Opinion & Order
This action is before the Court on more motions for summary judgment — the sixth and seventh such motions filed in this case. Plaintiff brought this case disputing the classification of its imported merchandise, engineered hardwood flooring, under tariff subheadings for plywood. Plaintiff
Procedural and Factual Background
This case has been aggressively litigated. The court has previously issued three opinions totaling 135 pages, in the process of resolving multiple procedural and substantive motions. Familiarity with these previous opinions 2 is assumed. While the issues remaining in this case have diminished greatly, the amount of paper dedicated to arguing over them has increased exponentially. In particular, Plaintiff filed over 2,600 pages of exhibits in support of its motion for summary judgment on the eighth cause of action, and in opposition to Defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the fifth and eighth causes of action. (See Docket Nos. 178-187, 200-238, and 241.)
At issue in this case is the classification of three types of engineered hardwood flooring imported by Plaintiff: 14mm, 2-strip 15mm, and 3-strip 15mm. 3 (Mem. of Law in Supp. of Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. on the Fifth and Eighth Causes of Action in the Compl. (“Def.’s Mot.”) 1; Pl.’s Mot. for Summ. Adjudication on the Eighth Cause of Action in the Compl. (“PL’s Mot.”) 1-2.) U.S. Customs and Border Protection (“CBP” or “Customs”) classified Plaintiffs merchandise under HTSUS Subheading 4412.14.31 and 4412.29.36, eo no-mine provisions for plywood, at a duty rate of 8% ad valorem. (Def.’s Mot. 1; Pl.’s Mot. II — 1.) Kahrs asserts that its merchandise is appropriately classified under HTSUS Subheading 4412.29.56, a basket provision encompassing “veneered panels and similar laminated wood,” free of duty. (PL’s Mot. II-1.)
In
Kahrs III,
the Court held that Plaintiffs 14mm and 15mm flooring fell within the common meaning of the term plywood, and was therefore appropriately classified under the government’s preferred tariff subheading.
Kahrs III,
Following
Kahrs III,
Plaintiff was left with one remaining claim that, if successful, could result in its preferred classification: the commercial designation claim set out in the fifth cause of action. (Compl. ¶¶ 48-62.) In this claim, Plaintiff alleges that at the time the HTSUS was enacted into law in 1988, there was a commercial designation for the term plywood that differed from the common meaning of plywood, that was general, definite, and uniform throughout the United States at that time, and that did not encompass plaintiffs engineered hardwood flooring.
(Id.)
Any commercial designation claim, including this one, rests on the theory that “the trade designation [was] so universal and well understood that the Congress, and all the trade, are supposed to have been fully acquainted with the practice at the time the law was enacted.”
Timber Products Co. v. United States,
Once Kahrs III was issued, this case appeared headed for trial on Plaintiffs commercial designation claim. (See Docket No. 120 (scheduling order permitting Plaintiff to withdraw its previously filed motion for summary judgment on the fifth cause of action, permitting additional discovery, and setting dates for the submission of a pretrial order, and for trial).) The Court received what amounted to a proposed pretrial order in a series of filings made throughout July and August, 2010. (Docket Nos. 128-129, 132-135, 138-143.) As the Court was reviewing these myriad submissions, on October 11, 2010, Plaintiff sought leave of the Court to amend its Complaint to assert a claim that its goods were not properly classifiable under any HTSUS subheading for plywood, because the common meaning of that term does not encompass Plaintiffs product. (Docket No. 147.)
Initially, the Court was disinclined to grant Plaintiffs motion to amend its complaint. Not only was the motion made at an unusually late stage of the proceeding, but it appeared that the motion might have been deniable on grounds of futility. The meaning of a term in an HTSUS heading or subheading is a pure question of law.
Medline Industries Inc. v. United States,
Moreover, the question of fact — whether the imported items fall within the scope of a specific tariff subheading — had already been resolved by the Court in this case.
See Medline Indus.,
Ultimately, however, the Court granted Plaintiffs motion to amend its complaint out of an abundance of caution. In doing
In
Schott III,
the CAFC reversed the judgment of this court, citing “a well-recognized exception to
stare decisis ”
requiring that “[a] court will reexamine and overrule a prior decision that was clearly erroneous.”
Schott III,
In light of the
Schott
cases, the Court decided to grant Plaintiffs motion to amend its complaint. (Order of December 8, 2010 (Dkt. 158), accepting Plaintiffs (Proposed) Amendment to Complaint as docketed on December 2, 2010
(“8th COA ”)
(Dkt. 157).) Plaintiff explicitly represented to the Court that it sought to amend its complaint in order to introduce testimony of certain expert witnesses that it hoped would “conclusively establish that the definition of plywood arrived at in [Boen] was erroneous.”
(Letter to the Court Requesting Permission to File a Motion for Leave to Amend its Complaint
Following a brief period of additional discovery, Plaintiff moved for summary judgment on the eighth cause of action, and defendant moved for summary judgment on the eighth and fifth causes of action.
