Rocknel Fastener, Inc. v. United States

                         Slip Op. 00 - 112

          UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE

             BEFORE:     RICHARD W. GOLDBERG, JUDGE


ROCKNEL FASTENER, INC.,

                      Plaintiff,

                 v.                      Court No. 97-10-01702

UNITED STATES,

                      Defendant.


[Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment denied. Defendant’s
motion for summary judgment granted. Judgment entered for
defendant.]

                                         Dated: August 29, 2000

     Sonnenberg & Anderson (Steven P. Sonnenberg), for
plaintiff.

     David W. Ogden, Acting Assistant Attorney General; Joseph
I. Liebman, Attorney in Charge, International Trade Field
Office, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United
States Department of Justice; Amy M. Rubin, Attorney,
International Trade Field Office, Commercial Litigation
Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice;
Sheryl A. French, of counsel, Office of Assistant Chief
Counsel, International Trade Litigation, United States Customs
Service; for defendant.


                              OPINION

    GOLDBERG, Judge: This matter is before the Court on

cross-motions for summary judgment.     Plaintiff, Rocknel

Fastener Inc. (“plaintiff”), challenges the United States

Customs Service’s (“Customs”) classification of certain
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 2


fasteners as screws “[h]aving shanks or threads with a

diameter of 6 mm or more” under subheading 7318.15.80 of the

Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (1997)

(“HTSUS”).   Plaintiff claims the imported fasteners should

instead be classified as “[b]olts and bolts and their nuts or

washers” under HTSUS subheading 7318.15.20.

     The Court exercises jurisdiction over this matter

pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(a) (1994).   For the reasons that

follow, the Court grants defendant’s motion for summary

judgment and denies plaintiff’s motion for the same.


                               I.
                           BACKGROUND

     The merchandise at issue consists of 561 different

industrial, externally threaded fasteners from Japan.     See

Pl.’s Mem. of Law in Supp. of its Mot. for Summ. J. (“Pl.’s

Br.”), at 1; Def.’s Mem. in Supp. of its Cross-Mot. for Summ.

J. and in Opp’n to Pl.’s Mot. for Summ. J. (“Def.’s Br.”), at

1.   The fasteners are fabricated from metal alloys, see Pl.’s



     1
          In their Joint Summary of Part Numbers and Entries
at Issue (Oct. 27, 1999), the parties agree that 59 products
are at issue. This opinion deals with 56 products, because
defendant now contends that samples 2, 9, and 59 should be
reclassified. See Def.’s Br., at 39 n.37, 40. Samples 2, 9,
and 59 are addressed separately in the order accompanying this
opinion.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 3


Br., at 1; Def.’s Br., at 1, and are designed to hold or

fasten components of a finished product together.     See Pl’s

Statement of Material Facts to Which There Is No Genuine

Triable Issue (“Pl.’s Stmt. Mat’l Facts”), at ¶17; Def.’s

Resp. to Pl.’s Statement of Material Facts as to Which There

Are No Genuine Issues to Be Tried (“Def.’s Resp. to Pl.’s

Facts”), at ¶17.

    The fasteners are rod- or pin-shaped, and are threaded on

one end.   See Pl.’s Stmt. Mat’l Facts, at ¶10, ¶12; Def.’s

Resp. to Pl.’s Facts, at ¶10, ¶12.     The diameter of each

fastener’s threads measures six millimeters or more.     See

Pl.’s Stmt. Mat’l Facts, at ¶9; Def.’s Resp. to Pl.’s Facts,

at ¶9.

    The fasteners also have a “head” on the end of the pin

opposite the threads.   See Pl.’s Stmt. Mat’l Facts, at ¶11;

Def.’s Resp. to Pl.’s Facts, at ¶11.     The fasteners were

designed to be, and are installed by, torquing these heads.

See Def.’s Statement of Additional Material Facts as to Which

There Are No Genuine Issues to Be Tried (“Def.’s Stmt. Add’l

Facts”), at ¶32, ¶33; Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Statement of

Material Facts Not in Issue (“Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Facts”),

at ¶32, ¶33.

    Plaintiff entered the subject fasteners into the United
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 4


States between March 14, 1997 and May 7, 1997.     On August 1,

1997, Customs liquidated the fasteners under 7318.15.80 at a

rate of 8.9% ad valorem.     On August 21, 1997, plaintiff filed

a protest, claiming the fasteners should have been classified

under   7318.15.20, subject to a duty rate of 0.3% ad valorem.

Customs denied the protest on September 18, 1997, after which

plaintiff timely filed this action.


                                 II.
                         STANDARD OF REVIEW

    This case is before the Court on cross-motions for

summary judgment.     Summary judgment is appropriate when “there

is no genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the

moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”

See USCIT R. 56(d).

    The “[c]lassification of goods entails a two-step

process: (1) ascertaining the proper meaning of specific terms

in the tariff provision; and (2) determining whether the

merchandise in question comes within the description of the

properly construed terms.”     Hewlett-Packard Co. v. United

States, 189 F.3d 1346, 1348 (Fed. Cir. 1999).     In this case,

the parties agree on the physical characteristics of the

imported fasteners.     Thus, the Court must determine only “the

proper meaning and scope of the relevant provisions.”     Carl
Court No. 97-10-01702                                        Page 5


Zeiss, Inc. v. United States, 195 F.3d 1375, 1378 (Fed. Cir.

1999).     Because the meaning of tariff terms is a question of

law, see id., summary judgment is appropriate in this case.

