VAL CO:R:C:V 545648 LR

Area Director of Customs
Western Great Lakes Area
Minneapolis, MN 55401

RE: Internal Advice 10/94; carrying cases; sale for exportation; Nissho Iwai American Corp v. United States; Synergy Sport International, Ltd. v. United States; HRL's 545144; 545271; 545320; presumption that transaction value is based on the price the importer paid

Dear Sir:

This is in response to your memorandum dated February 3, 1993, forwarded to this office by the Chief, Textiles and Plastic Branch, New York Seaport, and received by this office on May 13, 1994, requesting internal advice regarding the correct basis of appraisement of certain laptop computer carrying cases imported by Marubeni America Corporation ("MAC").

FACTS:

During the period September 21, 1990 through July 31, 1991, MAC imported textile carrying cases for laptop computers. These importations, involving eleven entries, are the subject of a pre- penalty notice issued to MAC on December 15, 1992, for alleged undervaluation. A copy of the pre-penalty response submitted by counsel for MAC was provided.

You indicate that the circumstances surrounding these importations, as provided to you by counsel, are as follows: The cases were manufactured by Daesung Industrial in Korea ("Korean seller") and sold to Yasumura Co. Ltd of Tokyo, Japan ("Japanese Middleman 1") at an invoice price of XXX per case. Japanese Middleman 1 sold the cases to Marubeni Corporation ("Japanese Middleman 2"), also of Tokyo, Japan. You indicate that the price is not known. Japanese Middleman 2 then resold the cases to its U.S. subsidiary, MAC, the importer of record, at an invoice price of XXX per case. MAC then resold the cases to Zeos International ("Zeos") of Minneapolis, Minnesota, an assembler of laptop computers, for an undisclosed amount.

The Customs entry documents pertaining to one of the entries was provided, including two Entry Summaries, Customs Form 7501. The first, showing an entered value of XXX was rejected by Customs. The second, is marked "corrected" and shows an entered value of XXX. MAC is shown as the importer of record. Also provided were two commercial invoices: one from the Korean seller to Japanese Middleman 1 for XXX (XXX unit price); a "corrected" invoice from Japanese Middleman 2 to MAC for XXX (XXX unit price); and, a textile export visaed invoice from the government of Korea ("export visa") for the imported cases. The Korean seller's invoice and the export visa indicate that the goods were to be shipped from Korea on May 10, 1991, to Minneapolis, U.S.A., via Seattle. No documents relating to the alleged sale from Japanese Middleman 1 to Japanese Middleman 2 or from MAC to Zeos were provided. The file contains no purchase orders or contracts relating to any of the sales. With regard to the relationship of the parties, counsel indicates in its pre-penalty response that the Korean seller and the Japanese Middleman 1 are not related and that MAC is a subsidiary of Japanese Middleman 2. Your office indicates that due to the location of the transactions, you are unable to determine the relationships between the Korean seller and Middleman 1 and whether or not those relationships influence the price paid or payable. The New York Seaport advises that "[t]he relation between each party is unknown" but "it does appear that there is a ownership relation between MAC and the parent company Marubeni Corporation of Japan."

MAC initially entered the cases at the price which Japanese Middleman 1 paid to the Korean seller (XXX). It is your position that transaction value should be based on the sale between Middleman 2 and MAC (XXX). The New York Seaport, NIS Division, concurs. In its response to the pre-penalty notice, counsel claims that based on the decisions in Nissho Iwai American Corp. v. United States, 982 F.2d 505 (Fed. Cir. 1992), and Synergy Sport International, Ltd. v. United States, 17 C.I.T. , Slip Op. 93- 5 (Ct. Int'l. Trade January 12, 1993). the proper basis of valuation of the involved entry is under transaction value, represented by the amount paid or payable by Middleman 1 to the Korean seller (XXX per case). It claims that both the Korean seller's commercial invoice and the export visa support this position. Among other things, they indicate that the goods were to be shipped from Korea to Minneapolis, U.S.A. via Seattle.

ISSUE:

Whether transaction value should be based on the sale between the Korean seller and Japanese Middleman 1 or on the sale between Japanese Middleman 2 and MAC.