Jurisdiction & Standard of Review
This Court has jurisdiction over this case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(a). Summary judgment is appropriate when “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact” and the Court determines that the movant is “entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” USCIT R. 56(c). The CIT reviews CBP protest denials “upon the basis of the record made before the court,” which is to say,
de novo.
28 U.S.C. § 2640(a)(1);
see also Park B. Smith, Ltd. v. United States,
Discussion
I. Eighth Cause of Action — Common Meaning
In the eighth cause of action, Plaintiff aims to establish what the common meaning of the term plywood is, and to demonstrate that this definition does not encompass its product. However, because the CAFC already established the common meaning of plywood in Boen, the only way for Plaintiff to prevail on this cause of action is to prove, as per Schott III, that the Boen definition is clearly erroneous, and that this Court therefore should not be bound by stare decisis. There is no dispute between the parties as to the nature of Plaintiffs merchandise, only as to the meaning of the term plywood for purposes of tariff classification. Accordingly, on the eighth cause of action, there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and this claim is ripe for summary judgment.
In order to evaluate whether Plaintiff has succeeded in this endeavor, the Court will first review the sources upon which the CAFC and this Court previously relied in establishing the common meaning of plywood. Then, the court will consider the arguments Plaintiff makes to change that definition, the sources it relies upon to justify doing so, and the arguments Defendant makes in response. Finally, the Court will assess whether Plaintiff has shown that the earlier decisions were clearly erroneous.
A. The Common Meaning of Plywood Established In Boen
The term plywood is not defined in the HTSUS, and as such should be given its common meaning.
See Boen,
[tjhere are three common characteristics of “plywood” found in the definitions provided [in these sources]: (1) there must be at least three layers; (2) each layer must be arranged at a right angle to its adjacent layer; and (3) the layers must be bonded together.
Id.
at 1265. The court considered arguments regarding whether each layer in a
In
Kahrs III,
this court relied upon the definition of plywood as determined in
Boen.
Additionally, the Court consulted the definition of plywood in Webster’s Third New International Dictionary and Explanatory Note 44.12, and contrasted these definitions with the meaning of “engineered flooring” according to the National Wood Flooring Association.
Kahrs III,
B. Plaintiffs Arguments — 8th Cause of Action
In support of the eighth cause of action, Plaintiff levels two main arguments aimed at dislodging the common meaning of plywood established in Boen and Kahrs III, First, Plaintiff contends that a product cannot be considered plywood unless it is manufactured with “balanced construction.” Second, Plaintiff attempts to revive an argument explicitly considered and rejected by the court in Boen: that a product cannot be plywood when the core layer is not a continuous expanse. Plaintiff also advances an argument that even if its product was once plywood, it has been further manufactured and substantially transformed into a product with a different name, character and use. To justify all of these contentions, Plaintiff would have the Court rely primarily on the sworn declarations of several expert witnesses.
1. Whether Balanced Construction is a Requirement of Plywood
First, Plaintiff asserts that the common meaning of the term plywood includes a requirement that the product be manufactured with a “balanced construction,” which it claims to mean “that the corresponding layers on each side of the core must be made of the same thickness and be made of the same category of wood species.” (Pl.’s Mot. VI-2.) Plaintiff asserts that neither its 14mm nor 15mm flooring has balanced construction, and therefore it cannot fall within the common meaning of the term plywood. (Id.) In support of this contention, Plaintiff offers the sworn declarations of six expert witnesses. (Id.)
Plaintiffs experts attempt to justify their opinions about balanced construction through citation to various textual sources. Experts Long and Forholt each cite two publications from the U.S. International Trade Commission: the
Summary of Trade and Tariff Information on Softwood Veneer and Plywood,
USITC Pub. 841 (Feb.1981) and the
Summary of Tariff and Trade Information on Hardwood Plywood,
USITC Pub. 841 (Apr.1978) (the “USITC Publications”). (Pl.’s Annexation of Concise Stmt, of Relevant Facts as to Which There Is No Genuine Dispute
5
(“CSF”) ¶¶ 5, 6.) These publications describe softwood and hardwood plywood as having “balanced construction,” which is
Plaintiffs experts also cite copious sources that contradict their opinions that balanced construction is a requirement for plywood. All six of Plaintiffs experts reference the definitions of hardwood plywood included in the 1983 and 2004 versions of the voluntary standards established by the Hardwood Plywood and Veneer Association and the American National Standards Institute (“HPVA/ANSI”). {See, e.g., Long Decl. ¶¶ 26-27.) These definitions make no mention of balanced construction. Similarly, five of Plaintiffs experts cite the definitions of softwood plywood from the 1983 and 1995 industry standards produced by the American Plywood Association (“APA”). These definitions are similarly silent on the issue of balanced construction. (See, e.g., id. ¶¶ 24-25.) Because none of these textual sources invoke balanced construction in their definitions, each expert takes the remarkable position that the industry standard definitions of hardwood and softwood plywood are deficient. (See e.g., id. ¶ 28 (“these separate definitions ... are reasonably complete except for one important aspect ... that plywood must be made of ‘balanced construction.’ ”))
Moreover, all six experts cite
• the definition of plywood found in Webster’s Third International Dictionary,
• the definition of plywood established by the CAFC in
Timber Products Co. v. United States,
• the description of plywood found in the Explanatory Note to Heading 4412,
• the definition of plywood found in Terms of the Trade, Random Lengths Publications, Fourth Edition (2000), and
• the definitions of plywood found in the 1987 and 2000 publications of Wood Handbook, published by the Forest Products Laboratory, USDA.
