Notice of Issuance of Final Determination Concerning Multifunctional Machines, 64094-64095 [E9-29056]
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64094
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 233 / Monday, December 7, 2009 / Notices
Abstract: The Form I–510 is executed
upon the arrival of an alien crewman
within the purview of Section 253 of the
Immigration and Nationality Act. The
information is used by CBP to help
ensure that expenses of caring for an
alien crewman are reimbursed by the
carrier.
Current Actions: CBP is proposing to
extend this collection of information
with no change to the burden hours.
Type of Review: Extension (without
change).
Estimated Number of Respondents:
100.
Estimated Number of Annual
Responses per Respondent: 1.
Estimated Total Annual Responses:
100.
Estimated Time per Response: 5
minutes.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 8.
If additional information is required
contact: Tracey Denning, U.S. Customs
and Border Protection, Office of
Regulations and Rulings, 799 9th Street,
NW., 7th Floor, Washington, DC 20229–
1177, at 202–325–0265.
Dated: December 2, 2009.
Tracey Denning,
Agency Clearance Officer, U.S. Customs and
Border Protection.
[FR Doc. E9–29058 Filed 12–4–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–14–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Notice of Issuance of Final
Determination Concerning
Multifunctional Machines
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
Attachment
This document provides
notice that U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (‘‘CBP’’) has issued a final
determination concerning the country of
origin of certain multifunctional
machines which may be offered to the
United States Government under a
government procurement contract.
Based upon the facts presented, in the
final determination CBP concluded that
Japan is the country of origin of the
multifunctional machines for purposes
of U.S. Government procurement.
DATES: The final determination was
issued on November 30, 2009. A copy
of the final determination is attached.
Any party-at-interest, as defined in 19
CFR 177.22(d), may seek judicial review
VerDate Nov<24>2008
14:05 Dec 04, 2009
Jkt 220001
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karen S. Greene, Valuation and Special
Programs Branch, Regulations and
Rulings, Office of International Trade
(202–325–0041).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that on, pursuant to
subpart B of part 177, Customs
Regulations (19 CFR part 177, subpart
B), CBP issued a final determination
concerning the country of origin of
certain multifunctional machines which
may be offered to the United States
Government under a government
procurement contract. This final
determination, in HQ H039955, was
issued at the request of Sharp
Electronics Corporation under
procedures set forth at 19 CFR part 177,
subpart B, which implements Title III of
the Trade Agreements Act of 1979, as
amended (19 U.S.C. 2511–18). In the
final determination, CBP concluded
that, based upon the facts presented,
certain articles will be substantially
transformed in Japan. Therefore, CBP
found that Japan is the country of origin
of the finished articles for purposes of
U.S. Government procurement.
Section 177.29, Customs Regulations
(19 CFR 177.29), provides that notice of
final determinations shall be published
in the Federal Register within 60 days
of the date the final determination is
issued. Section 177.30, CBP Regulations
(19 CFR 177.30), provides that any
party-at-interest, as defined in 19 CFR
177.22(d), may seek judicial review of a
final determination within 30 days of
publication of such determination in the
Federal Register.
Dated: December 2, 2009.
Sandra L. Bell,
Executive Director, Office of Regulations and
Rulings, Office of International Trade.
AGENCY: U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, Department of Homeland
Security.
ACTION: Notice of final determination.
SUMMARY:
of this final determination within
January 6, 2010.
HQ H039955
November 30, 2009
OT:RR:CTF:VS H039955 KSG
Mr. Edmund Baumgartner, Esq.
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP
1540 Broadway
New York, NY 10036
Re: U.S. Government Procurement; Title III,
Trade Agreements Act of 1979; Country of
Origin of Multifunctional Printer
Machines; substantial transformation
Dear Mr. Baumgartner:
This is in response to your letter, dated
November 26, 2007, requesting a final
determination on behalf of Sharp Electronics
Corporation (‘‘Sharp’’) pursuant to subpart B
of 19 CFR Part 177. We apologize for the
delay in our response.