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

Merchandise imported into the United States is appraised in accordance with section 402 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended by the Trade Agreement Act of 1979 (TAA; 19 U.S.C. 1401a). The preferred method of appraisement under the TAA is transaction value defined as the "price actually paid or payable for the merchandise when sold for exportation to the United States" plus certain enumerated additions. Section 402(b)(1) (emphasis added). For the purposes of this ruling we have assumed that transaction value is the appropriate basis of appraisement.

The "price actually paid or payable" is defined in section 402(b)(4)(A) of the TAA as "the total payment (whether direct or indirect...) made, or to be made, for the imported merchandise by the buyer to, or for the benefit of, the seller."

Until recently it has been the policy of the Customs Service to appraise imported merchandise under transaction value based on the sale which most directly caused the merchandise to be exported to the United States. However, in Nissho Iwai American Corp. v. United States, supra, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reviewed the standard for determining transaction value when there is more than one sale which may be considered as being for exportation to the United States. The court reaffirmed the principle of E.C. McAfee Co. v. United States, 842 F.2d 314 (Fed. Cir. 1988), that a manufacturer's price, rather than the middleman's price, is valid so long as the transaction between the manufacturer and the middleman constitutes a viable transaction value. In reaffirming the McAfee standard, the court stated that in a three-tiered distribution system:

The manufacturer's price constitutes a viable transaction value when the goods are clearly destined for export to the United States and when the manufacturer and the middleman deal with each other at arm's length, in the absence of any non-market influences that affect the legitimacy of the sales price. That determination can only be made on a case- by-case basis.

Id. at 509. See also, Synergy Sport International, Ltd. v. United supra. In both Nissho Iwai and Synergy, the middleman was the importer of record.

Headquarters Ruling Letter ("HRL") 545144, January 19, 1994, involved a three-tiered distribution arrangement, in which the middleman was not the importer. We reiterated our position that consistent with the above decisions, there is a presumption that transaction value is based on the price paid by the importer:

[i]n keeping with the courts' respective holdings and our own precedent, we will continue to presume that an importer's declared transaction value is based on the price the importer paid. In further keeping with the courts' holdings, we note that in those situations where an importer requests appraisement based on the price paid by the middleman to the foreign manufacturer (and the importer is not the middleman), the importer may do so. However, it will be the importer's responsibility to show that such price is acceptable under the standard set forth in Nissho Iwai and Synergy. That is, the importer must present sufficient evidence that the sale was an "arms's length sale," and that it was "a sale for export to the United States," within the meaning of 19 U.S.C. 1401a(b).

It was determined that the evidence presented did not establish that the imported goods were clearly destined for the United States when the middleman purchased, or contracted to purchase, them. The decision also notes that the file contains no evidence on the relationship between the seller and the middleman.

HRL 545271, March 4, 1994, also involved a three-tiered distribution arrangement in which the middleman was not the importer. The evidence presented that the merchandise was destined for the U.S. when sold to the middleman consisted of purchase contracts between the importer and the middleman indicating that the goods were designed and manufactured according to the importer's specifications. The merchandise was also tagged with the importer's label and sent directly from the manufacturer to the importer. The purchase contracts indicated that the manufacturer has access to the quota/visa required to ensure entry of the merchandise into the U.S. In addition, purchase orders between the middlemen and the manufacturers showed that the manufacturers are to provide the importer with specification and pre-production samples of the garments and that the goods will be shipped by the manufacturers directly to the importer. Based on this evidence, we ruled that transaction value should be based on the sale between the manufacturer and the middleman.

In HRL 545360, May 31, 1994, we ruled that in the case of merchandise subject to visa requirements, copies of the visaed invoices covering the merchandise for exportation to the United are required as evidence that the merchandise is destined for the United States. That case involved a three-tiered distribution arrangement with manufacturers in the Far East, a Hong Kong middleman, and a U.S. importer. In addition to the visaed invoices, copies of the manufacturers' invoices to the middleman, invoices from the middleman to the importer, purchase orders from the importer to the middleman, and an affidavit from the importer regarding the circumstances of the importations were submitted. Based on such evidence, we ruled that at the time the middleman purchased, or contracted to purchase, the imported goods, they were "clearly destined for the United States".