A plurality of Plaintiffs experts cite the definition of plywood found in McGrawHill Dictionary of Technical Terms, and more than one expert explicitly tackles the definition of plywood established by the CAFC in Boen, as well as the definition of plywood found in Plywood Working for Everybody, Van Nostrand Reinhold Company (1981). This diverse and exhaustive list of nine further textual sources defining or describing plywood share two things in common: they are uniformly silent on the alleged requirement that plywood have balanced construction, and they are uniformly criticized or dismissed by Plaintiffs experts for that reason.
In sum, while Plaintiffs experts were able to identify four textual sources making some reference to “balanced construction” or the “balanced” nature of a panel of plywood, they also collectively identified 13 textual sources that contradict their opinions.
Plaintiff alleges farther error in the common meaning of plywood established in Boen, claiming that a product with engineered gaps in its core cannot be plywood. Specifically, Plaintiff asserts that its 15mm flooring does not qualify as either “lumber core” or “veneer” plywood, because the “gaps that are designed, engineered, and built into the core,” do not meet the requirements of any standard commonly used in the U.S. plywood industry since September 7, 1995, precluding it from being plywood. 6 (8th COA ¶¶ 7-9.) Also, on account of this design feature, Plaintiff claims its 15mm flooring is not bought and sold as plywood, and is not recognized as lumber core plywood by “[tjhose experienced in the buying and selling of plywood in the plywood trade.” (8th COA ¶ 6.) In support of this argument, Plaintiff would once again have the Court rely on the sworn declarations of its expert witnesses. (Pl.’s Mot. VI-3 — VI-5.)
For these contentions, Plaintiff cites no new source, but rather argues that the CAFC misinterpreted Section 5.8.1 of Voluntary Product Standard 1-95, which permits gaps in the erossbands of plywood. (Id. at VI-3.) The standard reads, in relevant part:
Crossband gaps or center gaps, except as noted for plugged crossband and jointed crossband, shall not exceed 25 mm (1 inch) in width for a depth of 205 mm (8 inches) measured from panel edge.
Voluntary Product Standard PS 1-95: Construction and Industrial Plywood § 5.8.1 (See Ex. 10 to Pl.’s Resp., Forholt Decl., Attach. G). While the standard states a specific distance limiting the depth of any crossband or center gaps (8 inches), Plaintiff reasons that because 8 inches is about 16% of the total width of a 4’ by 8’ panel of plywood, what this standard really means is that any gap in the core of a piece of plywood is limited to 16% of the width of that piece of plywood. (Id. at VI-40 Plaintiff experts Griede, Holt and Forholt all agree that this standard does not permit gaps to run across the full width of a piece of plywood, as the gaps do in Plaintiffs 15mm flooring, but cite no textual authority in support of their opinions. (CSF ¶ 27.)
Additionally, Plaintiff argues that the gaps in its 15mm flooring do not satisfy the requirements of Section 5.8.1. on the basis of their length alone. (Pl.’s Mot. VI-4.) Plaintiff asserts that while the standard permits gaps of up to 8 inches, “[t]he length of those gaps in the 15mm flooring extends to 9 inches, including the edge-work.” (Id.)
3. Whether Plaintiffs Product Was Substantially Transformed
Plaintiff also contends, directly and simply, that its product does not fall within the
eo nomine
provision for plywood. Plaintiff argues that even if its product “ever remotely were plywood,” it has “advanced beyond plywood” and has been “substantially transformed” into a new and different product.
(Id.
at VI-5.) Plaintiff describes the manufacturing process by which its goods are produced, which involves cutting layers of wood for the face, bottom and core,
7
gluing and laminating these layers together under heat and pressure, trimming, sanding, finishing, and cutting edgework.
8
(Id.
at VI-7.) Plaintiff
C. Defendant’s Arguments
Defendant responds to Plaintiffs arguments both by criticizing the sources Plaintiff relies upon to support its claim, and by disputing Plaintiffs claim on the merits.
