EATON, Judge.
Before the court is Roche Vitamins, Inc.'s ("plaintiff or "Roche") challenge to the classification by United States Customs and Border Protection ("Customs") of Roche's product "BetaTab 20%" ("the merchandise" or "BetaTab"). The court exercises jurisdiction pursuant to 28
Plaintiff challenges Customs' classification of the merchandise, entered on December 16, 2002, under the 2002 Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States ("HTSUS") subheading 2106.90.97 as "[f]ood preparations not elsewhere specified or included: [o]ther: [o]ther." Joint Proposed Pretrial Order, Sched. ¶ 14 (ECF Dkt. No. 93) ("PTO"). Plaintiff, the importer of record, timely filed a protest to the liquidation of the merchandise and, after paying all assessed duties and fees, commenced this action when its protest was denied. PTO ¶¶ 1, 5-6. Plaintiff argues that the "merchandise is properly classifiable as a synthetic organic coloring matter and/or preparations based thereon. [B]eta-carotene, under [HTSUS] subheading [3204.19.35]." Pl.'s Compl. ¶ 13 (ECF Dkt. No. 4). In the alternative, Roche also claims that the merchandise is classifiable under subheading K3204.19.35 of the Pharmaceutical Appendix and under HTSUS subheadings 2936.10.00 and 2936.90.00 as "provitamins."
On December 23, 2010, this Court denied Roche's motion for summary judgment. Roche Vitamins, Inc. v. United States, 34 CIT ___, ___, 750 F.Supp.2d 1367, 1382 (2010) (Wallach, J.) ("Roche I"). There, the Court held that genuine issues of fact as to the principal use of the merchandise and the functionality of the merchandise's ingredients other than beta-carotene precluded summary judgment. Id. at ___, 750 F.Supp.2d at 1378, 1382.
During the course of the trial, the court heard testimony from three witnesses called by the plaintiff and one witness called by the United States. Plaintiffs witnesses were Dr. Jean-Claude Tritsch, Roche's technical director at the time of importation, Dr. Steven Schwartz, an expert on the bioavailability of carotenoids, and Lynda Doyle, a former employee of Roche's marketing department with knowledge of Roche's marketing strategy for the merchandise. The Government's sole witness was Dr. Robert Russell, a physician specializing in gastroenterology. Following trial, the parties submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.
The court makes its conclusions of law and findings of fact following a trial de novo. See 28 U.S.C. § 2640(a)(1) (2006) ("The Court of International Trade shall make its determinations upon the basis of the record made before [it]."); see also United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 233 n. 16, 121 S.Ct. 2164, 150 L.Ed.2d 292 (2001) ("The [Court of International Trade] `may consider any new ground' even if not raised below ... and `shall make its determinations upon the basis of the record made before the court,' rather than that developed by Customs." (citations omitted)).
When reviewing Customs' classification decisions, the court applies the HTSUS General Rules of Interpretation ("GRIs") and the HTSUS Additional U.S. Rules of Interpretation ("ARIs") in numerical
Customs' factual determinations are entitled to a presumption of correctness. See 28 U.S.C. § 2639(a)(1). "The presumption is a procedural device that allocates the burden of producing evidence. . ., placing the burden on [the plaintiff] to show that there was insufficient evidence for the factual components of [Customs'] decision." Chrysler Corp. v. United States, 592 F.3d 1330, 1337 (Fed.Cir.2010) (citations omitted).
Here, Customs classified the BetaTab under HTSUS heading 2106: "Food preparations not elsewhere specified or included." This provision "is an expansive basket heading that only applies in the absence of another applicable heading." R.T. Foods, Inc. v. United States, 36 CIT ___, ___, 887 F.Supp.2d 1351, 1358 (2012). "To prima facie fall under [this] heading ... two criteria must be met: the product[] must be (1) a food preparation, which is (2) not elsewhere specified or included." Id. Thus, to overcome the presumption of correctness, Roche must demonstrate either that the evidence does not support classification of the merchandise as a "food preparation," or that the evidence supports classification of the merchandise under a different heading. See Orlando Food, 140 F.3d at 1441 ("Inherent in the term `preparation' is the notion that the object involved is destined for a specific use."); see also Aromont USA, Inc. v. United States. 671 F.3d 1310, 1316 (Fed. Cir.2012); Arbor Foods. Inc. v. United States, 30 CIT 670, 677, 2006 WL 1359965 (2006).
