Slip Op. 01-100
UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
BEFORE: RICHARD K. EATON, JUDGE
____________________________________
:
INTERNATIONAL HOME TEXTILES, :
INC., :
:
Plaintiff, :
:
v. : Court No. 99-10-00627
:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, :
:
Defendant. :
____________________________________:
Importer brought suit challenging United States Customs Service’s (“Customs”)
classification of apparel under subheading 6103.42.10 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States (“HTSUS”) (1998), covering, inter alia, men’s cotton trousers, breeches, and
shorts, and under HTSUS subheading 6105.10.00, covering, inter alia, men’s cotton shirts.
Importer maintained that apparel at issue is properly classified under HTSUS subheading
6107.91.00, or subheading 6107.21.00, as sleepwear. Following trial, the United States Court of
International Trade, Eaton, J., held that Customs properly classified apparel under HTSUS
subheadings 6103.42.10 and 6105.10.00 as men’s cotton trousers, shorts, and shirts.
[Judgment entered for Defendant.]
Decided: August 10, 2001
Peter S. Herrick, for Plaintiff.
Stuart E. Schiffer, Acting Assistant Attorney General of the United States; Joseph I.
Liebman, Attorney in Charge, International Trade Field Office, Commercial Litigation Branch,
Civil Division, United States Department of Justice (Bruce N. Stratvert), for Defendant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
EATON, JUDGE: Before the Court is a customs classification dispute that was tried de
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 2
novo pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2640(a) (1994). Plaintiff International Home Textiles, Inc.
(“Plaintiff”) challenges the United States Customs Service’s (“Customs”) classification of certain
men’s garments under subheadings 6103.42.10 and 6105.10.00 of the Harmonized Tariff
Schedule of the United States (“HTSUS”) (1998), 19 U.S.C. § 1202 (1994).1 The Court
exercises exclusive jurisdiction over this matter, see 28 U.S.C. § 1581(a) (1994), and, based on
the findings of fact and conclusions of law set forth below, enters judgment for the United States
(“Government”) pursuant to USCIT Rules 52(a) and 58.
1
HTSUS subheading 6103.42.10 covers, inter alia, men’s cotton trousers, breeches,
and shorts. Subheading 6105.10.00 covers, inter alia, men’s cotton shirts. The relevant statutory
language reads as follows:
6103 Men's or boys' suits, ensembles, suit-type
jackets, blazers, trousers, bib and brace
overalls, breeches and shorts (other than
swimwear), knitted or crocheted:
Trousers, bib and brace overalls, breeches and shorts:
....
6103.42 Of cotton:
6103.42.10 Trousers, breeches and shorts........... ........ 16.7%
Trousers and breeches:
20 Men's................(347) doz. v
kg
....
Shorts:
50 Men's................(347) doz. v
kg
....
6105 Men's or boys' shirts, knitted or crocheted:
6105.10.00 Of cotton.................................................................. ....... 20.5%
10 Men's....................................................(338) doz. v
kg
HTSUS headings 6103, 6105.
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 3
BACKGROUND
The single entry at issue here consists of men’s pants, shorts, and tops, imported in
September 1998 through the port of Miami, Florida. Plaintiff is the importer of record.
Customs liquidated the subject merchandise on March 26, 1999, classifying it as follows: (1) the
pants, as “[t]rousers,” “[o]f cotton,” “[m]en’s,” under HTSUS subheading 6103.42.1020, at
16.7% ad valorem; (2) the shorts, as “[s]horts,” “[o]f cotton,” “[m]en’s,” under HTSUS
subheading 6103.42.1050, at 16.7% ad valorem; and (3) the tops, as “shirts, knitted or
crocheted,” “[o]f cotton,” “[m]en’s,” under HTSUS subheading 6105.10.0010, at 20.5% ad
valorem. Plaintiff timely protested liquidation, which protest Customs denied on August 9,
1999.