1. Whether Plaintiff May Use Expert Witness Declarations in Support of the 8th Cause of Action
First, Defendant contends that Plaintiff should be prohibited from using expert declarations to prove the common meaning of plywood, because (1) the experts were not properly disclosed during the period of additional discovery that was provided for the eighth cause of action, and (2) opinion testimony is an impermissible basis for resolving a question of law, such as the meaning of a tariff term. (Def.’s Resp. 4-10.) Even if the Court considers the expert declarations, however, Defendant maintains that Plaintiffs 14mm and 15mm flooring falls within the common meaning of the term plywood. (Id. 11-28; Def.’s Mot. 8-20.) Finally, Defendant argues that the position taken by CBP that Plaintiffs flooring is plywood is entitled to Skid-more deference. (Def.’s Mot. at 5-8.)
a. Whether Plaintiff Committed a Discovery Violation
In regards to the alleged discovery violation, Defendant points out that the scheduling order that permitted limited discovery on the eighth cause of action required the parties to make expert disclosures by January 28, 2011 and to identify all witnesses each party intended to depose by February 2, 2011. (Def.’s Resp. 4.) Defendant also points to USCIT Rule 26(a)(2), which requires the disclosure of a person who may be used at trial to present opinion testimony. (Id.) Defendant alleges that Plaintiff did not comply with the requirements of the scheduling order or US-CIT R. 26(a)(2) because no expert witness reports related to the eighth cause of action were produced until the end of discovery, between February 25, 2011 and March 22, 2011. (Id. at 5.) Defendant claims it could not conduct depositions of Plaintiffs experts until it received these declarations, but once it had received them, the time allotted for discovery had elapsed. (Id. at 6.) To remedy this violation, Defendant requests that the Court refuse to consider Plaintiffs expert witness reports insofar as they apply to the eighth cause of action. (Id. at 6-7.)
Plaintiff responds to this alleged discovery violation by explaining that the court’s scheduling order only required the parties to disclose experts that had “not been previously identified in this case,” and that because all of Plaintiffs witnesses were previously disclosed in regards to the fifth cause of action, no discovery violation occurred. (Pl.’s Rep. to Def.’s Resp. to Pl’s Mot. for Summ. J. on the Eighth Cause of Action (“Pl’s Rep.”) 2-3, 6-7.)
Defendant also seeks the exclusion of Plaintiffs expert witness reports on the grounds that opinion testimony is an inappropriate basis for resolving a pure question of law, such as the common meaning of a term in an HTSUS heading or subheading. (Def.’s Resp. 7-10.) Defendant cites the general proposition that “[experts are prohibited from opining on the law or its application in a particular scenario,” and points out that expert witness testimony necessarily relates to fact questions, of which there should be none, if the case is to be resolved by summary judgment.
(Id.
at 7
(citing
cases).) Defendant acknowledges that the CIT and its predecessor (the Customs Court) have occasionally considered expert testimony to establish the common meaning of a tariff term, but have done so only under limited circumstances not present here.
(Id.
at 8-9
(citing Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. v. United States,
Plaintiff responds to this argument by citing instances in which courts have considered affidavits containing expert opinion testimony when granting summary judgment, and by arguing that rather than opining on the meaning of a tariff term, its experts merely seek to provide their opinions on the meaning of terms within their professional experience. (Pl.’s Rep. 4-7.)
2. Defendant’s Contentions on the Merits of the 8th Cause of Action
Defendant also asserts that even if Plaintiff is permitted to use expert witness reports to support the eighth cause of action, Plaintiffs 14mm and 15mm flooring is nonetheless properly classifiable as plywood, within the common meaning of that term. (Def.’s Resp. 10-28; Def.’s Mot. 8-20.) Defendant cites Kahrs III, Boen, and no fewer than ten textual sources, each of which provides a definition of plywood consonant with the definition established by the courts in these cases. (Id.) Defendant notes that the CAFC considered and rejected the argument that gaps in the center layers of a sheet of plywood prevent an otherwise qualifying product from constituting plywood. (Def.’s Resp. at 16-18.) Defendant points out that while the HTSUS includes certain requirements for the plywood classifiable under the subheadings in question (such as having no ply thicker than 6mm, and having at least one outer ply of nonconiferous wood), there is no requirement in the HTSUS that plywood have “balanced construction,” as that term has been defined by Plaintiff. (Id. at 19.) Moreover, Defendant was unable to locate a single definition of plywood that requires it to be of a “balanced construction,” and the only located sources which utilize the term “balanced” to describe plywood appear to do so in reference to characteristics present in Plaintiffs flooring. (Id. at 19-21.)
Defendant’s last argument with respect to the eighth cause of action is that CBP has taken a position that engineered wood flooring such as Plaintiffs is properly classifiable as plywood, and that this determination “is entitled to deference or some high measure of respect from the Court.” (Def.’s Mot. 5
(citing United States v. Mead Corp.,
D. Analysis
1. Plaintiff May Use Expert Witness Declarations
The Court will not prohibit the use of Plaintiffs expert witness declarations in support of the eighth cause of action. First, Defendant has not persuaded the Court that there was a discovery violation in regards to expert disclosure. The Court’s scheduling order of December 22, 2010 states in relevant part:
[i]f an expert witness, who has not been previously identified in this case, is designated for use at trial regarding the Eighth Cause of Action, disclosure shall be made in accordance with USCIT Rule 26(a)(2) as soon as practicable, and no later than Friday, January 28, 2011.