Under these regulations, which implement
Title III of the Trade Agreements Act of 1979,
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Frm 00050
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
as amended (19 U.S.C. 2511 et seq.)(‘‘TAA’’),
CBP issues country of origin advisory rulings
and final determinations as to whether an
article is or would be a product of a
designated country or instrumentality for the
purposes of granting waivers of certain ‘‘Buy
American’’ restrictions in U.S. law or
practice for products offered for sale to the
U.S. Government.
This final determination concerns the
country of origin of certain multifunctional
printer machines that Sharp may sell to the
U.S. Government. We note that Sharp is a
party-at-interest within the meaning of 19
CFR 177.22(d)(1) and is entitled to request
this final determination. A conference was
held on this matter at Headquarters on
August 25, 2008.
FACTS:
This case involves the Sharp Dragon II Jmodels (Sharp model # MX–M550N/UJ, MX–
M620N/UJ, and MX–M700N/UJ). These
models have monochrome copying, printing,
faxing and duplex scanning functions.
Sharp Corporation, Sharp’s parent
company (‘‘Sharp Japan’’) developed the
Dragon II J-models in Japan, including the
engineering, development, design and art
work processes. The production of the
Dragon II J–Models begins with the
preparation of the key subassemblies and
units. According to your submission, there
are 11 main subassemblies that compose the
Dragon II J-models. Of the eleven
subassemblies that compose the Dragon II J–
Models, only the drum unit subassembly is
assembled in Japan. The remaining 10
subassemblies are assembled in China with
parts from Japan and China. The final
assembly of the merchandise is performed in
Japan.
The Subassemblies Assembled in China
According to your submission, the
subassemblies which are themselves
assembled in China are essentially as follows:
The laser scanning unit (‘‘LSU’’) creates
text or images on the photoconductor drum.
It consists of a housing, synchronous lens,
two cylindrical lenses, and asynchronous
lower lens.
The transfer belt unit transfers the image
created on the drum onto the surface of the
paper for printing.
The multifunctional printer cabinet
subassembly is comprised of the mechanical
frame for the printer engine along with
exterior panels, paper transport and exit
components, paper driver motors, cooling
fans and filters, sensors and switches for
detecting paper and whether doors are open
or closed, the paper manual feed unit, the
toner supply motors and sensors, paper
transport motors and sensors, the duplex
section, the toner image transfer section, the
image scanner section and the operation
panel.
The main charger unit subassembly
charges the surface of the drum evenly by
application of high voltage so that it can form
electrostatic images when irradiated by laser
beams.
The process unit subassembly houses the
drum used for creating images. The drum is
produced and installed in China.
The developer unit is used to transfer toner
evenly over the latent image created on the
E:\FR\FM\07DEN1.SGM
07DEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 233 / Monday, December 7, 2009 / Notices
drum unit. It is composed of a developing
roller, a developer doctor, a mixing roller,
humidity sensor, developer and toner.
The multifunctional printer control unit is
the combination of a printed circuit board
with a number of sophisticated integrated
circuits. It controls the electrical and
mechanical units. The control printed wiring
board (‘‘PWB’’) and mother PWB are stuffed
in China.
The Duplex Single Pass Feeder unit
transports original documents fed into the
multifunctional printer to the scanner. It
contains a contact image sensor (‘‘CIS’’).
The fusing unit is used to fix the
transferred image onto paper.
The toner hopper unit subassembly
transports toner from the hopper to the
developing unit and transports waste toner to
the waste toner section.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
Japanese Parts and Subassembly
The drum unit, which is assembled in
Japan, contains the drum, a core component
for creating images.
