United States v. C.H. Robinson Co. , 880 F. Supp. 2d 1335 ( 2012 )


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  • Slip Op. 12-134
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    UNITED STATES,
    Plaintiff,
    Before: Leo M. Gordon, Judge
    v.
    Court No. 06-00434
    C.H. ROBINSON COMPANY,
    Defendant.
    OPINION and ORDER
    [Defendant liable for unpaid duties.]
    Dated: November 7, 2012
    Steven M. Mager and Shelley D. Weger, Trial Attorneys, Commercial Litigation
    Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice, of Washington, D.C., argued for
    Plaintiff United States. With them on the brief were Stuart F. Delery, Acting Assistant
    Attorney General, Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and Patricia M. McCarthy, Assistant
    Director. Of counsel was Andrew Kosegi, Deputy Assistant Chief Counsel, U.S.
    Customs and Border Protection, of Indianapolis, IN.
    John M. Peterson and Richard F. O’Neill, Neville Peterson LLP, of New York,
    NY, argued for Defendant C.H. Robinson Company.
    Gordon, Judge: This opinion follows a bench trial. Plaintiff United States (the
    “Government”) brought this action pursuant to Section 553 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
    amended, 
    19 U.S.C. § 1553
     (2006)1, and 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (c), to recover certain duties,
    taxes, and fees from Defendant C.H. Robinson Company (“C.H. Robinson”). The court
    has jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1582
    (3) (2006). For the reasons set forth
    1
    Further citations to the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, are to the relevant provisions of
    Title 19 of the U.S. Code, 2006 edition.
    Court No. 06-00434                                                              Page 2
    below, the court adjudges C.H. Robinson liable for the duties, taxes, and fees
    demanded by the United States.
    I. Background
    This action involves the Government’s claim that C.H. Robinson, a bonded
    carrier, owes duties, taxes, and fees accruing to the United States for three entries
    (“subject entries”) of wearing apparel (“subject merchandise”) from the People’s
    Republic of China. The subject entries were made as transportation and exportation
    entries, covering merchandise destined for Mexico after passing through the United
    States from the Port of Los Angeles, California to the Port of Laredo, Texas.
    The vast majority of merchandise brought into the United States is entered by
    means of consumption entries by an importer of record. A consumption entry requires
    that merchandise entered into the commerce of the United States meet several
    statutory and regulatory requirements, including the payment of duties owing upon the
    entered merchandise, unless the merchandise is subject to duty-free treatment. See
    generally 
    19 U.S.C. § 1505
    .
    As an exception to this general rule, Congress established that merchandise may
    be entered into the United States for the sole purpose of transporting such merchandise
    to a foreign port of destination. In particular, “[a]ny merchandise . . . shown by the
    manifest, bill of lading, shipping receipt, or other document [such as a Customs Form
    7512] to be destined to a foreign country, may be entered for transportation in bond
    through the United States by a bonded carrier without appraisement or the payment of
    duties and exported under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury shall
    prescribe.” 
    19 U.S.C. § 1553
    (a). A transportation and exportation entry (“T&E entry”) is
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                          Page 3
    the type of entry that is used when merchandise is transiting the United States for
    eventual export from the United States.                        It is only when merchandise is being
    transported to a foreign destination and exported that duties are not owed.
    Based on its clear statutory authority, U.S. Customs and Border Protection
    (“CBP”) developed a broad regulatory scheme in which transportation and exportation
    entries would operate. See 
    19 U.S.C. § 1553
    (a); see also 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 18.20-18.24
    (2001). 2               CBP’s regulatory scheme for T&E entries is designed to ensure that
    merchandise destined to a foreign port of entry is, in fact, exported.                 This scheme
    provides a multi-layered approach to overseeing such entries, including safeguards
    against non-compliance. Among these safeguards is the provision found at 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (c), which requires that a “carrier shall pay any internal-revenue taxes, duties, or
    other taxes accruing to the United States on the missing merchandise, together with all
    costs, charges, and expenses caused by the failure to make the required transportation,
    report, and delivery.”
    The regulatory scheme also sets forth the timing of certain events regarding the
    transit of in-bond merchandise. For example, bonded merchandise destined for export
    from the United States and transported by land is required to be delivered to CBP at the
    port of exportation within 30 days after the date of receipt by the forwarding carrier at
    the port of origin. See 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.2
    (c)(2). As a safeguard, if this requirement is not
    met, the regulation provides that failure to deliver the merchandise within the 30-day
    2
    Further citations to the Code of Federal Regulations are to the relevant provisions of
    2001 edition.
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                   Page 4
    period constitutes an irregular delivery and the initial bonded carrier is subject to
    applicable civil penalties. 
    Id.
     (citing 
    19 CFR § 18.8
    ).
    Additionally, CBP’s regulations require that “[p]romptly, but no more than 2
    working days, after arrival of any portion of the in-bond shipment at the port of
    exportation, the delivering carrier shall surrender the in-bond manifest [CF 7512] to the
    port director as notice of arrival of the merchandise.”       
    19 C.F.R. § 18.7
    (a).      This
    regulation also states that“[f]ailure to surrender the in-bond manifest or report the arrival
    of bonded merchandise within the prescribed period shall constitute an irregular delivery
    and the initial bonded carrier shall be subject to applicable penalties (see § 18.8).” Id.
    (parenthetical in original).