(Dkt. 169 (emphasis added).) Because all of Plaintiffs expert witnesses had been previously identified in this case, the obligation imposed by this paragraph was never triggered, and USCIT R. 26(a)(2) (which requires disclosure of witnesses) was not violated. While it might have been helpful for Defendant to depose Plaintiffs experts for a second time, in order to plumb their testimony about the common meaning of plywood, the Court is not persuaded that Defendant was prevented from doing so — at least by any overt action of Plaintiff. Moreover, Defendant acknowledges that “the substantive portions of the testimony of Kahrs’ ‘experts,’ ... were initially offered in support of Kahrs’ motion for summary judgment on the fifth cause of action.” (Def.’s Rep. 5.) As such, Defendant cannot claim that it was blind-sided by any argument Plaintiff now makes regarding the eighth cause of action. Even if Plaintiff was less than forthcoming during the most recent period of discovery, it is clear to the Court, upon careful consideration of the substance of Plaintiffs expert witness declarations, that Defendant will not be prejudiced by their admission.
Defendant also has not persuaded the Court that it is improper to consider the opinions of expert witnesses when establishing the common meaning of a tariff term. To the contrary, for nearly a century, the courts have permitted the use of testimony to establish common meaning, but have uniformly held that any such testimony should be subordinate to reliable textual sources.
United States v. Crosse & Blackwell, Inc.,
2. Plaintiff Has Failed To Demonstrate that the Definition of Plywood Established in Boen Was Clearly Erroneous
After carefully considering the arguments and textual sources cited by the parties, along with the opinions espoused in Plaintiffs expert witness declarations, the Court concludes that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact on the eighth cause of action, and Defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
For the reasons described previously,
supra
at 1232-34, the only scenario under which this Court would disturb its prior ruling would be if Plaintiff demonstrated that the common meaning of plywood arrived at in
Boen
was clearly erroneous.
11
See Schott III,
a. Balanced Construction Is Not Part of the Definition of Plywood
On the issue of balanced construction, Plaintiff has failed to establish precisely what the phrase “balanced construction” means, and has failed to identify a single textual definition of plywood that explicit
Furthermore, the plain language of the HTSUS eo nomine provisions for plywood appear to contemplate plywood in which different veneers have been applied to the face and backside of the panel. If a piece of plywood was manufactured with one outer ply of coniferous wood, and the corresponding ply on the opposite side of the core was made from nonconiferous wood, such a product would not, by virtue of this feature, fail to be classifiable within HTSUS 4412 as plywood, even though it fails to fit within Plaintiffs proffered definition of balanced construction. (See HTSUS 4412.14 (providing for plywood containing “at least one outer ply of non-coniferous wood.”); see also HTSUS 4412.13 (providing for plywood containing “at least one outer ply of tropical wood”).) Accordingly, Plaintiffs argument about balanced construction is unavailing.
b. The Gaps In Plaintiffs 15mm Flooring Do Not Prevent It from Being Plywood
The Court is similarly unpersuaded by Plaintiffs argument that the common meaning of the term plywood includes the requirement that each ply be comprised of a continuous expanse. This argument was embraced by this court in an earlier stage of the Boen litigation, only to be rejected by the CAFC. The CIT concluded
[t]he definitions indicate that “plywood” is composed of thin sheets of wood glued together with the grains of adjacent layers at right angles. The definitions of “veneer” and “sheet” indicate that the layers forming plywood are “continuous expanses” of material of a constant thickness.
Boen Hardwood Flooring, Inc. v. United States,
None of the definitions of “plywood” ... are nearly so restrictive. The [CIT’s] interpretation of “plywood,” which imports the requirement that each layer be composed of a single, continuous sheet of wood, ignores the reality of the product and defies the accepted commercial meaning of the term.
Boen,
The Court does not accept the theory floated by Plaintiffs expert witnesses that although VPS Section 5.8.1 provides explicit measurements for the maximum width and length of crossband gaps, it really intends to restrict the measurements of such gaps as a percentage of the width of a “typical” piece of plywood. Such a standard would be easy enough to craft, and the Court finds it reasonable to infer that the measurements in this standard have been intentionally specified. Furthermore, Plaintiffs experts cite to no new textual definitions of plywood to support the contention that the product must be comprised only of layers that are each a continuous expanse. In the absence of such new or different textual sources, the Court has no basis upon which it could reject the binding precedent of the CAFC in Boen.
The Court is also unpersuaded by Plaintiffs argument that because the length of the gaps in Plaintiffs 15mm flooring are “beyond the [8 inch] limitation imposed by Section 5.8.1 [of the VPS],” Plaintiffs flooring therefore cannot be plywood. (Pl.’s Mot. VI-4.) The longest measurement of the width of Plaintiffs 15mm flooring (i.e., including all edge work) is eight and five eighths inches. If this measurement is taken to be the length of the gaps, 12 Plaintiffs product indeed may not comply with VPS Section 5.8.1. However, even with over-long gaps, the Court finds Plaintiffs product is still perfectly described by the common meaning of plywood established in Boen: it is comprised of at least three layers of wood that have been bonded together, with each layer arranged at a right angle to its adjacent layer. Even if Plaintiffs 15mm flooring is plywood that does not conform to VPS Section 5.8.1, it is classifiable as plywood nonetheless.
c. Plaintiff’s Substantial Transformation Argument Is Irrelevant
The Court also regards Plaintiffs third argument in support of the eighth cause of action — that its products may have once been plywood, but have been substantially transformed — to be a red herring. It is well established that goods shall be classified in the HTSUS “in their condition as imported.”