    In reviewing Customs’s classification, the Court must

determine the correct classification for the subject

merchandise.     See Jarvis Clark Co. v. United States, 733 F.2d

873, 878, 2 Fed. Cir. (T) 70, 75 (1984).     Its review of

Customs’s classification ruling is de novo.     See 28 U.S.C. §

2640 (1994).     Ordinarily, classification rulings are entitled

to a statutory presumption of correctness.     See 28 U.S.C. §

2639(a)(1) (1994).     Because the Court is faced with a question

of law on motions for summary judgment, however, no

presumption of correctness attaches to Customs’s

classification.     See Universal Elecs. Inc. v. United States,

112 F.3d 488, 492 (Fed. Cir. 1997).     In addition, the Court

does not apply Chevron deference to Customs’s classification

rulings.     See Carl Zeiss, 195 F.3d at 1378; Mead Corp. v.

United States, 185 F.3d 1304, 1307 (Fed. Cir. 1999), cert.

granted,120 S. Ct. 2193 (U.S. May 30, 2000) (No. 99-1434).
Court No. 97-10-01702                                       Page 6


                              III.
                           DISCUSSION

    Plaintiff claims the subject fasteners should be

classified as bolts under subheading 7318.15.20.     In support

of its argument, plaintiff relies on general dictionary

definitions and its understanding of prior case law.

    Defendant asserts that the subject fasteners are properly

classified as screws under subheading 7318.15.80.     As the

basis for its classification, defendant relies on ANSI/ASME

Standard B18.2.1 (1981) (“the Standard”), which identifies

screws and bolts according to primary and supplementary design

characteristics.

    The starting point in every classification case is the

tariff schedule.   Accordingly, the Court begins by examining

the structure of the statute.     Next, the Court considers the

specific tariff provisions in question, and in particular, the

meaning of the tariff terms “bolt” and “screw.”     After

reviewing dictionary definitions, fastener industry standards,

and judicial precedent, the Court concludes that the common

and commercial meaning of bolt and screw is embodied by

ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1.     Because the subject fasteners are

screws as defined by the Standard, the Court concludes that

Customs’s classification is correct.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                        Page 7


A.     Congress Intended That Customs Distinguish Bolts From
       Screws.

       Before turning to the specific tariff terms at issue in

this case, it is important to examine the structure of heading

7318.    The relevant portions of Heading 7318 are:


7318             Screws, bolts, nuts, coach screws, screw hooks,
            rivets, cotter pins, washers (including spring
washers)
          and similar articles, of iron or steel:
               Threaded articles:
          *** *** ***
7318.15             Other screws and bolts, whether or not with
                    their nuts or washers:
7318.15.20               Bolts and bolts and their nuts or
                         washers entered or exported in the
                         same shipment
          *** *** ***
7318.15.40               Machine screws 9.5 mm or more in
                         length and 3.2 mm or more in diameter
                         (not
                         including cap screws)

7318.15.50                 Studs
          *** *** ***
                           Other:
7318.15.60                      Having shanks or threads with a
                                diameter of less than 6 mm
          *** *** ***
7318.15.80                     Having shanks or threads with a
                               diameter of 6 mm or more
            *** *** ***

7318, HTSUS (1997 ed.).

       In conformance with the general organization of the

tariff schedule, heading 7318 encompasses a number of like

items.     And like all tariff headings, heading 7318 is broken
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 8


out into six and eight digit subheadings for classification of

articles thereunder.     In particular, six-digit subheading

7318.15 applies to both “other screws” and “bolts.”     The first

eight-digit provision under that subheading, 7318.15.20,

applies only to bolts.     For purposes of classification under

7318.15, then, Congress clearly considered bolts and screws to

be different articles, and intended Customs to classify them

under separate provisions.     As a corollary to this, a fastener

cannot be both a bolt and a screw, but must be one or the

other.



B.   The Common and Commercial Meaning of Bolt and Screw.

     Having established that Congress intended Customs to

distinguish “bolts” from “other screws,” the Court now turns

to the meaning of those terms.     Neither the HTSUS nor its

legislative history define bolt or screw.     Therefore, each

term must be construed according to its common and commercial

meaning, which are presumptively the same.     See Mead Corp.,

185 F.3d at 1308.

     The Court may utilize a number of sources to ascertain

the common and commercial meaning of bolt and screw, including

dictionaries of general usage, scientific authorities, witness

testimony, “its own understanding of the term,” see Sabritas,
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 9


S.A. de C.V. v. United States, 22 CIT __, __, 998 F. Supp.

1123, 1127 (1998), and “other reliable information sources.”

Mead Corp., 185 F.3d at 1308.   In cases such as this, courts

often looks to industrial or commercial standards for guidance

in interpreting tariff terms.   See, e.g., North Am. Processing

Co. v. United States, 23 CIT __, __, 56 F. Supp. 2d 1174, 1180

(1999) (deeming USDA regulations “persuasive” support for the

common and commercial meaning of “meat”); THK America, Inc. v.

United States, 17 CIT 1169, 1174, 837 F. Supp. 427, 432 (1993)

(consulting American National Standard AFBMA Standard

Terminology for Antifriction Bearings and Parts for the common

and commercial meaning of “ball bearing”); Washington Int’l

Ins. Co. v. United States, 16 CIT 873, 875, 803 F. Supp. 420,

422 (1992) (consulting American Society for Testing and

Materials standards to define various headnote terms), aff’d

24 F.3d 224 (Fed. Cir. 1994); see also Arthur J. Humphreys,

Inc. v. United States, 973 F.2d 1554, 1559 (Fed. Cir. 1992)

(stating that “[i]ndustrial or commercial standards are useful

in ascertaining the commercial meaning of a tariff term”).

    1.   ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1 Embodies the Common and
         Commercial Meaning of Bolt and Screw.