    Submission of a CF 7512 provides CBP with notice that the carrier has complied
    with the requirement of 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.2
    (c)(2) to deliver the merchandise to the port of
    exportation within 30 days of receipt. It also commences the 20-day period for the
    carrier to notify CBP that the in-bond merchandise has not been entered.                See
    
    19 C.F.R. § 4.37
    (b). However, if the carrier chooses to enter, rather than export, the in-
    bond merchandise, the carrier must make that entry (for consumption, for additional
    movement by another carrier, or for entry into warehouse) within 20 days after arrival at
    the port of destination. 
    Id.
    Pursuant to 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.7
    (b), “[t]he port director shall require only such
    supervision of the lading for exportation of merchandise covered by an entry or
    withdrawal for exportation or for transportation and exportation as is reasonably
    necessary to satisfy him that the merchandise has been laden on the exporting
    conveyance.” 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.7
    (b). In late 2001 and early 2002, the time of the subject
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                  Page 5
    entries, CBP used a self-regulating process at the Port of Laredo in which CBP did not
    require (1) a carrier to report separately its arrival at the port of destination and the
    carrier’s exportation of the merchandise, and (2) the supervised exportation of each
    T&E entry. Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Mot. In Limine, App. 29-30 (Dickinson Dec.), Jan. 8,
    2010, ECF No. 71. Instead, at that time, CBP gave exporting carriers the benefit of the
    doubt that merchandise subject to a T&E entry was exported after having merely
    received notice of the merchandise’s arrival at the port, unless such notice was called
    into question.
    CBP is authorized to verify the presumption of exportation it  granted an exporting
    carrier of a T&E entry. Pursuant to the procedures set forth in 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.7
    (c),
    “[w]henever the circumstances warrant, and  occasionally in any event, port directors
    shall request the Office of Enforcement to check export  entries . . . against the records
    of the exporting carriers.   Such check or verification shall include  an examination of the
    carrier’s records of claims and settlement of export freight charges and any  other
    records which may relate to the transaction.   The exporting carrier shall maintain these
    records for 5 years from the date of exportation of the merchandise.”            
    19 C.F.R. § 18.7
    (c)(emphasis added). A bonded carrier’s failure to ensure exportation or other
    lawful disposition of T&E merchandise exposes the carrier to liabilities for any non-
    delivery at the port of exportation. See 
    id.
     at §§ 18.7(c) and 18.8. Any non-delivery of
    T&E merchandise is “presumed to have occurred while the merchandise was in the
    possession of carrier, unless conclusive evidence to the contrary is produced.”
    
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (a); see also Assessment of Liquidated Damages Under Carrier’s
    Bonds, 
    47 Fed. Reg. 2,086
    -01, 2,087 (Dep’t of Treasury Jan. 14, 1982) (final rule).
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                   Page 6
    In addition to liability for payment of liquidated damages on the bond, the bonded
    carrier’s liability covers “any internal-revenue taxes, duties, or other taxes accruing to
    the United States on the missing merchandise, together with all costs, charges, and
    expenses caused by the failure to make the required transportation, report, and
    delivery.” 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (c).
    Here, CBP conducted an audit under 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.7
    (c) to verify whether
    C.H. Robinson as the bonded carrier of the subject entries exported the subject
    merchandise. CBP concluded that C.H. Robinson could neither show that the subject
    merchandise was nor otherwise account for the merchandise’s whereabouts.               CBP
    therefore presumed that the merchandise remained in the United States and
    determined   that   non-delivery   of   T&E   merchandise    had    occurred   for    which
    C.H. Robinson was responsible. Accordingly, CBP made a demand on C.H. Robinson,
    pursuant to 
    19 U.S.C. § 1553
     and 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (c), for payment of $106,407.86, plus
    interest, for duties owed on the subject entries (“CBP’s duty demand”). Joint Ex. 23.
    CBP’s duty demand explained that C.H. Robinson owed duties on the subject entries
    because “C.H. Robinson failed to insure that the goods were exported to Mexico” and,
    “[c]onsequently, the quota/visa-restricted merchandise was diverted into the commerce
    of the United States, resulting in the loss of duties owed to the Government.” 
    Id.
     CBP’s
    duty demand advised C.H. Robinson that “this demand may be protestable pursuant to
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1514
    .” 
    Id.
     C.H. Robinson neither protested the demand nor paid the duties
    demanded. This action for collection of the unpaid duties ensued.
    Prior to trial C.H. Robinson moved to dismiss this case as a matter of law,
    denying legal liability for any duties, taxes, or fees owed on the subject entries. Def.’s
    Court No. 06-00434                                                               Page 7
    Mot. to Dismiss, Mar. 30, 2007, ECF No. 19.        In support of its motion to dismiss,
    C.H. Robinson argued that its responsibility for the subject entries was fully discharged
    when the subject merchandise was delivered to the Port of Laredo, as evidenced by the
    CF 7512s stamped upon arrival at that port. 
    Id. at 7
    . C.H. Robinson contended that
    “any event that occurred subsequent [to delivery in Laredo] is not actionable against the
    carrier.” 
    Id.
     In denying C.H. Robinson’s motion the court ruled that as the bonded
    carrier of the subject entries, C.H. Robinson fulfilled its obligations under 19 C.F.R
    § 18.8 by providing acceptable proof of proper delivery of the subject merchandise at
    the Port of Laredo, i.e., by presenting date-stamped receipt copies of the subject
    CF 7512s.   See Order Denying Mot. to Dismiss at 3, Nov. 20, 2007, ECF No. 32.
