H. Reisman Corp. v. United States

17 Ct. Int'l Trade 1260
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedDecember 1, 1993
DocketConsolidated Court No. 92-08-00569
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ct. Int'l Trade 1260 (H. Reisman Corp. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of International Trade primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. Reisman Corp. v. United States, 17 Ct. Int'l Trade 1260 (cit 1993).

Opinion

Opinion

Restani, Judge:

This matter is before the court following a trial de novo. The issue to be determined is the proper classification of merchandise that provides vitamin B-12 in animal feed. The court eliminated certain classifications following trial. The court also now eliminates classification as a “medicament,” as the merchandise is not used in a therapeutic or prophylactic manner beyond the purposes provided by any nutrient, including ordinary grain feed or food of any kind.1

The United States Customs Service (“Customs”) classified the product at issue as vitamin B-12, under item 2936.26.00 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (“HTSUS”).2 The remaining classi[1261]*1261fications claimed by plaintiff are item 2308.90.80, other vegetable material of a kind used in animal feeding; item 2309.90.90, other preparations of a kind used in animal feeding;3 and item 2936.90.00, other provitamins and vitamins, including natural concentrates.

Facts

The imported merchandise is a reddish brown liquid, consisting of approximately 3% vitamin B-12 compounds, 20% proteinaceous matter, 77% water, and trace materials. Water is disregarded for purposes of classification. The merchandise is an eluate, that is, washings of a separation process, and is a colloidal suspension rather than a solution. The vitamin B-12 in the merchandise is not in crystalline form as is pure vitamin B-12 for human consumption. The vitamin B-12 in the merchandise is also not a natural concentrate.

The merchandise is the result of the fermentation of vegetable matter, essentially sugar and molasses. Such matter is transformed so completely by the processing that it has virtually nothing in common with the starting materials. The merchandise is produced as a side stream of the manufacture of crystalline vitamin B-12. It is described as the “spent broth.” In order to be suitable for use in animal feed, the liquid side stream product is dehydrated and powdered. It is sometimes mixed [1262]*1262with ground corn cobs or rice hulls so that it may be properly distributed in animal feed premixes. It is also sold in an unmixed form. The merchandise is only suitable for use in animal feed. It is not commercially feasible to process the eluate into pure vitamin B-12. The merchandise, however, is of value only because of its vitamin B-12 content.

The vitamin B-12 portion of the product consists of two different forms of vitamin B-12: cyanocobalamin and hydroxocobalamin. Each of these is a separately defined organic chemical compound. The proteinaceous matter is another totally separate ingredient. The compounds and other ingredients are not mixed together, but are simply the result of the fermentation process. These facts are admitted or were established by essentially uncontradicted testimony at trial.

Discussion

The first question to be addressed is whether the merchandise may be classified under chapter 29, as Customs’ classification and one of plaintiffs classifications are contained within that chapter. The overlying issue in this case is whether Chapter 29 covers all commercially known forms of a vitamin, or whether a more chemically oriented approach is reflected in the structure of Chapter 29. The court believes that the latter position is correct, as the following discussion indicates.

Chapter note 1 defines with great specificity the types of merchandise that are included within Chapter 29.4 Note 1(a) allows separately chemically defined organic compounds to be classified under the chapter. As indicated, the product contains two separately defined organic chemical compounds, as well as proteinaceous material. Even if the proteinaceous material is disregarded, the product is still a combination of two separately defined organic compounds. The Explanatory Notes to the Harmonized Tariff System (“the Explanatory Notes”), in addressing Chapter 29, make clear that in order to satisfy Note 1(a), the product must be a “single chemical compound of known structure.”5 Customs Co-Operation Council, 1 Harmonized Commodity Description and Cod[1263]*1263ing System, Explanatory Notes, Ch. 29, General Note A, at 326 (1988 Supp.). Thus, the product does not fit within Note 1(a). Any pure vitamin B-12 compound may be classified under Chapter 29 according to the direction of Note 1(a), but merchandise which includes two compounds is not within the purview of Note 1(a).

Further, the court recognized the inapplicability of Note 1(b) at trial. The product is clearly not a mixture of two or more isomers of the same compound. Nor is the merchandise a product of heading 2936, as specified in Note 1(c). In chemical terms a product is “a substance produced from one or more other substances as a result of chemical change.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1810 (1981). (Defendant offers no contrary definition.) The imported product is not obtained by chemically altering vitamin B-126 or any other separately listed vitamin under heading 2936. Notes 1(d) through (g) do not apply because they require that the merchandise described therein contain an item listed in a preceding subpart of Note 1. Note 1(h) does not apply by its terms. Accordingly, the merchandise is not described in Note 1.

Note 1, however, contains an escape valve. Despite the careful cataloging of Note 1, merchandise may be classified within Chapter 29 if the “context otherwise requires” such classification. See, Note 1 to Chapter 29, HTSUS. The Explanatory Notes state that provitamins and vitamins (including concentrates and intermixtures) are to be classified in Chapter 29, even though they may not be separately defined chemical compounds. 1 Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System, Explanatory Notes, Ch. 29, General Note C, at 327. The Explanatory Notes agree with the plain language of heading 2936, and therefore the context otherwise requires that such intermixtures and concentrates be classified under heading 2936. Thus, if the merchandise were an inter-mixture or concentrate of cyanocobalamin and hydroxocobalamin (whether pure or impure or in a solvent or not) it would fall under heading 2936. It is neither of these. The merchandise is clearly not a concentrate, and the merchandise contains six times as much proteinaceous material as vitamin.

The proteinaceous material is not simply an impurity in the vitamin B-12 product.7 The addition of proteinaceous material is a natural part of the manufacturing process and there is no need or desire to eliminate the material from this animal food product. In fact, more non-nutritive material is added to the merchandise, once it is dehydrated, in order to aid in mixing with other animal feed ingredients. The court cannot find a way to squeeze this multi-ingredient merchandise into the terms of Note 1 and the “context” does not appear to require its classification anywhere in Chapter 29. Other contexts within Chapter 29 may require [1264]*1264disregard of the listing in Note 1, as defendant’s examples indicate, but these are not the contexts that might include this merchandise.

The main thrust of defendant’s argument seems to be that Vitamin B-12 is an eo nomine classification, which includes all forms of the product.

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17 Ct. Int'l Trade 1260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-reisman-corp-v-united-states-cit-1993.