the PCB's] are exported, for purposes of the applicable TIB provision(s) in Subchapter XIII of Chapter 98, HTSUS, when they are sent to the maquiladora facility for the mounting onto the PCB's of the components mounted by the manual insertion process and for the other operations described in the FACTS portion of this ruling.

Sincerely,

John Durant, Director
Commercial Rulings Division