    However, the court further held that C.H. Robinson not only had to certify proper
    delivery, but was also responsible under the regulatory scheme to account for “missing
    merchandise.” Id.
    The court subsequently clarified that the Government has “the burden of
    persuasion to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the subject
    merchandise is ‘missing’ within the meaning of the regulation, or more simply that the
    merchandise was not exported as required.” Order Denying Def.’s Mot. in Limine at 2
    (citing Tech Licensing Corp. v. Videotek, Inc., 
    545 F.3d 1316
    , 1326-27 (Fed. Cir. 2008),
    Jan. 14, 2010, ECF No. 75. Although there is a regulatory presumption that a date-
    stamped CF 7512 showing receipt of the in-bond manifest is acceptable proof of proper
    delivery, C.H. Robinson, as the bonded carrier, also had a duty to account for missing
    merchandise if audited under the verification procedures of 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.7
    . Given
    these considerations, the court noted that the Government could not open its case in
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                Page 8
    chief “by simply resting with no proffer other than bare reliance on a regulatory
    requirement that Defendant account for missing merchandise.” 
    Id. at 3
    . Rather, the
    Government would have to rebut the presumption of proper delivery by proffering “as
    part of its case in chief evidence of the verification procedures undertaken pursuant to
    [the regulatory scheme] and their results that raised suspicions about the exportation of
    the merchandise, leading [the court] to conclude that [the merchandise] was not
    exported.”   
    Id.
       Depending on the efficacy of the Government’s opening case,
    C.H. Robinson, in turn, would have to come forward with its own evidence and
    explanations to account for the potentially missing subject merchandise. A bench trial
    followed to determine whether the Government could establish by a preponderance of
    the evidence that the subject merchandise was missing and therefore never exported.
    In an action tried upon the facts without a jury, “the court must find the facts
    specially and state its conclusions of law separately.” USCIT R. 52(a)(1); see also
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2645
    (a)(1). Based on the following findings of fact and conclusions of law,
    the court adjudges C.H. Robinson liable for duties, taxes, and fees on the subject
    merchandise in the amount of $106,407.86, plus interest.
    II. Discussion
    A. Findings of Fact
    In late December 2001, Trans-Union Group Inc./Intercambio Comercial Ekim
    S.A. (“TUG”), the importer of record, entered the subject merchandise under cover of
    T&E entry numbers 609 203 744, 609 203 873, and 609 203 862 at the Port of Los
    Angeles. Joint Exs. 4-6. C.H. Robinson was designated by TUG as the bonded carrier
    for the subject entries. Tr. 457:24-459:8 (Munoz direct); Joint Ex. 3; see also Joint Exs.
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                Page 9
    4-6. At TUG’s request, C.H. Robinson was to transport the subject merchandise from
    the Port of Los Angeles for delivery to Intercambio Comercial Ekim SA/L.E. Forwarding
    & Freight Broker in Laredo, Texas3 using Mario’s Transports Inc. (“Mario’s Transports”).
    Tr. 459:9-24; 471:18-22; 479:9-480:2 (Munoz direct); Joint Exs. 3-4, 7-11. Shortly after
    entry, the subject merchandise exited the Port of Los Angeles for Laredo and then its
    ultimate destination of Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. Pretrial Order, Schedule C (Uncontested
    Facts) ¶¶ 3, 11, and 19; Joint Exs. 4-6.
    TUG employed Mario Pena, Inc. (”Pena”), a licensed U.S. customs broker, to
    receive the subject merchandise in Laredo for exportation to Mexico. See Tr. 485:14-18
    (Munoz cross); Joint Ex. 4. Pena received the T&E documents - the CF 7512s - for the
    subject entries, and on January 2 and 4, 2002, using an unmonitored stamp machine in
    the lobby of CBP’s export lot at the Port of Laredo, obtained a date stamp showing
    receipt of each of the three subject CF 7512s covering the subject entries. Tr. 273:5-18
    (Mario Pena, Jr. direct); Joint Exs. 4-6. Pena’s official log book shows a record of
    receipt for the CF 7512s for the subject entries, but is blank for a corresponding date of
    exportation for each entry. Joint Ex. 13; see Tr. 271:23-272:6 (Mario Pena, Jr. direct).
    Pena never brought the subject merchandise to the CBP export lot in Laredo, nor did
    Pena ever see, or take possession or delivery of the subject merchandise. Tr. 273:5-14
    (Mario Pena, Jr. direct). Morever, CBP neither physically inspected nor took possession
    3
    No entity by the name of Intercambio Comercial Ekim SA/ L.E. Forwarding & Freight
    Broker was authorized to receive bonded cargo during the time in question. Tr. 409:18-
    412:3 (Ingalls direct).
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                Page 10
    of the subject merchandise at the Port of Laredo. Tr. 137:21-138:8 (Rodriguez direct);
    Joint Exs. 4-6.