The parts that are made in Japan that are
claimed to be critical components include:
the LSU housing, the LSU fixing base, the
LSU synchronous lower lens, LSU two
cylinder lenses, the transfer belt, cleaning
brushes, drum separator pawls, the cleaning
brush roller, the toner waste pipe, the drum,
the mixing roller, the humidity sensor, the
diodes and resistors, condensors, the flash
ROM, the boot ROM, the firmware, the
SDRAM, the application-specific integrated
circuit (‘‘ASIC’’), the multifunctional printer
input/output ASIC, the system control ASIC,
the LCD panel control ASIC, the USB
controller, the CIS, the fusing gear, the
separator pawl, the web roller, the cleaning
sub roller, the cleaning roller bearing, the
lower cleaning roller and the thermostats.
The firmware and ASICS are developed
and produced in Japan. Further, the
developer (iron powder beads) and toner are
produced in Japan.
Final Assembly and Testing In Japan
The final assembly of the machines takes
place in Japan. Sharp Japan starts with a MFP
cabinet unit subassembly and attaches the
various subassemblies by screws.
The printer control unit (MFP control unit)
together with the flash ROM (which includes
the firmware) is installed in a slot on the
back side of the MFP cabinet. The flash ROM
is installed into the slot on the rear of the
MFP cabinet unit. A network interface card
is installed. An additional flash ROM and a
network interface card are installed.
Testing, final inspection and packaging of
the units for shipment to the U.S. occurs in
Japan.
ISSUE:
What is the country of origin of the subject
multifunctional printer machines for the
purpose of U.S. Government procurement?
LAW AND ANALYSIS:
Pursuant to Subpart B of Part 177, 19 CFR
§ 177.21 et seq., which implements Title III
of the Trade Agreements Act of 1979, as
amended (19 U.S.C. § 2511 et seq.), CBP
issues country of origin advisory rulings and
final determinations as to whether an article
is or would be a product of a designated
VerDate Nov<24>2008
14:05 Dec 04, 2009
Jkt 220001
country or instrumentality for the purposes
of granting waivers of certain ‘‘Buy
American’’ restrictions in U.S. law or
practice for products offered for sale to the
U.S. Government.
Under the rule of origin set forth under 19
U.S.C. 2518(4)(B):
An article is a product of a country or
instrumentality only if (i) it is wholly the
growth, product, or manufacture of that
country or instrumentality, or (ii) in the case
of an article which consists in whole or in
part of materials from another country or
instrumentality, it has been substantially
transformed into a new and different article
of commerce with a name, character, or use
distinct from that of the article or articles
from which it was so transformed.
See also 19 CFR § 177.22(a).
In determining whether the combining of
parts or materials constitutes a substantial
transformation, the determinative issue is the
extent of operations performed and whether
the parts lose their identity and become an
integral part of the new article. Belcrest
Linens v. United States, 573 F. Supp. 1149
(Ct. Int’l Trade 1983), aff’d, 741 F.2d 1368
(Fed. Cir. 1984). Assembly operations that are
minimal or simple, as opposed to complex or
meaningful, will generally not result in a
substantial transformation. See C.S.D. 80–
111, C.S.D. 85–25, C.S.D. 89–110, C.S.D. 89–
118, C.S.D. 90–51, and C.S.D. 90–97. In
C.S.D. 85–25, 19 Cust. Bull. 844 (1985), CBP
held that for purposes of the Generalized
System of Preferences (‘‘GSP’’), the assembly
of a large number of fabricated components
onto a printed circuit board in a process
involving a considerable amount of time and
skill resulted in a substantial transformation.
In that case, in excess of 50 discrete
fabricated components (such as resistors,
capacitors, diodes, integrated circuits,
sockets, and connectors) were assembled.
Whether an operation is complex and
meaningful depends on the nature of the
operation, including the number of
components assembled, number of different
operations, time, skill level required,
attention to detail, quality control, the value
added to the article, and the overall
employment generated by the manufacturing
process.