    The Court first looks to dictionaries for the common and

commercial meaning of the term bolt.   Most generally,
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 10


Webster’s New World Dictionary defines bolt as “a threaded

metal rod or pin for joining parts, having a head and usually

used with a nut.”   157 (3d ed. 1988).   Similarly, Millwrights

and Mechanics Guide describes a bolt as “an externally

threaded fastener designed for insertion through holes in

assembled parts. . . . [that] is normally tightened and

released by turning a mated nut.”   Pl.’s Br., at 12 (quoting

Millwrights and Mechanics Guide 371 (4th ed. 1986)).     The

American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language defines

bolt, in greater detail, as “[a] fastener consisting of a

threaded pin or rod with a head at one end, designed to be

inserted through holes in assembled parts and secured by a

mated nut that is tightened by applying torque.”2   213 (3d ed.

1996).   Finally, the McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of

Science & Technology defines bolt as

          A rod, usually of metal, with a head at one
          end and a screw thread on the other. A bolt
          is used to fasten objects together. A bolt
          is passed through clearance holes in two or
          more parts, a nut is engaged on the threaded
          end, and the parts are drawn together.


    2
          Similarly, Webster’s II New Riverside University
Dictionary defines bolt as “[a] fastener having a threaded pin
or rod with a head at one end, designed to be inserted through
holes in assembled parts and secured by a mated nut that is
tightened by application of a torque.” Def.’s Br., Campanelli
Decl., ¶10 (quoting Webster’s II New Riverside University
Dictionary 188 (1984)).
Court No. 97-10-01702                                       Page 11



264 (2d ed. 1989).

       In broad terms, these definitions suggest that a bolt is

designed to function in the following manner: (1) it is

inserted into a preexisting hole, (2) a nut is joined on the

end, and (3) the nut is turned, such that it compresses

together the parts to be joined.     At the very least, the

characteristic identified by every one of the foregoing

definitions is that a bolt is normally meant to be used with a

nut.    Plaintiff cautions, however, that “there is no

requirement that a bolt be used with a nut.”     Pl.’s Br., at

11.    In plaintiff’s view, a bolt is simply “a rod which [sic]

fastens two or more objects together.”     Pl.’s Br., at 9.

       Turning to the tariff term “screw,” Webster’s New World

Dictionary defines it as “a mechanical device for fastening

things together, consisting essentially of a cylindrical or

conical piece of metal threaded evenly around its outside

surface with an advancing spiral ridge and commonly having a

slotted head: it penetrates only by being turned, as with a

screwdriver.”    1206.   Similarly, The American Heritage

Dictionary of the English Language defines screw as “a. A

cylindrical rod incised with one or more helical or advancing

spiral threads . . . 2. A metal pin with incised threads and
Court No. 97-10-01702                                    Page 12


broad slotted head that can be driven as a fastener by turning

with a screwdriver . . . .”   1622 (3d ed. 1996).   Finally,

Millwrights and Mechanics Guide states that “[a] screw is

supposed to mate with an internal thread into which it is

tightened or released by turning its head.”   Pl.’s Br., at 12

(quoting Millwrights and Mechanics Guide 371 (4th ed. 1986)).

Plaintiff offers no definition for the common and commercial

meaning of the term screw.3

    Based on the foregoing dictionary definitions, it appears

that bolts and screws are designed to perform their fastening

function in different ways: bolts by torquing a nut, and



    3
          The source of plaintiff’s complete neglect of the
term screw may be its reliance on its assertion that
7318.15.80 is a “basket” provision that is, by definition,
subordinate to 7318.15.20, an eo nomine provision. Plaintiff
asserts that because the subject fasteners fall within a broad
definition of the term “bolt,” and because the provision for
bolts, 7318.15.20, is more specific than 7318.15.80, the
fasteners must be classified as bolts under 7318.15.20. See
Pl.’s Br., at 6-7.
     Because bolts must be distinguished from other screws for
purposes of classification under subheading 7318.15, whether
7318.15.80 is an eo nomine or basket provision is irrelevant.
If a fastener is a bolt, it must be classified under
7318.15.20, the eo nomine provision for bolts. If a fastener
is not a bolt, however, it cannot be classified under
7318.15.20 under any circumstances; it must be classified
elsewhere under subheading 7318.15. This is true regardless
of whether the alternative provisions under 7318.15 are eo
nomine or basket provisions. Thus, even assuming plaintiff is
correct in asserting that 7318.15.20 takes precedence over
7318.15.80, it is of no consequence.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 13


screws by torquing the head.   According to plaintiff, however,

          [f]rom a common meaning standpoint, it is
          irrelevant whether the subject merchandise
          is used with a nut or whether it is driven
          by the head. The common meaning of the term
          “bolt” includes such fasteners regardless of
          whether they are used with a nut, as
          indicated by the explanation that bolts are
          usually, but not always, required to be so
          used. It is also evident that screws may be
          used with nuts, and still remain “screws.”

Pl.’s Br., at 12 (citations omitted).   To illustrate this

point, plaintiff offers a quote from Millwrights and Mechanics

Guide.

          The bolt is described as an externally
          threaded fastener designed for insertion
          through holes in assembled parts.      It is
          normally tightened and released by turning a
          mated nut. A screw differs from a bolt in
          that it is supposed to mate with an internal
          thread into which it is tightened or
          released by turning its head.          These
          definitions obviously do not always apply,
          since bolts can be screwed into threaded
          holes and screws can be used with nuts.

Id.   (quoting Millwrights and Mechanics Guide 371 (4th ed.

1986)).

