Supporting Law and Regs

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Delivery Ticket

Supporting Law and Regs

OMB: 1651-0081

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[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 1]

[Revised as of April 1, 2003]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR125]


[Page 618-619]

TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

PART 125--CARTAGE AND LIGHTERAGE OF MERCHANDISE--Table of Contents

Subpart D--Delivery and Receipt


Sec. 125.31 Documents used.


When merchandise is carted or lightered to and received from a

bonded store or bonded warehouse, it shall be accompanied by one of the

following tickets or documents:

(a) Customs Form 6043--Delivery Ticket.

(b) Customs Form 7501, Entry Summary, annotated ``Permit''.

(c) Customs Form 7512--Transportation Entry and Manifest of Goods

Subject to Customs Inspection and Permit.


[T.D. 82-204, 47 FR 49375, Nov. 1, 1982, as amended by T.D. 84-129, 49

FR 23167, June 5, 1984; T.D. 95-81, 60 FR 52295, Oct. 6, 1995]


Sec. 125.32 Merchandise delivered to a bonded store or bonded

warehouse.


When merchandise is carried, carted or lightered to and received in

a bonded store or bonded warehouse, the proprietor or his representative

shall check the goods against the accompanying delivery ticket, Customs

Form 6043, or copy of the permit, Customs Form 7501, and countersign the

document acknowledging receipt of the merchandise as listed thereon. If

the proprietor or his agent has been designated to carry the merchandise

to his own bonded warehouse, he shall check the goods against the

accompanying delivery ticket, Customs Form 6043, or copy of the permit,

Customs Form 7501, at the time he picks up the cargo. Receipt of

merchandise by a bonded warehouse proprietor for the purpose of

transportation to his own warehouse constitutes receipt into a bonded

warehouse.


[T.D. 94-81, 59 FR 51496, Oct. 12, 1994]


Sec. 125.33 Procedure on receiving merchandise.


(a) From public or bonded store. A receipt shall be taken from the

cartman, lighterman or bonded carrier for all goods delivered to him

from public store or bonded store. The receipt may be taken on Customs

Form 6043, or on the appraising officer's release ticket at the time

delivery is made.

(b) From bonded warehouse. In case of withdrawals from bonded

warehouse,


[[Page 619]]


the merchandise shall be released only to the proprietor of the

warehouse, who shall acknowledge such release on the appropriate

withdrawal or removal document.

(c) All other cases. A receipt shall be taken for all goods

delivered from Customs custody in any other case where the port director

deems such receipt necessary.


[T.D. 73-140, 38 FR 13554, May 23, 1973, as amended by T.D. 82-204, 47

FR 49375, Nov. 1, 1982; T.D. 94-81, 59 FR 51496, Oct. 12, 1994]


Sec. 125.34 Countersigning of documents and notation of bad order or

discrepancy.


When a cartman, lighterman, other bonded carrier, foreign trade zone

operator, bonded warehouse proprietor, container station operator or

centralized examination station operator, as provided for in Sec. 112.2,

receives merchandise remaining in Customs custody, he shall countersign

the appropriate document in the space provided and shall note thereon

any bad order or discrepancy. When available, the importing carrier's

tally slip for the merchandise shall be attached to the delivery ticket

which accompanies the merchandise while it is being carted or lightered

in bond, for the use of Customs officers only at destination.


[T.D. 73-140, 38 FR 13554, May 23, 1973, as amended by T.D. 94-81, 59 FR

51496, Oct. 12, 1994]


Sec. 125.35 Report of loss, detention, or accident.


Any loss or detention of bonded merchandise, or any accident

happening to a vehicle or lighter while carrying bonded merchandise

shall be immediately reported by the cartman, lighterman, qualified

bonded carrier, foreign trade zone operator, bonded warehouse

proprietor, container station operator or centralized examination

station operator to the port director.


[T.D. 94-81, 59 FR 51496, Oct. 12, 1994]


Sec. 125.36 Inability to deliver merchandise.


If the warehouse is closed or the warehouseman refuses to receive

the merchandise, the cartman or bonded carrier shall notify the

appropriate Customs inspector. The inspector shall promptly report the

facts to the port director or his delegated representative for

instructions. The merchandise shall then be returned to the Customs

inspector, deposited in the public stores for safekeeping, or handled as

ordered by the port director.


[T.D. 73-140, 38 FR 13554, May 23, 1973, as amended by T.D. 94-81, 59 FR

51496, Oct. 12, 1994]




[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 1]

[Revised as of April 1, 2003]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR19.9]


[Page 307-308]

TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

PART 19--CUSTOMS WAREHOUSES, CONTAINER STATIONS AND CONTROL OF MERCHANDISE THEREIN--Table of Contents

Sec. 19.9 General order, abandoned, and seized merchandise.


(a) Acceptance of merchandise. The arriving carrier (or other party

to whom custody of the merchandise was transferred by the carrier under

a Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry) is responsible

for preparing a Customs Form (CF) 6043 (Delivery Ticket), or other

similar Customs document as designated by the port director or an

electronic equivalent as authorized by Customs, to cover the

proprietor's receipt of the merchandise and its transport to the

warehouse from the custody of the arriving carrier (or other party to

whom custody of the merchandise was transferred by the carrier under a

Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry). A joint

determination will be made by the warehouse proprietor and the bonded

carrier of the quantity and condition of the goods or articles so

delivered to the warehouse. Within two working days of the joint

determination, the warehouse proprietor will report to the port director

any discrepancy between the quantity and condition of the goods and that

reported on


[[Page 308]]


CF 6043, or other similar Customs document as designated by the port

director or an electronic equivalent as authorized by Customs.

(b) Recording and storing. General order, abandoned, and seized

goods and articles shall be recorded and stored in the warehouse as

prescribed by Sec. 19.12.

(c) Release of merchandise. Merchandise in general order may be

released by the warehouse proprietor, after Customs inspection or

examination as ordered by the port director, to the person named in a

release order under Sec. 141.11 of this chapter. The release may only be

made by the proprietor upon presentation of a permit to release or

delivery authorization signed by the appropriate Customs officer on

Customs Form 3461, 7501, 368 or 368A or other Customs form as designated

by the port director. General order goods which have been unclaimed

under Sec. 127.11 of this chapter, voluntarily abandoned, or seized and

forfeited may be released for transfer to the place of sale upon

presentation to the warehouse proprietor of an approved copy of Customs

Form 5251 (Order to Transfer Merchandise for Public Auction (Sale)), and

an approved copy of Customs Form 6043 (Delivery Ticket). The quantity

and condition of the goods so transferred shall be determined jointly by

the proprietor and the cartman or lighterman picking up the goods for

delivery to the place of sale. Any discrepancies shall be noted on the

delivery ticket, a copy of which shall be sent to the port director

within two business days of agreement. Seized goods that are released

for a purpose other than sale may be released from warehouse only upon

such written terms and conditions as directed by the port director.


[T.D. 82-204, 47 FR 49371, Nov. 1, 1982, as amended by T.D. 92-56, 57 FR

24944, June 12, 1992; T.D. 02-65, 67 FR 68032, Nov. 8, 2002]




[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 2]

[Revised as of April 1, 2003]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR146.66]


[Page 111-112]

TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

PART 146--FOREIGN TRADE ZONES--Table of Contents

Subpart F--Transfer of Merchandise From a Zone

Sec. 146.66 Transfer of merchandise from one zone to another.