Thereafter, Plaintiff commenced suit, contending that the subject merchandise should
have been classified “under HTSUS subheadings [sic] 6107.91.00 or 6107.21.00 as sleepwear”
(Compl. ¶¶ 12, 18, 24; see also Pl.’s Pretrial Mem. at 3; Tr. at 4–5),2 at 9.1%, or 9.3%, ad
2
HTSUS heading 6107 encompasses, inter alia, men’s underpants, briefs,
nightshirts, pajamas, bathrobes, dressing gowns, and similar articles. Subheading 6107.21.00
covers nightshirts and pajamas, and subheading 6107.91.00, the so-called “residual provision,”
covers other, similar articles, including sleepwear. The pertinent statutory language reads as
follows:
6107 Men's or boys' underpants, briefs, nightshirts,
pajamas, bathrobes, dressing gowns and similar
articles, knitted or crocheted:
....
Nightshirts and pajamas:
6107.21.00 Of cotton............................... ........ 9.3%
10 Men's..........................(351) doz. v
kg
....
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 4
valorem, respectively. Plaintiff relies primarily on the holding of International Home Textile,
Inc. v. United States, 153 F.3d 1378 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (“Int’l Home II”), aff’g 21 CIT 280 (1997)
(“Int’l Home I”) (collectively “Int’l Home”), a case where it was both plaintiff and appellant.
Plaintiff maintains that it has, since the resolution of that prior matter, redesigned its men’s pants,
shorts, and tops, such that they now have the essential character of being for the private activity
of “sleeping; and, perhaps sipping a cup of coffee and reading a newspaper in the privacy of
one’s home.” (Pl.’s Pretrial Mem. at 2.) Specifically, Plaintiff claims that its men’s garments are
now “of such lightweight material and looser fit that persons would feel uncomfortable and ill at
ease by wearing the garments outdoors and in public view” (id.), and that “[t]hey would not want
to wear these garments while exercising outdoors or away from home” (id.). Plaintiff further
states that its garments are “advertised, marketed and displayed in the men’s
sleepwear/underwear sections of retail stores.” (Id. at 3.) In sum, Plaintiff maintains that the
garments at issue “are sleepwear and not outerwear.” (Id.)3
Other:
6107.91.00 Of cotton......................................... ........ 9.1%
30 Sleepwear...................(351) doz. v
kg
HTSUS heading 6107.
3
Plaintiff, in its complaint, also alleges that Customs “made additions to the
transaction value of the merchandise” (Compl. ¶ 29) for which there existed no statutory basis
(Compl. ¶ 30). The Government states in its answer that “the additions to value for the hangers
was included in the invoiced value and was not added by Customs.” (Answer ¶ 29.) Plaintiff,
however, has failed to pursue this claim. Consequently, the Court cannot and does not address it.
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 5
The Government, on behalf of Customs, counters that the merchandise at issue is
“loungewear” (Def.’s Pretrial Mem. at 3),4 that is, that the merchandise is “of the same kind” as
that at issue in International Home (see id.), and, hence, is “suitable for wear outdoors and in
public view, for wear while exercising outdoors or away from home, and for wear for informal
entertaining” (id.; see also Tr. at 6). Thus, the Government claims, Customs properly classified
the garments under HTSUS headings 6103 and 6105.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The proper classification of imported goods is, ultimately, a question of law, see, e.g.,
Univ. Elecs., Inc. v. United States, 112 F.3d 488, 491 (Fed. Cir. 1997), one which the court
reviews de novo. See 28 U.S.C. § 2640(a) (“The Court of International Trade shall make its
determination upon the basis of the record made before [it].”).5
4
The parties in International Home stipulated that the garments then at issue were
“properly considered loungewear, primarily used inside the home and around the house.” Int’l
Home I, 21 CIT at 281. Plaintiff declined to so stipulate here.
5
While Customs’ classification “decision” is, by statute, “presumed to be correct,”
see 28 U.S.C. § 2639(a)(1), this presumption has been found to be “a procedural device that is
designed to allocate, between the two litigants to a lawsuit, the burden of producing evidence in
sufficient quantity.” Univ. Elecs., 112 F.3d at 492. Specifically, the presumption places upon
the importer the burden of producing sufficient evidence to show by a preponderance of the
evidence that Customs’ classification decision is erroneous. See id.; see also Hawley &
Letzerich v. United States, 19 C.C.P.A. 47, 55 (1931).
