This case involves the tariff classification of Canadian lumber imported into the United States by Millenium Lumber Distribution, Ltd. (“Millenium”). Millenium appeals the decision of the United States Court of International Trade granting summary judgment in favor of the United States (“the government”) that the United States Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (“Customs”) correctly classified Millenium’s imported lumber under heading 4407 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (“HTSUS”).
Millenium Lumber Distrib. Ltd. v. United States,
No. 02-595,
I
Millenium imported approximately 215 entries of cut lumber between October 1999 and January 2001 under HTSUS subheading 4418.90.40. The imported merchandise included 2x3, 2x4, and 2x6 spruce/ pine/fir lumber of various grades, cut to various even-foot lengths ranging from 5 to 20 feet. Each board had a 90° square-cut end, and an angle cut between 67.4° and 80.5° on the board’s opposite end.
Millenium,
In December 2000, Customs notified Millenium that it was classifying the subject merchandise under HTSUS subheading 4407.10.0015 rather than under Milleni-um’s entered HTSUS subheading 4418.90.40. Customs liquidated the merchandise accordingly. Millenium filed two protests, which were both denied, and then commenced this action in the Court of International Trade pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(a).
Millenium,
The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. Millenium asserted that the imported merchandise was classifiable under heading 4418 as “[bjuilders’ joinery and carpentry of wood” or alternatively under heading 4421 as “[ojther articles of wood.” The government maintained that Millenium’s imported merchandise was standard dimensional lumber, classifiable under heading 4407 as “[w]ood sawn or chipped lengthwise ... of a thickness exceeding 6 mm.” The court agreed with the government and granted summary judgment accordingly.
Millenium,
II
Millenium appeals the grant of summary judgment upholding Customs’ classification of the imported lumber under heading 4407. Millenium asserts that the court should have instead granted Millenium’s summary judgment motion and classified the lumber under heading 4418 or, in the alternative, under heading 4421. We have jurisdiction over Millenium’s appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(5).
We review a grant of summary judgment by the Court of International Trade for correctness as a matter of law and decide
de novo
the proper interpretation of the tariff provisions as well as whether there are genuine issues of material fact to preclude summary judgment.
Rollerblade, Inc. v. United States,
Proper classification of goods under the HTSUS entails first ascertaining the meaning of specific terms in the tariff provisions and then determining whether the subject merchandise comes within the description of those terms.
Rollerblade,
The General Rules of Interpretation (“GRIs”) govern classification of merchandise under the HTSUS.
N. Am. Processing Co. v. United States,
Ill
Heading 4407 provides for “[w]ood sawn or chipped lengthwise, sliced or peeled, whether or not planed, sanded, or finger-jointed, of a thickness exceeding 6 mm.” The explanatory note to heading 4407 provides that “[w]ith few exceptions, this heading covers all wood and timber, of any length but of a thickness exceeding 6 mm.” Note 44.07, Vol. 2, Explanatory Notes, World Customs Organization (2d ed.1996) [hereinafter Explanatory Note]. Despite its breadth, heading 4407 excludes merchandise that meets heading 4418’s more specific terms. Id. While the parties agree that Millenium’s imported lumber falls within heading 4407’s broad terms, they dispute whether the merchandise also falls under the more specific heading 4418.
Heading 4418 covers “[guilders’ joinery and carpentry of wood.” The explanatory note to heading 4418 provides that “[t]his heading applies to woodwork, including that of wood marquetry or inlaid wood, used in the construction of any kind of building, etc., in the form of assembled goods or as recognizable unassembled pieces.” 44.18 Explanatory Note. Carpentry includes woodwork “used for structural purposes or in scaffoldings, arch supports, etc.”
Id.
To qualify as “recognizable unas-sembled pieces” of particular articles, the subject merchandise must be “dedicated solely or principally for use in those articles.”
Baxter Healthcare Corp. of P.R. v. United States,
In granting the government’s motion for summary judgment, the court explained that the subject merchandise was not identifiable or fixed with certainty as unassem-bled truss pieces because “the evidence on the record demonstrates that there is no genuine issue as to the fact that some or all of the imported lumber would require significant additional processing in order to be assembled into completed wood trusses.”
Millenium,
*1330 On appeal, Millenium asserts that summary judgment was inappropriate because it sees a factual dispute as to whether its imported lumber required recutting to be used in a final truss. Millenium points to testimony indicating that builders often splice two boards together to form a longer truss, thereby eliminating the need for angle cuts at both ends. Millenium also cites testimony from Customs’ expert witness, Dr. Woeste, who, when asked if the lumber could be used in its exact length and with its existing precut angles by splicing two boards together at their square ends, responded that it was “possible.” Millenium also submitted affidavit testimony from one of its customers who claimed that “[t]he angle cut truss components produced by Millenium Lumber Distribution Co. were used to manufacture trusses without re-cutting except for about 10% which was surplus to specific job needs or contained defects.” In addition, Millenium proffered evidence that builders used the original angle cut without reshaping. Millenium asserts that together, this testimony created a material factual dispute, and that summary judgment was therefore inappropriate. We disagree.
The germane question is not whether Millenium’s imported lumber can be used in a truss without recutting, but whether the subject lumber requires recut-ting before it is sufficiently “recognizable” as unassembled pieces of a finished truss to warrant classification under heading 4418.
See
44.18 Explanatory Note. It may have been possible to use the subject merchandise in finished trusses without recut-ting, and some of Millenium’s customers may have used nearly all of the lumber it imported from Millennium to manufacture trusses without recutting as the testimony above indicates. This does not mean, however, that the subject merchandise was “dedicated solely or principally for use in” a finished truss so that the merchandise could be fairly characterized as “in the form of ... recognizable unassembled pieces” of a truss.
See Baxter Healthcare,
Because Customs’ classifications decisions are presumed correct, Millenium bears the burden of proving otherwise.
Rollerblade,
Millenium also contends, in the alternative, that its imported merchandise is *1331 sufficiently advanced beyond simple dimensional lumber to be classified under heading 4421. Heading 4421 covers “other articles of wood” but excludes any that are “specified or included in the preceding headings.” 44.21 Explanatory Note. Therefore, simple dimensional lumber subject to classification under heading 4407 cannot fall under heading 4421. Millenium argues that its imported merchandise is too far advanced to be classified as standard dimensional lumber under heading 4407 because the lumber has “specified dimensions, minimal grade, Machine Stress Rating, minimal moisture content, species, and precision cut[s] at one end to particular angles.” These characteristics, however, do not preclude classification under heading 4407.
The explanatory note to heading 4407 specifies that “[w]ith a few exceptions, this heading covers all [sawn, chipped or cut] wood and timber, of any length but of a thickness exceeding 6 mm.” 44.07 Explanatory Note. As to the angle cut at one end of the lumber, 44.07’s explanatory note specifies that “the wood of this heading need not necessarily be of rectangular (including square) section nor of uniform section along the length.” Id. Millenium offers no further objection to Customs’ classification under heading 4407. The imported merchandise therefore cannot be classified under heading 4421.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the United States Court of International Trade.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. A truss is a wood assembly that forms a rigid triangulated framework of wood used to support the roof or other parts of a building.