(a) At the same port. A transfer of merchandise to another zone with

a different operator at the same port (including a consolidated port)

will be by a licensed cartman or a bonded carrier as provided for in

Sec. 112.2(b) of this chapter or by the operator of the zone for which

the merchandise is destined under an entry for immediate transportation

on Customs Form 7512 or other appropriate form with a Customs Form 214

filed at the destination zone. A transfer of merchandise between zone

sites at the same port having the same operator may be made under a

permit on CF 6043 or under a local control system approved by the port

director wherein any loss of merchandise between sites will be treated

as if the loss occurred in the zone.

(b) At a different port. A transfer of merchandise from a zone at

one port of entry to a zone at another port will be by bonded carrier

under an entry for immediate transportation on Customs Form 7512. All

copies of the entry must bear a notation that the merchandise is being

transferred to another zone designated by its number.

(c) Forwarding of merchandise history; documentation. When

merchandise is transferred under the provisions of this section, the

operator of the transferring zone shall provide the operator of the

destination zone with the documented history of the merchandise being

transferred.

(1) The following documentation must accompany merchandise

maintained under a lot inventory control system:

(i) A copy of the original Customs Form(s) 214 with accompanying

invoices for admission of the merchandise and all components thereof;

(ii) A copy of any Customs Form 214 filed subsequent to admission to

change the status of the merchandise or its components; and


[[Page 112]]


(iii) A copy of any Customs Form 216 to manipulate or manufacture

the merchandise.

(2) The following documentation must accompany merchandise not under

a lot system, and not manufactured in a zone:

(i) A copy of the original Customs Form(s) 214 with accompanying

invoices for admission of the merchandise as attributed under the

particular zone inventory method;

(ii) A copy of any Customs Form 214 filed subsequent to admission to

change the status of the merchandise as attributed under the particular

zone inventory method; and

(iii) A copy of any Customs Form 216 to manipulate the merchandise

as attributed under the particular zone inventory method.

(3) If the documents specified in paragraph (c)(2) of this section

are not presented, the operator of the transferring zone shall submit

the following:

(i) A statement of the zone value, dutiable value, quantity,

description, unique identifier, and zone status (showing any changes of

status after admission and whether the merchandise was manipulated so as

to change its tariff classification) of all the merchandise in the

shipment covered by the transportation entry; and

(ii) A certification that the statement in paragraph (c)(3)(i) of

this section, is true and that the information contained therein is

contained in the inventory control and recordkeeping system of the

transferring zone.

(4) The following documentation must accompany merchandise not under

a lot system, but manufactured in a zone:

(i) A statement by the transferring zone operator of the zone value,

dutiable value, quantity, description, unique identifier, and zone

status of all the merchandise (and components thereof, where applicable)

covered by the transportation entry. The statement will also show any

change in zone status in the transferring zone and whether the

merchandise has been manufactured or manipulated in the zone so as to

change its tariff classification; and

(ii) A certification by the operator of the transferring zone that

the statement in paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section is true and the

information therein is contained in the inventory control and

recordkeeping system of the zone.

(5) The operator of the transferring zone shall transmit the

historical documentation of the merchandise to the receiving zone within

10 working days after it has been delivered to the bonded carrier for

transportation. The documentation will be referenced to the I.T. number

covering the merchandise.

(d) Arrival at destination zone. Upon arrival of the merchandise at

the destination zone, it will be admitted under the procedure provided

for in Sec. 146.32, except that no invoice or Customs examination will

be required. When the historical documentation is received, the operator

of the destination zone shall associate it with the Customs Form 214 for

admission of the merchandise and incorporate that information into the

zone inventory control and recordkeeping system.


[T.D. 86-16, 51 FR 5049, Feb. 11, 1986, as amended by T.D. 94-81, 59 FR

51497, Oct. 12, 1994]




[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 1]

[Revised as of April 1, 2003]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR123.10]


[Page 598-599]

TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

PART 123--CUSTOMS RELATIONS WITH CANADA AND MEXICO--Table of Contents

Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec. 123.10 General order merchandise.


(a) Any merchandise or baggage regularly landed but not covered by a

permit for its release shall be allowed to remain at the place of

unlading until the fifteenth calendar day after landing. No later than

20 calendar days after landing, the owner or operator of the vehicle or

the agent thereof shall notify Customs of any such merchandise or

baggage for which entry has not been made. Such notification shall be

provided in writing or by any appropriate Customs-authorized electronic

data interchange system. Failure to provide such notification may result

in assessment of a monetary penalty of up to $1,000 per bill of lading

against the owner or operator of the vehicle or the agent thereof. If

the value of the merchandise on the bill is less than $1,000, the

penalty shall be equal to the value of such merchandise.

(b) Any merchandise or baggage that is taken into custody from an

arriving carrier by any party under a Customs-authorized permit to

transfer or in-bond entry may remain in the custody of that party for 15

calendar days after receipt under such permit to transfer or 15 calendar

days after arrival at the port of destination. No later than 20 calendar

days after receipt under the permit to transfer or 20 calendar days

after arrival under bond at the port of destination, the party shall

notify Customs of any such merchandise or baggage for which entry has

not been made. Such notification shall be provided in writing or by any

appropriate Customs-authorized electronic data interchange system. If

the party fails to notify Customs of the unentered merchandise or

baggage in the allotted time, he may be liable for the payment of

liquidated damages under the terms and conditions of his custodial bond

(see Sec. 113.63(c)(4) of this chapter).

(c) In addition to the notification to Customs required under

paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the carrier (or any other party

to whom custody of the unentered merchandise has been transferred by a

Customs authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry) shall provide

notification of the presence of such unreleased and unentered

merchandise or baggage to a bonded warehouse certified by the port

director as qualified to receive general order merchandise. Such

notification shall be provided in writing or by any appropriate Customs-

authorized electronic data interchange system and shall be provided

within the applicable 20-day period specified in paragraph (a) or (b) of

this section. It shall then be the responsibility of the bonded

warehouse proprietor to arrange for the transportation and storage of

the merchandise or baggage at the risk and expense of the consignee. The

arriving carrier (or other party to whom custody of the merchandise was

transferred by the carrier under a Customs-authorized permit to transfer

or in-bond entry) is responsible for preparing a Customs Form (CF) 6043

(Delivery Ticket), or other similar Customs document as designated by

the port director or an electronic equivalent as authorized by Customs,

to cover the proprietor's receipt of the merchandise and its transport

to the warehouse from the custody of the arriving carrier (or other

party to whom custody of the merchandise was transferred by the carrier

under a Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry) (see

Sec. 19.9 of this chapter). Any unentered merchandise or baggage shall

remain the responsibility of the carrier, master, or person in charge of

the importing vehicle or the agent thereof or party to whom the

merchandise has been transferred under a Customs authorized permit to

transfer or in-bond entry until it is properly transferred from his

control in accordance with this paragraph. If the party to whom custody

of the unentered merchandise or baggage has been transferred by a

Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry fails to notify a

Customs-approved bonded warehouse of such merchandise or baggage within

the applicable 20-calendar-day period, he may be liable for the payment

of liquidated damages of $1,000 per bill of lading under the terms


[[Page 599]]


and conditions of his international carrier or custodial bond (see

Secs. 113.63(b), 113.63(c) and 113.64(b) of this chapter).