Moreover, the presumption, in effect, attaches only to disputed questions of fact. See
Univ. Elecs., 112 F.3d at 493 (“Because the presumption relates to the presentation of evidence .
. . it has force only as to factual components of [Customs’] decision (i.e., components where
evidence is required).”); 3G Mermet Fabric Corp. v. United States, 25 CIT __, __, 135 F. Supp.
2d 151, 155 n.8 (2001); cf. Rollerblade, Inc. v. United States, 112 F.3d 481, 484 (Fed. Cir. 1997)
(finding presumption “irrelevant” where there exists no factual dispute); Goodman Mfg., L.P. v.
United States, 69 F.3d 505, 508 (Fed. Cir. 1995). It “carries no force as to questions of law.”
Univ. Elecs., 112 F.3d at 492. Thus, “[w]hen viewed from the perspective of standards of
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 6
DISCUSSION
The resolution of a classification question is a two-part inquiry. See Univ. Elecs., 112
F.3d at 491. The court must: (1) ascertain the proper meaning of the relevant tariff provision(s);
and (2) determine whether the merchandise at issue falls within the description of such
provision(s) as properly construed. Id. The first question is one of law; the second, one of fact.
Id.; see Sports Graphics, Inc. v. United States, 24 F.3d 1390, 1391 (Fed. Cir. 1994).
The primary question of law arising from the facts now before the Court is the proper
construction of HTSUS heading 6107. This question has been addressed by this court and the
Federal Circuit in a case that, as noted above, involved the classification of men’s loungewear
previously imported by Plaintiff. See Int’l Home, 21 CIT 280, aff’d, 153 F.3d 1378; see also
Inner Secrets/Secretly Yours, Inc. v. United States, 19 CIT 496, 885 F. Supp. 248 (1995); St. Eve
Int’l, Inc. v. United States, 11 CIT 224 (1987); Mast Indus., Inc. v. United States, 9 CIT 549
(1985), aff’d, 786 F.2d 1144 (Fed. Cir. 1986); see generally United States v. Carborundum Co.,
536 F.2d 373 (C.C.P.A. 1976).
In International Home, Plaintiff claimed that the men’s loungewear at issue was properly
classified as “similar articles” under HTSUS heading 6107, see Int’l Home II, 153 F.3d at 1380,
specifically, either under subheading 6107.91.00 or subheading 6107.21.00. See Int’l Home I, 21
CIT at 280–81. This court held that each of the named exemplars listed under heading 6107, that
is, “[m]en’s or boys’ underpants, briefs, nightshirts, pajamas, bathrobes, [and] dressing gowns,”
review, . . . in classification disputes neither th[e Federal Circuit] nor the Court of International
Trade defers to Customs’ decisions, whether factual or legal.” Id. at 493.
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HTSUS heading 6107, is “characterized by a sense of privateness . . . or private activity.” Id. at
282. The court further found that the loungewear items at issue did not possess this essential
characteristic of privacy and, thus, were not properly classified under either HTSUS subheading
6107.91.00 or 6107.21.00. See id. The Federal Circuit affirmed, agreeing that the essential
characteristic of the listed exemplars is that, “in their principal use [they] evoke a sense of
privacy.” Int’l Home II, 153 F.3d at 1381. In so holding, the Federal Circuit accepted this
court’s conclusion that Customs had properly classified the garments because it would not be
inappropriate for them to be worn
at informal social occasions in and around the home, and for other
individual, non-private activities in and around the house – e.g.,
watching movies at home with guests, barbequing at a backyard
gathering, doing outside home and yard maintenance work,
washing the car, walking the dog, and the like.
Int’l Home I, 21 CIT at 282. See Int’l Home II, 153 F.3d at 1381 (concurring that HTSUS
heading 6107 “is indeed limited to garments for private uses”).
