CLA-2 CO:R:C:V 543911 CW

Area Director of Customs
JFK Airport
Jamaica, New York 11430

RE: Application for Further Review of Protest No. 1001-5-001953 contesting the appraisement of certain jewelry imported by Zale Corp. from Hong Kong

Dear Sir:

The above-referenced protest contests your determination of the appraised value of certain jewelry manufactured in Hong Kong and imported by Zale Corp. in 1984.

FACTS:

The record reflects that the three Hong Kong manufacturers of the jewelry in question submitted invoices for the merchandise to Z of Hong Kong Ltd., a wholly-owned subsidiary of the importer (protestant). The Hong Kong subsidiary, in turn, invoiced the importer for the merchandise after adding an average mark-up of approximately 30 percent to the manufacturers' invoice prices. None of the manufacturers is related to either the Hong Kong subsidiary or the importer.

Your office determined that transaction value under section 402(b) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended by the Trade Agreements Act of 1979 (TAA; 19 U.S.C. 1401a(b)), is properly represented by the invoice prices from the Hong Kong subsidiary to the importer. Protestant maintains that, for several alternative reasons, transaction value should be represented by the Hong Kong manufacturers' invoice prices.

Counsel for the protestant contends initially that the Hong Kong subsidiary acted as the importer's buying agent in regard to the jewelry in question, and that the subsidiary's mark-up to the importer constituted compensation for the purchasing functions performed by the former. Therefore, counsel states that as the mark-up represents a buying commission, it is not dutiable as part of transaction value pursuant to TAA #7 dated September 29, 1980 (HQ 542141). Although no written buying

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agency agreement existed between the importer and its Hong Kong subsidiary, counsel asserts that the totality of the evidence clearly shows that the relationship between the parties was that of agent and principal.

According to counsel, the functions performed by the Hong Kong subsidiary on behalf of, and solely at the direction of, the importer included investigating various supply and manufacturing sources, working with the importer regarding price and delivery matters, coordinating material requirements, maintaining quality control, accompanying employees of the importer on visits to the manufacturers, inspecting the finished jewelry and arranging for its shipment to the U.S. We note that counsel's initial submission stated that the fact that the jewelry was shipped directly from the manufacturers to the importer supports the conclusion that transaction value should be represented by the manufacturers' invoice prices. However, information subsequently submitted indicates that the jewelry was shipped directly from the manufacturers to the importer only during the period when the subsidiary was not fully staffed. According to this information, once the subsidiary's office was fully staffed, the jewelry was hand-carried from the manufacturers to the subsidiary who then shipped the merchandise to the U.S.

Counsel explains that the 30 percent average mark-up reflected on the Hong Kong subsidiary's invoices was "intended as a bookkeeping measure to ensure parity with the price [the importer] would have had to pay for similar jewelry purchased in the New York City area market." Two affidavits executed by the persons who served as the importer's international controller and the Hong Kong subsidiary's general manager during the relevant time period have been submitted to corroborate the above-stated facts related by counsel for the protestant.

As an alternative argument, counsel maintains that transaction value for the subject jewelry should properly be represented by the manufacturers' invoice prices based on the meaning of the words "when sold for exportation to the United States" in the statutory definition of transaction value (section 402(b) of the TAA). Counsel cites the recent decision of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in E.C. McAfee Company et al. v. United States et al., No. 87-1441, 842 F.2d 314 (Fed. Cir. 1988), as authority for the proposition that where there exist two sales for the same merchandise -- one between the foreign manufacturer and a foreign middleman and the other between that middleman and a U.S. customer -- and both sales satisfy the statutory standard of being "for exportation to the United States," appraisement shall be based upon the manufacturer's sales price.

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1. Whether the Hong Kong subsidiary's average 30 percent mark-up in its invoice price to the importer for the jewelry in question constitutes a nondutiable buying commission.

2. Whether the transactions between the manufacturers and the Hong Kong subsidiary qualify as sales "for exportation to the United States" and, if so, whether the holding in the E.C. McAfee case requires that these transactions be used to determine transaction value.

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

We note at the outset the essential inconsistency between the alternative positions advanced by counsel for the protestant. On the one hand, counsel maintains that because the Hong Kong subsidiary acted merely as the importer's buying agent, the jewelry was, in effect, sold by the manufacturers to the importer -- not to the subsidiary. On the other hand, counsel contends in his alternative argument that there was a sale between the manufacturers and the Hong Kong subsidiary and that, because the sale satisfies the statutory standard of being "for exportation to the United States," transaction value should be based upon the manufacturers' invoice prices. Notwithstanding the clear contradiction between the two positions, both will be addressed in this decision letter.

Concerning the first issue, section 402(b) of the TAA defines transaction value as "the price actually paid or payable for the merchandise when sold for exportation to the United States," plus amounts for the items specified in section 402(b)(1) if they are not already included in that price. Although selling commissions are specified as one of the additions to the price actually paid or payable, buying commissions are not.

No single factor is determinative in establishing the existence of a bona fide buying agency relationship. The existence of such a relationship must be ascertained by examining all relevant factors and each case is governed by its own particular facts. J.C. Penney Purchasing Corp. v. United States, 80 Cust. Ct. 84, C.D. 4741, 451 F. Supp. 973 (1978). Where the existence of an agency relationship is not clearly established, the legal relationship is not that of agency. New Trends, Inc. v. United States, 10 CIT __, 645 F. Supp. 957 (1986). The commissionaire performs the duties of an agent acting on behalf of its principal, the buyer. It may not act as an independent seller, nor as a representative of the manufacturer. United States v. Manhattan Novelty Corp., 63 Cust. Ct. 699, A.R.D. 263 (1969); (See also TAA #7). Where the relationship between the parties is that of buyer and seller rather than principal and

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agent, an item claimed to be a "buying commission" is not deductible from appraised value. B & W wholesale Co., Inc. v. United States, 58 CCPA 92, C.A.D. 1010 (1971).

