CLA-2 RR:CR:TE 960967 MBG

John S. Rode, Esquire
Rode & Qualey
295 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10017

RE: Tariff Classification of Arthritis Relief Gloves; Reconsideration of NY 816073

Dear Mr. Rode:

This is in reply to your request on behalf of Becton Dickinson & Company, asking Customs to reconsider New York Ruling Letter (NY) 816073, dated November 14, 1996. That ruling concerned the tariff classification of “arthritis relief gloves” produced in Thailand. For the reasons set out below, we affirm the holding in NY 816073.

FACTS:

The merchandise under reconsideration is a pair of unlined gloves constructed from 80 percent nylon and 20 percent spandex knit fabric. Each glove has four fingers with fourchettes, an inserted thumb, and a one-inch side vent. The gloves are packaged in a paperboard container that is labeled on the front “Arthritis Relief Gloves” and contains the following beneath that name:

Therapeutic:

Worn while sleeping, provides relief from symptoms of Arthritis in hands 2

? Helps relieve pain, stiffness and swelling ? Increases morning strength and flexibility ? Lightweight LYCRA® spandex for extra comfort

On the back of the container there is language to the effect that while sleeping the gloves provide compression and warmth which reduces pain and stiffening in the hands and gives greater flexibility and grip strength.

The gloves were classified under subheading 6116.93.9400, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States Annotated (HTSUSA), which provides for knit gloves of synthetic fibers, with fourchettes. The importer believes that the gloves should be classified either under the provision for other articles specifically designed for the use or benefit of physically handicapped persons, in subheading 9817.00.96, HTSUSA, or, alternatively, under the provision for other orthopedic appliances, in subheading 9021.19.85, HTSUSA.

ISSUE:

The issue presented is whether the subject gloves are properly classifiable under subheading 6116.93.9400, HTSUSA, or whether the appropriate subheading is 9817.00.96, HTSUSA, as articles specifically designed for handicapped persons. As an alternative to subheading is 9817.00.96, it is claimed that subheading 9021.19.85, HTSUSA, which provides for orthopedic appliances for preventing bodily deformities, is applicable.

LAW AND ANALYSIS:

The Nairobi Protocol to the Agreement on the Importation of Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Materials Act of 1982 established duty-free treatment for certain articles to be used by the handicapped. Presidential Proclamation 5978 and Section 1121 of the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988, provided for the implementation of the Nairobi Protocol by creating subheadings 9817.00.92, 9817.00.94, and 9817.99.96, HTSUSA. These tariff provisions specifically provide for duty-free treatment for articles specially designed or adapted for the use or benefit of the blind or other physically or mentally handicapped persons. Subheading 9817.00.96, HTSUSA, specifically provides for articles specially designed for the use or benefit of physically or mentally handicapped persons other than the blind. 3

U.S. Note 4, Subchapter XVII, Chapter 98, HTSUSA, provides as follows:

(a) For purposes of subheadings 9817.00.92, 9817.0094, and 9817.00.96, the term “blind or other physically or mentally handicapped persons” includes any person suffering from a permanent or chronic physical or mental impairment which substantially limits one or more major life activities, such as caring for one’s self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, breathing, learning, or working.

(b) Subheadings 9817.00.92, 9817.00.94, and 9817.00.96 do not cover--

(I) articles for acute or transient disability; * * * (iii) therapeutic and diagnostic articles; or * * *

In Richards Medical Co. v.. US, 720 F. Supp. 998 (CIT 1989), aff’d, 910 F. 2d 828 (Fed. Cir. 1990), the CIT held that “therapeutic” articles are those that are used to heal or cure the condition causing the handicap, as opposed to those articles which are designed to compensate for, or adapt to, the handicapped condition. The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, in affirming the decision of the lower, recognized that the word therapeutic has both broad and narrow interpretations. 910 F.2d at 830. In determining the intent given by Congress to the term “therapeutic”, the Court of Appeals reasoned that the legislative history “cut against construing this term broadly to include alleviate or palliative treatments, i.e. treatments which help the handicapped person live with his or her handicapped condition. . .[I]nclusion of these treatments would be inconsistent with the legislative history.” Id. This position was followed in Travenol Laboratories, Inc. V. United States, 17 CIT 69 (1993), and Nobelpharma v. United States, 955 F. Supp. 1491 (CIT 1997).