(d) If the carrier or any other party to whom custody of the

unentered merchandise has been transferred by a Customs-authorized

permit to transfer or in-bond entry fails to timely relinquish custody

of the merchandise to a Customs-approved bonded General Order warehouse,

the carrier or other party may be liable for liquidated damages equal to

the value of that merchandise under the terms and conditions of his

international carrier or custodial bond, as applicable.

(e) If the bonded warehouse operator fails to take possession of

unentered and unreleased merchandise or baggage within five calendar

days after receipt of notification of the presence of such merchandise

or baggage under this section, he may be liable for the payment of

liquidated damages under the terms and conditions of his custodial bond

(see Sec. 113.63(a)(1) of this chapter). If the port director finds that

the warehouse proprietor cannot accept the goods because they are

required by law to be exported or destroyed (see Sec. 127.28 of this

chapter), or for other good cause, the goods will remain in the custody

of the arriving carrier or other party to whom the goods have been

transferred under a Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond

entry. In this event, the carrier or other party will be responsible

under bond for exporting or destroying the goods, as necessary (see

Secs. 113.63(c)(3) and 113.64(b) of this chapter).

(f) In ports where there is no bonded warehouse authorized to accept

general order merchandise, or if merchandise requires specialized

storage facilities which are unavailable in a bonded facility, the port

director, after having received notice of the presence of unentered

merchandise or baggage in accordance with the provisions of this

section, shall direct the storage of the merchandise by the carrier or

by any other appropriate means.

(g) Merchandise taken into the custody of the port director pursuant

to section 490(b), Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1490(b)),

shall be sent to a general order warehouse after 1 day after the day the

vehicle arrived, to be held there at the risk and expense of the

consignee.


[T.D. 98-74, 63 FR 51289, Sept. 25, 1998, as amended by T.D. 02-65, 67

FR 68033, Nov. 8, 2002]




[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 1]

[Revised as of April 1, 2003]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR122.50]


[Page 557-558]

TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

PART 122--AIR COMMERCE REGULATIONS--Table of Contents

Subpart E--Aircraft Entry and Entry Documents

Sec. 122.50 General order merchandise.


(a) Any merchandise or baggage regularly landed but not covered by a

permit for its release shall be allowed to remain at the place of

unlading until the fifteenth calendar day after landing. No later than

20 calendar days after landing, the pilot or owner of the aircraft or

the agent thereof shall notify Customs of any such merchandise or

baggage for which entry has not been made. Such notification shall be

provided in writing or by any appropriate Customs-authorized electronic

data interchange system. Failure to provide such notification may result

in assessment of a monetary penalty of up to $1,000 per bill of lading

against the pilot or owner of the aircraft or the agent thereof. If the

value of the merchandise on the bill is less than $1,000, the penalty

shall be equal to the value of such merchandise.

(b) Any merchandise or baggage that is taken into custody from an

arriving carrier by any party under a Customs-authorized permit to

transfer or in-bond entry may remain in the custody of that party for 15

calendar days after receipt under such permit to transfer or 15 calendar

days after arrival at the port of destination. No later than 20 calendar

days after receipt under the permit to transfer or 20 calendar days

after arrival under bond at the port of destination, the party shall

notify Customs of any such merchandise or baggage for which entry has

not been made. Such notification shall be provided in writing or by any

appropriate Customs-authorized electronic data interchange system. If

the party fails to notify Customs of the unentered merchandise or

baggage in the allotted time, he may be liable for the payment of

liquidated damages under the terms and conditions of his custodial bond

(see Sec. 113.63(c)(4) of this chapter).

(c) In addition to the notification to Customs required under

paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the carrier (or any other party

to whom custody of the unentered merchandise has been transferred by a

Customs authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry) shall provide

notification of the presence of such unreleased and unentered

merchandise or baggage to a bonded warehouse certified by the port

director as qualified to receive general order merchandise. Such

notification shall be provided in writing or by any appropriate Customs-

authorized electronic data interchange system and shall be provided

within the applicable 20-day period specified in paragraph (a) or (b) of

this section. It shall then be the responsibility of the bonded

warehouse proprietor to arrange for the transportation and storage of

the merchandise or baggage at the risk and expense of the consignee. The

arriving carrier (or other party to whom custody of the merchandise was

transferred by the carrier under a Customs-authorized permit to transfer

or in-bond entry) is responsible for preparing a Customs Form (CF) 6043

(Delivery Ticket), or other similar Customs document as designated by

the port director or an electronic equivalent as authorized by Customs,

to cover the proprietor's receipt of the merchandise and its transport

to the warehouse from the custody of the arriving carrier (or other

party to whom custody of the merchandise was transferred by the carrier

under a Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry) (see

Sec. 19.9 of this chapter). Any unentered merchandise or baggage shall

remain the responsibility of the carrier, pilot, or person in charge of

the importing aircraft, or the agent thereof, or party to whom the

merchandise has been transferred under a Customs authorized permit to

transfer or in-bond entry, until it is properly transferred from his

control in accordance with this paragraph. If the party to whom custody

of the unentered merchandise or baggage has been transferred by a

Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry


[[Page 558]]


fails to notify a Customs-approved bonded warehouse of such merchandise

or baggage within the applicable 20-calendar-day period, he may be

liable for the payment of liquidated damages of $1,000 per bill of

lading under the terms and conditions of his international carrier or

custodial bond (see Secs. 113.63(b), 113.63(c) and 113.64(b) of this

chapter).

(d) If the carrier or any other party to whom custody of the

unentered merchandise has been transferred by a Customs-authorized

permit to transfer or in-bond entry fails to timely relinquish custody

of the merchandise to a Customs-approved bonded General Order warehouse,

the carrier or other party may be liable for liquidated damages equal to

the value of that merchandise under the terms and conditions of his

international carrier or custodial bond, as applicable.

(e) If the bonded warehouse operator fails to take possession of

unentered and unreleased merchandise or baggage within five calendar

days after receipt of notification of the presence of such merchandise

or baggage under this section, he may be liable for the payment of

liquidated damages under the terms and conditions of his custodial bond

(see Sec. 113.63(a)(1) of this chapter). If the port director finds that

the warehouse proprietor cannot accept the goods because they are

required by law to be exported or destroyed (see Sec. 127.28 of this

chapter), or for other good cause, the goods will remain in the custody

of the arriving carrier or other party to whom the goods have been

transferred under a Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond

entry. In this event, the carrier or other party will be responsible

under bond for exporting or destroying the goods, as necessary (see

Secs. 113.63(c)(3) and 113.64(b) of this chapter).

(f) In ports where there is no bonded warehouse authorized to accept

general order merchandise, or if merchandise requires specialized

storage facilities that are unavailable in a bonded facility, the port

director, after having received notice of the presence of unentered

merchandise or baggage in accordance with the provisions of this

section, shall direct the storage of the merchandise by the carrier or

by any other appropriate means.

