The United States appeals a decision of the Court of International Trade classifying certain folio merchandise imported by Avenues in Leather, Inc. (“Avenues”) under subheading 4820.10.2020 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (“HTSUS”).
Aves. in Leather v. United States,
No. 99-09-00603,
BACKGROUND
The merchandise at issue are Presentation Calcu-Folios imported by Avenues in 1997. These Calcu-Folios measure approximately 13.5 inches tall by 11.5 inches wide by 1.5 inches deep when closed, are zippered on three sides with an interior sleeve, possess one exterior open flat pocket and a number of small interior pockets, have a padded carrying handle fitted to the exterior spine, are constructed of paperboard covered with plastic foam and a vinyl/plastic exterior and interior, contain a solar-powered calculator, and have an interior three-ring metal binder permanently affixed to the spine.
Upon importation, the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection and its predecessor United States Customs Service (“Customs”) classified the merchandise under HTSUS subheading 4202.12.20, 1 which covers “Trunks, suitcases, vanity cases, at-taché cases, briefcases, school satchels, and similar containers... [w]ith outer surface of plastics.” Avenues argued, however, that the Presentation Calcu-Folios should be classified under either HTSUS subheading 4820.30.00, 2 which covers “[blinders (other than book covers), folders and file covers” or HTSUS subheading 4820.10.2020, which covers “[mjemoran-dum pads, letter pads and similar articles.”
The difference between these two classifications is significant: items classified under subheading 4202.12.20 are dutiable at 20% ad valorem, while items under sub *1329 headings 4820.30.00 and 4820.10.2020 are dutiable at 3.7% and 2.8%, respectively.
This is not the first time the parties have disputed the proper tariff classification of this type of merchandise. A brief description of the procedural history of this case is warranted to provide the context for the Court of International Trade’s decision, which is the subject of this appeal.
In 1993, upon importation of four other types of leather folios similar to the merchandise at issue in this case, Customs classified the leather folios under HTSUS subheading 4202.11.00.
Aves. in Leather v. United States,
In 1997, Customs classified the Calcu-Folio goods, which are the subject of this appeal, under subheading 4202.12.20. Avenues disagreed with Customs’ classification and filed a complaint in the Court of International Trade, contending that the merchandise is properly classifiable under subheading 4820.30.00. The Court of International Trade granted summary judgment affirming the classification based on the reasoning that, to avoid summary judgment, Avenues had to prove that our decision in
Avenues I
was “clearly erroneous.”
Id.
We reversed the grant of summary judgment and remanded the case because this was a new entry and a court had not previously classified the Calcu-Folios. Av
es. in Leather v. United States,
On remand, a trial was held on October 1, 2003 at the Court of International Trade. To prove that the Calcu-Folios should be classified under HTSUS heading 4820, Avenues presented testimony of Ot-niel Shor, Caron Ann Williamson, and Sam Goldstein. Customs responded by presenting the testimony of Customs National Import Specialists Carl Abramowitz and Kevin Gorman to support its contention that the merchandise should be classified under heading 4202. The Court of International Trade rejected Customs’, classification of the Presentation Calcu-Folios under subheading 4202.12.20, and held that they were classified properly under subheading 4820.10.2020 as “memorandum pads.” CIT Opinion.
At the trial, Avenues’ witness, Shor, the designer of Calcu-Folio, testified that the article was designed as an organizational aid for taking notes by allowing the user to organize and interact with the matter bound by the pad folio. He further testified that the inside sleeve was designed to hold a standard office folder, and. the folio had a maximum inside capacity of 1 inch. Thus, Avenues contended, the folios at issue were akin to “portfolios,” or flat cases designed and intended to hold papers.
Customs submitted several dictionary definitions of “briefcase” to argue that the merchandise was prima facie classifiable in heading 4202 as either a form of “briefcase” or as a “similar container” under an ejusdem generis analysis. Emphasizing the “container” aspects of the merchandise, Customs introduced evidence on the marketing of the goods as business travel goods. Customs further argued that the folios were capable of being used to carry non-paper personal and business objects.
In reaching its conclusion, the Court of International Trade recognized that the *1330 essential characteristics of the listed exemplars in heading 4202 are to “organize, store, protect, and carry various items.” Based on the testimony of the witnesses and the evidence presented, it concluded that the Calcu-Folios had a different specific primary purpose — to facilitate the taking of notes as well as aid the organization of print and other visual flat materials capable of being bound by the article’s metal binder or fit within its pockets. Relying on General Rules of Interpretation (“GRI”) 3(b), the Court of International Trade concluded that the article had the essential character of a binder or a memorandum pad under heading 4820, and such features complemented the article’s predominant purpose as an article of stationery, of paper or paperboard. Thus, the Court of International Trade classified the folios as memorandum pads, under Subheading 4820.10.2020.