      Plaintiff’s observation that common definitions of bolt

and screw are often inconsistent or ambiguous and obscure the

distinction between the two fasteners is well taken.     In order

to classify the fasteners at issue then, the Court must look

to more precise sources, to foreclose the ambiguities latent
Court No. 97-10-01702                                    Page 14


in dictionary definitions.    See United States v. Spiegel Bros.

Corp., 51 C.C.P.A. 69, 73 (1964) (consulting a “more precise

source[]” for the common meaning of pliers); see also Marcor

Dev. Corp. v. United States, 20 CIT 538, 547, 926 F. Supp.

1124, 1134 (1996) (rejecting vague or overly broad dictionary

definitions as common meaning).    Accordingly, the Court turns

to fastener industry standards for bolts and screws.

    ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1 provides a well-recognized,

comprehensive basis for the common and commercial meaning of

bolt and screw.    It defines a bolt as “an externally threaded

fastener designed for insertion through holes in assembled

parts, and is normally intended to be tightened or released by

torquing a nut.”    Def.’s Br., Ex. A (ANSI/ASME B18.2.1), ¶2.1.

The same Standard defines screw as “an externally threaded

fastener capable of being inserted into holes in assembled

parts, of mating with a preformed internal thread or forming

its own thread, and of being tightened or released by torquing

the head.”   Id. ¶2.2.   These definitions of bolt and screw

reflect the commonalities of the dictionary definitions of

bolt and screw noted previously by the Court.4


    4
          The Standard’s definitions are also consistent with
Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System Explanatory
Note 73.18(A) (2d ed. 1996), which states that “[a] bolt is
designed to engage in a nut, whereas screws for metal are more
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 15


    The Standard’s primary and supplementary criteria put a

finer point on the foregoing definitions.     The criteria focus

on design characteristics; that is, bolts and screws are

identified based on their physical properties for use, not the

manner in which they are actually used.     See id. ¶3 (stating

that a fastener that has a majority of specified design

characteristics is a screw “regardless of how it is used in

its service application”).   Under the Standard, then, the

issue is not whether a fastener is ultimately screwed into

threaded holes or used with a nut, but whether it is designed

to be screwed into threaded holes or used with a nut.

    Defendant relies on ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1 as the

common and commercial meaning of bolt and screw.     Defendant’s



usually screwed into a hole tapped in the material to be
fastened.” The Court may consult the Explanatory Notes to
determine the common meaning of tariff terms because while
they “do not constitute controlling legislative history . . .
[they] nonetheless are intended to clarify the scope of HTSUS
subheadings and to offer guidance in interpreting
subheadings.” Mita Copystar Am. V. United States, 21 F.3d
1079, 1082 (Fed. Cir. 1994).
          Interestingly, Explanatory Note 73.18(A) states that
screws are “generally threaded throughout their length whereas
bolts usually have part of the shank unthreaded.” That
distinction is not made in any of the dictionary definitions
surveyed by the Court, nor do the parties argue this point.
The Court thus simply notes that many of the fasteners at
issue are threaded along their entire length while the body
(unthreaded portion) of others is large relative to the
threaded portion of the shank.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 16


affiants refer to it variously as “the recognized standard in

the United States,”     Def.’s Br., Vass Decl., ¶15 (Affidavit of

Steven Vass, Product Engineering Manager for Lake Erie Screw

Corporation and Chairman of the ANSI/ASME B18.2 Committee for

Externally Driven Fasteners), and “the national consensus

standard.”    Def.’s Reply Br., Wilson Decl., ¶3 (Affidavit of

Charles J. Wilson, Director of Engineering, Industrial

Fastener Institute).     Plaintiff acknowledges that “ANSI/ASME

standards are recognized and adopted as American National

Standards.”    Pl.’s Br., at 22.

    According to defendant’s affiants, ANSI/ASME Standard

B18.2.1 “is in wide use in all areas of American industry.”

Def.’s Br., Hubbard Decl., ¶8 (Affidavit of John Hubbard,

engineering manager for Rockford Fastener, Inc. and chairman

of the Industrial Fastener Institute Small Products

Engineering Committee); see also Def.’s Br., Vass Decl., ¶15.

The Standard is published by the Industrial Fasteners

Institute (IFI) in its Fastener Standards handbook,5 which the

preface describes as “a ‘BIBLE’ for designers, manufacturing

engineers, and managers in all industries.”     Def.’s Br., Ex.D


    5
          Customs also publishes this standard in its handbook
“What Every Member of the Trade Community Should Know:
Distinguishing Bolts From Screws.” See Def.’s Br., Ex. B, 2 -
11.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 17


(preface to Fastener Standards (6th ed.)).

    In sum, all of defendant’s affiants believe the ANSI/ASME

Standard B18.2.1 “reflect[s] the common and commercial

understanding of the terms bolts and screws, as well as the

common and commercial understanding of the distinctions

between bolts and screws.”   Def.’s Br., Vass Decl., ¶16; see

also Def.’s Br., Hubbard Decl., ¶7.   And, while plaintiff’s

affiants contend that the subject fasteners are bolts, none of

them dispute that ANSI/ASME B18.2.1 is the prevailing standard

in the United States for bolts and screws.6

    Furthermore, ANSI and ASME’s expertise in the field of

fasteners is well-recognized.   See, e.g., Hafele Am. Co. v.