    In March 2002, Officer O’Ruill David McCanlas (“Officer McCanlas”) of CBP”s
    Office of Investigations, Fraud and Commercial Crimes Unit commenced an audit of
    C.H. Robinson, as the bonded carrier responsible for the subject entries, to ensure
    compliance with CBP’s procedures for T&E entries. Tr. 25:10-24; 26:9-27:10; 41:21-
    42:22 (McCanlas direct) and 51:17-20 (McCanlas cross).         In response to Officer
    McCanlas’ request for proof that the subject entries had been exported to Mexico,
    C.H. Robinson produced a date-stamped receipt copy of the in-bond manifest – the
    CF 7512 – for each of the subject entries. Joint Exs. 4-6. C.H. Robinson also obtained
    from TUG and submitted to CBP three documents purporting to be Mexican import
    documents, known as “pedimentos” (“the C.H. Robinson pedimentos” or “subject
    pedimentos”), as proof of exportation of the subject entries. Tr. 42:23-43:13 (McCanlas
    direct) and 526:19-21 (Anderson re-direct); Pl.’s Exs. 9-11.
    After receiving the subject pedimentos, Officer McCanlas contacted Jesus
    Alberto Fernandez Wilburn (“Fernandez Wilburn”), Port Director at the Colombia
    Solidarity Bridge for Mexican Customs, Nuevo Leon, Mexico, which shared operations
    with the Port of Nuevo Laredo, requesting that Mexican Customs verify the authenticity
    of the three subject pedimentos.      Tr. 44:20-45:9 (McCanlas direct); Pl.’s Ex. 15.
    A search of Mexican Customs’ electronic database revealed that the unique numbers
    on each of the subject pedimentos did not match the numbers for any pedimento in
    that database, nor was there any evidence of the existence of the subject pedimentos.
    Tr. 328:10-329:10 (Fernandez Wilburn direct). Moreover, the four digit broker code for
    Court No. 06-00434                                                               Page 11
    the customs broker listed on the subject pedimentos did not match the name of the
    customs broker associated with that code.      Tr. 329:20-331:2 (Fernandez Wilburn
    direct). Lastly, the inspection stamps on each of the subject pedimentos indicated a
    road-check inspection in the interior of Mexico that pre-dated the purported date of
    entry of the subject merchandise into Mexico, Tr. 332:6-22 (Fernandez Wilburn direct),
    and pre-dated the date stamp signifying payment of Mexican import duties. Tr. 335:6-
    14 (Fernandez Wilburn direct).
    The court heard testimony from Rudolfo Torres Herrera (“Torres Herrera”), who
    served in various positions for Mexican Customs prior to his current appointment as the
    Assistant Commissioner for post imports. He is well versed in the Mexican importation
    system, including the use of pedimentos, and was designated as an expert at trial. Tr.
    164:7-22 (Torres Herrera direct) and 206:20-207:14 (Torres Herrera direct). He testified
    that on valid pedimentos inspection stamps must always post-date bank stamps
    because Mexican customs duties must be deposited with a bank prior to entry of
    merchandise into Mexico. Tr. 184:14-21 (Torres Herrera direct).
    Torres Herrrera also testified that, in September 2009, in response to another
    request from CBP to verify the validity of the subject pedimentos, he performed a
    detailed analysis of the information contained in those pedimentos. Pl.’s Exs. 41-43.
    A search of Mexican Customs’ electronic database for information on the unique
    pedimento numbers corresponding to each of the subject pedimentos revealed no
    information regarding the numbers corresponding to these three pedimentos.
    Tr. 179:13-180:2 (Torres Herrera direct). A further search of the Mexican Customs’
    electronic database for the name and broker license number of the Mexican customs
    Court No. 06-00434                                                             Page 12
    broker listed on each of the pedimentos revealed that there was no broker in that
    database matching the name and broker license number set forth on the subject
    pedimentos. Tr. 181:16-182:2 (Torres Herrera direct). That search, however, did reveal
    that the customs broker license number provided on the subject pedimentos belonged
    to a customs broker other than the broker listed on those pedimentos. Tr. 182:2-6
    (Torres Herrera direct).   Moreover, the search revealed that the Mexican Customs’
    electronic database had no record of a relationship between the importing company
    listed on the subject pedimentos and either the named customs broker or the customs
    broker whose license number appeared on those pedimentos. Tr. 182:20-183:5 (Torres
    Herrera direct). The results of these searches confirmed the results of CBP’s March
    2002 inquiry.
    The Torres Herrera investigation also showed that the tax identification number –
    a unique number assigned to all persons or entities doing business in Mexico – listed on
    the subject pedimentos for the Mexican customs broker was not in the Mexican
    electronic taxation database. Tr. 181:17-182:1; 183:6-184:5-7 (Torres Herrera direct).
    He thus concluded that the listed tax identification number was not valid. 
    Id.
     The
    Torres Herrera investigation further revealed that the population registry number – a
    unique 18-digit number assigned to all Mexican nationals upon birth – listed for the
    Mexican customs broker on the subject pedimentos did not contain the required number
    of digits for population registry numbers and was identical to the tax identification
    number listed on the subject pedimentos. Tr. 183:7-184:7 (Torres Herrera direct). The
    investigation also demonstrated that the bank listed on the subject pedimentos as
    having received payment of the duties owed on the entries of the subject merchandise
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                Page 13
    did not engage in any transaction with the importing company listed on the subject
    pedimentos.    Tr. 184:8-185:11 (Torres Herrera direct).      Finally, Mexican Customs’
    electronic database did not contain any record of import transactions involving the
    importing company listed on the subject pedimentos during the period 2001-2002.