Dell Products LP v. United States,
3. CamelBak Products Does Not Affect the Outcome of This Case
On July 8, 2011, Plaintiff filed a letter to bring to the Court’s attention a recent CAFC decision that it claims ,“set[s] forth very important new guidelines on the analytical tools to be used for determining the scope of an
eo nomine
provision under GRI 1.” (Letter of July 8, 2011 1
(citing CamelBak Products, LLC v. United
Defendant responds by arguing that CamelBak did not introduce new criteria for all eo nomine classification cases, but simply highlighted factors that have long been considered by the courts. (Government’s Response to Plaintiffs July 8, 2011 Letter 1.) Defendant also distinguishes CamelBak by pointing out that Kahrs’ merchandise falls entirely within the eo nomine provision for plywood, whereas the article in CamelBak was comprised of two components that may have been classifiable under two different tariff provisions. Naturally, Plaintiff seized the opportunity to file an additional letter, in which it insists, among other things, that its 14mm flooring really is a composite article, comprised of a plywood core with front and back veneers. 13 (Pl.’s Rep. to Def.’s Resp. to Pl’s July 8, 2011 Letter 2-3.)
The Court finds that
CamelBak
does not affect the holding in this case. The CAFC stated in
CamelBak
that, “[i]f the subject articles fall within the scope of [a given]
eo nomine ...
provision then, under
Mita Copy star,
GRI1 mandates that the subject articles be classified [under that provision.]”
CamelBak
at 1367. The “analytical tools or factors” from
CamelBak
are only provided to help assess whether a product is “beyond the reach of the eo
nomine
” provision.
Id.
Plaintiffs merchandise is encompassed entirely by the definition of plywood. The Court finds that Plaintiffs merchandise does not possess an “additional component,” alien to plywood, much less “possess features substantially in excess” of the common meaning of plywood.
CamelBak
at 1368
(quoting Casio, Inc. v. United States,
For the foregoing reasons, then, the Court finds that it continues to be bound to accept the common meaning of plywood set out in Boen, just as it was in Kahrs III. The Court grants summary judgment to Defendant on the eighth cause of action.
II. Fifth Cause of Action — Commercial Designation
In the fifth cause of action, Plaintiff aims to prove that at the time the HTSUS was enacted into law in 1988, there was a commercial designation of the term plywood within the plywood wholesale trade, which differed from the common meaning, and was general, definite and uniform throughout the United States. (Compl. ¶¶ 48-62.) Plaintiff alleges that this commercial meaning does not encompass its engineered hardwood flooring, and seeks a judgment from this Court that its merchandise is instead classifiable as “veneered panels and similar laminated wood,” free of duty.
(Id.
¶ 62.) For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds there is no genuine issue of material fact
A. Defendant’s Contentions
Defendant argues that even if the factual assertions made by Plaintiffs expert witnesses are accepted as true, Plaintiff is unable to prove the uniformity and definiteness prongs of its commercial designation claim as a matter of law. (Def.’s Mot. 23-26.) Regardless of what Plaintiffs experts may claim about the commercial designation of plywood that existed in the trade prior to 1988, Defendant points to “publications of industry-wide trade organizations, authoritative publications which are voluntarily utilized and relied upon by the wholesale plywood industry,” which confirm that at that time, the industry regarded plywood according to its common meaning, rather than any special commercial designation.
{Id.
at 23.) Defendant cites
Timber Products
for the proposition that “[contradiction is a sufficient, but not necessary, condition for finding inconsistency, rather than uniformity throughout the trade, precluding commercial designation of a tariff term for classification under the HTSUS.”
(Id.
at 25-26
(citing Timber Products,
Specifically, Defendant cites the ANSI/ HPMA standards for hardwood plywood from 1983, which defines plywood as
[a] panel composed of an assembly of layers or plies of veneer (or veneers in combination with lumber core, particleboard core, MDF core, hardboard core, or of special core material) joined with an adhesive. Except for special constructions, the grain of alternate plies is always approximately at right angles, and the face veneer is usually a hardwood species.
(Id. at 23 (quoting ANSI/HPMA HP 1983 at p. 12, § 5, Definitions, PLYWOOD, HARDWOOD).) Plaintiff also cites the VPS PS 1-83 Construction and Industrial Plywood (With Typical APA Trademarks ) (December 30, 1983), which defines plywood as
a flat panel built up of sheets of veneer called plies, united under pressure by a bonding agent to create a panel with an adhesive bond between plies as strong as or stronger than, the wood. Plywood is constructed of an odd number of layers with grain of adjacent layers perpendicular. Layers may consist of a single ply or two or more plies laminated with parallel grain direction oriented parallel to the long dimension of the panel.
(Id.
at 24.)
14
These definitions are consistent with the common meaning of plywood, now well established by the courts, and serve to rebut Plaintiffs claims that prior to 1988 everyone in the plywood industry, throughout the United States, meant something different by the term ‘plywood.’
