Samsung Electronics America, Inc. (“Samsung”) appeals from the summary judgment of the United States Court of International Trade in
Samsung Electronics America, Inc. v. United States,
BACKGROUND
Samsung imported various types of electronic equipment manufactured by its parent company, Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (“manufacturer”), in Korea between December 1987 and October 1990. Samsung then resold the equipment bearing both companies’ brand name SAMSUNG to consumers in America.
Customs assessed duties on each entry protested here based on the “transaction value” of the imported equipment, which is only one of several methods of appraisal used by Customs. This transaction value was determined using the price actually paid by Samsung when it purchased the equipment from the manufacturer, as provided in 19 U.S.C. § 1401a (1994).
As part of the sales contracts, Samsung and the manufacturer entered into Servicing Agent Agreements (“service agreements”), which acknowledged that “the Products exported to the United States are occasionally in need of the inspection, repair, refurbishing, and such other customer requested services.” The service agreements obligated the manufacturer to reimburse Samsung up to 5% of the total purchase price per year for the cost of these inspections, repairs and refurbish-ings.
During the time covered by these sales contracts and service agreements, but after liquidation of the entries, certain electronic equipment like that imported in the subject entries was found to contain latent defects. Samsung either sold the equipment containing such manufacturing defects at a discount and with the SAMSUNG label removed, or repaired it in the United States, either before sale or under the consumer warranties covering defective equipment, when consumers returned the equipment to Samsung as defective. Samsung’s cost accounting system kept track of these losses and repair costs on an annual basis. When consumers asserted their rights under their consumer warranties with Samsung, if the defects were determined to have not been caused by the consumer and to be covered by the warranty, the defects were repaired and the expenditures were considered repair costs in Samsung’s accounting system. Samsung (in America) asserted its rights under the service agreements and the manufacturer (Samsung in Korea) reimbursed Samsung (in America) for its losses incurred in the discounted sales and the costs incurred to repair the defects. This reimbursement was equal to 4.7% of the total purchase price for the period in question.
Samsung filed claims with Customs under what are now 19 C.F.R. § 158.12 and 19 U.S.C. § 1401 a(b)(3)(A)(i) for the valuation of the defective merchandise and, consequently, the duties assessed, to be reduced by a reasonable allowance for the diminished value due to the latent manufacturing defects. Customs rejected both Samsung’s claims and its subsequent protests.
See Samsung Electronics America, Inc. v. United States,
The Court of International Trade, on remand, found that Samsung could not “establish either the existence of latent defects in the subject entries with any specificity or the value of such claimed defects,” and again granted summary judgment to the government.
Samsung,
We have jurisdiction over this appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(5) (1994).
DISCUSSION
I.
Samsung seeks a partial refund in duties under 19 U.S.C. § 1401a
1
via a belated allowance under 19 C.F.R. § 158.12,
2
which requires an appraisal of the partially damaged merchandise that reflects the value of the defects. The Court of International Trade held that an importer is entitled to this allowance in dutiable value only when the particular entry for which the allowance is sought and the diminution in value of the merchandise so entered can be established with specificity.
See Samsung,
As this court specifically noted in our previous opinion, Samsung bore “the burden of proving ... that the costs to repair defects under consumer warranties were incurred to repair defects in existence at importation.”
Samsung,
The government argues that this evidence fails to prove that any defects repaired under the warranties existed at the time the items were entered and, in fact, the defects could have occurred at any time during the warranty period, possibly long after the item was imported. The Court of International Trade determined that the evidence showed only what the annual repair costs paid by Samsung were, and did not prove that the asserted repair
We agree with the Court of International Trade that Samsung’s evidence proves only that at least some of the merchandise Samsung imported between 1987 and 1990 contained latent defects upon importation. We further agree that Samsung has failed to establish which of the subject entries contained merchandise with latent defects at the time of importation and what their reduced value was. Samsung’s proof establishes no more than that
some
merchandise was defective. It does not clearly indicate
which
entries contained merchandise that was defective, or the value of the defects of a given entry. Under
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. United States,
We, therefore, agree with the Court of International Trade’s decision, and interpret 19 C.F.R. § 158.12 to require Samsung to prove that a specific entry contained defective merchandise and what the allowance in appraised value for each such entry should be. Section 158.12 specifically states that the entered merchandise is to be “appraised in its condition as imported.” Customs appraises the value of each entry as of the time of importation and assesses a duty based on this appraisal before it liquidates the entry. We, therefore, hold that section 158.12 requires the value for defects or damage to be associated with the entry appraised, so any refund on duty paid can be determined based on the specific entry at issue. It is legally insufficient to prove the repair costs, for example, for 1988 in toto, without correlation to particular entries in 1988. 5
II.