Thus, the proper construction of HTSUS heading 6107 is settled law. The question
essential to determining whether the garments at issue fall within this heading, then, is the same
as that in International Home, i.e., whether it would be “unusual or inappropriate to wear the
[garments at issue] during informal social occasions and at other, non-private occasions,
including outside the home.” Id.; see also Carborundum, 536 F.2d at 377. The Court, having
heard the testimony of the witnesses, including that of three experts, and having carefully
examined the exhibits, particularly the garments themselves, see Mast, 9 CIT at 552 (noting that
“merchandise itself may be strong evidence of use”), concludes that the garments at issue are
appropriate for wear during informal social and other, non-private occasions in and outside the
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 8
home, and, therefore, are properly classified under HTSUS subheadings 6103.42.10 and
6105.10.00.
I. Findings of Fact
The garments at issue (Def.’s Ex. S(1), S(2), S(3)) are made of 100 percent cotton, and,
with the exception of the top (which has a contrasting heather gray placket), are solid navy blue
in color. The pants have an elastic waistband with a drawstring made of the same fabric as the
garment itself, side seam pockets, and elastic cuffs at the bottom of the pants legs. The shorts
also have an elastic waistband with the same self-fabric drawstring and side seam pockets.
Neither garment has a fly front opening. The top, referred to by the parties as a “Henley” (see,
e.g., Tr. at 11:15; Tr. at 31:22), has a rib neck collar, short sleeves with rib cuffs, a back drop,
two side vents, and a three-button front placket. All three garments bear the label
“Knightsbridge.” None of the garments is embellished by print or design. In sum, these
garments are virtually indistinguishable from garments designed, marketed, and sold to be worn
both inside and outside the home, on casual occasions and for other, non-private activities in and
around the home. (See generally Def.’s Ex. T(1), T(2), T(3); Def.’s Ex. U(6), U(7), U(8), U(9);
see, e.g., Def.’s Ex. R2; Def.’s Ex. W2; Def.’s Ex. X2; Def.’s Ex. Y2.)
As a preliminary matter, the Court notes that Plaintiff was unable show that the garments
at issue were, in fact, designed as sleepwear. Ms. Jan Leber, Plaintiff’s chief designer, and the
designer of the garments at issue (see Pretrial Order, Schedule G-1, at 14), testified as follows
with respect to the shorts:
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 9
Q: Was it your intent to make it look like athletic shorts? -- A: No.
Not particularly. . .
Q: Did you design it to look like pajamas? -- A: Just a short leg,
yeah, like a pajama pant, but that was [sic] just a short leg instead
for warm weather, or for people who don’t like to wear long pants.
Q: But when you designed that particular garment there, the short
one, were you using any kind of model garment as sort of to copy
[sic], to model after? -- A: Well, there was no particular garment in
mind, other than the fact that we wanted to have a soft comfortable
waist, and a roomy fit in the seat and hip, and adequate room in the
rise.
(Tr. at 113:20–25, 114:1–10.) To the contrary, the Government’s expert witnesses, Professor
Donna Gustavsen, Acting Department Head of the Apparel Design Department of the Rhode
Island School of Design (see Def.’s Ex. S3), and Ms. Marion Holmes, an independent contractor
involved for over thirty years in the design, manufacture, marketing, and sale of men’s apparel
(see Def.’s Ex. T3; Tr. at 258–60), concluded that the garments at issue were likely adapted from
athletic garments or other casual outerwear. (See, e.g., Tr. at 191:5–8 (finding that garments at
issue and various athletic garments to which they were compared “were extraordinarily similar,
and . . . that the styling for the International Home Textile garments may have been derived from
an athletic inspiration”); Tr. at 193:22–24 (finding “inclusion of elastic plus a drawstring . . . an
extremely athletic detail”); Tr. at 345:24–25 (“They’re knock-offs of activewear and they’re
designed for multiuse.”); see also Tr. at 210–14 (summarizing manner in which fabric,
construction, and design of garments at issue are comparable, indeed, almost identical, to athletic
garments in general).) Indeed, Plaintiff failed to establish the existence of any of the alleged
features in design or construction which, it claims, render the garments at issue appropriate only
for private activity, namely: (1) their construction from a lightweight fabric; and (2) their
allegedly oversized fit. The Court finds convincing on these design issues the testimony of the
Government’s expert witnesses.