In the present case, since MAC is the importer of record, the presumption is that transaction value is based on the price that MAC paid to Japanese Middleman 2 (assuming the sale was an arms's length sale). In order to appraise the goods based on the price Japanese Middleman 1 paid to the Korean seller, the importer must present sufficient evidence that the sale was an arm's length sale and that it was a sale for exportation to the United States. In support of its claim that at time of the sale from the Korean seller to Japanese Middleman 1 the goods were clearly destined for the United States, counsel refers to the Korean seller's invoice and the export visa, both of which reflect that the goods will be shipped to Minneapolis, U.S.A. No other evidence was provided. As discussed below, we find that the evidence presented is not sufficient.

In contrast to the above cases where all relevant information pertaining to the import transactions was provided, in the present case, pertinent information regarding the subject importations is lacking to establish that the alleged sale to Middleman 1 was a bona fide sale or that it was a sale for exportation to the United States. Although counsel indicates that there were several sales involving the imported goods (Korean seller-Japanese Middleman 1; Japanese Middleman 1- Japanese Middleman 2; Japanese Middleman 2-MAC; MAC-Zeos) no purchase orders or contracts relating to any of these alleged sales were provided. While the Korean seller's invoice to Japanese Middleman 1 indicates that the terms of sale were FOB Korea, we have no information about the terms of the alleged sale from Japanese Middleman 1 to Japanese Middleman 2. In fact, no documentation regarding the sale from Japanese Middleman 1 to Japanese Middleman 2 was provided at all. Based on the evidence presented we cannot determine whether the alleged sales to both middlemen were bona fide sales, and if so, when the sales occurred and the underlying circumstances surrounding them. Without knowing all the circumstances surrounding the importation, we cannot determine whether the alleged sale to Japanese Middleman 1 was a sale for exportation to the United States.

Moreover, assuming there was a bona fide sale to Japanese Middleman 1, the evidence is insufficient to establish that the goods were clearly destined to the United States at the time of such sale. While the export visa, issued on May 10, 1991, is evidence that as of that date the goods were to be exported to the United States, it does not establish that the goods were clearly destined for the United States prior to this date. (The entry documents indicate that the goods were also exported on May 10, 1991). Other than the Korean seller's April 27, 1991 invoice, there is no documentary or other evidence that the sale to Japanese Middleman 1 was a sale for exportation to the United States.

For example, in HRL 545271, purchase contracts between the importer and the middleman indicating that the goods were designed and manufactured according to the importer's specifications were provided. In HRL 545320, purchase orders from the importer to the middleman were submitted along with an affidavit from the importer regarding the circumstances of the importations. In this case, no evidence has been presented indicating that the goods were manufactured to MAC's or Zeos' specifications or that they bore their labels. There are no purchase orders, contracts, affidavits, etc. from MAC or Zeos which show this. Although the goods were ultimately exported to the United States, we find that there is insufficient evidence to establish that they were clearly destined for exportation to the United States when sold to Japanese Middleman 1. In addition, other than counsel's statement that the Korean seller and Japanese Middleman 1 are not related, no evidence was presented establishing that the alleged sale was "at arm's length".

Based on the above considerations, we find that insufficient evidence has been presented to overcome the presumption that transaction value is based on the price MAC paid to Japanese Middleman 2. (If they are related parties as provided in 19 U.S.C. 1410a(g)(1), transaction value is acceptable only if the relationship between them did not influence the price actually paid or payable; or if the transaction value of the imported merchandise closely approximates the transaction value, deductive value or computed value for identical or similar merchandise as provided in 19 U.S.C. 1401a(b)(B)).

HOLDING:

Based on the evidence presented, transaction value should not be based on the price Japanese Middleman 1 paid to the Korean seller. Assuming the price MAC paid to Japanese Middleman 2 is a viable transaction value, this should be the basis for appraisement.

The Office of Regulations and Rulings will take steps to make this decision available to Customs personnel via the Customs Rulings Module in ACS and the public via he Diskette Subscription Service, Freedom of Information Act and other public access channels 60 days from the date of this decision.

Sincerely,

John Durant, Director
Commercial Rulings Division