844530 84 Ruling Active

The tariff classification of steam crimped oats from Canada.

Issued September 20, 1989 by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

Tariff classification

HTS codes: 1104.22.00

Headings: 1104

Product description

S. Customs Service, indicted a starch content of 51.1 percent by weight and an ash content of 2.3 percent by weight.

CBP rationale

The applicable subheading for the steam crimped oats with the stated specifications will be 1104.22.0000, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), which provides for other worked cereal grains.

Full text

NY 844530 SEPTEMBER 20, 1989 CLA-2-11:S:N:N1:231 CATEGORY: Classification TARIFF NO.: 1104.22.00 Mr. W.R. Purcell W.R. Filbin & Co., Inc. 2436 Bagley Avenue Detroit, Michigan 48216-1885 RE: The tariff classification of steam crimped oats from Canada. Dear Mr. Purcell: In your letter dated August 4,1989 on behalf of Huron Commodities, Inc. of Canada you requested a tariff classification ruling. The product, steam crimped oats, are said to be whole oats that are heated with steam for fifteen minutes at 200 degrees fahrenheit, put through a crimper to crack the hull and then cooled to room temperture. The sample submitted by your office, as analysed by the laboratory of the U.S. Customs Service, indicted a starch content of 51.1 percent by weight and an ash content of 2.3 percent by weight. The applicable subheading for the steam crimped oats with the stated specifications will be 1104.22.0000, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), which provides for other worked cereal grains. The rate of duty will be 2 percent advalorem. Goods classifiable under subheading 1104.22.0000, HTS, which have originated in the territory of Canada, will be entitled to a 1.8 percent rate of duty under the United States-Canada Free Trade Agreement (FTA) upon compliance with all applicable regulations. This ruling is being issued under the provisions of Section 177 of the Customs Regulations (19 C.F.R. 177). A copy of this ruling letter should be attached to the entry documents filed at the time this merchandise is imported. If the documents have been filed without a copy, this ruling should be brought to the attention of the Customs officer handling the transaction. Sincerely, Jean F. Maguire Area Director New York Seaport 

View original on CBP CROSS →

More rulings on the same tariff codes

Searching CBP rulings the smart way

TariffLens semantically searches all 200,000+ CBP rulings, surfaces the ones that actually match your product, and builds defensible classifications backed by ruling citations.

Book a demo →