(g) Merchandise taken into the custody of the port director pursuant

to section 490(b), Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1490(b)),

shall be sent to a general order warehouse after 1 day after the day the

aircraft arrived, to be held there at the risk and expense of the

consignee.


[T.D. 98-74, 63 FR 51288, Sept. 25, 1998, as amended by T.D. 02-65, 67

FR 68033, Nov. 8, 2002]




[Code of Federal Regulations] [Title 19, Volume 1] [Revised as of April 1, 2003] From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access [CITE: 19CFR4.34] [Page 34-36] TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY PART 4--VESSELS IN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC TRADES--Table of Contents Sec. 4.34 Prematurely discharged, overcarried, and undelivered cargo. (a) Prematurely landed cargo. Upon receipt of a satisfactory written application from the owner or agent of a vessel establishing that cargo was prematurely landed and left behind by the importing vessel through error or emergency, the port director may permit inward foreign cargo remaining on the dock to be reladen on the next available vessel owned or chartered by the owner of the importing vessel for transportation to the destination [[Page 35]] shown on the Cargo Declaration, Customs Form 1302, of the first vessel, provided the importing vessel actually entered the port of destination of the prematurely landed cargo. Unless so forwarded within 30 days from the date of landing, the cargo shall be appropriately entered for Customs clearance or for forwarding in bond; otherwise, it shall be sent to general order as unclaimed. If the merchandise is so entered for Customs clearance at the port of unlading, or if it is so forwarded in bond, other than by the importing vessel or by another vessel owned or chartered by the owner of the importing vessel, representatives of the importing vessel shall file at the port of unlading a Cargo Declaration in duplicate listing the cargo. The port director shall retain the original and forward the duplicate to the director of the originally intended port of discharge. (b) Overcarried cargo. Upon receipt of a satisfactory written application by the owner or agent of a vessel establishing that cargo was not landed at its destination and was overcarried to another domestic port through error or emergency, the port director may permit the cargo to be returned in the importing vessel, or in another vessel owned or chartered by the owner of the importing vessel, to the destination shown on the Cargo Declaration, Customs Form 1302, of the importing vessel, provided the importing vessel actually entered the port of destination. \67\ --------------------------------------------------------------------------- \67\ See Sec. 141.69(c) of this chapter for the conditions under which such merchandise and goods removed from a port of intended entry under these or certain other circumstances may subsequently be cleared under a consumption entry which had been filed therefore before the merchandise was removed from the port of intended entry. <SUP>68-69</SUP> [Reserved] --------------------------------------------------------------------------- (c) Inaccessibly stowed cargo. Cargo so stowed as to be inaccessible upon arrival at destination may be retained on board, carried forward to another domestic port or ports, and returned to the port of destination in the importing vessel or in another vessel owned or chartered by the owner of the importing vessel in the same manner as other overcarried cargo. (d) Application for forwarding cargo. When it is desired that prematurely landed cargo, overcarried cargo, or cargo so stowed as to be inaccessible, be forwarded to its destination by the importing vessel or by another vessel owned or chartered by the owner of the importing vessel in accordance with paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this section, the required application shall be filed with the local director of the port of premature landing or overcarriage by the owner or agent of the vessel. The application shall be supported by a Cargo Declaration, Customs Form 1302, in such number of copies as the port director may require. Whenever practicable, the application shall be made on the face of the Cargo Declaration below the description of the merchandise. The application shall specify the vessel on which the cargo was imported, even though the forwarding to destination is by another vessel owned or chartered by the owner of the importing vessel, and all ports of departure and dates of sailing of the importing vessel. The application shall be stamped and signed to show that it has been approved. (e) Manifesting prematurely landed or overcarried cargo. One copy of the Cargo Declaration, Customs Form 1302, shall be certified by Customs for use as a substitute traveling manifest for the prematurely landed or overcarried cargo being forwarded as residue cargo, whether or not the forwarding vessel is also carrying other residue cargo. If the application for forwarding is made on the Cargo Declaration, the new substitute traveling manifest shall be stamped to show the approval of the application. If the application is on a separate document, a copy thereof, stamped to show its approval, shall be attached to the substitute traveling manifest. An appropriate cross-reference shall be placed on the original traveling manifest to show that the vessel has one or more substitute traveling manifests. A permit to proceed endorsed on a Vessel Entrance or Clearance Statement, Customs Form 1300, issued to the vessel transporting the prematurely landed or overcarried cargo to its destination shall make reference to the nature of such cargo, identifying it with the importing vessel. [[Page 36]] (f) Residue cargo procedure. A vessel with prematurely landed or overcarried cargo on board shall comply upon arrival at all domestic ports of call with all the requirements of part 4 relating to foreign residue cargo for domestic ports. The substitute traveling manifest, carried forward from port to port by the oncarrying vessel, shall be finally surrendered at the port where the last portion of the prematurely landed or overcarried cargo is discharged. (g) Cargo undelivered at foreign port and returned to the U.S. Merchandise shipped from a domestic port, but undelivered at the foreign destination and returned, shall be manifested as ``Undelivered-to be returned to original foreign destination,'' if such a return is intended. The port director may issue a permit to retain the merchandise on board, or he may, upon written application of the steamship company, issue a permit on a Delivery Ticket, Customs Form 6043, allowing the merchandise to be transferred to another vessel for return to the original foreign destination. No charge shall be made against the bond on Customs Form 301, containing the bond conditions relating to international carriers set forth in Sec. 113.64 of this chapter. The items shall be remanifested outward and an explanatory reference of the attending circumstances and compliance with export requirements noted. [28 FR 14596, Dec. 31, 1963, as amended by T.D. 77-255, 42 FR 56321, Oct. 25, 1977; T.D. 85-123, 50 FR 29952, July 23, 1985; T.D. 95-77, 60 FR 50010, Sept. 27, 1995; T.D. 00-22, 65 FR 16515, Mar. 29, 2000]

[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 1]

[Revised as of April 1, 2003]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR4.37]


[Page 36-38]

TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

PART 4--VESSELS IN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC TRADES--Table of Contents

Sec. 4.37 General order.


(a) Any merchandise or baggage regularly landed but not covered by a

permit for its release shall be allowed to remain at the place of

unlading until


[[Page 37]]


the fifteenth calendar day after landing. No later than 20 calendar days

after landing, the master or owner of the vessel or the agent thereof

shall notify Customs of any such merchandise or baggage for which entry

has not been made. Such notification shall be provided in writing or by

any appropriate Customs-authorized electronic data interchange system.

Failure to provide such notification may result in assessment of a

monetary penalty of up to $1,000 per bill of lading against the master

or owner of the vessel or the agent thereof. If the value of the

merchandise on the bill is less than $1,000, the penalty shall be equal

to the value of such merchandise.