    Tr. 185:12-21 (Torres Herrera direct).
    Torres Herrera also testified about the likelihood that cargo accompanied by the
    subject pedimentos could have passed legally through Mexican Customs into Mexico.
    According to Torres Herrera, all information listed on a pedimento is included in a bar
    code appearing at the center of the document, Tr. 169:18-170:8 (Torres Herrera direct),
    and all cargo entering Mexico must pass through a series of checkpoints where
    Mexican Customs visually examines each pedimento and the bar code is scanned for
    verification against Mexican Customs’ electronic database. Tr. 190:16-195:13 (Torres
    Herrera direct). He indicated that there are three check points in the enclosed Mexican
    Customs’ compound in the Port of Nuevo Laredo through which all truck cargo must
    pass upon crossing the U.S./Mexico border. 
    Id.
     At the first inspection booth, a Mexican
    Customs official scans the bar code. If the pedimento is not in Mexican Customs’
    electronic database, Mexican Customs would seize the subject merchandise.
    Tr. 191:13-24 (Torres Herrera direct).      At the second inspection booth, which is
    operated by a private company, the bar code is scanned again to verify the results of
    the first scan. Tr. 191:25-193:25 (Torres Herrera direct). If the pedimento is not in
    Mexican Customs’ electronic database, the subject merchandise would be seized. 
    Id.
    At the third check point, the pedimento is visually inspected for a final time before cargo
    is permitted to leave the compound.        Tr. 194:2-19 (Torres Herrera direct).      Any
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                 Page 14
    discrepancy or irregularity found in the pedimento during the three stage check-point
    process would lead to a physical inspection and/or seizure of the cargo, and all such
    inspections or seizures would be registered in Mexican Customs’ electronic database.
    Tr. 191:13-194:14 (Torres Herrera direct); Tr. 341:12-16 (Fernandez Wilburn direct). In
    addition to the three check points at the Mexican Customs’ compound in Nuevo Laredo,
    cargo traveling by road to the interior of Mexico is subject to a fourth check point located
    20 kilometers from the U.S./Mexico border. At this fourth check point, operated by
    Mexican military, federal, and/or state police, each pedimento is examined and the bar
    code is again scanned. Tr. 194:12-19 (Torres Herrera direct). If any discrepancy is
    identified, the subject merchandise would be seized. Tr. 191:13-194:19 (Torres Herrera
    direct).
    Torres Herrera testified that, in his experience, illegal entry (smuggling) of
    merchandise into Mexico is most often accomplished by using pedimentos that, unlike
    the subject pedimentos, are valid in all respects except for the listed country of origin.
    He testified that in those cases, but for the country of origin, the information contained
    on the face of the pedimento would match that found in the Mexican Customs’
    electronic database so as to minimize the risk of suspicion during the importation check-
    point process. Tr. 195:17-196:17 (Torres Herrera direct).           Because the subject
    pedimentos contained numerous discrepancies that were unverifiable by a search of
    official Mexican electronic databases and because the subject pedimentos contained
    information whose falsity could have been ascertained by a visual inspection of a
    trained Mexican Customs official, Torres Herrera concluded that, in his expert opinion,
    the subject pedimentos were not valid Mexican import documents, Tr. 179:3-11 (Torres
    Court No. 06-00434                                                               Page 15
    Herrera direct), and that any cargo accompanied by these pedimentos could not have
    passed into the territory of Mexico undetected by Mexican Customs. Tr. 190:18-195:13
    (Torres Herrera direct). Accordingly, in his expert opinion, the merchandise purported
    to have been imported into Mexico using the subject pedimentos never entered Mexico.
    Tr. 189:24-190:15 (Torres Herrera direct).
    Pursuant to the procedures in place in 2002, Mexican Customs would have
    seized cargo whose pedimentos did not appear in Mexican Customs’ electronic
    database. Tr. 341:12-16 (Fernandez Wilburn direct). While there is no evidence of the
    subject pedimentos in Mexican Customs’ electronic customs database, Tr. 179:18-
    180:2 (Torres Herrera direct) and 328:10-329:10 (Fernandez Wilburn direct), there is
    also no record of a seizure of the subject merchandise by Mexican Customs. See Pl.’s
    Ex. 15; Tr. 58:14-59:3 (McCanlas cross) and 327:8-18 (Fernandez Wilburn direct).
    In response to the Government’s case in chief, C.H. Robinson relied on the three
    date-stamped CF 7512s for the subject entries; the subject pedimentos; the driver hand
    tags and freight bills for transport of the subject merchandise; and Pena’s official log
    book as evidence regarding the final disposition of the subject entries. Pl.’s Exs. 19 and
    22. While C.H. Robinson demonstrated proof of delivery of the subject merchandise at
    the Port of Laredo, in accordance with 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (c), by submitting the three date-
    stamped CF 7512s, see Order Denying Mot. to Dismiss at 3, no information contained
    on the face of the three CF 7512s provides any indication of the exportation or non-
    exportation of the subject merchandise after its presumed arrival at the Port of Laredo,
    see Joint Exs. 4-6; Tr. 32:19-33:9 (McCanlas direct) and 87:9-89:20 (Lopez direct). The
    same can be said for the driver hang tags and the freight bills for the transport of the
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                Page 16
    subject merchandise, Pl.’s Ex. 19; Tr. 90:2-92:23 (Lopez direct), and the official Pena
    log book, Joint Ex. 13; Tr. 268:12-22; 272:14-24 (Mario Pena, Jr. direct).