The United States timely appealed to this court. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(5).
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Whether an imported item has been properly classified involves a two step analysis: (1) ascertaining the proper meaning of specific terms in the tariff provision; and (2) determining whether the merchandise at issue comes within the description of such terms as properly construed.
Sports Graphics, Inc. v. United States,
On appeal, “the appellant bears the burden of establishing reversible error in the decision of the Court of International Trade, by showing that the court erred in its interpretation of the law, or that its findings of fact are clearly erroneous with due consideration to the appropriate level of deference.”
Park B. Smith, Ltd. v. United States,
B. Analysis
I. Stare Decisis
Customs first argues that the Court of International Trade’s decision violates the doctrine of stare decisis because it failed to distinguish this court’s ruling in Avenues I. Specifically, Customs contends that because the Calcu-Folios are substantially the same as the articles at issue in Avenues I, the Court of International Trade should have been bound by the decision in that case, which classified the articles under section 4202 and rejected Avenues’ attempt to classify them under section 4820. Customs further contends that the Court of International Trade erred by not providing any basis for distinguishing this case from Avenues I.
Avenues responds that the similarity of the articles does not preclude it from retrying the classification under the rule of law pronounced in
United States v. Stone & Downer Co.,
It is well settled that collateral es-toppel does not prevent an importer from successive litigation over the classification of merchandise, even when the subsequent
*1331
importations involve the “same issue of fact and the same question of law.”
Stone & Downer Co.,
Stare decisis
in essence “makes each judgment a statement of the law, or precedent, binding in future cases before the same court or another court owing obedience to its decision.... It deals only with law, as the facts of each case must be determined by the evidence adduced at trial.... ”
Mendenhall v. Cedarapids, Inc.,
Because the doctrine of
stare decisis
applies to only legal issues and not issues of fact, Avenues is burdened by the previous legal determination' that “the common characteristic or unifying purpose of the goods in heading 4202 consistís] of ‘organizing, storing, protecting, and carrying various items.’ ”
Avenues II,
II. HTSUS Classification
The parties’ remaining arguments are directed to the issue of whether the properly-interpreted scope of HTSUS Heading 4202 or HTSUS Heading 4820 encompasses Avenues’ imported folios. We address classification under each of these headings separately.
a. Heading 4202
Regarding classifícátion under Heading 4202, Customs argues that because the articles at issue satisfy the common definition of one of the eo nomine exemplars, “briefcases,” the Court of International Trade erred in concluding that the Calcu-Folios are not classified under section 4202. Customs further argues that, under a ejusdem generis analysis, the articles in question are classifiable under Heading 4202 because they possess the characteristics uniting all of the containers of that heading.
Avenues responds that the Court of International Trade correctly concluded that the Calcu-Folios are not a form of a “briefcase,” and properly rejected an ejus-dem generis classification under Heading 4202 in view of its finding that the specific primary purpose of the Calcu-Folios is to facilitate taking of notes as well as to aid the organization of print and other visual flat materials.
While the Court of International Trade did not specifically state that the folios in question were not a form of briefcase, the court described the goods in question as “pad folios,” and, as such, concluded that “they lack[ed] specific
eo nomine
classification in the HTSUS.”
CIT Opinion
at 2,
[Shor] explained that “pad folios” are not briefcases, which are designed to *1332 carry various business-related as well as personal articles..., nor are they attache cases, which are hard-sided rectangular cases.... He described them as “covers” and “carriers” designed to hold and organize paper products and flats such as cards, envelopes, photographs, file folders, thin catalogues, et cetera, capable of being fit within the pad folio’s pockets and sleeves.
Id.
at 4,
The trial court also found that while the article could be used to carry personal objects that would normally be carried in a briefcase, the article was not designed to do so.
See id.
at 17,
Heading 4202 contains a list of particular items followed by a general phrase, “similar articles.” It is well settled that when a list of items is followed by a general word or phrase, the rule of
ejusdem generis
is used to determine the scope of the general word or phrase.
See Totes, Inc. v. United States,
We have previously held that the “the common characteristic or unifying purpose of the goods in heading 4202 consistís] of ‘organizing, storing, protecting, and carrying various items.’ ”
Avenues II,
In
Avenues I,
we concurred with the Court of International Trade’s conclusion that the physical characteristics of the leather folios “speak strongly to the ‘organizing, storing, protecting, and carrying’ characteristics of the imported merchandise.”
Avenues I,
Based on these factual findings, the Court of International Trade concluded that “[t]he articles ’4202’ features do not impart the essential characteristics of a ’4202’ container.”