(b) Any merchandise or baggage that is taken into custody from an

arriving carrier by any party under a Customs-authorized permit to

transfer or in-bond entry may remain in the custody of that party for 15

calendar days after receipt under such permit to transfer or 15 calendar

days after arrival at the port of destination. No later than 20 calendar

days after receipt under the permit to transfer or 20 calendar days

after arrival under bond at the port of destination, the party shall

notify Customs of any such merchandise or baggage for which entry has

not been made. Such notification shall be provided in writing or by any

appropriate Customs-authorized electronic data interchange system. If

the party fails to notify Customs of the unentered merchandise or

baggage in the allotted time, he may be liable for the payment of

liquidated damages under the terms and conditions of his custodial bond

(see Sec. 113.63(c)(4) of this chapter).

(c) In addition to the notification to Customs required under

paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the carrier (or any other party

to whom custody of the unentered merchandise has been transferred by a

Customs authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry) shall provide

notification of the presence of such unreleased and unentered

merchandise or baggage to a bonded warehouse certified by the port

director as qualified to receive general order merchandise. Such

notification shall be provided in writing or by any appropriate Customs-

authorized electronic data interchange system and shall be provided

within the applicable 20-day period specified in paragraph (a) or (b) of

this section. It shall then be the responsibility of the bonded

warehouse proprietor to arrange for the transportation and storage of

the merchandise or baggage at the risk and expense of the consignee. The

arriving carrier (or other party to whom custody of the merchandise was

transferred by the arriving carrier under a Customs-authorized permit to

transfer or in-bond entry) is responsible for preparing a Customs Form

(CF) 6043 (Delivery Ticket), or other similar Customs document

designated by the port director or an electronic equivalent as

authorized by Customs, to cover the proprietor's receiptof the

merchandise and its transport to the warehouse from the custody of the

arriving carrier (or other party to whom custody of the merchandise was

transferred by the carrier under a Customs-authorized permit to transfer

or in-bond entry) (see Sec. 19.9 of this chapter). Any unentered

merchandise or baggage shall remain the responsibility of the carrier,

master, or person in charge of the importing vessel or the agent thereof

or party to whom the merchandise has been transferred under a Customs

authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry, until it is properly

transferred from his control in accordance with this paragraph. If the

party to whom custody of the unentered merchandise or baggage has been

transferred by a Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry

fails to notify a Customs-approved bonded warehouse of such merchandise

or baggage within the applicable 20-calendar-day period, he may be

liable for the payment of liquidated damages of $1,000 per bill of

lading under the terms and conditions of his international carrier or

custodial bond (see Secs. 113.63(b), 113.63(c) and 113.64(b) of this

chapter).

(d) If a carrier or any other party to whom custody of the unentered

merchandise has been transferred by means of a Customs-authorized permit

to transfer or in-bond entry fails to timely relinquish custody of the

merchandise to a Customs-approved bonded General Order warehouse, the

carrier or other party may be liable for liquidated damages equal to the

value of


[[Page 38]]


that merchandise under the terms and conditions of his international

carrier or custodial bond, as applicable.

(e) If the bonded warehouse operator fails to take possession of

unentered and unreleased merchandise or baggage within five calendar

days after receipt of notification of the presence of such merchandise

or baggage under this section, he may be liable for the payment of

liquidated damages under the terms and conditions of his custodial bond

(see Sec. 113.63(a)(1) of this chapter). If the port director finds that

the warehouse operator cannot accept the goods because they are required

by law to be exported or destroyed (see Sec. 127.28 of this chapter), or

for other good cause, the goods will remain in the custody of the

arriving carrier or other party to whom the goods have been transferred

under a Customs-authorized permit to transfer or in-bond entry. In this

event, the carrier or other party will be responsible under bond for

exporting or destroying the goods, as necessary (see Secs. 113.63(c)(3)

and 113.64(b) of this chapter).

(f) In ports where there is no bonded warehouse authorized to accept

general order merchandise or if merchandise requires specialized storage

facilities which are unavailable in a bonded facility, the port

director, after having received notice of the presence of unentered

merchandise or baggage in accordance with the provisions of this

section, shall direct the storage of the merchandise by the carrier or

by any other appropriate means.

(g) Whenever merchandise remains on board any vessel from a foreign

port more than 25 days after the date on which report of arrival of such

vessel was made, the port director, as prescribed in section 457, Tariff

Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1457), may take possession of such

merchandise and cause it to be unladen at the expense and risk of the

owners of the merchandise. Any merchandise so unladen shall be sent

forthwith by the port director to a general order warehouse and stored

at the risk and expense of the owners of the merchandise.

(h) Merchandise taken into the custody of the port director pursuant

to section 490(b), Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1490(b)),

shall be sent to a general order warehouse after 1 day after the day the

vessel was entered, to be held there at the risk and expense of the

consignee.


[T.D. 98-74, 63 FR 51287, Sept. 25, 1998, as amended by T.D. 02-65, 67

FR 68032, Nov. 8, 2002]


[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 2]

[Revised as of April 1, 2003]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR144.34]


[Page 73-74]

TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

PART 144--WAREHOUSE AND REWAREHOUSE ENTRIES AND WITHDRAWALS--Table of Contents

Subpart D--Withdrawals from Warehouse

Sec. 144.34 Transfer to another warehouse.


(a) At the same port. With the concurrence of the proprietors of the

delivering and receiving warehouses, merchandise may be transferred from

one bonded warehouse to another at the same port under Customs

supervision and at the expense of the importer upon his written request

to the port director, who shall issue an order for such transfer on

Customs Form 6043. However, the port director may require the filing of

a rewarehouse entry under Sec. 144.41 if he determines it necessary for

proper control of the merchandise. All charges shall be paid before

merchandise is transferred from a warehouse of class 1 (see Sec. 19.1 of

this chapter for classes of warehouses). The quantities of goods so

transferred shall be subject to the joint determination of the warehouse

proprietor and the cartman, lighterman, or private bonded carrier, as

provided in Sec. 19.6 of this chapter.

(b) At another port. Merchandise may be transferred to a warehouse

which is under the jurisdiction of another port by withdrawing the

merchandise for transportation in accordance with Sec. 144.36 and

entering it for rewarehouse in accordance with Sec. 144.41 upon arrival

at destination. All charges shall be paid before merchandise is

transferred from the warehouse of class 1 (see Sec. 19.1 of this chapter

for classes of warehouses).

(c) Transfers between integrated bonded warehouses--(1) Eligibility.

(i) Only an importer who will transfer warehoused merchandise among

Class 2 and 9 warehouses listed on the application in paragraph (c)(2)

of this section is eligible to participate.

(ii) The importer must have a centralized inventory control system

that shows the location of all of the warehoused merchandise at all

times, including merchandise in transit.

(iii) The importer and its surety must sign the application. If the

application to use this alternative procedure is approved by the

appropriate port director, the importer's entry bond containing the

conditions provided under Sec. 113.62 of this chapter will continue to

attach to any merchandise transferred under these alternative

procedures.

(iv) Each proprietor of a warehouse listed on the application and

each surety who underwrites that proprietor's custodial bond coverage

under Sec. 113.63 of this chapter shall sign the application.