United States, 18 CIT 1096, 1098, 870 F. Supp. 352, 355 (1994)

(citing ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1 for the meaning of screw);

S.I. Stud, Inc. v. United States, 17 CIT 661, 669-70 (1993)


    6
          Plaintiff’s affiants do not refute that ANSI/ASME
B18.2.1 is the national standard for bolts and screws, nor do
they claim that (1) according to the Standard, all of the
subject fasteners are bolts; or that (2) the subject fasteners
are known as bolts throughout the fastener industry. The sum
and substance of the affidavits offered by plaintiff is that
Rocknel, its Japanese vendor, and Rocknel’s customers
(Japanese automakers), refer to the subject fasteners as
bolts in their purchase orders, specifications, and manuals.
See, e.g., Pl.’s Br., Vaughn Decl. (Purchasing Manager,
Rocknel Fastener, Inc.); Pl.’s Br., DeRango Decl. (Sales
Manager, Rocknel Fastener, Inc.). As plaintiff acknowledges,
such evidence is “not necessarily controlling.” Pl.’s Br., at
21.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 18


(relying on the American Society of Mechanical Engineers

(ASME) American Standard Glossary of Terms for Mechanical

Fasteners, ASA B18.12 (1962) to determine whether fasteners

were bolts or studs), aff’d 24 F.3d 1394 (Fed. Cir. 1994);

Advel Corp. v. United States, 73 Cust. Ct. 200, 204 (Cust. Ct.

1974) (referring to ASME’s Glossary of Terms for Mechanical

Fasteners as an “authoritative technical source[]” for the

common meaning of rivets).     For all of these reasons, the

Court finds that ANSI/ASME B18.2.1 embodies the common and

commercial meaning of the terms bolt and screw.

         2.        Plaintiff’s Objections to Customs’s
                   Classification Fail.

    Plaintiff argues that the common and commercial meaning

of bolt and screw cannot be derived from ANSI/ASME Standard

B18.2.1 for several reasons.     Plaintiff insists that the

common and commercial meaning of bolt and screw be derived

from dictionary definitions alone.     Plaintiff also argues that

ANSI/ASME B18.2.1 is the equivalent of a commercial

designation that must be definite, uniform and general, that

the Standard is outdated, and that it is inapplicable because

the subject fasteners are custom-made and used in automobiles.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                        Page 19


               a.     Plaintiff’s proffered definition for bolt
                      is unacceptably vague.

    Plaintiff argues that the common meaning of bolt must be

ascertained from dictionaries of general use.     Plaintiff cites

Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, which defines

bolt as “[a] rod or heavy pin (as one made of steel) designed

to fasten two or more objects (as metal plates) together and

hold one or more objects in place often having a head at one

end and a screw thread cut upon the other end and being usu.

secured by a nut or by riveting.”     Pl.’s Br., at 9 (quoting

Webster’s Third New International Dictionary [no page

specified] (1986)).     Similarly, plaintiff cites another

dictionary that defines bolt as “a stout metallic pin used for

holding objects together, frequently screw threaded at one

extremity to receive a nut.”     Pl.’s Br., at 9 (quoting Lexicon

Webster Dictionary 110 (1983)).     Plaintiff claims that taken

together with similar definitions, these definitions establish

that a bolt is “a rod which [sic] fastens two or more objects

together.”   Pl.’s Br., at 9.7   Plaintiff’s experts offer no

definition for the term bolt.     And, as previously noted,



    7
          Plaintiff also phrases its definition of bolt as a
“rod or pin-shaped object with a head on one end and which is
designed to fasten objects in place (or together).” Pl.’s
Br., at 11.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                       Page 20


plaintiff offers no definition for the term screw.

    Plaintiff reduces its dictionary definitions almost to

the point of abstraction,8 such that its definition for bolt

is overly broad and ambiguous.   For purposes of illustration,

its definition of bolt is “a rod which fastens two or more

objects together.” Pl.’s Br., at 9.     Yet, that definition

encompasses screws as well; in simplest terms they, too, are

rods that fasten things together.     See, e.g., American

Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 1622 (3d ed. 1996)

(“A metal pin. . . that can be driven as a fastener.”).

    Clearly, accepting a definition of bolt as broad as that

urged by plaintiff would create conflict between 7318.15.20

and other provisions under subheading 7318.15.     Subheading

7318.15 applies to both screws and bolts.     Under plaintiff’s

urged definition of bolt, however, any rod-like object that

fastens things together would be classified under 7318.15.20,

including screws.   In that case, the “[o]ther” provisions of

7318.15 -- 7318.15.60 and 7318.15.80 -- would be serve no

function and be completely superfluous.     And it is axiomatic

in Customs law, and indeed all statutory construction

exercises, that a court not interpret one provision of a


    8
          Interestingly, plaintiff eschews any mention of a
nut, even though both of its definitions do so.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                      Page 21


statute as to render meaningless another.      See Dow Chem. Co.

v. United States, 10 CIT 550, 552-53, 647 F. Supp. 1574, 1578

(1986) (refusing to interpret a tariff provision so as to

render superfluous or partially nullify other provisions).

Thus, plaintiff’s proposed definition of bolt must fail.

     Plaintiff contends, nonetheless, that “the essence of”

its formulation for the common and commercial meaning of bolt

has been adopted by the court in prior cases.      See Pl.’s Br.,

at 10.     The majority of the cases cited by plaintiff are not

persuasive in this case, however, because they do not

elucidate the meaning of bolts vis a vis screws; instead,

those cases discuss bolts in comparison with other types of

merchandise.

     For example, plaintiff cites S.I. Stud.     Like the instant

case, the merchandise at issue was fasteners imported from

Japan.     See 17 CIT at 661.   Unlike this case, however, the

court was faced with a choice, not between bolts and screws,

but bolts and studs.     Thus, the court did not have occasion to

consider bolts, as relevant to this case, in relation to

screws.9



     9
          Similarly, the court in A.L. Liebman & Son, Inc. v.
United States chose between bolts and anchors, not bolts and
screws. 65 Cust. Ct. 85 (1970).
Court No. 97-10-01702                                       Page 22


      It is notable, however, that in finding that the

fasteners were studs,10 the S.I. Stud court rejected the

“broad” definition of bolt proffered by plaintiff in that

case.      See id. at 664.   And given the “overlap between” the

definitions of bolt and stud in “general purpose

dictionaries,” the court “place[d] greater emphasis on . . .

technical sources.”      Id. at 669.   One of the technical sources

relied on by that court was a publication of the American

Society of Mechanical Engineers, one of the       organizations

responsible for ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1.       See id. at 669-

70.