Plaintiff claims the BetaTab is alternatively classifiable as a "coloring matter" under HTSUS heading 3204 (and K3204 by the inclusion of beta-carotene in the Pharmaceutical Appendix) or as a provitamin
Principal use provisions "`call for a [factual] determination as to the group of goods that are commercially fungible with the imported goods'" so as to identify "the `use which exceeds any other single use.'" Aromont, 671 F.3d at 1312 (quoting Primal Lite, Inc. v. United States, 182 F.3d 1362, 1365 (Fed.Cir.1999); Lenox Collections v. United States, 20 CIT 194, 196, 1996 WL 47155 (1996)). This Court customarily uses several factors, commonly referred to as the "Carborundum Factors," to inform its determination as to which goods are "commercially fungible with the imported goods." Id. (quoting Primal Lite, 182 F.3d at 1365) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Id. at 1313 (citing United States v. Carborundum Co., 63 CCPA 98, 536 F.2d 373, 377 (1976)). The actual use of the goods "is evidence of the principal use" but is still only "one of a number of factors." Id.
Even if the merchandise is not principally used as a colorant, it is not necessarily classifiable as a provitamin under HTSUS heading 2936. Here, for instance, the BetaTab is not the provitamin beta-carotene in its pure form. Additional stabilizers were added to beta-carotene crystalline during the BetaTab's manufacturing process. Chapter 29 note 1(f) only permits the addition of a stabilizer to provitamins where "necessary for their preservation or transport." See also Explanatory Notes to the Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System, 29.36
Merchandise that might otherwise be classified under the headings of Chapter 29 becomes "particularly suitable for specific use," and is thus excluded from those headings, when (1) the ingredients added to it facilitate uses not ordinary to goods of the heading or (2) where the added ingredients alter the chemical's reactive properties in a manner that excludes uses ordinary to goods of the heading. See, e.g., Degussa Corp. v. United States, 508 F.3d 1044, 1046 (Fed.Cir.2007) (finding particularly suitable for a specific use a chemical with modified reactive properties that promoted its incorporation into "certain organic solvents and polymers"). Thus, a product's increased suitability for an ordinary application of its chemical component will not, exclude it from Chapter 29, so long as the product can still be used as that chemical in other ordinary ways. Added ingredients that make a chemical
Certain imports are entitled to duty free status by virtue of their inclusion in the Pharmaceutical Appendix. An import is entitled to such status if, when imported from an eligible country and claimed by the importer, "the individual product [is] listed in the Pharmaceutical Appendix," its tariff classification contains "the symbol 'K' [in the] special rates of duty subcolumn for those 8-digit subheadings which contain active ingredients and chemical intermediaries," and it is "used in the prevention, diagnosis, alleviation, treatment, or cure of disease in humans." Advice Concerning the Addition of Certain Pharmaceutical Products and Chemical Intermediates to the Pharmaceutical Appendix to the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States, USITC Pub. 3167, at 7, 3 (Apr. 1999) ("Advice re: Pharm. App'x"); BASF Corp. v. United States, 29 CIT 681, 693-94 n. 7, 391 F.Supp.2d 1246, 1256 n. 7 (2005) ("BASF II") ("[The import must be] 'used in the prevention, diagnosis, alleviation, treatment, or cure of disease in humans or animals,' which the [International Trade Commission] identifies as a pharmaceutical or'drug.'" (quoting Advice re: Pharm. App'x at 3)), affd, 482 F.3d 1324 (Fed.Cir.2007) ("BASF II"); see also HTSUS General Note 13 ("Whenever a rate of duty of'Free' followed by the symbol 'K' in parentheses appears in the'Special' subcolumn for a heading or subheading, any product (by whatever name known) classifiable in such provision which is the product of a country eligible for tariff treatment under column 1 shall be entered free of duty, provided that such product is included in the pharmaceutical appendix to the tariff schedule."). In other words, to enter duty-free, the good must be listed in the Pharmaceutical Appendix, classified in an appropriate subheading,
In determining whether the import is used as or in a pharmaceutical product, the "principal use" of the goods for classification purposes is not determinative. As noted, a "principal use" determination for classification purposes calls for the identification of the use "which exceeds any other single use," turning not on the actual use of the product, but on the use of the class or kind of goods "commercially fungible" with the product. Aromont, 671 F.3d at 1312. Duty-free status under the Pharmaceutical Appendix, however, turns on whether consumers of the product itself intend to use it in a pharmaceutical manner. See BASF II, 482 F.3d at 1326 (denying a beta-carotene product duty-free status because it was not "disputed that [the] product is not intended for vitamin or other pharmaceutical use, but is intended for use as a food colorant").