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 10
As to the fabric used in the construction of these garments, the Court finds that, while it is
lightweight, it is not, as maintained by Plaintiff, “translucent.” (See Tr. at 22:22.) Professor
Gustavsen observed:
The fabric is opaque. It is not transparent fabric. It’s totally
opaque. . . . However, if you hold the fabric up to the light it would
be different. However, it’s not transparent, and there’s nothing
about the fabric that makes it so light as to be unwearable outside
of the home, or outside of the bedroom, in particular.
(Tr. at 208:11–18; see also Tr. at 194:25, 195:1–2 (“[The fabric is] not so light weight [sic] that
[it] would . . . [be] impossible to wear [these garments] outdoors, or [during] any of the activities
that we talked about.”).) Plaintiff’s claims to the contrary are, in any event, refuted by the
Court’s observation of the garments themselves, which were worn by Plaintiff’s model during
the trial.
With respect to the garments’ allegedly oversized construction, the Court finds this claim
unsubstantiated. First, the Government introduced at trial three poster boards prepared by
Professor Gustavsen (Def.’s Ex. T(1), T(2), T(3)) which adequately disprove this claim. These
exhibits compare the specification sheets for the pants, shorts, and top at issue to the
specifications of, respectively, a pair of Russell Athletic pants (Def.’s Ex. P2), a pair of Nike
shorts (Def.’s Ex. Q2), and a Basic Equipment Henley top (Def.’s Ex. O2). Professor Gustavsen
purchased these items, respectively, at The Sports Authority, Modell’s, and Walmart. Her
comparisons, as reflected by these exhibits and in her accompanying testimony, demonstrate that
the garments at issue are not significantly more “oversized” than athletic apparel. (See, e.g., Tr.
at 192:17–20 (concluding that there exists “no basis for saying that the International Home
Textile [pants] were actually oversized or larger than a normal athletic pant would be”); Tr. at
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 11
196:5–6 (“If anything, the Nike short was oversized more so than the International Home [sic].”);
Tr. at 201:25, 202:1 (finding, upon comparison of Henley top at issue and that purchased, that
“measurements were very very close and the construction were [sic] also very close as well”).)
Ms. Holmes also prepared poster boards (Def.’s Ex. U(6), U(7), U(8), U(9)) displaying the
specification sheets of the garments at issue, as well as those of various items of what she
deemed to be activewear or sportswear. Ms. Holmes concluded, in light of these comparisons,
that there existed “no evidence that [the garments at issue] were exceptionally loose fitting or
offered any more comfort than any other activewear style.” (Tr. at 281:7–8.) In fact, Ms.
Holmes testified, “[l]oose fit, comfort fit today, is a term that’s used all over the market. It
applies to everything that’s being made now in sportswear.” (Tr. at 278:21–23; see also Tr. at
347–48.) Professor Gustavsen, too, indicated little support for “the theory that being oversized is
necessarily indicative of a sleepwear requirement” (Tr. at 192:22–23), and thus “question[ed] the
validity of using that strategy for categorizing [garments] as sleepwear” (Tr. at 193:1–2).
The physical characteristics of the garments do indeed suggest that the consumer would
deem it appropriate to wear these garments during informal social and other, non-private
occasions in and outside the home. (See, e.g., Tr. at 194:11–13 (containing Professor
Gustavsen’s opinion that inclusion of pocket “tie[s] back to a recognizable garment that most
men would recognize as being an athletic [sic] derived garment”); Tr. at 209:10–20 (wherein
Professor Gustavsen stated that drawstring and pockets are “design elements that tie these
garments into what is a recognizable athletic context,” such that “the consumer . . . perception . .
. [is that they are] athletic based, . . . that [one] is able to wear them comfortably in [sic] a
number of different activities”).) Again, the Court’s observation of the garments, as worn by
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 12
Plaintiff’s model, is perhaps the most telling evidence in support of this finding. The Court saw
nothing in the design (and, as previously noted, the fabric) of the garments that would prevent
them from being worn in informal social settings inside or outside the home.