See Arthur J. Humphreys, Inc. v. United States,
B. Plaintiffs Contentions
In its response brief, Plaintiff claims that the commercial designation of plywood is
a panel composed of an assembly of layers or plies, typically at right angles to each other, all joined together with an adhesive bonded under heat and pressure, and the product is typically bought, sold by, manufactured to, and/or referenced to, well-recognized plywood veneer grades set forth in standards established by industry associations and/or government entities, or by standards agreed upon between the parties.
(Pl.’s Resp. 25-26.) While Plaintiff claims that plywood is defined as a product which is bought and sold according to “well-recognized” veneer grades, Plaintiff acknowledges that “a buyer might agree with a wholesale seller that he or she would purchase plywood products that are not bought and sold according to recognized grading standards,” in which case the buyer and/or seller would probably have “internal standards and an understanding as to the quality of the product that is being sold.” (Id. at 26.) Plaintiff acknowledges that VPS PS 1-83, cited by Defendant, was “[t]he plywood industry standard in effect in 1988,” and points out that this standard prescribed “letter grades ... to designate the quality of the veneers” used to manufacture the plywood. (Id.) Plaintiff rounds out its arguments by insisting that its experts have put forth a uniform, general and definite rendition of the commercial designation of plywood. (Id. at 28-30.)
C. Analysis
1. Whether Plaintiffs Fifth Cause of Action States a Claim Upon Which Relief Can Be Granted
In its complaint, Plaintiff provides little more than a rudimentary description of the commercial designation that it contends generally, definitely and uniformly existed throughout the United States in 1988. The closest Plaintiff comes to actually proffering a commercial designation is found in paragraph 55, where Plaintiff alleges that plywood
is bought and sold based on the grades of the face, back, and often the core of the plywood sheets. It is a commodity, component, multipurpose or structural material used to make other items.
(Id. ¶ 55.) While it is not clear whether Plaintiff intended for these sentences to set out the commercial designation of plywood, it is clear that this excerpt differs significantly from what Plaintiff now claims is the commercial designation. (See Pl.’s Resp. 25-26 (claiming the commercial designation of plywood is “a panel composed of an assembly of layers or plies, typically at right angles to each other, all joined together with an adhesive bonded under heat and pressure, and the product is typically bought, sold by, manufactured to, and/or referenced to, well recognized plywood veneer grades”).) In any event, the Court sees no other portion of Plaintiffs complaint that could be characterized as setting forth an alleged commercial designation.
In light of the vagueness of the commercial designation that is set out in the complaint, the Court has deep reservations about whether Plaintiff has alleged enough facts in support of the fifth cause of action to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The Supreme Court decided
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
[wjhile a complaint attacked by a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss does not needdetailed factual allegations ... a plaintiffs obligation to provide the ‘grounds’ of his ‘entitle[ment] to relief requires more than labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will not do.... Factual allegations must be enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative level[.]
Twombly,
In light of Plaintiffs failure to set out clearly what the alleged commercial designation is, the Court has some concern about whether Plaintiffs fifth cause of action constitutes more than a “formulaic recitation of the elements” of a commercial designation claim, and whether the factual allegations Plaintiff does make “raise a right to relief above the speculative level.” See id. However, as Defendant did not move to dismiss the fifth cause of action for failure to state a claim, and because Defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the fifth cause of action is now fully briefed before the Court, the Court will assume the sufficiency of Plaintiffs pleading and proceed to an evaluation on the merits.
2. Plaintiff Cannot Prove the Uniformity of its Alleged Commercial Designation
The Court finds that the definitions of plywood found in the industry standard publications for hardwood and softwood plywood in 1983 preclude Plaintiff from proving a uniform commercial designation. Even if the Court credits the statements of Plaintiffs expert witnesses as true, and accepts that, in their experience, plywood was always commercially defined as a product that is bought and sold on the basis of the grades of the veneers used in its construction, the textual definitions demonstrate a lack of uniformity on that point. The Court notes that the 1983 ANSI/HPMA hardwood plywood standard and the 1983 APA softwood plywood standard include abundant information about grading, but neither includes a definitional requirement that a product must be bought and sold by grade in order to constitute plywood. To the contrary, the definition of plywood found in each standard is fully consistent with the (now well established) common meaning of plywood. Because “[i]n order for a commercial designation to be uniform, it must be the same throughout the trade,” the Court finds that Plaintiff is incapable of proving uniformity in this case.
Timber Products Co.,
3. Plaintiff Cannot Prove the Definiteness of its Alleged Commercial Designation
The Court also finds that Plaintiffs commercial designation lacks definiteness. Plaintiffs proffered commercial designation of plywood is identical to the common meaning of plywood as established by the courts, with one additional requirement: the proviso that plywood “is typically bought, sold by, manufactured to, and/or referenced to, well-recognized plywood veneer grades ... or by standards agreed upon between the parties.” (Pl.’s Resp. 26 (emphasis added).) It is not clear to the Court from this string of disjunctive possibilities just how essential this added requirement is to Plaintiffs alleged commercial designation. Plaintiff further clarifies (or, perhaps, obfuscates) that a buyer and a seller of plywood could freely agree that the plywood in a given transaction does not need to be linked to “recognized grading standards,” and that under such circumstances “the buyer and/or seller would typically have their own internal standards and an understanding as to the quality of the product being sold.”