The structure of the HTSUS makes this distinction clear. There are numerous headings and subheadings that call for a non-pharmaceutical principal use, but which, nevertheless, also contain the symbol "K" in their special rates of duty subcolumn. See, e.g., HTSUS 3203.00.80; 3204.13.60; 3204.13.80; 3204.90.00. Inclusion of the symbol, therefore, indicates that Congress intended that some imports with a non-pharmaceutical "principal use" are entitled to duty free status under the Pharmaceutical Appendix nonetheless. Were that not the case, the inclusion of the symbol "K" in these subheadings would be a dead letter in every such instance. Moreover, such an interpretation would run afoul of "one of the most basic interpretive canons, that'[a] statute should be construed so that effect is given to all its provisions, so that no part will be inoperative, superfluous, void or insignificant.'" Corley v. United States, 556 U.S. 303, 314, 129 S.Ct. 1558, 173 L.Ed.2d 443 (2009) (citation omitted).
As an initial matter, the court finds that, having had the opportunity to observe their demeanor during direct and cross-examination, all four witnesses testified credibly at trial.
The stipulated facts and evidence adduced at trial, when analyzed under the rubric of the Carborundum factors, establish that the principal use of the merchandise is as a source of provitamin A in foods or vitamin products, rather than as a coloring matter.
First, the merchandise is actually used in the same manner as other vitamin and provitamin formulations intended for use in the domestic manufacture of vitamin supplements and fortified foods. Beta-carotene products are used to provide provitamin A activity in the manufacture of direct compression tablets, gel capsules, and nutrient powders. Put another way, these products are used, regardless of coloring ability, in the manufacture of the types of goods sold as vitamin supplements at drugstores and retailers like GNC or Vitamin Shoppe. Tr. 623-24. The products are also used in fortified food products, such as food bars and cereals, for coloration and provitamin activity, or for provitamin activity alone. Tr. 606-09, 612-13. BetaTab was developed for use in vitamin products and its actual use during the relevant time period was predominantly as a source of provitamin A for vitamin products. PTO ¶ 31; Tr. 615. The "vast majority of the merchandise has been used for vitamin products. PTO ¶ 30.
Next, the general physical characteristics of the merchandise lend themselves to a principal use as a vitamin supplement.
Use of the BetaTab as an ingredient to provide provitamin A activity, rather than as a colorant, is commercially practical. The majority of the merchandise sold by Roche in 2002 was sold for nutritional use. Tr. 615; Pl.'s Ex. 42. Other beta-carotene products that do not provide coloration, such as Roche's B-Carotene 10% B, are sold for nutritional use to large food producers. Tr. 612-13; Pl.'s Ex. 42. BASF, a significant competitor of Roche, also sold beta-carotene products primarily for use in the manufacture of tablets and capsules. Tr. 616-19. The BetaTab is marketed for use as a vitamin A source in vitamin products and "the vast majority of" the merchandise has been used for vitamin products. PTO ¶ 28, 30. The merchandise can, however, also be used in an economically practical manner as a colorant. Tr. 573-576. As such, this factor is not very probative.
The ultimate purchasers of the BetaTab do not draw a bright-line distinction between its use as colorant and its use as a vitamin. Roche's customers understand that beta-carotene products have a dual function as both a colorant and a source of provitamin A activity. Tr. 577. Accordingly, purchasers expect the merchandise to provide both nutrition and coloration simultaneously. Tr. 577. Thus, this factor is also not particularly probative.