(2) Application. Application must be made in writing to the port

director of the port in which the applicant's centralized inventory

control system exists, with copies to all affected port directors, for

exemptions from the requirements for transfer of merchandise from one

bonded warehouse to another set forth in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this

section. The application must list all bonded warehouses to and from

which the merchandise may be transferred; all such warehouses must be

covered by the same centralized inventory control system. Only blanket

exemption requests will be considered; exemptions will not be considered

for individual transfers. The application may be in letter form, signed

by all participants, and contain a certification to the port director by

the applicant that he maintains accounting records, documents and

financial statements and reports that adequately support Customs

activities.

(3) Operation. An importer who receives approval to transfer

merchandise between bonded warehouses in accordance with the provisions

of this section may, after entry into the first warehouse, transfer that

merchandise to any other warehouse without filing


[[Page 74]]


a withdrawal from warehouse or a rewarehouse entry. The warehoused

merchandise will be treated as though it remains in the first warehouse

so long as the actual location of the merchandise at all times is

recorded as provided under the provisions of this section.

(4) Inventory control requirements. The records required to be

maintained must include a centralized inventory control system and

supporting documentation which meets the following requirements:

(i) Provide Customs upon demand with the proper on-hand balance of

each inventory item in each warehouse facility and each storage location

within each warehouse;

(ii) Provide Customs upon demand with the proper on-hand balance for

each open warehouse entry and the actual quantity in each warehouse

facility;

(iii) If an alternative inventory system has been approved, provide

Customs upon demand with the proper on-hand balance for each unique

identifier and the quantity related to each open warehouse entry and the

quantity in each warehouse facility;

(iv) Maintain documentation for all intracompany movements,

including authorizations for the movement, shipping documents and

receiving reports. These documents must show the appropriate warehouse

entry number or unique identifier, the description and quantity of the

merchandise transferred, and must be properly authorized and signed

evidencing shipment from and delivery to each location;

(v) Maintain a consolidated permit file folder at the location where

the merchandise was originally warehoused. The consolidated permit file

folder must meet the requirements of Sec. 19.12(d)(4) of this chapter

regardless of the warehouse facility in which the action occurred.

Documentation for all intracompany movements, including authorizations

for movement, shipping documents, receiving reports, as well as

documentation showing ultimate disposition of the merchandise must be

filed in the consolidated permit file folder within seven business days;

(vi) Maintain a subordinate permit file at all intracompany

locations where merchandise is transferred containing copies of

documentation required by Sec. 19.12(d)(4) of this chapter and by

paragraph (c)(3)(v) of this section relating to merchandise quantities

transferred to the location. A copy of all documents in the subordinate

permit file folder must be filed in the consolidated permit file folder

within seven business days; no exceptions will be granted to this

requirement. When the final withdrawal is made on the respective entry,

the subordinate permit file shall be considered closed and filed at the

intracompany location to which the merchandise was transferred; and

(vii) File the withdrawal from Customs custody at the original

warehouse location at which the merchandise was entered.

(5) Waiver of permit file folder requirements. The permit file

folder requirements of paragraphs (c)(3)(v) and (c)(3)(vi) of this

section may be waived if the proprietor's recordkeeping and inventory

control system qualifies under the requirements of Sec. 19.12(d)(4)(iii)

of this chapter at all locations where bonded merchandise is stored.

(6) Procedure not available--(i) Liens. The transfer procedures

permitted under paragraph (c) of this section shall not be available for

merchandise with respect to which Customs is notified of the existence

of a lien, as prescribed in Sec. 141.112 of this chapter (see 19 U.S.C.

1564), until proof shall be produced at the original warehouse location

that the lien has been satisfied or discharged.

(ii) Restricted merchandise. With the exception of alcohol and

tobacco products, merchandise subject to a restriction on release such

as covered by a licensing, quota or visa requirement, is not eligible.


[T.D. 73-175, 38 FR 17464, July 2, 1973, as amended by T.D. 82-204, 47

FR 49376, Nov. 1, 1982; T.D. 97-19, 62 FR 15840, Apr. 3, 1997]