In order to determine whether a substantial
transformation occurs when components of
various origins are assembled into completed
products, CBP considers the totality of the
circumstances and makes such
determinations on a case-by-case basis. The
country of origin of the item’s components,
extent of the processing that occurs within a
country, and whether such processing
renders a product with a new name,
character, and use are primary considerations
in such cases. Additionally, factors such as
the resources expended on product design
and development, extent and nature of postassembly inspection and testing procedures,
and worker skill required during the actual
manufacturing process will be considered
when determining whether a substantial
transformation has occurred. No one factor is
determinative.
CBP has held in a number of cases
involving similar merchandise that complex
and meaningful assembly operations
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
64095
involving a large number of components
result in a substantial transformation. In
Headquarters Ruling Letter (‘‘HRL’’) 563491
(February 8, 2007), CBP addressed the
country of origin of certain digital color
multifunctional systems manufactured by
Sharp and assembled in Japan of various
Japanese—and Chinese—origin parts. In that
ruling, CBP determined that color
multifunctional systems were a product of
Japan based on the fact that ‘‘although several
subassemblies are assembled in China,
enough of the Japanese subassemblies and
individual components serve major functions
and are high in value, in particular, the
transfer belt, control box unit, applicationspecific integrated circuits, charged couple
device, and laser diodes.’’ Further CBP found
that the testing and adjustments performed in
Japan were technical and complex and the
assembly operations that occurred in Japan
were sufficiently complex and meaningful.
See also HRL 562936, dated March 17, 2004.
The processing operations presented in
this case are most similar to that presented
in HRL 563491. The composition and
assembly process of a number of key
subassemblies such as the laser scanning
unit, the transfer belt unit and the controller
unit are not meaningfully different from the
assembly operations performed on the
merchandise in our previous ruling. Taking
all of the facts and circumstances into
account, and in light of our previous
decision, we find that the operations
performed in Japan including the final
assembly, testing and related operations to be
sufficiently complex and meaningful to result
in a new and distinct article of commerce in
Japan. Therefore, we find that the Dragon II–
J multifunctional printer machines are
products of Japan for the purposes of U.S.
Government procurement. We note however,
that with so many of the subassemblies
performed in China, the transfer of additional
parts or processing from Japan to China
might well require a different result.
HOLDING:
Based on the facts of this case, the country
of origin of the Dragon II J-model
multifunctional printer machines is Japan for
purposes of U.S. Government procurement.
Notice of this final determination will be
given in the Federal Register, as required by
19 CFR § 177.29. Any party-at-interest other
than the party which requested this final
determination may request, pursuant to 19
CFR § 177.31 that CBP reexamine the matter
anew and issue a new final determination.
Pursuant to 19 CFR § 177.30, any party-atinterest may, within 30 days after publication
of the Federal Register Notice referenced
above, seek judicial review of this final
determination before the Court of
International Trade.
Sincerely,
Sandra L. Bell,
Executive Director, Office of Regulations and
Rulings Office of International Trade.
[FR Doc. E9–29056 Filed 12–4–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–14–P
E:\FR\FM\07DEN1.SGM
07DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 233 (Monday, December 7, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 64094-64095]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-29056]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Notice of Issuance of Final Determination Concerning
Multifunctional Machines
AGENCY: U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Department of Homeland
Security.
ACTION: Notice of final determination.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document provides notice that U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (``CBP'') has issued a final determination concerning the
country of origin of certain multifunctional machines which may be
offered to the United States Government under a government procurement
contract. Based upon the facts presented, in the final determination
CBP concluded that Japan is the country of origin of the
multifunctional machines for purposes of U.S. Government procurement.