      Plaintiff’s citation to Atlas Copco N. Am., Inc. v.

United States is also inapt in that the court considered bolts

in the context of merchandise other than screws.       17 CIT 1163,

837 F. Supp. 423 (1993).       That case involved a unique item

known as a Swellex bolt.       Plaintiff argued that Swellex bolts

should be classified under the provision for bolts, but

Customs classified them instead as “articles of iron or


      10
          The court found that the fasteners were studs, in
large measure, based on the difference in “shape or
configuration” of the fasteners. S.I. Stud, 17 CIT at 664.
The studs were threaded at both ends, had no head, and were
used to fasten items together with nut at each end. See id.
at 662. The Court observes that even the studs at issue in
S.I. Stud would fall within plaintiff’s proffered definition
of bolt as a “rod which fastens two or more objects together”.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 23


steel.”   In analyzing whether the Swellex bolts were “bolts”

or “other articles of iron or steel,” one of the main issues

facing the Atlas Copco court was whether, under the precursor

to the HTSUS, the TSUS, a non-threaded object could be

classified as a bolt.    See Atlas Copco, 17 CIT at 1166, 837 F.

Supp. at 425.    The court’s discussion regarding legislative

intent and the characteristics of bolts is, for that reason,

completely inapplicable to the controversy before the Court;

heading 7318 of the HTSUS is divided into threaded and non-

threaded articles, and the provisions for both screws and

bolts are threaded articles.    Thus, under the current

provisions, a non-threaded fastener could never be classified

as a bolt.

    Finally, plaintiff cites Hafele to support its broad

definition for bolt.    Hafele is the most relevant of

plaintiff’s citations in that it involves the same tariff

provisions at issue here; Customs classified the merchandise

as a screw under 7318.15.80 and plaintiff argued the

merchandise should instead be classified as a bolt under

7318.15.20.

    The Hafele court determined that the merchandise in that

case was bolt.    The broad dictionary definitions cited for the

term “bolt” in that case are not instructive here, however.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                       Page 24


In Hafele, the court first considered whether the merchandise

was a screw.    In that case, it was “undisputed that the

subject merchandise does not accomplish its primary purpose

[of fastening other objects together] upon having its head

torqued.”    Hafele, 18 CIT at 1098, 870 F. Supp. at 355.       The

court stated that “the merchandise must mate with a cam in

order to accomplish its purpose . . . the cam is then

tightened and locked by torquing the cam, not by torquing the

head of the merchandise.”     Id.   In effect, the Court found

that the fastener at issue was not a screw because it was not

designed to be torqued by its head to fasten things together.

       Notably, the court relied on ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1.

(1981), the same standard invoked by defendant in this case,

in its analysis.    See id.   Only after having determined that

the merchandise was not a screw did the court find that it fit

within broad dictionary definitions of bolt similar to those

cited by plaintiff.     In contrast, in this case, it is

undisputed that the fasteners were designed to be, and in fact

are installed by, torquing their heads.      See Def.’s Stmt.

Add’l Facts, at ¶32, ¶33; Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Facts, at ¶32,

¶33.    Due to this factual distinction, plaintiff’s reliance on

the broad dictionary definitions of bolt is misplaced.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 25


               b.   Plaintiff’s objections to Standard B18.2.1
                    are without merit.

      Plaintiff argues that Standard B18.2.1 cannot be used to

inform the common and commercial meaning of tariff terms, and

in any event is not applicable to its fasteners.    Plaintiff

argues that (1) the Standard is a “technical” meaning that

must be definite, uniform, and general throughout the trade,

(2) Congress did not explicitly adopt the standard in the

HTSUS, (3) the Standard is not applicable because it is a U.S.

standard and the fasteners are manufactured in Japan, and that

(4) with particular respect to the automotive industry, the

Standard is outdated.   Plaintiff’s objections are without

merit.

      First, plaintiff asserts that ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1

is a technical standard that differs from the common and

commercial meaning of bolt and screw.   See Pl.’s Br., at 19-

20.   According to plaintiff, this “technical definition” is

“equated with a proffered commercial designation” that

defendant must demonstrate is definite, uniform, and general

throughout the trade.   Pl.’s Br., at 20.   Plaintiff also

argues that Congress did not include ANSI/ASME Standard

B18.2.1 in the notes or otherwise refer to it in the HTSUS,

and therefore that “the standard should be ignored for
Court No. 97-10-01702                                       Page 26


classification purposes.”    Pl.’s Br., at 20.

    Plaintiff is wrong on both points.     Standard B18.2.1 is

not a commercial designation; the court has consulted

standards promulgated by ANSI, ASME, and many other standard-

making bodies in numerous cases to inform the common and

commercial meaning of tariff terms.     See introduction to

Section B, supra.    The court has done so even when such

standards were not explicitly part of the HTSUS.

    Plaintiff also “questions the applicability of ANSI/ASME

B18.2.1 (1981) to the subject imported fasteners” because the

fasteners were manufactured according to Japanese, not

American, specifications.    Pl.’s Br., at 22.   Plaintiff is

patently mistaken.    First, the   ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1 is

a methodology for distinguishing between bolts and screws, not

specifications for the length, diameter, size of head, etc.,

of particular bolts and screws.     Therefore, that the subject

fasteners were manufactured to fit into Japanese cars is

irrelevant to the applicability of ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1.