Code of Federal Regulations] [Title 19, Volume 1] [Revised as of April 1, 2003] From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access [CITE: 19CFR19.12] [Page 309-315] TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY PART 19--CUSTOMS WAREHOUSES, CONTAINER STATIONS AND CONTROL OF MERCHANDISE THEREIN--Table of Contents Sec. 19.12 Inventory control and recordkeeping system. (a) Systems capability. The proprietor of a class 11 general order warehouse as described in Sec. 19.1 must have an automated inventory control and recordkeeping system. Proprietors of existing class 3, 4, or 5 warehouses as described in Sec. 19.1 certified before December 9, 2002, to receive general order merchandise must have automated inventory control and recordkeeping systems in place with respect to general order merchandise after a period of 2 years from December 9, 2002. All other warehouse proprietors have a choice of maintaining manual or automated inventory control and recordkeeping systems or a combination of manual and automated systems. All inventory control and recordkeeping systems must be capable of: (1) Accounting for all merchandise transported, deposited, stored, manipulated, manufactured, smelted, refined, [[Page 310]] destroyed in or removed from the bonded warehouse and all merchandise collected by a proprietor or his agent for transport to his warehouse. The records shall provide an audit trail from deposit through manipulation, manufacture, destruction, and withdrawal from the bonded warehouse either by specific identification or other Customs authorized inventory method. The records to be maintained are those which a prudent businessman in the same type of business can be expected to maintain. The records are to be kept in sufficient detail to permit effective and efficient determination by Customs of the proprietor's compliance with these regulations and correctness of his annual submission or reconciliation; (2) Producing accurate and timely reports and documents as required by this part; and (3) Identifying shortages and overages of merchandise in sufficient detail to determine the quantity, description, tariff classification and value of the missing or excess merchandise so that appropriate reports can be filed with Customs on a timely basis. (b) Procedures manual. (1) The proprietor shall have available at the warehouse an English language copy of its written inventory control and recordkeeping systems procedures manual in accordance with the requirements of this part. (2) The proprietor shall keep current its procedures manual and shall submit to the port director a new certification at the time any change in the system is implemented. (c) Entry of merchandise into a warehouse--(1) Identification. All merchandise collected by a proprietor or his agent for transport to his warehouse shall be receipted. In addition, all merchandise entered in a warehouse will be recorded in a receiving report or document using a Customs entry number or unique identifier if an alternate inventory control method has been approved. All merchandise will be traceable to a Customs entry and supporting documentation. (2) Quantity verification. Quantities received will be reconciled to a receiving report or document such as an invoice with any discrepancy reported to the port director as provided in Sec. 19.6(a). (3) Recordation. Merchandise received will be accurately recorded in the accounting and inventory system records from the receiving report or document using the Customs entry number or unique identifier if an alternative inventory control method has been approved. (d) Accountability for merchandise in a warehouse--(1) Identification of merchandise. The Customs entry number or unique identifier, as applicable under Sec. 19.4(b)(8), will be used to identify and trace merchandise. (2) Inventory records. The inventory records will specify by Customs entry number or unique identifier if an alternative inventory control method is approved: (i) The location of the merchandise within the warehouse; (ii) Except for merchandise in general order, the cost or value of the merchandise, unless the proprietor's financial records maintain cost or value and the records are made available for Customs review; and (iii) The beginning balance, cumulative receipts and withdrawals, adjustments, destructions, and current balance on hand by date and quantity. (3) Theft, shortage, overage or damage. Any theft or suspected theft or overage or any extraordinary shortage or damage (equal to one percent or more of the value of the merchandise in an entry or covered by a unique identifier; or if the missing merchandise is subject to duties and taxes in excess of $100) shall be immediately brought to the attention of the port director, and confirmed in writing within five business days after the shortage, overage, or damage has been brought to the attention of the port director. An entry for warehouse must be filed for all overages by the person with the right to make entry within five business days of the date of discovery. The applicable duties, taxes and interest on thefts and shortages so reported shall be paid by the responsible party to Customs within 20 calendar days following the end of the calendar month in which the shortage is discovered. The port director may allow the consolidation of duties and taxes applicable to multiple [[Page 311]] shortages into one payment; however, the amount applicable to each warehouse entry is to be listed on the submission and shall specify the applicable duty, tax and interest. These same requirements shall apply when cumulative thefts, shortages or overages under a specific entry or unique identifier total one percent or more of the value of the merchandise or if the duties and taxes owed exceed $100. Upon identification, the proprietor shall record all shortages and overages in its inventory control and recordkeeping system, whether or not they are required to be reported to the port director at the time. The proprietor must also record all shortages and overages as required in the Customs Form 300 or annual reconciliation report under paragraphs (g) or (h) of this section, as appropriate. Duties and taxes applicable to any non-extraordinary shortage or damage and not required to be paid earlier must be reported and submitted to the port director no later than the date the certification of preparation of Customs Form 300 is due or at the time the certification of preparation of the annual reconciliation report is due, as prescribed in paragraphs (g) or (h) of this section. Discrepancies found in a Class 9 warehouse with integrated locations as set forth in Sec. 19.35(c) will be the net discrepancies for a unique identifier (see Sec. 19.4(b)(8)(ii) of this part) such that overages within one sales location will be offset against shortages in another location that is within the integrated location. A Class 9 proprietor who transfers merchandise between facilities in different ports without being required to file a rewarehouse entry in accordance with Sec. 144.34 of this chapter may offset overages and shortages within the same unique identifier for merchandise located in stores in different ports (see Sec. 19.4(b)(8)(ii) of this part). (4) Permit file folders--(i) Maintenance. Permit file folders shall be maintained and kept up to date by filing all receipts, damage or shortage reports, manipulation requests, withdrawals, removals and blanket permit summaries within five business days after the event occurs. The permit file folders shall be kept in a secure area and shall be made available for inspection by Customs at all reasonable hours. (ii) Review. When the final withdrawal of merchandise relating to a specific warehouse entry, general order or seizure occurs, the warehouse proprietor shall: review the permit file folder to ensure that all necessary documentation is in the file folder accounting for the merchandise covered by the entry; notify Customs of any merchandise covered by the warehouse entry, general order or seizure which has not been withdrawn or removed; and file the permit file folder with Customs within 30 calendar days after final withdrawal, except as allowed by paragraph (b)(4)(iv) of this section. The permit file folder for merchandise not withdrawn during the general order period shall be submitted to the port director upon receipt from Customs of the Customs Form 6043. (iii) Exemption to maintenance requirement. Maintenance of permit file folders will not be required, if the proprietor has an automated system capable of: satisfactorily summarizing all actions by Customs warehouse entry; providing upon demand by Customs an entry activity summary report which lists all individual receipts, withdrawals, destructions, manipulations and adjustments by warehouse entry and is cross-referenced to the source documents for each transaction; and maintaining source documents so that the documents can be readily retrieved upon request. Failure to provide the entry activity summary report or documentation supporting the entry activity summary report upon demand by the port director or the field director of regulatory audit could result in reinstatement by the port director of the requirement to maintain the permit file folder for all warehouse entries. When final withdrawal is made, the proprietor must submit the entry activity summary report to Customs. Prior to submission, the proprietor must ensure the accuracy of the summary report and assure that all supporting documentation is on file and available for review if requested by Customs. (iv) Exemption to submission requirement. At the discretion of the port director, a proprietor may be allowed to [[Page 312]] furnish formal notification of final withdrawal in lieu of the requirement to submit the permit file folder or entry activity summary within 30 calendar days of each final withdrawal. If approved to use this procedure the proprietor could be required by the port director to submit permit file folders or entry activity summaries on a selective basis. Failure to promptly provide the permit file folder or entry activity summary upon request by the port director or the field director of regulatory audit could result in withdrawal of this privilege. (5) Physical inventory. The proprietor shall take at least an annual physical inventory of all merchandise in the warehouse, or periodic cycle counts of selected categories of merchandise such that each category is counted at least once during the year, with prior notification of the date(s) given to Customs so that Customs personnel may observe or participate in the inventory if deemed necessary. If the proprietor of a Class 2 or Class 9 warehouse has merchandise covered by one warehouse entry, but stored in multiple warehouse facilities as provided for under Sec. 144.34 of this chapter, the facility where the original entry was filed must reconcile the on-hand balances at all locations with the record balance for those entries with merchandise in multiple locations. The proprietor shall notify the port director of any discrepancies, record appropriate adjustments in the inventory control and recordkeeping system, and make required payments and entries to Customs, in accordance with paragraph (d)(3) of this section. (e) Withdrawal of merchandise from a warehouse. All bonded merchandise withdrawn from a warehouse will be accurately recorded within the inventory control and recordkeeping system. The inventory control and recordkeeping system must have the capability to trace all withdrawals back to a