Moreover, the channels of trade in which these garments moved further suggest that they
were intended for wear during activities other than sleeping. For example, Ms. Leber testified
that Plaintiff sells its merchandise to “underwear/loungewear buyers” (see Tr. at 98:8–10), as
well as “sleepwear/loungewear buyers” (see Tr. at 102:20–21), affiliated with various mass
merchants. Plaintiff’s expert witness, Mr. Joel Freedman, a buyer for Kmart stores who
purchased Plaintiff’s garments, stated on cross-examination that he did not buy goods for a
“sleepwear” department, rather, the areas he bought for were “[u]nderwear and loungewear, two
separate departments” (Tr. at 183:13), and that, at Kmart, sleepwear and loungewear are sold in
the same vicinity (see Tr. at 182–82). The Government also produced evidence and testimony
tending to show that Plaintiff’s parent company is recognized, at least during a prominent trade
show (Tr. at 289–90), as one which deals in apparel for “casual lifestyles” (see Tr. at 291:11–12;
Def.’s Ex. X3).
Furthermore, the evidence adduced at trial with respect to environments of sale, including
methods of advertising and display, was equivocal, at best. Plaintiff’s evidence on these issues
consisted of, inter alia, a retail store floor plan, hangtags, photographs, and advertisements. None
of these exhibits proved to be probative. First, the floor plan (Pl.’s Ex. 12), which, according to
Mr. Freedman, portrays the “traditional layout for men’s wear at Kmart” (Tr. at 154:7), fails to
show where the merchandise at issue was actually displayed; indeed, it is entitled “Summer
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2001” (see Pl.’s Ex. 12; see also Tr. at 168:18 (acknowledging that floor plan depicts “a current
display”)).
Second, the hangtags introduced by Plaintiff (Pl.’s Ex. 7; Pl.’s Ex. 11) also fail to
demonstrate how the garments at issue were actually displayed or marketed for sale. There exists
no evidence to suggest that the garments at issue were actually marketed with these, or similar,
hangtags. Nor did Plaintiff successfully show that any of the garments at issue were presented
for sale with, or accompanied on display by, any type of “sleepwear” hangtag. The Government,
however, introduced into evidence almost identical garments imported by Plaintiff in January
1999 (Def.’s Ex. S2(1), S2(2)), each of which bears a “Knightsbridge” hangtag that reads, in part,
“[f]or the man who takes his loungewear seriously” (see id.). Ms. Roslyn Haynes, an import
specialist employed by Customs for thirty years (Tr. at 363:20–22), observed that these
garments, while part of a different entry, are “materially the same” (Tr. at 358:18–19) as those at
issue.
Third, the sixteen pictures produced by the parties as a collective exhibit (Def.’s Ex. E),
which purport to depict the garments at issue on display at Target stores, were also largely
unprobative. Mr. Jaime Grosfeld, Vice President of International Home Textiles, Inc., for
instance, denied that the garments depicted in any of these pictures were those of Plaintiff.6
Moreover, none of the garments depicted in these pictures appear to bear the Knightsbridge label
6
Although the Government claimed that most of these pictures were submitted by
Plaintiff with its responses to the Government’s interrogatories (see Tr. 55:8–10), it appears that
only four pictures (Def.’s Ex. E(13), E(14), E(15), E(16)) were, in fact, submitted by Plaintiff
(see Pl.’s Ex. 6).
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 14
found on the garments at issue. Three pictures depict tops and pants, displayed on floor stands,
bearing the “Honors” label and hangtag. (Def.’s Ex. E(14), E(15), E(16).) These pictures show
the “Honors” brand garments displayed in the same general vicinity as men’s robes, underwear,
ties, and belts. Also posted in the vicinity of the “Honors” brand garments is a poster promoting
the “Honors” brand long sleeve Henley as “loungewear.” (See Def.’s Ex. E(14).) In any event,
neither party established that the “Honors” brand garments on display are the garments at issue
here. Likewise, the garments depicted in ten of the remaining pictures are clearly displayed for
sale along with signs that promote them as “loungewear.” (See Def.’s Ex. E(1), E(2), E(3), E(4),
E(5), E(6), E(7), E(9), E(10), E(12).)