Considering that the merchandise in question does not provide any cure for arthritis but serves as a means of helping those suffering from arthritis to live with the disease, the gloves do not meet the court’s definition of “therapeutic” and are, therefore, not excluded from the applicability of subheading 9817.00.96.

The language of the heading under which subheading 9817.00.96 appears requires that articles classifiable thereunder must be “specially designed or adapted” for the benefit of mentally or physically handicapped persons. 4

Assuming, arguendo, that Headquarters Ruling (HQ) 556090, dated November 8, 1991, provides that individuals who suffer significantly from arthritis are persons who have an impairment which substantially limits one or more of major life activities discussed in U.S. note 4(a), then individuals who benefit from the arthritis relief gloves are physically handicapped within the meaning of U.S. Note 4(a).

While the legislative history of subheading 9817.00.96 discusses that the design, modification, or adaptation of an article must significant enough in order for the article to be used by handicapped individuals, Congress established no specific definition of these terms. Senate Report (Finance Committee) No. 97-564, September 21, 1982). See also, Headquarters Ruling Letter (HQ) 951004 dated March 3, 1992. Since it is difficult to establish a clear definition of what is “specially designed or adapted,” various factors must be utilized on a case-by-case basis to determine whether a given article is “specially designed or adapted” within the meaning of this statute.

In Treasury Decision (TD) 92-77 (26 Cust. Bull. 1, (August 26, 1992)), Customs addressed the implementation of the duty-free provisions of the Nairobi Protocol, and discussed the eligibility requirements for duty-free treatment. With regard to whether an article has been “specially designed or adapted” for the handicapped, Customs stated the following:

A primary factor to be considered concerns the physical properties of the article itself, i.e., whether the article is easily distinguishable, by properties of design and the corresponding use specific to this unique design from articles useful to nonhandicapped individuals. If an article is solely dedicated to use by the handicapped, e.g. pacemakers or hearing aids, then this is conclusive evidence that the articles are “specially designed or adapted” for the handicapped for purposes of the Nairobi Protocol.

Thus, if an article is solely dedicated to use by the handicapped, it is Customs position that this would be conclusive evidence that the item is “specifically designed or adapted” for the handicapped for purposes of the Nairobi Protocol. The Court of International Trade used similar reasoning in Richards Medical, supra, and held that instruments used to implant the hip prosthetic device at issue in that case, are “specifically and exclusively designed for prosthetic implantation and have no other apparent use.”

According to the submission received on behalf of the importer, the gloves were specifically designed to benefit persons suffering from arthritis. The instant gloves are “made form a knit fabric composed of 80 percent nylon and 20 percent spandex, and are constructed to provide both compression and warmth to the 5

fingers.” In this regard, in order to compare the instant gloves with gloves being sold at retail to the general public, a member of my staff visited two department stores (J.C. Penney and Co. and Lord and Taylor). Each store sold ISOTONER® gloves substantially similar in both design and material (19 percent spandex vs. 20 percent spandex in the instant gloves). Accordingly, we are unable to conclude that the gloves under consideration have any design feature which distinguishes them from ordinary gloves used by the general public.

Considering the above, the gloves at issue are not “specifically designed or adapted” for the handicapped, nor do they appear to provide any unique compensatory advantages. (See HQ 556449). Accordingly, the subject gloves are not classifiable in subheading 9817.00.96.