    Although C.H. Robinson made efforts to provide additional evidence of the
    disposition of the subject merchandise after its purported arrival at the Port of Laredo,
    those efforts proved to no avail.       In early November 2004, Gordon Anderson
    (“Anderson”), Vice President of C.H. Robinson’s brokerage operations during the time in
    question, sent an email message to Donald Munoz (“Munoz”), the account manager at
    C.H. Robinson responsible for the subject entries. Joint. Ex. 18. In this email message,
    Anderson asked Munoz to locate any records demonstrating that the subject
    merchandise had been exported to Mexico.          Id.; Tr. 460:10-461:3 (Munoz direct).
    C.H. Robinson’s search for proof of export included attempts to locate “Customs
    documents, financial receipts, Mexican carrier and or broker proof of export, paperwork
    showing arrival into the plant in [M]exico, etc.[,] … documents from the truckers used[,]
    [including] drivers log [and] other documentation showing delivery was made … [and]
    any sort of financial trail, to include P.O.’s and method of payment and confirmation of
    funds received by [the] customer for [the] transaction[,] [as well as] warehouse ledger
    info, [and] proof of delivery to receiving party … [and any information from the] party in
    Mexico [who] was responsible for clearing Mexican Customs.”                  Joint Ex. 18.
    C.H. Robinson’s internal efforts failed to locate any such records or any other evidence
    that the subject merchandise had left the territory of the United States. Id.; Tr. 492:6-
    493:22 (Munoz re-direct) and 526:19-21 (Anderson re-direct).
    C.H. Robinson, through Munoz, contacted TUG to obtain additional proof of
    exportation in 2004. See Joint Ex. 18. However, TUG never provided any proof (other
    Court No. 06-00434                                                               Page 17
    than the subject pedimentos at the time of the original transaction) to C.H. Robinson
    that the subject merchandise was exported to Mexico.            Joint Ex. 18; see also
    Tr. 491:17-20; 493:12-22 (Munoz re-direct). C.H. Robinson was also unable to obtain a
    financial trail for the subject merchandise, such as purchase orders, methods of
    payment, confirmation of a funds transfer by TUG, information from a warehouse ledger
    showing that the subject merchandise had shipped, documentation from the Mexican
    customs broker, proof of delivery to the receiving party in Mexico or similar
    documentation, showing that the subject merchandise was received in their warehouse,
    nor was C.H. Robinson able to locate a record of any taxes or fees paid by TUG to its
    Mexican customs broker for services of clearing Mexican Customs. Tr. 492:11-493:11
    (Munoz re-direct).   C.H. Robinson also failed to present any evidence, including a
    driver’s log from Mario’s Transports, to demonstrate delivery of the subject merchandise
    in Mexico. Lastly, C.H. Robinson presented no evidence demonstrating that, pursuant
    to Customs’ regulations, another party relieved it of its responsibility to export the
    subject merchandise. C.H. Robinson never replaced or cancelled the subject entries
    with immediate exportation or consumption entries.         Pretrial Order, Schedule C,
    Uncontested Facts ¶¶ 8, 16, & 24.
    The court notes that, throughout the five-year history of this litigation up through
    the time of trial, C.H. Robinson had proferred the subject pedimentos (obtained from
    TUG) as proof of exportation.    At trial, however, C.H. Robinson conceded that the
    subject pedimentos were not genuine documents and could not be verified in Mexican
    Customs’ electronic database. Tr. 18:18-19:24 (Peterson opening statement); see also
    Def.’s Proposed Concls. of L. ¶ 20 (“C.H. Robinson does not deny that the pedimentos
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                   Page 18
    were not genuine.”) and ¶ 35 (“[T]he invalid pedimentos which C.H. Robinson presented
    to Customs did not constitute acceptable proof of exportation . . . .”). At that point,
    C.H. Robinson sought to create an inference that the subject merchandise was
    smuggled into Mexico. Tr. 19:6-16 (Peterson opening statement). Despite its efforts,
    C.H. Robinson presented no evidence (direct or circumstantial) that would lead to the
    inference that the subject merchandise was smuggled into Mexico. To the contrary, the
    subject pedimentos, in the expert opinion of Torres Herrera, were more likely than not
    evidence of diversion of the subject merchandise into the commerce of the United
    States rather than evidence of smuggling into Mexico. Tr. 201:19-24 (Torres Herrera
    direct). Critically, the disposition of the subject merchandise after its purported arrival at
    the Port of Laredo remains unknown to C.H. Robinson, and C.H. Robinson presented
    no evidence nor anyone with personal knowledge of the whereabouts of the subject
    merchandise.
    There is no direct evidence as to the whereabouts of the subject merchandise.
    However, the Government presented documentary evidence and the credible testimony
    of several lay witnesses, including Officer McCanlas and Fernandez Wilburn, along with
    the credible testimony of its expert, Torres Herrera, that allows the court to draw a
    reasonable, if not strong, inference that the subject pedimentos were not valid Mexican
    import documents, a fact ultimately conceded by C.H. Robinson. The record before the
    court and the credible testimony of these witnesses, in particular that of Torres Herrera,
    further allows the inference that the subject merchandise could not have been imported
    into Mexico using the subject pedimentos. Those pedimentos would not have been
    validated by an inspection of Mexican Customs’ electronic database and would not have
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                   Page 19
    passed visual scrutiny by Mexican Customs officials. Therefore, the court finds that the
    subject merchandise is missing.
