USR Optonix, Inc. v. United States

2005 CIT 27
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedFebruary 18, 2005
Docket98-02723
StatusPublished

This text of 2005 CIT 27 (USR Optonix, 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
USR Optonix, Inc. v. United States, 2005 CIT 27 (cit 2005).

Opinion

Slip Op. 05-27

UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE

USR OPTONIX, INC.,

Plaintiff,

v. Court No. 98-08-02723

UNITED STATES, Before: Judge Timothy C. Stanceu

Defendant.

[Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment denied; defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment granted in part and denied in part]

Decided: February 18, 2005

Neville Peterson LLP (John M. Peterson and Curtis W. Knauss) for plaintiff.

Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General, Barbara S. Williams, Attorney in Charge, International Trade Field Office, and James A. Curley, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice; Beth C. Brotman, Office of Assistant Chief Counsel, United States Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, of Counsel, for defendant.

OPINION AND ORDER

STANCEU, Judge:

Plaintiff USR Optonix, Inc. (“Optonix”) challenges the determinations of tariff

classification that the United States Customs Service (“Customs”) applied to two products

imported during a period beginning in November 1994 and concluding in May 1997.1 Optonix

moves for summary judgment with respect to the classification of both products; defendant

1 The U.S. Customs Service now is renamed as the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection. See Homeland Security Act of 2002, Pub. L. 107-296, § 1502, 116 Stat. 2135 (2002); Reorg. Plan for the Dep’t of Homeland Security, H.R. Doc. No. 108-32 (2003). Court No. 98-08-02723 Page 2

United States cross-moves for summary judgment in its favor, also with respect to both products.

The court exercises jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(a) (2000).

The first product at issue, designated as “P22-RE1,” is a white powder consisting by

weight of at least 99 percent yttrium oxide (Y2O3). The remaining 1 percent or less of the

product consists of europium oxide. The product is represented by the formula “Y2O3:Eu” and

also is identified as “Yttrium Oxide: Europium Doped.” The second product, “P22-HCR2,” is a

red powder comprised by weight of at least 90 percent yttrium oxygen sulfide (Y2O2S),

10 percent or less europium oxygen sulfide (Eu2O2S), and 1 percent or less ferrous oxide (Fe2O3).

Each product is used as a material in the production of phosphorescent coatings that are applied

in the manufacturing of cathode ray tubes.

The court awards summary judgment to defendant on the issue of the tariff classification

of P22-RE1. The court concludes that there are no genuine issues of fact material to that tariff

classification and that the tariff classification determined by Customs was correct, entitling

defendant to judgment as a matter of law. The motions of both parties for summary judgment on

the tariff classification of P22-HCR2 are denied because of the existence of one or more genuine

issues of material fact.

I. BACKGROUND

Upon liquidation, Customs classified the entries of P22-RE1 that were made prior to

1995 in subheading 2846.90.50, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (“HTSUS”),

subject to duty at 3.7 percent ad valorem. The version of the provision that was in effect at the

time of the pre-1995 entries of P22-RE1 read as follows: Court No. 98-08-02723 Page 3

2846 Compounds, inorganic or organic, of rare-earth metals, of yttrium or of scandium, or of mixtures of these metals:

* * * 2846.90 Other: * * *

2846.90.50 Other. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.7%.

Customs classified entries of P22-RE1 made in 1995 and thereafter in subheading

2846.90.80, HTSUS, the provision that superceded the former subheading 2846.90.50, HTSUS.

The article description for heading 2846 and the duty applicable to the subheading at issue,

3.7 percent ad valorem, remained unchanged.

Upon liquidation, Customs classified entries of P22-HCR2 in subheading 3206.50.00,

HTSUS. At the time the entries were made, this tariff provision read, in relevant part, as

follows:

3206 . . . inorganic products of a kind used as luminophores, whether or not chemically defined:

* * *

3206.50.00 Inorganic products of a kind used as luminophores. . . . . . . .10.0%

HTSUS, 1994.2

Plaintiff protested the classification determinations that Customs made upon liquidation.

Following denial of the protests, plaintiff commenced this action.

2 During the time plaintiff imported the subject entries, the duty rate was reduced in stages, as follows: 1995, 9.3%; 1996, 8.6%; 1997, 7.9%. Court No. 98-08-02723 Page 4

A. Contentions of the Parties on the Classification of P22-RE1

Defendant maintains that Customs was correct in determining upon liquidation to classify

P22-RE1 in subheading 2846.90.50, HTSUS, and subsequently in subheading 2846.90.80,

HTSUS. In challenging that determination, plaintiff’s principal argument is that P22-RE1 is

excluded from the scope of heading 2846 because it is a mixture of two compounds (i.e., yttrium

oxide and europium oxide) and therefore is not itself a “compound” within the meaning of the

article description for the heading (“Compounds, inorganic or organic, of rare-earth metals, of

yttrium or of scandium, or of mixtures of these metals”). On the basis of this assertion, plaintiff

advocates classification in subheading 3824.90.39, HTSUS, free of duty. That provision pertains

to “mixtures of two or more inorganic compounds”; the superior heading (heading 3824,

HTSUS) is a “basket” heading that includes, inter alia, “chemical products and preparations of

the chemical or allied industries . . . not elsewhere specified or included.”

Plaintiff claims an alternative classification in subheading 2846.90.20, HTSUS, the

article description for which is “[m]ixtures of rare-earth oxides or of rare-earth chlorides.”

Plaintiff argues that, should the court determine that P22-RE1 falls within the scope of heading

2846, the court should rule that P22-RE1 is classified in subheading 2846.90.20 based on its

assertion that both yttrium oxide and europium oxide are rare-earth oxides.

Defendant argues that P22-RE1 is correctly classified in subheading 2846.90.80, HTSUS,

(and in the predecessor subheading 2846.90.50, HTSUS, prior to 1995) because heading 2846, in

defendant’s view, includes mixtures of oxides of yttrium and europium. As confirmation that the

scope of the heading includes mixtures as well as compounds, defendant points to the article

description for another eight-digit subheading within the heading, subheading 2846.90.20, Court No. 98-08-02723 Page 5

HTSUS, which, as noted above, reads “[m]ixtures of rare-earth oxides or of rare-earth

chlorides.” Defendant also directs the court’s attention to Explanatory Note 32.06, which

contains a reference identifying headings 2843 to 2846 as appropriate for the classification of a

mixture of yttrium oxide and europium oxide. Further, defendant points to the first paragraph of

Explanatory Note 28.46 in support of its contention that heading 2846 includes mixtures of

oxides of the metals mentioned in the article description for the heading; plaintiff relies on this

same paragraph to support its argument that mixtures such as P22-RE1 are excluded from

heading 2846 because they are not “compounds of mixtures” but instead are mixtures of

compounds made intentionally for special purposes.

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