10 • MarineNews • March, 2005
Legal Beat
By Jeanne M. Grasso and
Charles T. Blocksidge
Trade and Technical Corrections Act of
2004 (the Act), signed into law on
December 3, 2004, contains a provision
that reverses a final rule, issued by the
Bureau of Customs and Border Protection
(CBP) in 2001 (Final Rule; 66 Fed. Reg.
16392 (March 26, 2001)), that subjected
repairs made to U.S.-flag vessels while on
the high seas to declaration, entry, and
duty requirements. Simply put, the Act
expands the list of items that are exempt
from the 50 percent ad valorem duty
requirement contained in the Vessel
Repair Statute (19 U.S.C. § 1466) and, as
a result, could possibly save owners and
operators of U.S.-flag vessels large sums
of money.
The Vessel Repair Statute requires the
payment of a 50 percent ad volorem duty
on the cost of equipment, materials, and
parts purchased for, or the expenses of
repairs made to, a U.S.-flag vessel in a
foreign country. The purpose of the Ves-
sel Repair Statute is to protect U.S. ship-
yards from foreign competition by dis-
couraging vessel owners/operators from
taking their vessels abroad for the purpose
of obtaining less expensive foreign
repairs. Generally, the owner, operator, or
master of a U.S. flag vessel must, upon
the vessel's first arrival in a U.S. port,
declare all equipment, parts, or materials
purchased for, and all repairs made to, the
vessel outside the United States and, with-
in ten calendar days after arrival, file a
formal entry of such equipment, materi-
als, parts, and expenses of repairs. Fol-
lowing the submission of the entry, vessel
owners/operators may submit an applica-
tion for relief for certain items that, based
on statutory interpretations and regulatory
exemptions, they believe should be non-
dutiable or, in the alternative, subject to a
lower duty rate.
Changing Tide
The Vessel Repair Statute has under-
gone change multiple times since its
inception in 1866, but several significant
events throughout the 1990s, attributable
to both statutory amendment and judicial
interpretation, motivated CBP to revise
the regulations that implement the Vessel
Repair Statute's mandate. In 1999, CBP
published a proposed rule implementing
such changes and requested the public's
input. Following an extended comment
period, CBP published its Final Rule in
2001. In part, the Final Rule was a mani-
festation of Customs' interpretation of the
decision in Mount Washington Tanker Co.
v. United States, 505 F. Supp. 209, 214
(1980), aff'd 665 F.2d 340 (C.C.P.A.
1981), as well as an effort to streamline
the process for seeking relief from vessel
repair duties. Consequently, this Final
Rule made parts, materials, and equip-
ment utilized in repairs performed by
crewmembers while a vessel was "on the
high seas" dutiable under the Vessel
Repair Statute (despite the fact that the
Vessel Repair Statute used the languageCircle 207 on Reader Service Card
Congress Voids Certain Ad Valorem Duties on Ship Repairs
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