DATES: The final determination was issued on November 30, 2009. A copy
of the final determination is attached. Any party-at-interest, as
defined in 19 CFR 177.22(d), may seek judicial review of this final
determination within January 6, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karen S. Greene, Valuation and Special
Programs Branch, Regulations and Rulings, Office of International Trade
(202-325-0041).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is hereby given that on, pursuant to
subpart B of part 177, Customs Regulations (19 CFR part 177, subpart
B), CBP issued a final determination concerning the country of origin
of certain multifunctional machines which may be offered to the United
States Government under a government procurement contract. This final
determination, in HQ H039955, was issued at the request of Sharp
Electronics Corporation under procedures set forth at 19 CFR part 177,
subpart B, which implements Title III of the Trade Agreements Act of
1979, as amended (19 U.S.C. 2511-18). In the final determination, CBP
concluded that, based upon the facts presented, certain articles will
be substantially transformed in Japan. Therefore, CBP found that Japan
is the country of origin of the finished articles for purposes of U.S.
Government procurement.
Section 177.29, Customs Regulations (19 CFR 177.29), provides that
notice of final determinations shall be published in the Federal
Register within 60 days of the date the final determination is issued.
Section 177.30, CBP Regulations (19 CFR 177.30), provides that any
party-at-interest, as defined in 19 CFR 177.22(d), may seek judicial
review of a final determination within 30 days of publication of such
determination in the Federal Register.
Dated: December 2, 2009.
Sandra L. Bell,
Executive Director, Office of Regulations and Rulings, Office of
International Trade.
Attachment
HQ H039955
November 30, 2009
OT:RR:CTF:VS H039955 KSG
Mr. Edmund Baumgartner, Esq.
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP
1540 Broadway
New York, NY 10036
Re: U.S. Government Procurement; Title III, Trade Agreements Act of
1979; Country of Origin of Multifunctional Printer Machines;
substantial transformation
Dear Mr. Baumgartner:
This is in response to your letter, dated November 26, 2007,
requesting a final determination on behalf of Sharp Electronics
Corporation (``Sharp'') pursuant to subpart B of 19 CFR Part 177. We
apologize for the delay in our response.
Under these regulations, which implement Title III of the Trade
Agreements Act of 1979, as amended (19 U.S.C. 2511 et
seq.)(``TAA''), CBP issues country of origin advisory rulings and
final determinations as to whether an article is or would be a
product of a designated country or instrumentality for the purposes
of granting waivers of certain ``Buy American'' restrictions in U.S.
law or practice for products offered for sale to the U.S.
Government.
This final determination concerns the country of origin of
certain multifunctional printer machines that Sharp may sell to the
U.S. Government. We note that Sharp is a party-at-interest within
the meaning of 19 CFR 177.22(d)(1) and is entitled to request this
final determination. A conference was held on this matter at
Headquarters on August 25, 2008.
FACTS:
This case involves the Sharp Dragon II J-models (Sharp model
MX-M550N/UJ, MX-M620N/UJ, and MX-M700N/UJ). These models
have monochrome copying, printing, faxing and duplex scanning
functions.
Sharp Corporation, Sharp's parent company (``Sharp Japan'')
developed the Dragon II J-models in Japan, including the
engineering, development, design and art work processes. The
production of the Dragon II J-Models begins with the preparation of
the key subassemblies and units. According to your submission, there
are 11 main subassemblies that compose the Dragon II J-models. Of
the eleven subassemblies that compose the Dragon II J-Models, only
the drum unit subassembly is assembled in Japan. The remaining 10
subassemblies are assembled in China with parts from Japan and
China. The final assembly of the merchandise is performed in Japan.
The Subassemblies Assembled in China
According to your submission, the subassemblies which are
themselves assembled in China are essentially as follows:
The laser scanning unit (``LSU'') creates text or images on the
photoconductor drum. It consists of a housing, synchronous lens, two
cylindrical lenses, and asynchronous lower lens.
The transfer belt unit transfers the image created on the drum
onto the surface of the paper for printing.
The multifunctional printer cabinet subassembly is comprised of
the mechanical frame for the printer engine along with exterior
panels, paper transport and exit components, paper driver motors,
cooling fans and filters, sensors and switches for detecting paper
and whether doors are open or closed, the paper manual feed unit,
the toner supply motors and sensors, paper transport motors and
sensors, the duplex section, the toner image transfer section, the
image scanner section and the operation panel.