It is alternatively claimed that the arthritic gloves are classifiable in subheading 9021.19.85, HTSUSA, as orthopedic appliances for prevent bodily deformities. The pertinent portions of heading 9021 follow:

9021 Orthopedic appliances, including crutches, Surgical belts and trusses; splints an other fracture appliances; artificial parts of the body; hearing aids and other appliances which are worn or carried, or implanted in the body, to compensate for a defect or disability; parts and accessories thereof: Artificial joints and other orthopedic or fracture appliances; parts and accessories thereof: * * * 9021.19 Other: * * * 9021.19.85 00 Other............................................................

The Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System, Explanatory Notes (Ens), is the official interpretation of the HTSUSA at the international level (for the 4 digit headings and the 6 digit subheadings). EN 1(b) to Chapter 90 states: 1.-This chapter does not cover: * * * (b) Supporting belts or other support articles of textile material, whose intended effect on the organ to be supported or held derives solely from their elasticity (for example, maternity belts, thoracic support bandages, abdominal support bandages, maternity belts, thoracic 6

support bandages, abdominal support bandages, supports for joints or muscles)(Section XI).

The Explanatory Notes to Heading 9021, HTSUSA, state the following:

(I) ORTHOPAEDIC APPLIANCES

These are appliances for: (I)Preventing or correcting bodily deformities; or ii) Supporting or holding organs following an illness or operation.

In HQ 087213, dated September 18, 1990, it was stated:

[U]nder the Tariff Schedules of the United States (TSUS), Customs has maintained the position that orthopedic appliances are generally used in the medical treatment of a physical ailment and are body supports which are worn on the person. See Headquarters Ruling Letter (HRL) 058883, dated March 23, 1979 9 (air cushion designed for back support classified under the provision for pneumatic mattresses and other inflatable articles, not specifically provided for, in item 790.39, TSUS). Furthermore, orthopedic appliances are usually obtained at the direction of a physician at certain medical supply outlets which have personnel specially trained to measure and fit the appliance for the individual patient. Articles which are available in ordinary retail stores for use in alleviating sprains or strains are not, for purposes of tariff classification, considered orthopedic devices. See HRL 058970, dated May 7, 1978 (inflatable air cushion designed for back support classified under the provision for pneumatic mattresses and other inflatable articles, not specifically provided for, in item 790.39, TSUS).

Further, it is our view that the wording of the tariff precludes the instant merchandise from classification as an “orthopedic appliance.” The references to orthopedic appliances in the tariff name such articles as crutches, surgical belts, trusses, artificial joints, and other fracture appliances, not articles commonly worn on the person. In accord with the rule of ejusdem generis, the instant gloves are not considered orthopedic appliances for tariff purposes because they do not fall within the same class or kind of goods as those specifically named.

We also note that in March 1996, at its 17th session, the World Customs Organization’s Harmonized System Committee (HSC) examined the classification of mass-produced, post -operative footwear designed for patients recovering from foot surgery or metatarsal injury. The committee determined that the “Technol Post-Op” shoe was precluded from classification in heading 9021, HS because it was mass-produced.

7

For the reasons set out above, the subject gloves are not “orthopedic appliances” for tariff purposes.

HOLDING:

The arthritic relief gloves were properly classified in NY 816073 under subheading 6116.93.9400, HTSUSA, which provides for other crocheted gloves with fourchettes. The gloves are dutiable at the general column one rate of 19.3 percent ad valorem. The applicable textile restraint category is 631.

Due to the changeable nature of the statistical annotation (the ninth and tenth digits of the classification) and the restraint (quota/visa) categories applicable to textile merchandise, you should contact your local Customs office prior to importation of this merchandise to determine the current status of any import restraints or requirements.

The designated textile and apparel category may be subdivided into parts. If so, visa and quota requirements applicable to the subject merchandise may be affected. Since part categories are the result of international bilateral agreements which are subject to frequent renegotiations and changes, to obtain the most current information available, we suggest that you check, close to the time of shipment, the Status Report On Current Import Quotas (Restraint Levels), an internal issuance of the U.S. Customs Service, which is available for inspection at our local Customs office.

Sincerely,


John Durant, Director
Commercial Rulings Division