    Additionally, the documentation that C.H. Robinson provided during the audit
    process to CBP, as well as at trial, did not establish (a) exportation out of the United
    States, (b) entry into the commerce of the United States along with payment of duties,
    (c) warehousing, or (d) transfer to another carrier for exportation of the subject
    merchandise. The record before the court and, in particular, the credible testimony of
    Defendant’s     two   witnesses,     Anderson     and     Munoz,     further   demonstrates
    C.H. Robinson’s inability to proffer, no less obtain evidence (other than the date-
    stamped CF 7512s and the subject false pedimentos) that accounts for the subject
    merchandise. Therefore, the court finds C.H. Robinson was unable to account for that
    merchandise in accordance with 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (a).
    B. Conclusions of Law
    As explained above, merchandise seeking to pass through U.S. ports for export
    without appraisement or payment of duty is entered at the port of arrival under cover of
    a T&E entry.     See 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.20
    (a).       The statutory and regulatory framework
    imposes various responsibilities and deadlines for the handling of a T&E entry. Among
    them, T&E merchandise must be transported from the port of arrival by a bonded
    carrier, 
    19 U.S.C. § 1553
    (a); 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.20
    (a), and must be delivered to CBP at the
    port of destination within 30 days of receipt by the bonded carrier at the port of arrival (if
    transported on land). 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.2
    (c)(2). Within no more than two working days
    after arrival of any portion of the merchandise at the port of destination, the bonded
    carrier must notify CBP of such arrival by surrendering the in-bond manifest (CF 7512).
    Court No. 06-00434                                                              Page 20
    
    19 C.F.R. §§ 18.2
    (d) and 18.7(a). The final disposition of the merchandise – either
    exportation or official entry into U.S. commerce or warehouse – must then be effected
    within 20 days of the notice of arrival. See 
    19 C.F.R. § 4.37
    (b). A bonded carrier’s
    failure to comply with any of these procedures exposes the carrier to the liabilities set
    forth in 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    . See 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 18.2
    (c)(2), 18.2(d), 18.7(a), and 18.8(a);
    see also 
    id.
     at § 4.37(b).
    Additionally, a bonded carrier responsible for a T&E entry is subject to post-
    exportation audit by CBP “[w]henever the circumstances warrant, and occasionally in
    any event.” 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.7
    (c). Post-exportation audits are designed to “check export
    entries and withdrawals against the records of the exporting carriers” and “shall include
    an examination of the carrier’s records of claims and settlement of export freight
    charges and any other records which may relate to the transaction.” 
    Id.
    When CBP determines that merchandise covered by a T&E entry is missing or
    unaccounted for, the non-delivery is ‘presumed to have occurred while in the carrier’s
    possession, and therefore, the carrier is treated by [CBP] as being responsible for that
    loss [such that CBP] will collect from the carrier duty on the missing merchandise.”
    Assessment of Liquidated Damages Under Carrier’s Bonds, 
    47 Fed. Reg. 2,087
    .
    A bonded carrier’s liabilities for any missing T&E merchandise include liquidated
    damages on the bond, 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (b), as well as “any internal-revenue taxes,
    duties, or other taxes accruing to the United States on the missing merchandise.” 
    Id.
     at
    § 18.8(c). When audited pursuant to 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.7
    , a bonded carrier’s failure to
    account for the exportation of merchandise covered by a T&E entry is a legally sufficient
    basis for the imposition of duties under 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (c). See 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 18.7
    (c)
    Court No. 06-00434                                                               Page 21
    and 18.8(c); Order Denying Mot. to Dismiss at 3. The Government may collect duties
    pursuant to 
    19 U.S.C. § 1592
    (d), or alternatively under 
    19 U.S.C. § 1553
     and 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (c). Order Denying Mot. to Dismiss at 2-3.
    The allocation of legal responsibility for the subject entries in this action is
    governed by the regulatory framework applicable to a T&E entry. See Joint Exs. 4-6;
    see also Joint Ex. 13. Against this framework, each subject date-stamped CF 7512
    showing receipt of the in-bond manifest enjoys a presumption that it is proof of proper
    delivery of the subject merchandise by C.H. Robinson. Order Denying Def.’s Mot. in
    Limine at 3.   However, C.H. Robinson’s obligations under 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (c) go
    beyond the certification of proper delivery of the merchandise covered by the subject
    entries to include a responsibility to account for missing merchandise. Order Denying
    Mot. to Dismiss at 3. Despite C.H. Robinson’s arguments to the contrary, there is no
    statute or regulation that imposes a burden on the Government to search for or
    establish the location of missing merchandise.