The main charger unit subassembly charges the surface of the
drum evenly by application of high voltage so that it can form
electrostatic images when irradiated by laser beams.
The process unit subassembly houses the drum used for creating
images. The drum is produced and installed in China.
The developer unit is used to transfer toner evenly over the
latent image created on the
[[Page 64095]]
drum unit. It is composed of a developing roller, a developer
doctor, a mixing roller, humidity sensor, developer and toner.
The multifunctional printer control unit is the combination of a
printed circuit board with a number of sophisticated integrated
circuits. It controls the electrical and mechanical units. The
control printed wiring board (``PWB'') and mother PWB are stuffed in
China.
The Duplex Single Pass Feeder unit transports original documents
fed into the multifunctional printer to the scanner. It contains a
contact image sensor (``CIS'').
The fusing unit is used to fix the transferred image onto paper.
The toner hopper unit subassembly transports toner from the
hopper to the developing unit and transports waste toner to the
waste toner section.
Japanese Parts and Subassembly
The drum unit, which is assembled in Japan, contains the drum, a
core component for creating images.
The parts that are made in Japan that are claimed to be critical
components include: the LSU housing, the LSU fixing base, the LSU
synchronous lower lens, LSU two cylinder lenses, the transfer belt,
cleaning brushes, drum separator pawls, the cleaning brush roller,
the toner waste pipe, the drum, the mixing roller, the humidity
sensor, the diodes and resistors, condensors, the flash ROM, the
boot ROM, the firmware, the SDRAM, the application-specific
integrated circuit (``ASIC''), the multifunctional printer input/
output ASIC, the system control ASIC, the LCD panel control ASIC,
the USB controller, the CIS, the fusing gear, the separator pawl,
the web roller, the cleaning sub roller, the cleaning roller
bearing, the lower cleaning roller and the thermostats.
The firmware and ASICS are developed and produced in Japan.
Further, the developer (iron powder beads) and toner are produced in
Japan.
Final Assembly and Testing In Japan
The final assembly of the machines takes place in Japan. Sharp
Japan starts with a MFP cabinet unit subassembly and attaches the
various subassemblies by screws.
The printer control unit (MFP control unit) together with the
flash ROM (which includes the firmware) is installed in a slot on
the back side of the MFP cabinet. The flash ROM is installed into
the slot on the rear of the MFP cabinet unit. A network interface
card is installed. An additional flash ROM and a network interface
card are installed.
Testing, final inspection and packaging of the units for
shipment to the U.S. occurs in Japan.
ISSUE:
What is the country of origin of the subject multifunctional
printer machines for the purpose of U.S. Government procurement?
LAW AND ANALYSIS:
Pursuant to Subpart B of Part 177, 19 CFR Sec. 177.21 et seq.,
which implements Title III of the Trade Agreements Act of 1979, as
amended (19 U.S.C. Sec. 2511 et seq.), CBP issues country of origin
advisory rulings and final determinations as to whether an article
is or would be a product of a designated country or instrumentality
for the purposes of granting waivers of certain ``Buy American''
restrictions in U.S. law or practice for products offered for sale
to the U.S. Government.
Under the rule of origin set forth under 19 U.S.C. 2518(4)(B):
An article is a product of a country or instrumentality only if
(i) it is wholly the growth, product, or manufacture of that country
or instrumentality, or (ii) in the case of an article which consists
in whole or in part of materials from another country or
instrumentality, it has been substantially transformed into a new
and different article of commerce with a name, character, or use
distinct from that of the article or articles from which it was so
transformed.
See also 19 CFR Sec. 177.22(a).