Customs entry and to ultimate disposition of the merchandise by the proprietor. (f) Special provisions for use of FIFO inventory procedures--(1) Notification. A proprietor who wishes to use FIFO procedures for all or part of the merchandise in a bonded warehouse shall provide the port director a written certification that: The proprietor has read and understands Customs FIFO procedures set forth in this section; the proprietor's procedures are in accordance with Customs FIFO procedures, and the proprietor agrees to abide by those procedures; and the proprietor of a public warehouse will obtain the written consent of any importer using the warehouse before applying FIFO procedures to their merchandise. (2) Qualifying merchandise. FIFO inventory procedures may be used only for fungible merchandise. For purposes of this section, ``fungible merchandise'' means merchandise which is identical and interchangeable for all commercial purposes. While commercial interchangeability is usually decided between buyer and seller or between proprietor and importer, Customs is the final arbiter of fungibility in bonded warehouses. The criteria for determining whether merchandise is fungible include, but are not limited to, Governmental and recognized industrial standards, part numbers, tariff classification, value, brand name, unit of quantity (such as barrels, gallons, pounds, pieces), model number, style and same kind and quality. Fungible textile and textile products which are withdrawn from a Class 9 warehouse may be accounted for using FIFO inventory procedures, inasmuch as such articles would be exempt from textile quotas. (3) Merchandise specifically excluded. FIFO procedures cannot be applied to the following merchandise, as well as any other merchandise which does not comply with the requirements of paragraph (f)(2) of this section: (i) Merchandise subject to quota, visa or export restrictions chargeable to different countries of origin; (ii) Textile and textile products of different quota categories; (iii) Merchandise with different tariff classifications or rates of duty, except where the difference is within the merchandise itself (such as kits, merchandise in unusual containers) or where the tariff classification or dutiability is determined only by conditions upon withdrawal (for example, withdrawal for vessel supplies, bonded wool transactions); [[Page 313]] (iv) Merchandise with different legal requirements for marking, labeling or stamping; (v) Merchandise with different trademarks; (vi) Merchandise of different grades or qualities; (vii) Merchandise with different importers of record; (viii) Damaged or deteriorated merchandise; (ix) Restricted merchandise; or (x) General order, abandoned or seized merchandise. (4) Maintenance of FIFO. FIFO procedures used for merchandise in any inventory category, must be used consistently throughout the warehouse storage and recordkeeping practices and procedures for the merchandise. For example, merchandise may not be added to inventory by FIFO but withdrawn by bypassing certain inventory layers to reach a specific warehouse entry other than the oldest one. However, this does not preclude the use of specific identification for some merchandise in a warehouse entry and FIFO for other merchandise, so long as they are segregated in physical storage and clearly distinguished in the inventory and accounting records. (5) FIFO recordkeeping. In the inventory and accounting records, the proprietor shall establish an inventory layer for each warehouse entry represented in each inventory category. The layers shall be established in the order of time of acceptance of the entry or by the date of importation of merchandise covered by each applicable warehouse entry. There shall be no mixing of layering both by time of acceptance and date of importation in the same warehouse. Records for each layer shall, as a minimum, show the warehouse entry number, date of acceptance, date of importation, quantity and unit of quantity. They shall also show for each entry the type of warehouse withdrawal number or other specific removal event charged against the entry, by date and quantity. Each addition to or deduction from the inventory category shall be posted in the appropriate inventory category within 2 business days after the event occurs. All FIFO records and documentation shall consistently use the same unit of quantity within each inventory category. (6) Entry requirements. Warehouse entries covering any merchandise to be accounted for under FIFO must be prominently marked ``FIFO'' on the face of the entry document. The entry document or an attachment thereto shall show the unique identifier of each inventory category to be accounted for under FIFO, the quantity in each inventory category and the unit of quantity. (7) Receipts. Any shortages, overages, or damage found upon receipt shall be attributed to the entry under which the merchandise was received. FIFO procedures will not take effect until the merchandise is physically placed in the storage location for the inventory category represented in the entry. (8) Manipulation. When manipulation results in a product with a different unique identifier, the inventory and accounting records shall show the quantities of merchandise in each inventory category appearing in the product covered by the new unique identifier. The withdrawal shall show the unique identifiers of both the materials used in the manipulation and the product as manipulated. The quantities of the original unique identifiers will be deducted from their respective warehouse entries on a FIFO basis when the resultant product is withdrawn. (9) Discontinuance of FIFO. A proprietor may voluntarily discontinue the use of FIFO procedures for all or part of the merchandise currently under FIFO by providing written notification to the port director. The notification shall clearly describe the merchandise, by commercial names and unique identifiers, to be removed from FIFO. Following notification, the merchandise shall be segregated in both the recordkeeping system and the physical location by warehouse entry number and the quantities so removed shall be deducted from the appropriate FIFO inventory category balances. Merchandise so removed shall be maintained under the specific identification inventory method. FIFO procedures which were voluntarily discontinued may be reinstated, but not for merchandise covered by any warehouse entry for which FIFO was discontinued. [[Page 314]] (g) Warehouse proprietor submission. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (h) of this section or Sec. 19.19(b) of this part, the warehouse proprietor must prepare a Warehouse Proprietor's Submission on Customs Form (CF) 300 within 45 calendar days from the end of the business year and maintain the Submission on file for 5 years from the end of the business year covered by the Submission. The proprietor must submit to the port director, within 10 business days after preparation of the CF 300, a letter signed by the proprietor certifying that the CF 300 has been prepared, is available for Customs review, and is accurate. If the proprietor of a Class 2 or Class 9 warehouse has merchandise covered by one warehouse entry, but stored in multiple warehouse facilities as provided for under Sec. 144.34 of this chapter, the CF 300 shall cover all locations and warehouses of the proprietor. An alternative format may be used for providing the information required on the CF 300. (h) Annual reconciliation--(1) Report. Instead of preparing Customs Form 300 as required under paragraph (g) of this section, the proprietor of a class 2, importers' private bonded warehouse, and proprietors of classes 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 warehouses if the warehouse proprietor and the importer are the same party, must prepare a reconciliation report within 90 days after the end of the fiscal year unless the port director authorizes an extension for reasonable cause. The proprietor shall retain the annual reconciliation report for 5 years from the end of the fiscal year covered by the report. The report must be available for a spot check or audit by Customs, but need not be furnished to Customs unless requested. There is no form specified for the preparation of the report. (2) Information required. The report must contain the company name; address of the warehouse; class of warehouse; date of inventory or information on cycle counts; a description of merchandise for each entry or unique identifier, quantity on hand at the beginning of the year, cumulative receipts and transfers (by unit), quantity on hand at the end of the year, and cumulative positive and negative adjustments (by unit) made during the year. If the proprietor of a Class 2 or Class 9 warehouse has merchandise covered by one warehouse entry, but stored in multiple warehouse facilities as provided for under Sec. 144.34 of this chapter, the reconciliation shall cover all locations and warehouses of the proprietor at the same port. If the annual reconciliation includes entries for which merchandise was transferred to a warehouse without filing a rewarehouse entry, as allowed under Sec. 144.34, the annual reconciliation must contain sufficient detail to show all required information by location where the merchandise is stored. For example, if merchandise covered by a single entry is stored in warehouses located in 3 different ports, the annual reconciliation should specify individually the beginning and ending inventory balances, cumulative receipts, transfers, and positive and negative adjustments for each location. (3) Certification. The proprietor must submit to the port director within 10 business days after preparation of the annual reconciliation report, a letter signed by the proprietor certifying that the annual reconciliation has been prepared, is available for Customs review, and is accurate. The certification letter must contain the proprietor's IRS number; date of fiscal year end; the name and street address of the warehouse; the name, title, and telephone number of the person having custody of the records; and the address where the records are stored. Reporting of shortages and overages based on the annual reconciliation will be made in accordance with paragraph (d)(3) of this section. Any previously unreported shortages and overages should be reported to the port director and any unpaid duties, taxes and fees should be paid at this time. (i) System review. The proprietor shall perform an annual internal review of the inventory control and recordkeeping system and shall prepare and maintain on file a report identifying any deficiency discovered and corrective action taken, to ensure that the system meets the requirements of this part. (j) Special requirements. A warehouse proprietor submission (CF 300) or annual reconciliation must be prepared [[Page 315]] for each facility or location as defined in Secs. 19.2(a) and 19.35(c) of this part. When merchandise is transferred from one facility or location to another without filing a rewarehouse entry, as provided for in Sec. 144.34(c) of this chapter, the submission/reconciliation for the warehouse where the entry was originally filed should account for all merchandise under the warehouse entry, indicating the quantity in each location. [T.D. 97-19, 62 FR 15836, Apr. 3, 1997, as amended by T.D. 99-78, 64 FR 57565, Oct. 26, 1999; T.D. 02-65, 67 FR 68033, Nov. 8, 2002]






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File Modified2003-07-24
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