    As the bonded carrier responsible for the subject entries, C.H. Robinson, has a duty to
    ensure that the subject merchandise was timely exported out of the United States or
    lawfully entered into U.S. commerce or warehouse. See Order Denying Def.’s Mot. to
    Dismiss; see also 
    19 U.S.C. § 1553
    (a); 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 18.7
    (c) (providing for audit of
    “exporting carriers” (emphasis added)) and 18.8(a)). Had C.H. Robinson wanted to
    expose itself only to liability for transporting the  subject merchandise from one port to
    another, without needing to ensure the proper exportation of the  merchandise, it could
    have done so by using an immediate  transportation without appraisement entry. See
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1552
    ; 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 18.11-18.12
    .    Before delivering the merchandise to
    Court No. 06-00434                                                                 Page 22
    another carrier for exportation, C.H. Robinson could then  have ensured that the new
    carrier filed an Entry for Exportation, see 
    19 C.F.R. §18.25
    , making  the new carrier
    liable in the event that the new carrier failed to export the merchandise.    Alternatively,
    C.H. Robinson could have had the merchandise entered into a warehouse or for
    consumption. See 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.23
    (b). C.H. Robinson chose none of these options.
    Rather, by permitting itself to remain the carrier of the subject merchandise entered
    under a T&E entry, it would seem obvious that C.H. Robinson was responsible for
    ensuring the exportation of the subject merchandise. It is equally obvious that by failing
    to do so C.H. Robinson made  itself liable for any violations that may have occurred
    relating to the exportation of that merchandise.
    To recover taxes, duties, and fees accruing to the United States, the Government
    bears the burden to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the subject
    merchandise is “missing.”       Order Denying Def.’s Mot. in Limine.           Proof by a
    preponderance of the evidence requires the court, as the trier of fact, “to believe that the
    existence of a fact is more probable than its nonexistence.” Bosies v. Benedict, 
    27 F.3d 539
    , 542 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (citing In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 371-72 (1970) (Harlan, J.,
    concurring)).
    In this action the Government has established that the subject merchandise is
    missing, and C.H. Robinson, in turn, has failed to account for that missing subject
    merchandise. The court concludes on the record before it that it is more probable than
    not that the subject merchandise was not exported, as required by statute and
    regulation.     Consequently, pursuant to 
    19 U.S.C. § 1553
     and 
    19 C.F.R. § 18.8
    (c),
    Court No. 06-00434                                                             Page 23
    C.H. Robinson is liable for “any internal-revenue taxes, duties, or other taxes accruing
    to the United States” on the missing subject merchandise in the amount of $106,407.86.
    III. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the Government has established that C.H. Robinson
    did not export or otherwise account for the subject merchandise and that the
    Government is therefore entitled to a judgment for unpaid duties on the subject entries
    in the amount of $106.407.86, plus interest. In early March 2004, C.H. Robinson paid
    CBP $57,212 as settlement of the liquidated damages claims related to the subject
    entries.   Comp. ¶ 15.   Subsequently, the Government admitted that the maximum
    amount of liquidated damages owed by C.H. Robinson was capped at the amount of the
    bond on the subject entries, i.e., $25,000. 
    Id. at ¶ 18
    ; see also C.H. Robinson Int’l v.
    United States, 
    64 Fed. Cl. 651
    , 660 (2005) Consequently, in seeking its requested
    relief, the Government acknowledges that a judgment in its favor should be offset by
    any overpayment in liquidated damages by C.H. Robinson on those entries. Comp. at
    Prayer for Relief.
    Additionally, the Government seeks pre-judgment interest on the unpaid duties.
    The award of pre-judgment interest is within the sound discretion of the court based on
    considerations of equity and fairness. See United States v. Imperial Food Imports, 
    834 F.2d 1013
    , 1016 (Fed. Cir. 1987) (citing United States v. Goodman, 
    6 CIT 132
    , 140-41,
    
    572 F. Supp. 1284
    , 1290 (1983)). The purpose behind pre-judgment interest is to make
    the Government whole by reimbursing it for what in effect amounts to an interest-free
    loan to Defendant. 
    Id.
     Pre-judgment interest shall run from the date of Customs’ final
    demand for payment, September 21, 2006, to the date of judgment, see United States
    Court No. 06-00434                                                             Page 24
    v. Yuchius Morality Co., 
    26 CIT 1224
    , 1240-41 (2002), at the rate provided in 
    28 U.S.C. § 2644
     and in accordance with 
    26 U.S.C. § 6621
    , see United States v. Golden Gate
    Petroleum Co., 
    30 CIT 174
    , 182-83 (2006) (citing Goodman, 6 CIT at 140, 
    572 F. Supp. at 1290
    ). In this action, there has been no unreasonable delay on the part of the
    Government, and therefore, equity favors awarding the Government pre-judgment
    interest to compensate the Government for the loss of use of the unpaid duties. Finally,
    the Government is awarded post-judgment interest based on the same considerations
    of equity and fairness and shall be calculated at a rate in accordance with 
    28 U.S.C. § 1961
    . See Golden Gate Petroleum, 30 CIT at 183 n.9 (citing Goodman, 6 CIT at 140-
    41, 
    572 F. Supp. at 1290
    ). Accordingly, the parties are hereby
    ORDERED to file, on or before November 20, 2012, a joint proposed judgment in
    conformity with this opinion taking into account any overpayment in liquidated damages
    by C.H. Robinson on the subject entries; and it is further
    ORDERED that if the parties are unable to reach agreement on a joint proposed
    judgment, each party shall file its own proposed judgment on or before November 20,
    2012.
    /s/ Leo M. Gordon
    Judge Leo M. Gordon
    Dated: November 7, 2012
    New York, New York
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Slip Op. 12-134; Court 06-00434

Citation Numbers: 2012 CIT 134, 880 F. Supp. 2d 1335

Judges: Gordon

Filed Date: 11/7/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023