M.B.I. Merchandise Industries, Inc. v. United States

16 Ct. Int'l Trade 495
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedJune 26, 1992
DocketCourt No. 87-03-00472
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ct. Int'l Trade 495 (M.B.I. Merchandise Industries, Inc. 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
M.B.I. Merchandise Industries, Inc. v. United States, 16 Ct. Int'l Trade 495 (cit 1992).

Opinion

Opinion

Introduction

Musgrave, Judge:

This case turns on whether photo albums imported from Taiwan and the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”) were actually the produce of Korea. Plaintiff M.B.I. Merchandise Industries (“MBI”) protested the seizure of eleven shipments of photo albums. The Customs Service denied the protest on the grounds that the seized albums were actually produced in Korea and transhipped through Taiwan, in an attempt to avoid antidumping duties. MBI brought suit in this Court to protest the exclusion of the albums. A trial was held on the issue of country of origin of the photo albums. After trial, further briefs were filed at the request of the Court. 1

The subsidiary, hut threshold question central to the various government threats and proceedings, is whether the plaintiff and its principals have made false statements about the origin of the merchandise in question. Having considered the appearance, composure and accuracy of plaintiff s testimony, the Court finds plaintiffs witnesses credible, and the government’s case to be based upon unsubstantiated suspicion.

Because the original ruling which held that the albums were Korean was flawed, because the government’s own test to determine the country of manufacture of photo album pages was flawed, and because the government’s witnesses could not differentiate between Taiwanese and Korean photo album pages at trial, the Court finds that the Customs Service overcame its own presumption of correctness, and that the albums were improperly excluded.

Facts

MBI manufactures and distributes photo albums, some of which it imports from Taiwan and the PRC. The albums at issue consist of a [496]*496three-ring or a coil binder attached to a decorated or padded cover, containing “magnetic” pages which have clear plastic sheets attached to them by a dry glue. Labels are placed on the albums, which are then shrink-wrapped.

Prior to 1985, MBI imported a majority of its photo albums from Korea. Tr. B at 45-46. In October, 1985, antidumping duties of 64.81% were imposed against Korean photo albums and magnetic pages. Once the duties were imposed, Korean albums were priced out of the market. MBI officials visited Taiwan and began importing photo albums from a Taiwanese supplier, Three Leaf Stationery Products (“Three Leaf’). Tr. B at 96. MBI started purchasing from Perfect Leatherware Company in the PRC at around the same time. Tr. B at 45, 98-99.

The evidence at trial showed that Three Leaf had the production capacity to make enough photo album covers to fill MBI’s orders throughout the seizure period. Tr. B at 453. The government’s expert witness admitted that Three Leaf had adequate cover-making capacity. Tr. B at 429. After MBI placed its orders in late 1985, Three Leaf increased the quality of its magnetic pages and purchased another automatic page-making machine in April, 1986. See Pltf. Exh. 7. Three Leaf was thereafter able to produce a large number of photo album pages and completed photo albums by running the machines around the clock. Tr. A at 136-138. MBI admits that Three Leaf imported some pages from Korea, and that MBI suggested that Three Leaf import some Korean pages if it could not meet MBI’s requirements with its own production. Tr. A at 56-62. Three Leaf was reluctant to do so because the Korean pages cost more than its own production. Tr. A at 198.

MBI imported eight shipments from Three Leal2 and three from Perfect Leatherware3, a PRC manufacturer. MBI claims that only seven percent of the pages it imported from Three Leaf were made in Korea, based on Three Leafs production records. The government attempted to show that a larger share of the seized albums contained Korean pages; however, the government failed to present evidence to support this supposition.

In early 1986, the Customs Service received reports that a large number of Korean photo albums were being transshipped before importation to the U.S. in an attempt to avoid antidumping penalties. Without otherwise attempting to verify the accuracy of that information or the country of origin of MBI’s imports the Customs Service refused to admit eleven MBI photo album shipments in late 1986. The Customs Service later seized the eleven shipments. The seizures were based on a physical test of the photo album pages, preliminary information supplied by a competitor company and a “Korea” marking stamped on the three-ring binder of some of the albums. Tr. B at 147. Customs also relied on the “drastic” shift in the declared country of origin of photo albums to [497]*497producers which did not, according to “the best knowledge” of Customs’ import specialists, have the production capacity to make photo albums. Tr. B at 150. No Customs agent visited any of the newly exporting factories to verify production before the seizures, although a Customs agent did visit the Three Leaf plant in 1987, more than ayear after the actions against MBI were undertaken to verify that Three Leaf was producing photo albums. Tr. B at 150, Jt. Exh. 22.

After the albums were seized, Customs Special Agent Ronald Kellmer asked the Customs Office of Regulations and Rulings (“ORR”) to determine whether the seized albums should be excluded. Tr. B at 197. Special Agent Kellmer reported to the ORR that the imported albums were entirely Korean-made and were only assembled and packaged in Taiwan. Tr. B at 163. Special Agent Kellmer testified that officers of MBI had told him that they had ordered and were using parts from Korea. Tr. B at 176. He later elaborated that either Mr. Bash or Mr. Leykin of MBI had stated to him that complete sets of components had been shipped from Korea and then simply assembled and “blister packed” in Taiwan. Tr. B at 203.

Special Agent Kellmer indicated that the basis for his statement was, at least in part, contained in Joint Exhibit 15, a set of handwritten notes of a meeting of Customs officials with Mr. Leykin, president of MBI, and counsel for MBI. Tr. B at 206. No other documentary evidence at trial supported Special Agent Kellmer’s testimony. The specific paragraph in Joint Exhibit 15 that Special Agent Kellmer referred to as supporting his assertion states, “In some cases: Korean leafs, rings, and flats are imported into Taiwan, assembled and then exported to U.S. as [a] Product of Taiwan.” Jt. Exh. 15 at 3 (emphasis in original).

Mr. Leykin testified to his recollection of the meeting described in Joint Exhibit 15. He stated that he had explained that MBI had no knowledge of any transshipments. The Customs officials had wanted to know if he knew about any other manufacturers in Taiwan that made albums for export to the United States. Tr. B at 452. When asked by examining counsel about the paragraph referred to in Special Agent Kellmer’s testimony, Mr. Leykin testified that “he asked me if I knew any assembly operations and I told him I heard of some whereby they were importing flats from Korea and assembled them in Taiwan. ” Tr. B at 453. He then stated that MBI’s Taiwanese supplier, Three Leaf, had more than enough capacity to produce flats (i.e. album covers), and that he had never heard of Three Leaf importing flats from anywhere. Tr. B. at 453.

The excerpt relied on by the government, when read in context, supports Mr. Leykin’s recollection of the meeting more credibly than Special Agent Kellmer’s. Special Agent Kellmer had earlier testified that he never knew that Three Leaf could produce album covers. Tr. B at 235.

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16 Ct. Int'l Trade 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mbi-merchandise-industries-inc-v-united-states-cit-1992.