Mattel, Inc. v. United States

624 F.2d 1076, 67 C.C.P.A. 74, 1980 CCPA LEXIS 225
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 1980
DocketC.A.D. 1248; No. 79-28; No. 79-29
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 624 F.2d 1076 (Mattel, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mattel, Inc. v. United States, 624 F.2d 1076, 67 C.C.P.A. 74, 1980 CCPA LEXIS 225 (ccpa 1980).

Opinion

Miller, Judge.

This case is before us on appeal by Mattel, Inc. (Mattel) and cross-appeal by the Government from the decision and judgment of [75]*75the U.S. Customs Court sustaining Mattel’s alternative claim for classification of the involved merchandise under item 724.25, TSUS, as phonograph records dutiable at 5 percent ad valorem. Mattel’s primary claim, the subject of its appeal, is that the involved merchandise is classifiable as duty free under (1) item 800.00, TSUS, as U.S. goods returned after having been exported without having been advanced in value or improved in condition while abroad, or (2) item 807.00, TSUS, as the U.S. goods component of articles assembled abroad, said component not having been advanced in value or improved in condition while abroad except by being assembled.2 The Customs Service classified the involved merchandise under item 737.90, TSUS, as toys, and parts of toys, n.s.p.f., other, dutiable at 17.5 percent ad valorem, the correctness of which is the subject of the Government’s cross-appeal. We hold that the involved merchandise is classifiable as duty free under item 807.00, TSUS, and reverse the decision and judgment below.

BACKGROUND

The involved merchandise covering 10 entries consists of phonograph records manufactured in the United States which were exported in bulk quantities to Mexico, where they were packaged for retail sale in envelopes and imported into the United States at Los Angeles-Long Beach during the period of August 18-November 21 1972, in association with talking toy telephones (not in issue here), known and sold as Mattel-O-Phones and Talking Picture Phones, the latter in two styles, depending on the types of records included: Nice Neighbors Talking Picture Phone (Nice Neighbors Phone), and Alphabet-Talking Pictures Phone (Alphabet Phone).3 The records have no hole in the center and possess no use independent from the toy telephones. On the Mattel-O-Phone records appears the legend “©Mattel, Inc. 1964,” and on the other records appear the words “Made and printed in U.S.A.”

The Customs Court denied Mattel’s primary claim for duty-free classification on the basis of Mattel’s failure to timely file free-entry, claim-supporting documents required by Customs Regulation 19 CFR 10.1.4 Mattel argues that its claims for free entry of the records [76]*76imported with the Alphabet Phone and the Nice Neighbors Phone are not dependent on compliance with 19 CFR 10.1, because the words thereon provide the factual basis “determinable from an examination of the article (s)” within the exception from compliance provided by 19 CFR 10.1. It also argues that the evidence establishes that from 1968 to 1972 identical records were granted free-entry treatment— “a classification which was dependent on verification by the Customs officials of U.S. origin or production, without advancement in value or improvement in condition, and without payment of drawback”; and that waiver of documents required by 19 CFR 10.1 was denied only because the import specialist concluded “that neither he nor the District Director had authority to waive documentation requirements (when) the Customs Service was not going to accord duty-free treatment.” 5

Alternatively, Mattel argues that even if the filing of documents specified by 19 CFR 10.1 was required, as determined by the Customs Court, the requirement was satisfied by its tender of the documents to the Customs Court before final liquidation under 19 CFR 10.112, which permits late filing where failure to timely file “was not due to willful negligence or fraudulent intent.”6 With respect to this argument, the Customs Court concluded that Mattel failed to meet its burden of establishing that its failure to timely file the free-entry, claim-supporting documents was not due to willful negligence, adding that—

the record shows that the failure to timely file was intentional, which for purposes of section 10.112, is the legal equivalent of willful negligence.

The Customs Court observed that the Government had conceded that the free-entry, claim-supporting documents may be filed with the Customs Court if there was a showing that the late filing was not due to willful negligence or fraud.

The Customs Court referred to testimony of Mattel’s director of import-export administration that when he and Mattel knew that the Customs Service was not going to allow duty-free treatment to the records,7 they did not continue to file the free-entry documents required by the regulations, although such documents were filed regarding other components, specific mention of the records being omitted;8 also to testimony of Mattel’s manager of import-export [77]*77documentation that it was standard operating procedure in 1972 to not file free-entry documents on merchandise that he knew would not be allowed duty-free treatment by the Customs Service. Such evidence persuaded the court to find the intentional character of the nonfiling of the free-entry documents.

The Customs Court further found that Mattel's constructed cost submissions (exhibits 15 B, D, E, and F) contained a footnote reading:

Importer requesting judicial ruling that this merchandise is applicable under items 800.00 or 807.00 TSUS.

Of this, the court said:

This notice of an intention to seek a judicial ruling * * * shows an intent not to seek a timely ruling by the Customs Service.

The constructed cost submissions were sent by letter from Mattel to the District Director of the Customs Service for the purpose of assisting in the computation of the estimated duty to be deposited with the entry and covered numerous components in addition to the records — some applicable under item 800.00, some applicable under item 807.00, and some, including the records, associable under various classifications. Earlier constructed cost submissions listed records as applicable under item 807.00.

OPINION

Although we are satisfied that substantial evidence supports the Customs Court’s findings that the nonfiling of the free-entry, claim-supporting documents was intentional, in a nominal sense, we conclude that the Customs Court erred in holding that “intentional * * * for purposes of section 10.112, is the legal equivalent of willful negligence.” 9

The Customs Regulations do not provide a definition of willful negligence. However, in F. W. Myers & Co. v. United States, 70 Cust. Ct. 202, C.D. 4431, 360 F. Supp. 429, appeal dismissed, 61 CCPA 121 (1973), the Customs Court, after reviewing several authorities,10 said (at 209):

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Bluebook (online)
624 F.2d 1076, 67 C.C.P.A. 74, 1980 CCPA LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mattel-inc-v-united-states-ccpa-1980.