The channels of trade in which the merchandise moves and the recognition of the use in the trade indicate a principal use as a provitamin product. The beta-carotene used in the manufacture of the merchandise is produced domestically by Roche, sent abroad for processing, and then imported as a mixture with the additional components. PTO ¶ 40. Manufacturers of vitamin tablets are considered to be part of the dietary supplement industry and not part of the food industry. Tr. 621-22. There is a recognized market for direct compression tablets and capsules. See Tr. 640. The merchandise was targeted for sale in that market by the Roche sales employees and "recommended strictly for nutrition." Tr. 640-41. Roche's research and development reports list only other beta-carotene products that are not used as colorants as products competitive with the merchandise. Tr. 302-03; Def.'s Ex. H6 at 6. Roche's annual sales report for 2002 identifies the merchandise, and no other merchandise, as sold through Roche's "Human Nutrition Health" division. Tr. 252; Def.'s Ex. G.
The environment of sale and advertising strongly indicate that the BetaTab is principally used as a source of provitamin A. The merchandise "was not produced or marketed for sale as a colorant during the relevant time period" and Roche's marketing
The additional ingredients added to the mixture do not make the BetaTab particularly suited for specific use outside of the ordinary uses of beta-carotene. First, a stabilizing matrix of some kind is necessary for any beta-carotene product. In its pure crystalline form, beta-carotene is unstable and susceptible to oxidation, which destroys its healthful properties and usefulness as a colorant. PTO ¶ 11, 14-15. Beta-carotene must be processed and combined with other ingredients to be commercially usable as either a provitamin or a colorant. PTO ¶ 11.
Roche's manufacturing process does not change the BetaTab's functionality as a provitamin. The manufacturing process Roche uses to create the merchandise does not change the character of the beta-carotene as provitamin A. Tr. 726. The process used to create the BetaTab, that is, the technology by which Roche adds additional ingredients that envelop the betacarotene crystalline in a matrix, is common throughout the industry for several different types of vitamin. Tr. 42. That same technology is used to produce all Roche beta-carotene forms. Tr. 43. There is no evidence that the merchandise's non-betacarotene ingredients enhance absorption or bioavailability of the beta-carotene in a manner greater than any other stabilizing matrix. Tr. 331-35, 357, 379, 389, 393, 472-73, 715-17. Moreover, an increase in the bioavailability of a provitamin product does not change its use as a provitamin. Provitamins for human consumption are intended to be ingested and processed by the body to yield vitamin activity. The increased bioavailability of a particular provitamin merely improves that ordinary use of goods within the class of provitamins.
That the additional ingredients make the BetaTab highly suitable for tableting does not make the merchandise particularly suitable for a specific use. Although highly suitable for tableting, the merchandise contains no ingredients specifically prepared for tableting. Tr. 164-66. That suitability is not at odds with use as a provitamin or with the product's other uses. The additional ingredients, or matrices, of the various Roche products are "basically the same" for lower potency products suitable for human consumption that are used for coloration purposes as for higher potency products that are used for vitamin and nutritional products. Tr. 350, 349-57. Other Roche products, primarily used as colorants, also have characteristics that make them highly suitable for tableting. Tr. 403. Some of those products are used to make tablets for nutritional use. Tr. 425-28. The merchandise is well suited for fortifying foods with provitamin A. Tr. 446-47. Other, less potent, Roche beta-carotene products are
Finally, the tableting process is a step that transforms the merchandise, which is essentially a bulk beta-carotene ingredient, into a final product for sale. The merchandise's increased suitability to be used in the creation of tablets for retail sale is a particular kind of use within the uses common to members of the provitamin category.