Samsung argues that it uses “generally accepted accounting principles” (“GAAP”) in maintaining costs on an annual basis, and that 19 C.F.R. § 158.12 cannot require more detailed records because under 19 U.S.C. § 1401a(g)(3)
6
importers
Even if the annual accounting system is applicable for certain purposes because it is a set of GAAP, it does not mean that the burden of proof to qualify for an allowance in appraisal value has been satisfied under this regulation, which has its own eviden-tiary requirements. Under different fact scenarios the Court of International Trade has previously stated that “value comparisons using allocations of costs verified and in compliance with GAAP do not necessarily provide the Court with accurate information with respect to the import statute in the U.S.,”
VWP of America, Inc. v. United States,
Our interpretation of 19 C.F.R. § 158.12 requires the allowance sought to be specifically tied to the value of the damaged or defective merchandise as appraised on an entry-by-entry basis. Samsung has provided no proof whatsoever of the entry-by-entry repair costs and losses. Indeed, it asserts that it is not capable of providing any such proof. Samsung’s proof of annual losses, repair costs and import duty assessments for the years 1987 to 1990 is insufficient to prove that every item repaired during these years contained manufacturing defects present at importation, and furthermore that every item so repaired was imported in the entries challenged here. The majority of the warranties covered the equipment for between ninety days and one year, but at least one warranty covered a particular part for eight years. If an item covered under the eight year warranty was repaired in 1988, it could have been imported at any time from 1980 until 1988, but the only entries for which Samsung protested and for which it now requests allowances were entered between December 1987 and October 1990. Thus, it cannot be determined whether that repair cost should be reflected in the appraisal for an entry in 1988. Samsung must be able to prove that the allowance requested is connected with the specific entry for which it is sought. As the Court of International Trade correctly held, “without some more concrete temporal connection between the subject entries, and the submitted warranty costs, only vague assumptions can be made about the appropriate allowance for the defects in subject entries.”
Samsung,
CONCLUSION
The summary judgment in favor of the government, holding that Samsung failed to prove the amounts of the requested allowances on an entry-by-entry basis, as required by 19 C.F.R. § 158.12, is therefore,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. 19 U.S.C. § 1401a details how the value of imported merchandise should be appraised.
. 19 C.F.R. § 158.12(a) reads as follows:
Merchandise partially damaged at time of importation.
(a) Allowance in value. Merchandise which is subject to ad valorem or compound duties and found by the port director to he. partially damaged at the time of importation shall he appraised in its condition as imported, with an allowance made in the value to the extent of the damage. However, no allowance shall be made when forbidden by law or regulation; for example, Chapter 72, Additional U.S. Note 3, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United Stales (19 U.S.C. § 1202), provides that no allowance or reduction of duties for partial damage or loss in consequence of discoloration or rust occurring before importation shall be made upon iron or steel or upon any article of iron or steel.
(emphasis added).
.Park's precise words were:
Because Samsung's merchandise was manufactured outside of the United States, and imported into the United States, all latent manufacturing defects in the merchandise, although discovered after importation, must have existed, and did exist, at the time of importation.
Park Aff. ¶3, J.A. at 41.
. We note that in
Alyeska,
as opposed to the situation here, Customs assessed the duty on twenty-one entries by extrapolating the value of the merchandise from one entry to the twenty other entries, whereas here Samsung asks Customs to interpolate the annual costs to each entry imported. The Court of International Trade held that 19 U.S.C. § 1500 provided for separate, unitary appraisal of entries and that a “value adjustment to imported merchandise may be reflected only on the entry or entries which cover the imported merchandise.”
Alyeska,
. This is especially so because, as discussed supra, the 1988 repair costs could involve equipment imported by Samsung in previous years in entries not protested here.
. Customs appraises all entered goods upon importation pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1401a(g)(3), which states in relevant part:
[Ijnformation that is submitted by an importer, buyer, or producer in regard to the appraisement of merchandise may not be rejected by the customs officer concernedon the basis of the accounting method by which that information was prepared, if the preparation was in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.... The applicability of a particular set of generally accepted accounting principles will depend upon the basis on which the value of the merchandise is sought to be established.