(Id.
(emphasis added).) The Court finds that Plaintiffs assertion regarding the necessary connection between plywood and
The lack of definiteness of Plaintiffs proffered commercial designation stands in stark contrast to the commercial designations in successful commercial designation cases. In
Florsheim Shoe Co. v. United States,
ConClusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court concludes that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact on either of the remaining causes of action in this case, and Defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on both the fifth and eighth causes of action. It is therefore
ORDERED that Defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the fifth and eighth causes of action is GRANTED, and it is further
ORDERED that Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment on the eighth cause of action is DENIED, and it is further
ORDERED that the parties shall confer and submit to the court, no later than Tuesday, August 16, 2011, a proposed judgment in accordance with the opinions
Notes
. Plaintiff also requested the opportunity to make an “oral presentation” pursuant to US-CIT R. 7(c) and 56(c). (Pl.’s Mot. for Summ. Adjudication on the Eighth Cause of Action in the Compl. ("Pl.’s Mot.”) 6.) The court treats this request as a request for oral argument, finds that oral argument is not warranted, and denies Plaintiff's request.
.
Kahrs Int’l. Inc. v. United States,
33 CIT -,
.Plaintiff asserts that the classification of its 7mm and 11mm flooring is also in dispute, but the United States has conceded that these products are “classifiable in HTSUS Heading 4412, subheading 4412.29.56, the provision for 'other' plywood, veneered panels and similar laminated wood, free of duty.” (Def.'s Resp. 3.) Seeing no dispute as to the classification of this merchandise, the Court focuses on the arguments made with respect to the 14mm and 15mm flooring.
.
Res judicata
“bars litigation by the same parties of the same issues previously adjudicated.”
Schott III,
. By citing to Plaintiff's statement of facts as “CSF” the Court does not endorse Plaintiff’s characterization of its statement as either concise or undisputed.
.The middle layer of Plaintiff's 14mm flooring is not comprised of slats, so Plaintiff does not make this argument with respect to that product.
. The 15 mm flooring has a core made of “fingers,'' also known as slats; the 14mm flooring has a core made of a “5-ply poplar panel.” (Pl.'s Mot. VI-7.)
. The 15mm flooring utilizes a “patented
. The court in May Department Stores saw this conclusion as so axiomatic that "it requires no citation of authority.” 16 U.S.Cust. App. at 355. Unfortunately, this Court has no such luxury.
. "Suppose the question before the court was, is a horse an animal, and the proof would show that a horse was not an animal. It is doubtful if the testimony in this kind of supposed case would be regarded by any court as any evidence at all. But, certainly ... [such testimony] would not control as against the judicially known fact and judicially decided fact, that a horse is an animal.”
United States v. Flory & Co.,
15 Ct.Cust.Appls. 156, 160, T.D. 42,219,
.The Court’s obligation to follow binding precedent is stronger than any Skidmore deference the Court might extend to CBP classification rulings. Accordingly, because of the existence of binding precedent in this case, the Court does not consider the extent to which Skidmore deference might compel a similar outcome in this case.
. The Court also notes that the "length” of the gaps could also be measured by the distance such gaps are completely enclosed (i.e., excluding all edge work), seven inches, or by the width of the surface of the panel, seven and seven eighths inches. Under either of these measurements, the gaps in Plaintiffs plywood would appear to conform with VPS Section 5.8.1. Because the Court finds it has no bearing on the appropriate classification of Plaintiff’s merchandise, the Court need not resolve which measurement is appropriate for gauging the length of the crossband gaps.
. In its second letter, Plaintiff also requests the opportunity to file additional briefing on CamelBak, which the Court declines.
. Defendant cites several other industry publications that provide similar definitions for plywood, however these are the only textual industry sources from prior to 1988, the year in which the HTSUS became U.S. law.
. USCIT R. 12(b)(5) is the CIT's equivalent of Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), and the Supreme Court's holding in Twombly applies to it with equal force.
. The Court identifies the following as a partial list of products that would fit within Plaintiff's proffered commercial designation:
1. Products that meet the common meaning of plywood, and are bought and sold according to well-recognized plywood veneer grades, or
2. Products that meet the common meaning of plywood, and are "manufactured to” well-recognized plywood veneer grades, or
3. Products that meet the common meaning of plywood, and are "referenced to” well-recognized plywood veneer grades, or
4. Products that satisfy some combination of (1) — (3), or
5. Products that meet the common meaning of plywood, and are bought and sold according to standards agreed upon by the parties, or
6. Products that meet the common meaning of plywood, and are manufactured according to standards agreed upon by the parties, or
7. Products that meet the common meaning of plywood, and are referenced to standards agreed upon by the parties, or
8. Products that meet the common meaning of plywood, with no reference to grading whatsoever.
