The Customs Appeal Tribunal (“CAT”) has unanimously allowed all three of a taxpayer’s appeals and set aside the rulings of the Royal Malaysian Customs Department (“Customs”). Jason Tan Jia Xin and Jesslyn Teo Yi En of Lee Hishammuddin Allen & Gledhill’s Tax, Customs & Trade Practice successfully acted for the taxpayer. At the heart of the case was a fundamental question of tariff classification: can Customs move a product out of the specific tariff code that describes it and into a residual, “catch-all” code? In this case, the CAT allowed the taxpayer’s appeals and set the reclassification aside.
The Essentials
Background
The taxpayer manufactures and sells adhesive and construction-chemical products. The dispute concerned the classification, under the Customs Duties Order 2022 (“CDO 2022”), of three of its two-component cementitious waterproofing products (collectively, “Products”). Each product has a liquid component that is mixed on site with a cement-based component to form a coating, which is applied onto concrete and other building surfaces to make them waterproof.
Customs gave the same component three different tariff codes in the space of about 14 months. It was first classified under sub-heading 3906.90.2000 (acrylic polymers), then under sub-heading 3824.50.0000 (non-refractory mortars and concretes), and finally, after the taxpayer applied for a review, under sub-heading 3824.99.9900 (other chemical preparations not elsewhere specified or included). Throughout, the composition, function and use of the component stayed the same. The taxpayer appealed to the CAT.
The Dispute
The single question was whether the Products fell under one of two headings:
The Taxpayer’s Case
The taxpayer’s position was that a residual heading cannot be used where a specific heading already covers the goods, and that the Products fell squarely within Heading 32.14. It advanced several grounds, each sufficient on its own:
Customs’ Position
Customs maintained that sub-heading 3824.99.9900 was correct. By the composition of the liquid component on its own, Customs accepted that the most specific heading would be Heading 39.06 (acrylic polymers). But because the liquid is meant to be used with its cement-based component, Customs assessed the goods as the combined mixture of cement, silica and acrylic polymer, and found that two headings could apply to that mixture: Heading 32.14 and Heading 38.24.
Applying the General Interpretative Rules, Customs argued that, although Heading 32.14 gave a more complete description of the mixture, the components were sold and marketed together as a retail set, so the two headings were to be treated as “equally specific” under Rule 3(a). Customs added that the mixture could be left visible as a finishing layer or be tiled over, and that the two uses were of equal merit, so the classification could not be resolved under Rule 3(a). Under Rule 3(b), Customs said the essential character of the mixture was waterproofing, which the Explanatory Notes to both headings could cover. As neither Rule 3(a) nor Rule 3(b) resolved the matter, Customs turned to Rule 3(c) and selected Heading 38.24 as the heading appearing last in numerical order. Under Rule 6, Customs had first chosen sub-heading 3824.50.0000 (non-refractory mortars and concretes) but, on review, considered the mixture was not a mortar or concrete and reclassified it under sub-heading 3824.99.9900 as an “other” chemical preparation.
The CAT’s Decision
The CAT unanimously allowed all three appeals and set aside Customs’ rulings. The effect is that Customs’ reclassification of the Products under the residual Heading 38.24 no longer stands, and the taxpayer’s appeals succeeded in full.
The CAT’s written grounds are anticipated to provide further clarity on the legal position. In the meantime, our key takeaways from the decision are set out below.
What This Means for Your Business
Although this appeal concerned waterproofing products, the principles it raises are relevant to any business that imports, exports or manufactures goods classified under the CDO 2022.
Conclusion
This is a welcome outcome for businesses. While the CAT’s full grounds are awaited, the result is a reminder that tariff classification should follow the established approach: a specific heading takes priority over a general one, the Interpretative Rules are applied in order, and the correct code turns on what the goods actually do rather than on the convenience of a residual heading. Any business facing a reclassification, an unfavourable Customs Ruling, or a change in Customs’ position should check carefully whether the correct heading and the correct method have been applied.
This alert is prepared for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Specific legal advice should be sought for any particular circumstances. If your business is facing a tariff classification dispute, an adverse Customs Ruling, or any other tax or customs dispute, please contact Jason Tan Jia Xin (tjx@lh-ag.com) or Associate Jesslyn Teo Yi En (tye@lh-ag.com).