Second, under the HTSUS, goods are classified within the

meaning of the tariff terms as understood in the United

States, not the county of exportation.     See Hismoco (Am.) Co.

v. United States, 81 Cust. Ct. 32, 34 (1978) (assessing

whether the merchandise at issue was within the common meaning
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 27


of “‘dried prunes’ as that term is used in the commerce of the

United States); Buchanan Elec. Prods. Co. v. United States, 65

Cust. Ct. 570, 577 (1970) (finding the merchandise was “tubes”

as commonly known in the United States); Ziel & Co. v. United

States, 53 Cust. Ct. 164, 166 (1964) (rejecting claim that

kiwi fruit was within the common meaning of “berries” as the

term is used in the United States); Wing Coffee Co. v. United

States, 53 Cust. Ct. 60, 63 (1964) (finding that larm are not

olives as commonly known in the United States).    Thus, the

fasteners at issue cannot be classified according to Japanese

convention.11

     Finally, plaintiff complains that, in relation to the

automotive industry standards and techniques, ANSI/ASME

B18.2.1 is outdated and ambiguous.   According to plaintiff,

“[t]he manufacturing process in various fields has . . .

evolved to the point that, even when used with a nut, bolts

are driven by the head.”   Pl.’s Br., at 24.   In such cases,



     11
          Plaintiff also notes that “[t]he subject fasteners
are designed in terms of ‘metric’ measurements (i.e., measured
in millimeters), as opposed to English measurements.” Pl.’s
Br., at 2. This is irrelevant. First, 7318.15.80 is
expressed in millimeters: “Having shanks or threads with a
diameter of 6 mm or more.” Moreover, ANSI/ASME Standard
B18.2.1 is equally applicable to metric fasteners. See Def.’s
Br., Vass Decl., Ex. B (Metric Fastener Standards (2d ed.
1983)).
Court No. 97-10-01702                                      Page 28


“the nuts are already welded into place and the bolts must be

driven by their head in the assembly.”12    Id.   In plaintiff’s

view, because some of the subject fasteners are used with nuts

in this manner, ANSI/ASME B18.2.1 is inapplicable to the

automotive industry.

    Plaintiff is incorrect for a number of reasons.      First,

ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1 is reviewed by the American Society

of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) every five years.13     See Def.’s

Br., at 18 and n.19.     And, the Standard was approved by ANSI

in December, 1996.     See Def.’s Br., Vass. Dec., Ex. E (1999

Foreword to ASME B18.2.1).     Importantly, according to Charles

J. Wilson, Director of Engineering at the Industrial Fasteners

Institute, General Motors, Ford Motor Company, Chrysler

Corporation, and other automotive companies helped formulate

ANSI/ASME B18.2.1 and have been and continue to be


    12
          If the design and manner of use of screws and bolts
has evolved to the point where they are indistinguishable from
one another, the most appropriate forum to make this argument
is before Congress, which has the authority to revise the
HTSUS.
    13
          “According to the bylaws of ASME, standards are
reviewed every five years. Depending on the outcome of that
review, the standard must be reaffirmed, meaning no changes
are required, revised, or withdrawn (canceled) if there is
evidence that the standard is not being used.” Def.’s Br.,
Vass Decl., ¶16. Thus, although it appears that the Standard
has not been revised since 1981, it has been reviewed several
times since then.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                        Page 29


participants in the B18 Standards Committee.        See Def.’s Reply

Br., Wilson Decl., ¶4; see also Def.’s Br., Vass Decl., Ex. I

(ASME Standards Committee B18).        And, ASME membership includes

both manufacturers and users.        See Def.’s Br., Vass Decl.,

¶16.        These facts mitigate against plaintiff’s claim that the

standard is outdated with respect to the automotive industry,

or not in accordance with its manufacturing processes.        And at

oral argument on June 6, 2000, plaintiff could not identify

specific changes in manufacturing processes or the design of

fasteners in the last thirty years to counter defendant’s

classification.

       Second, plaintiff does not dispute that the subject

fasteners are properly classified under Heading 7318.        The

articles contained within heading 7318 are “parts of general

use.”14       Section XV, Note 2(a), HTSUS (1997). As such, they are

not classified according to a particular industry.15       Cf. Item


       14
          Parts of general use, such as the articles of
heading 7318, are specifically exempted from classification
under the chapter for vehicles. See Section XVII, Note 2(b),
HTSUS (1997).
       15
          In fact, in addition to the automotive industry, the
American National Standards Committee B18 included
representatives from the hardware, engine manufacturing, anti-
friction bearing manufacturing, agricultural, metal cutting
tool, hand tool, farm & industrial equipment, elevator,
telephone, and electrical manufacturing industries, as well as
the Navy, Army, Air Force and Department of Defense. See
Court No. 97-10-01702                                    Page 30