The merchandise is primarily used to create vitamin supplements and fortified foods. As noted, "the vast majority of" the merchandise has been used for vitamin products and the merchandise is principally used in that manner. PTO ¶ 30. The product was sold through Roche's "Human Nutrition Health" division. Tr. 252; Def.'s Ex. G. Dietary supplements are intended to provide customers with nutrients that they are not other-wise ingesting in sufficient amounts for optimal health. Tr. 374-75. Like most supplements, the merchandise is a "formulation that is meant to maintain general health or well-being." Tr. 478. Although the product would not normally be used in the medical treatment of vitamin A deficiency, it is used with the purpose of maintaining healthy levels of vitamin A. Tr. 730. In addition to helping those who consume it to avoid vitamin A deficiency, research suggests that provitamin A may have a prophylactic effect against certain cancers. Tr. 731-32. Thus, the BetaTab is used in a manner designed to promote human health.
As determined at trial, the merchandise is principally used a source of provitamin A in foods or vitamin products, rather than as a "coloring matter." Consequently, the BetaTab cannot be classified under Heading 3204. As noted, in order to be classified under HTSUS heading 3204, an imported good must be principally used as a "coloring matter." Roche I, 34 CIT at ___, 750 F.Supp.2d at 1375-78. Thus, the merchandise cannot be classified under Heading 3204. Because the merchandise cannot be classified under subheading 3204.19.35, the court does not reach whether the BetaTab would qualify for duty-free entry under that subheading as a result of its inclusion in the Pharmaceutical Appendix.
The merchandise is a "provitamin" covered by Heading 2936.
Because the merchandise is classifiable under another heading, Roche has overcome the presumption of correctness to which Customs' classification was entitled. As noted, to fall under Customs' selected heading, Heading 2106, an imported good must be both (1) a food preparation, and (2) not elsewhere specified or included. The trial evidence demonstrated that the merchandise is a provitamin and is not particularly suited to specific use, rendering it classifiable within Heading 2936. As such, the merchandise is "elsewhere included." Therefore, Roche has demonstrated that BetaTab fails the second requirement for classification in Heading 2106 and that Customs' decision to classify the BetaTab in that heading is incorrect.
Under GRI 6, "the classification of goods in the subheadings of a heading shall be determined according to the terms of those subheadings and any related subheading notes" and by application of the other GRIs. Within Heading 2936, there are only two potentially applicable subheadings: 2936.10.00
The terminology of Heading 2936 makes clear that Congress intended the term "unmixed" in subheading 2936.10.00 to indicate that the subheading does, not encompass mixtures of different kinds of vitamins or provitamins, but does encompass mixtures of vitamins or provitamins with the stabilizing ingredients permitted by note 1(f) to Chapter 29. In other words, a vitamin or provitamin that is mixed with other ingredients that are not "[provitamins [or] vitamins" remains "unmixed" for purposes of classification in subheading 2936.10.00. Thus, the 2936.10.00 term "unmixed" means "unmixed with other vitamins or pro-vitamins."
The heading language, common to both 2936.10.00 and 2936.90.00 confirms this conclusion. That language, "intermixtures of the foregoing, whether or not in any solvent," makes clear the congressional intention that goods of the heading are to be treated differently from other ingredients for purposes of what is a "mixture." The phrase "of the foregoing" limits the ordinarily broad term "intermixture" to combinations of "[p]rovitamins and vitamins, natural or reproduced by synthesis (including natural concentrates), derivatives thereof used primarily as vitamins." The
That this narrower understanding of the term "mixture" carries down to the subheading level is shown by the structure of the subheadings. All of 2936's subheadings refer to a plural noun or conjunction followed by: ", unmixed" with the exception of 2936.90.00, the catch-all. Compare HTSUS 2936.90.00 ("Other, including natural concentrates"), with HTSUS 2936.10.00 ("Provitamins"), HTSUS 2936.21.00 ("Vitamin A"), 2936.22.00 ("Vitamin B
Accordingly, the additional stabilizing ingredients added to the beta-carotene crystalline to create the BetaTab do not render the product a mixture for purposes of subheading 2936.10.00. Therefore, because BetaTab is a provitamin compound, subheading 2936.10.00 is the correct subheading and the merchandise is properly classified thereunder.
For the reasons stated above, the court concludes that the correct tariff classification for the BetaTab 20% is HTSUS subheading 2936. 10.00 and the merchandise is subject to a duty rate of "Free." Judgment will enter accordingly.