Sweet Briar, Inc. v. United States

73 Cust. Ct. 93, 1974 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 3008
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1974
DocketC.D. 4558
StatusPublished

This text of 73 Cust. Ct. 93 (Sweet Briar, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Customs Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweet Briar, Inc. v. United States, 73 Cust. Ct. 93, 1974 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 3008 (cusc 1974).

Opinion

Richardson, Judge:

The merchandise in this case consists of ladies dresses which were manufactured in and exported from the Philippine Islands in 1963 and 1964, classified in liquidation under TSUS item 382.03 upon entry at the port of Atlanta, Georgia, and accorded the duty rate reduction authorized for “Philippine articles” under General Headnote 3(c) of the Tariff Schedules of the United States. The plaintiff protests the reliquidation of 11 entries pursuant to 19 U.S.C.A., section 1521 (section 521, Tariff Act of 1930) under which the reduced duty rate was disallowed as to two of the entries, namely, A188 and A1272, allegedly because the dress material was said to [95]*95have been imported into the Philippines directly from Japan and not from the United States, and the values were increased on all of the entries to include an “embroidery charge” said to have been omitted from the invoice values. The reliquidations resulted in increased duties being assessed against the plaintiff, and it filed the instant protest alleging the reliquidations to be illegal.

Plaintiff contends that a reliquidation under section 1521 does not authorize a “reappraisement” of the merchandise, and further, that the evidence does not establish that the district director either made a finding of probable cause to believe that there was fraud or that he could have had probable cause to believe there was fraud in the case.

The case was submitted upon the official papers which were offered by the plaintiff, and documentary evidence and the testimony of two witnesses which was offered by the defendant.

The record shows that the “reliquidations”, had their genesis in two reports of customs representatives on the subjects of undervaluation and false invoicing. The first report (exhibit B-l) is authorized by Customs Representative Perry J. 'Spanos stationed in Hong. Kong, and is dated June 19,1964. It deals with Sweet Briar entries made at ports other than Atlanta. The Spanos report states the relationship between Sweet Briar (the American importer), Kalaw Clothes Factory (the Philippine manufacturer) and Toyo Menka Kaisha (the Japanese seller) as follows:

Sweet Briar, Inc., of the United States ships United 'States made1 (or Japanese made, but dyed and finished in the United States) cloth material on consignment to Kalaw Clothes Factory in Manila. Toyo Menka Kaisha, Osaka, Japan, ships various accessories such as buttons, zippers, belt-backings, hook and eye, on consignment to Kalaw Clothes Factory in Manila.
Kalaw Clothes Factory cuts and sews the fabric into ladies dresses, suits, and blouses and then ships the garments to Sweet Briar, Inc., of the United States. The payments are arranged as follows: Sweet Briar, Inc., of the United States,-advances a letter of credit to Toyo Menka Kaisha of Hong Kong which includes the value of the accessories, the making charges and commission (profit) earned by Toyo Menka. Toyo Menka, Hong Kong, advances a letter of credit to Toyo Menka, Osaka, for the value of the accessories and another letter of credit to Kalaw Clothes Factory in Manila for the making charges. This operation is graphically illustrated on attached Exhibit A.

The “Exhibit A” referred to in the Spanos report also indicates, among other things, that the Sweet Briar payments to Toyo Menka [96]*96Kaisha, Hong Kong, included an amount for “embroidery charges.” However, the report asserts that certain embroidery charges incurred in the Philippines on uncut material of American origin shipped there by Sweet Briar were not listed on the invoices covering the finished garments coming back to this country. In this connection the report states:

The additional embroidery cost has never been shown on any of the invoices of supporting documents.. . .

And the Spanos report goes on to state:

The reason for the numerous irregularities in the invoices of the instant merchandise listed in the letter from the customs agent in charge, Charleston, South Carolina, dated April 29, 1964 (C-8-50), are possibly duo to “slip ups” by the seller in not adding the correct embroidery charges on the final invoice.

The “seller,” according to the Spanos report, is Toyo Menka Kaisha, Ltd., of Osaka, Japan, who, the record shows, had also entered into a written contract with Kalaw Clothes Factory to furnish Kalaw with “raw materials” and “supplies” to be made into finished garments and shipped to any destination (except communist dominated territories) as instructed by Toyo Menka Kaisha. (“Exhibit B” of the Spanos report.) And it was the “seller” who controlled the price quotations recorded on the invoices investigated in the Spanos report.

The second report (exhibit B-3) giving rise to the “reliquidations” is authored by Senior Customs Representative Stewart H. Adams, also stationed in Hong Kong, dated July 13, 1965. This report transmits to the customs agent in charge at Savannah, Georgia, certified copies of Philippine customs documents purporting to show “that 21 United States entries were made of other than United States and Philippine materials.” The Philippine documents referred to in the Stewart report are said to involve 11 entries made at Atlanta, 9 made at San Francisco, and 1 made at Few York. Copies of ,some of these documents are annexed to the official papers in entry A1272,2 and consist of: (1) a certificate of inspection, identification, and loading of the merchandise covered by entry A1272 pertaining to 624 dozen ladies dresses issued by the Philippine Embroidery and Apparel, Control and Inspection Board, (2) a listing of entry numbers of merchandise imported into the Philippines together with a description and quantity of the merchandise stapled to the reverse side of the aforementioned certificate, and' (3) four Philippine customs entries covering rayon and cotton fabrics imported from Japan and bearing entry numbers [97]*97which are the same as some of the entry numbers appearing on the aforementioned listing.

On the basis of exhibits B-l and B-3, among other things, a third report (exhibit B) was compiled, and this by George 0. Corcoran, Jr., customs agent in charge at the port of Savannah, who was one of the two witnesses who testified at the trial herein. The Corcoran report was addressed to the district director at Savannah under date of February 14,1966, and reported alleged violations under 19 U.S.C.A.,' sections 1481,1485, and 1592 against the plaintiff.

With respect to the omission of the embroidery charges reported in exhibit B-l, the Corcoran report states:

During the investigation in the offices of Kalaw Clothes Factory, it was found that an embroidery charge averaging $9.20 per dozen for dresses, $4.50 per dozen for ladies’ suits and $2.54 per dozen for ladies’ blouses is incurred during the manufacture of these items; and this charge is not included on the invoices which were filed in support of entries covering the importation of this type of clothing.

And as to the entries at bar, the Corcoran report states:

... A review of the Atlanta consumption entries covering Kalaw’s shipments to Sweet Briar, Inc. disclosed the embroidery charges were not shown on the supporting invoices of seventeen entries.

With respect to the matter of false invoicing (i.e., country of origin), the Corcoran report states:

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