CIT Opinion
at 19. We agree. Here, while the. Calcu-Folios may be used to organize and protect small and/or flat items in addition to a writing pad, they have an internal capacity of only 1 inch and lack significant carrying space. These characteristics make them unsuitable to carry newspapers, books, and other objects that are normally carried in containers that are common to Heading 4202. Moreover, while the articles in question may be generally described as “containers,” their specific use is limited to facilitation in taking of notes as well as aiding in the organization of print and other visual flat materials. Such a specific use, which predominates over the more general description of containers, precludes classification of the Calcu-Folios under Heading 4202.
See Totes,
Accordingly, the Court of International Trade correctly concluded that the Calcu-Folios are neither classifiable, eo nomine, as a form of briefcase, nor, under an ejus-dem generis analysis, as a “similar container,” under Heading 4202.
b. Heading 4820
Regarding classification of the Calcu-Folios under Subheading 4820.10.2020, Customs contends that the Court of International Trade erred in classifying the merchandise as memorandum pads. Specifically, Customs argues that Note 1(h) of Heading 4820 precludes classification under that heading. Customs further argues that the the imported articles are not “articles of stationery, of paper or paperboard:” Finally, Customs argues that the trial court erred in using the “essential character” analysis under GRI 3(b), and confused the concepts of “primary purpose” and “essential character.”
Avenues responds that Note 1(h) is inapplicable because the imported articles have a specific primary purpose that prohibits their classification under Heading 4202. Avenues further responds that, based on the evidence, the court correctly found the Calcu-Folios are articles of stationery pertaining to paper or paperboard.
The proper classification of merchandise is governed by the GRIs.
See Orlando Food Corp. v. United States,
Taking into consideration all the physical attributes of the Calcu-Folios and the testimony of the witnesses, the Court of International Trade concluded that they were described properly as an article of stationery, of paper or paperboard. CIT Opinion at 19. The court based its conclusion in part on the presence of the article’s structural components, which include a memorandum pad, a three-ring binder, and a paperboard core and spine. The memorandum pad and the core are clearly of paper or paperboard. The court further found that the article’s pockets are essentially flat, which limits their storage capabilities to papers and other flat items, and the three-ring binder served to hold three-holed items, such as paper from the memorandum pad. Thus, the court concluded, and we agree, that the Calcu-Folios exhibit characteristics of an article of stationery, of paper or paperboard. Apart from the memorandum pad and the binder, which appear as named exemplars under Heading 4820, most of the remaining features of the Calcu-Folios pertain to use with writing or written documents. For example, the pen sleeves are used to hold pens, and the limited capacity of the cover and the pockets restrict use of the Calcu-Folios to holding or organizing flat items such as papers or folders.
Moreover, the Explanatory Notes (“ENs”) to Heading 4820 state in relevant part that the heading includes: “(1) ... memorandum pad... (3) Binders designed for holding loose sheets, magazines, or the like (e.g., clip binders, spring binders, screw binders, ring binders) and folders, file covers, files... and portfolios.” The ENs further provide that these goods may be bound with materials other than paper, such as leather, plastics, or textile materials, and may have reinforcements or fittings of metals. Although the ENs are not legally binding or dispositive, they may be consulted for guidance and are generally indicative of the proper interpretation of the various HTSUS provisions.
JVC Co. of Am. v. United States,
Thus, the imported item as a whole exhibits characteristics of an article of stationery, of paper or paperboard, and shares the common characteristics of a memorandum pad and a letter pad. Accordingly, applying GRI 1, we hold that the Calcu-Folios are classifiable under Subheading 4820.10.2020.
Because we conclude that the merchandise at issue is properly classifiable under GRI 1, resort to an analysis under GRI 3(b) is unnecessary. However, since the trial court reached the correct result, missteps in its reasoning in arriving there are harmless errors.
Pillowtex Corp. v. United States,
CONCLUSION
Because the Court of International Trade correctly classified the subject Cal- *1335 eu-Folios under Heading 4820.10.2020, we affirm.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. Heading 4202 covers:
Trunks, suitcases, vanity cases, attaché cases, briefcases, school satchels, spectacle cases, binocular cases, camera cases, musical instrument cases, gun cases, holsters and similar containers; traveling bags, toiletry bags, knapsacks and back packs, handbags, shopping bags, wallets, purses, map cases, cigarette cases, tobacco pouches, tool bags, sports bags, bottle cases, jewelry boxes, powder cases, cutleiy cases, similar containers, of leather or of composite leather, of sheeting of plastics, of textile materials, of vulcanized fiber, or of paperboard, or wholly or mainly covered with such materials or with paper....
. Heading 4820 covers:
Registers, account books, notebooks, order books, receipt books, letter pads, memorandum pads, diaries and similar articles, exercise books, blotting pads, binders (loose-leaf or other), folders, file covers, manifold business forms, interleaved carbon sets and other articles of stationery, of paper or paperboard; albums for samples or for collections and book covers (including cover boards and book jackets) of paper or paperboard ....