8708.40.20 (applicable to gear boxes as known in the motor

vehicle (designed for transport of persons) industry).       Thus,

contrary to plaintiff’s position, ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1

is no less applicable because plaintiff’s fasteners – parts of

general use – are used in the automotive industry.16

    Third, plaintiff admits that 7318.15 is neither an actual

use nor a principal use provision.   See Def.’s Stmt. Add’l

Facts, ¶2, ¶3; Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Facts, ¶2, ¶3.    And

generally, use is not considered unless use is part of the



Pl.’s Br., Seirig Decl., Ex. D (roster of committee
personnel).
    16
          Thus, the testimony of Ali A. Seirig, Professor in
the Department of Mechanical Engineering of the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, that the Standard “bears little relation to
how those terms [bolt and screw] are used in applications in
various industries, including the automotive and aerospace
industries” misses its mark. Pl.’s Br., Seirig Decl., ¶9.
Moreover, Professor Seirig does not express a belief that the
subject fasteners are bolts. He only states that, in his
view, “the main distinguishing characteristic between a bolt
and a screw would be the fastener’s ability to bore a hole, or
create mating threads in a material. From my review of the
products in Exhibit A, none appear to meet this basic
requirement of a screw.” Id. at ¶11.
          It is worth noting that, with respect to the ability
to bore a hole, that Explanatory Note 73.18(A) distinguishes
between “[b]olts and screws for metal” and “[s]crews for
wood,” which would be classified under 7318.12. According to
the Note, the former “are rarely pointed.” The latter,
however, “differ from bolts and screws for metal in that they
are tapered and pointed, and they have a steeper cutting
thread since they have to bite their own may into the
material.”
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 31


definition of the classification or use is otherwise

suggested.    See North Am. Processing, 23 CIT at __, 56 F.

Supp. 2d at 1180 (citing Ruth Sturm, Customs Law &

Administration § 53.2 (Supp. 1995)).    Thus, that the subject

fasteners are ultimately used in the assembly of automobiles

has no bearing on the common and commercial meaning of bolt

and screws, nor does it vitiate    ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1's

applicability.    Cf. Carl Zeiss, 195 F.3d at 1379 (refusing to

narrow a provision for microscopes to only those used in

research and industry because “a use limitation should not be

read into an eo nomine provision unless the name itself

inherently suggests a type of use”).    And if Customs took into

account how different fasteners of general use were actually

used in different industries to determine whether they were

bolts or screws, classification would be inconsistent and

therefore counter to the principle underlying the tariff

classification system.    See Henry Dickens Rowley v. United

States, 68 Cust. Ct. 117, 122 (1972) (calling “[u]niformity of

tariff classification, an important tariff principle”).

    Moreover, although plaintiff’s customers use the subject

fasteners for assembly of the engine, suspension, and body of

automobiles, the fasteners are not limited to use in those

areas only.    See Pl.’s Br., at 2; see also Pl.’s Br., Higuchi
Court No. 97-10-01702                                       Page 32


Decl., ¶12 (stating that the subject fasteners are used in the

engine wire harness assembly, oil pump, oil pan assembly,

clutch, accumulator body, regulator, servo body, exhaust pipe,

fuel pipe, radiator, navigation (GPS) system, antilock brake

system, windshield washer, radio speakers, rear brake, cruise

control, brake master cylinder, suspension, shift lever,

console, seats, doors, sunroof, and trunk lid).    And

“[s]ervice applications for the same fastener may vary.”

Def.’s Stmt. Add’l Facts, ¶11, Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Facts,

¶11.    The subject fasteners are not limited to use in

automobiles either, but can be used in a variety of other

industries.    See Pl.’s Br., at 1 (stating that the subject

fasteners may also be used in the manufacture of motorcycles);

Tr. of Oral Argument of 10/27/99, at 8-9 (representation by

counsel for plaintiff that the subject fasteners can be used

in other industries).

       In conclusion, plaintiff’s objections to ANSI/ASME

Standard B18.2.1 are without merit.    As stated, the Standard

is the common and commercial meaning of bolt and screw as

understood by the fastener industry in the United States.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                    Page 33


     C.   The Subject Fasteners are Screws.

     The Court has determined that under ANSI/ASME Standard

B18.2.1, “[a] screw is an externally threaded fastener capable

of being inserted into holes in assembled parts, of mating

with a preformed internal thread or forming its own thread,

and of being tightened or released by torquing the head.”

Def.’s Br., Ex. A, ¶2.2.   Plaintiff does not dispute that

“[t]he Samples, Drawings, and/or Manuals provided by Rocknel

indicate that the imported fasteners were designed to be

installed in holes of assembled parts by turning the heads of

the fasteners to mate with preformed internal threads or form

their own threads, and by turning the heads to tighten or

release.”17   Def.’s Stmt. Add’l Facts, ¶32; Pl.’s Resp. to

Def.’s Facts, ¶32.

     Further, under ANSI/ASME Standard B18.2.1,

          [a] bolt is designed for assembly with a
          nut.   A screw has features in its design
          which makes [sic] it capable of being used
          in a tapped or other preformed hole in the
          work.    Because of basic design, it is
          possible to use certain types of screws in
          combination with a nut.     Any externally
          threaded fastener which has a majority of
          the design characteristics which assist its
          proper use in a tapped or other preformed


     17
          Plaintiff “[d]enies that nuts are equated with
preformed internal threads” but “[a]dmits in other respects.”
Pl.’s Resp. to Def.’s Facts, ¶32.
Court No. 97-10-01702                                     Page 34


         hole is a screw, regardless of how it is
         used in service application.

Def.’s Br., Ex. A, ¶3 (Explanatory Data).     In characterizing

the subject fasteners as screws, defendant found that the

fasteners met at least five of the Standard’s nine

supplementary design criteria for screws.     Plaintiff has not

submitted evidence to dispute this finding.     Nor has plaintiff

argued in sufficient detail that under ANSI/ASME Standard

B18.2.1, the subject fasteners are bolts.     Accordingly, the

subject fasteners are screws.




                               IV.
                           CONCLUSION

    For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants defendant’s

motion for summary judgment and denies plaintiff’s motion for

summary judgment.   A separate Order will be entered

accordingly.


                             __________________________________
                                      Richard W. Goldberg
                                             JUDGE
Dated:   August 29, 2000
         New York, New York.