In determining whether the combining of parts or materials
constitutes a substantial transformation, the determinative issue is
the extent of operations performed and whether the parts lose their
identity and become an integral part of the new article. Belcrest
Linens v. United States, 573 F. Supp. 1149 (Ct. Int'l Trade 1983),
aff'd, 741 F.2d 1368 (Fed. Cir. 1984). Assembly operations that are
minimal or simple, as opposed to complex or meaningful, will
generally not result in a substantial transformation. See C.S.D. 80-
111, C.S.D. 85-25, C.S.D. 89-110, C.S.D. 89-118, C.S.D. 90-51, and
C.S.D. 90-97. In C.S.D. 85-25, 19 Cust. Bull. 844 (1985), CBP held
that for purposes of the Generalized System of Preferences
(``GSP''), the assembly of a large number of fabricated components
onto a printed circuit board in a process involving a considerable
amount of time and skill resulted in a substantial transformation.
In that case, in excess of 50 discrete fabricated components (such
as resistors, capacitors, diodes, integrated circuits, sockets, and
connectors) were assembled. Whether an operation is complex and
meaningful depends on the nature of the operation, including the
number of components assembled, number of different operations,
time, skill level required, attention to detail, quality control,
the value added to the article, and the overall employment generated
by the manufacturing process.
In order to determine whether a substantial transformation
occurs when components of various origins are assembled into
completed products, CBP considers the totality of the circumstances
and makes such determinations on a case-by-case basis. The country
of origin of the item's components, extent of the processing that
occurs within a country, and whether such processing renders a
product with a new name, character, and use are primary
considerations in such cases. Additionally, factors such as the
resources expended on product design and development, extent and
nature of post-assembly inspection and testing procedures, and
worker skill required during the actual manufacturing process will
be considered when determining whether a substantial transformation
has occurred. No one factor is determinative.
CBP has held in a number of cases involving similar merchandise
that complex and meaningful assembly operations involving a large
number of components result in a substantial transformation. In
Headquarters Ruling Letter (``HRL'') 563491 (February 8, 2007), CBP
addressed the country of origin of certain digital color
multifunctional systems manufactured by Sharp and assembled in Japan
of various Japanese--and Chinese--origin parts. In that ruling, CBP
determined that color multifunctional systems were a product of
Japan based on the fact that ``although several subassemblies are
assembled in China, enough of the Japanese subassemblies and
individual components serve major functions and are high in value,
in particular, the transfer belt, control box unit, application-
specific integrated circuits, charged couple device, and laser
diodes.'' Further CBP found that the testing and adjustments
performed in Japan were technical and complex and the assembly
operations that occurred in Japan were sufficiently complex and
meaningful. See also HRL 562936, dated March 17, 2004.
The processing operations presented in this case are most
similar to that presented in HRL 563491. The composition and
assembly process of a number of key subassemblies such as the laser
scanning unit, the transfer belt unit and the controller unit are
not meaningfully different from the assembly operations performed on
the merchandise in our previous ruling. Taking all of the facts and
circumstances into account, and in light of our previous decision,
we find that the operations performed in Japan including the final
assembly, testing and related operations to be sufficiently complex
and meaningful to result in a new and distinct article of commerce
in Japan. Therefore, we find that the Dragon II-J multifunctional
printer machines are products of Japan for the purposes of U.S.
Government procurement. We note however, that with so many of the
subassemblies performed in China, the transfer of additional parts
or processing from Japan to China might well require a different
result.
HOLDING:
Based on the facts of this case, the country of origin of the
Dragon II J-model multifunctional printer machines is Japan for
purposes of U.S. Government procurement.
Notice of this final determination will be given in the Federal
Register, as required by 19 CFR Sec. 177.29. Any party-at-interest
other than the party which requested this final determination may
request, pursuant to 19 CFR Sec. 177.31 that CBP reexamine the
matter anew and issue a new final determination. Pursuant to 19 CFR
Sec. 177.30, any party-at-interest may, within 30 days after
publication of the Federal Register Notice referenced above, seek
judicial review of this final determination before the Court of
International Trade.
Sincerely,
Sandra L. Bell,
Executive Director, Office of Regulations and Rulings Office of
International Trade.
[FR Doc. E9-29056 Filed 12-4-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111-14-P