With respect to the instant case, counsel for the protestant concedes that no written buying agency agreement existed between the importer and the Hong Kong subsidiary. In this regard, it has been held that while the existence of such an agreement lends support to a claim that a bona fide buying agency relationship exists, the absence of one is not fatal to such a claim, provided the available evidence, taken as a whole, establishes the existence of such a relationship. See Mitsui & Co. (U.S.A.), Inc. v. United States, 66 Cust. Ct. 553, R.D. 11740 (1971); and Rosenthal-Netter, Inc. v. United States, 12 CIT __, 679 F. Supp. 21 (1988). It is our opinion that, on balance, the available evidence in this case establishes that the Hong Kong subsidiary acted as an independent seller rather than as the importer's buying agent in regard to the merchandise in question.

Although the two affidavits submitted by protestant attest to the fact that the Hong Kong subsidiary performed certain functions on behalf of the importer which are typical of those rendered by buying agents, this appears to be the only evidence before us that tends to support the existence of a buying agency relationship between the two related parties. A review of the manufacturers' invoices to the Hong Kong subsidiary for the merchandise in question reveals that in all but one instance the jewelry was hand-carried from the manufacturers to the Hong Kong subsidiary who then arranged for their shipment to the U.S. These invoices contain no reference to the importer, nor do they indicate that the subsidiary was purchasing the merchandise for anyone other than itself.

Moreover, the subsidiary's average 30 percent mark-up over the manufacturers' invoice prices is not separately itemized as a buying commission on any of the subsidiary's invoices to the importer, but is merely reflected on the invoices as part of the price for the jewelry. In this regard, we are unaware of any evidence which would indicate that the mark-up was considered by either of the related parties as compensation to the subsidiary for the purchasing functions which it performed. In fact, in explaining the reason for the subsidiary's average 30 percent mark-up, the affidavits executed by the importer's international controller and the subsidiary's general manager during the relevant time period state only that this was a bookkeeping measure designed to raise the price of the jewelry to equal the price of similar jewelry in the New York City area market. The importer's former international controller states that "[i]n effect, this became the intra-company transfer price between" the related parties. We also view as persuasive the statement by

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your office in the Customs Protest and Summons Information Report dated January 6, 1986, that the subsidiary's mark-up greatly exceeds the 5 to 7 percent commission that is normal in the trade for bona fide buying agents.

With respect to the three Headquarters rulings cited by counsel in support of the contention that the mark-up represents a buying commission, we believe that these rulings are distinquishable on their facts from the instant case. Again, in determining whether a buying agency relationship exists, each case is governed by its own particular facts. In our view, the facts in this case establish that the Hong Kong subsidiary acted as an independent seller of the jewelry in question.

In regard to counsel's alternative position, a memorandum of April 1, 1988 (HQ 544179), from the Deputy Assistant Commissioner (Commercial Operations) to all Regional Commissioners, published in the May 4, 1988, issue of the Customs Bulletin (18 Cust. Bull. 7), stated that the court in the E.C. McAfee case:

... held that in the circumstances before it, transaction value was represented by the cost to the distributors of tailoring services in Hong Kong with the addition of the cost of fabric and certain other adjustments ('assembly price') rather than on the basis of the price paid by the United States customers to Hong Kong distributors for imported, made-to-measure clothing produced in Hong Kong ('consumer price'). In so holding, the court empha- sized on several occasions that the decision was limited to the particular factual circumstances before it.

Accordingly, the April 1, 1988, memorandum concluded that "insofar as Headquarters is concerned, the principles set forth within the subject court case should only be applied with regard to the importation of made-to-measure clothing when the distributor and tailor are located in the same country."

Therefore, the holding in the E.C. McAfee case will not be applied to the instant case.

TAA #57 dated January 21, 1983 (HQ 542928), sets forth Headquarters' position regarding the manner in which merchandise should be appraised where there are two or more transactions which might give rise to a transaction value. We stated in TAA #57 that:

... the transaction to which the phrase 'when sold for exportation to the United States' refers when there are two or more transactions which might rise

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to a transaction value, is the transaction which most directly causes the merchandise to be exported to the United States.

That case involved a situation in which a foreign manufacturer sold merchandise to another foreign company which, in turn, sold the merchandise to a U.S. purchaser. Although the manufacturer was not related to the second foreign company, the second company was related to the U.S. importer. We concluded that the goods were not shipped from the country of manufacture to the U.S. as a result of the sale from the manufacturer to the second foreign company but as a result of the sale from the second company to the U.S. purchaser. Thus, we held that it is this second sale to which we must look for a transaction value. See also C.S.D. 84- 54 dated December 1, 1983 (HQ 543098), and Headquarters rulings dated February 4, 1986 (HQ 543676), and June 3, 1986 (HQ 543710).

We believe that the holding in TAA #57 is clearly controlling with respect to the instant case. Therefore, consistent with that ruling, we find that the transaction value of the jewelry in question should be based upon the sale between the Hong Kong subsidiary and the importer.

HOLDING:

On the basis of the information presented, it is our opinion that the Hong Kong subsidiary acted as an independent seller of the merchandise in question, and that transaction value should be based upon the invoice price between the subsidiary and the importer. Accordingly, you are directed to deny the protest in full.

Sincerely,

John Durant
Director, Commercial
Rulings Division

Enclosure