Finally, with respect to advertising, Plaintiff could produce little evidence as to how the
garments at issue were actually advertised, much less that they were, in fact, advertised as
“sleepwear” or for use solely during private activities. While Plaintiff did introduce into
evidence three advertisements placed in Kmart sales circulars (Pl.’s Ex. 4; Pl.’s Ex. 13; Pl.’s Ex.
14), only one of these ads (Pl.’s Ex. 4) was identified by any of Plaintiff’s witnesses as depicting
the garments at issue.7 However, the scene depicted in this ad is, again, equivocal: a man,
barefoot, wearing the top and pants at issue, leaning against an unadorned chest of drawers inside
a stark room, close to a chair and a large open window. No words or phrases, other than the
7
One of the two remaining advertisements produced by Plaintiff depicts garments
advertised under the banner, “Sale! All men’s sleepwear.” (Pl.’s Ex. 13.) However, this ad does
not include photos of any of the garments at issue. (See id.; see also Tr. at 16:19–22.) The other
advertisement does include a photo of a top and shorts strikingly similar to those at issue, but
promotes them with the phrase “all men’s loungewear 100% cotton.” (Pl.’s Ex. 14; see also Tr.
at 159:22–24 (wherein Mr. Freedman acknowledges that “the all men’s loungewear” is the
merchandise that is the subject of the instant action).)
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 15
“Knightsbridge” name, are placed on the ad. (See Pl.’s Ex. 4.) Moreover, the Court notes that
this ad is dated July 1999, and that Plaintiff failed to establish that this particular advertisement
was used to promote the garments at issue. In fact, another of Plaintiff’s submissions refers to
this advertisement as one pertaining to different entries. (See Pl.’s Ex. 1, at 3 & Ex. C.) The
Government, on the other hand, was able to produce much advertising showing garments that,
according to their visual presentation, are nearly identical to those at issue, promoted for use for
activities other than sleeping. (See, e.g., Def.’s Ex. G; Def.’s Ex. H; Def.’s Ex. I.)
Finally, returning to the garments themselves, while it is recognized that they may,
seemingly, be worn while sleeping (and no doubt are worn for that purpose), the Government’s
experts concluded, as does the Court, that nothing would prevent them from being worn at
informal social occasions inside or outside the home. (See, e.g., Tr. at 194:16–20 (“Could it be
worn for sleeping, yes, it could. . . . But to say it’s only worn as a sleep garment or primarily
worn as a sleep garment, I don’t find that to be truly credible.”); Tr. at 206:3–11 (stating
that garments at issue “are actually multiuse garments and can be worn in different capacities”);
Tr. at 208:24–25, 209:1 (“I don’t find any qualities in these garments which would limit their use
to be worn [sic] in the bedroom, or a totally intimate setting.”); Tr. at 344:11 (asserting that
“primary use is not private”); Tr. at 345:17–25 (concluding that garments at issue are
“multiuse”).) Thus, the Court was presented with expert testimony and exhibits which, together
with its own observation of the garments themselves, are sufficient to demonstrate that the
garments at issue simply do not posses that “sense of privateness . . . or private activity,” Int’l
Home I, 21 CIT at 282, that would permit them to be properly classified as sleepwear.
Court No. 99-10-00627 Page 16
II. Conclusions of Law
HTSUS heading 6107 is “limited to garments for private uses.” Int’l Home II, 153 F.3d
at 1381. In light of the factual findings set forth above, the Court further concludes that the
garments at issue do not share the essential characteristic of merchandise properly classified
under HTSUS heading 6107, that is, garments whose principal use relates to private activity.
Plaintiff has failed to prove that it is “unusual or inappropriate to wear the [garments] at issue
during informal social occasions and at other, non-private occasions, including outside the
home,” id., while the Government has established evidence sufficient to support classification
under HTSUS headings 6103 and 6105.
CONCLUSION
Thus, in accordance with the foregoing findings and conclusions, the Court ultimately
concludes that the garments at issue are properly classified under HTSUS subheadings
6103.42.10 and 6105.10.00. Judgment is entered accordingly.
___________________________
Richard K. Eaton, Judge
Dated: August 10, 2001
New York, New York