[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 1]

[Revised as of April 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR123.92]



[Page 674-676]

 

                        TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

 

   CHAPTER I--BUREAU OF CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF 

              HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

 

PART 123_CUSTOMS RELATIONS WITH CANADA AND MEXICO--Table of Contents

 

    Subpart J_Advance Information for Cargo Arriving by Rail or Truck

 

Sec.  123.92  Electronic information for truck cargo required in advance 

of arrival.



    (a) General requirement. Pursuant to section 343(a) of the Trade Act 

of 2002, as amended (19 U.S.C. 2071 note), and subject to paragraph (e) 

of this section, for any truck required to report its arrival under 

Sec.  123.1(b), that will have commercial cargo aboard, Customs and 

Border Protection (CBP) must electronically receive from the party 

described in paragraph (c) of this section certain information 

concerning the cargo, as enumerated in paragraph (d) of this section. 

The CBP must receive such cargo information by means of a CBP-approved 

electronic data interchange system no later than either 30 minutes or 1 

hour prior to the carrier's reaching the first port of arrival in the 

United States, or such lesser time as authorized, based upon the CBP-

approved system employed to present the information.

    (1) Through cargo in transit to a foreign country. Cargo arriving by 

truck in transit through the United States from one foreign country to 

another



[[Page 675]]



(Sec.  123.31(a)); and cargo arriving by truck for transportation 

through the United States from one point to another in the same foreign 

country (Sec.  123.31(b); Sec.  123.42) are subject to the advance 

electronic information filing requirement in paragraph (a) of this 

section.

    (2) Cargo entered under bond. Cargo that is to be unladed from the 

arriving truck and entered, in bond, for exportation, or for 

transportation and exportation, in another vehicle or conveyance are 

also subject to the advance electronic information filing requirement in 

paragraph (a) of this section.

    (b) Exceptions from advance reporting requirements--(1) Cargo in 

transit from point to point in the United States. Domestic cargo 

transported by truck and arriving at one port from another in the United 

States after transiting Canada or Mexico (Sec.  123.21; Sec.  123.41) is 

exempt from the advance electronic filing requirement for incoming cargo 

under paragraph (a) of this section.

    (2) Certain informal entries. The following merchandise is exempt 

from the advance cargo information reporting requirements under 

paragraph (a) of this section, to the extent that such merchandise 

qualifies for informal entry pursuant to part 143, subpart C, of this 

chapter:

    (i) Merchandise which may be informally entered on Customs Form (CF) 

368 or 368A (cash collection or receipt);

    (ii) Merchandise unconditionally or conditionally free, not 

exceeding $2,000 in value, eligible for entry on CF 7523; and

    (iii) Products of the United States being returned, for which entry 

is prescribed on CF 3311.

    (c) Carrier; and importer or broker--(1) Single party presentation. 

Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the incoming 

truck carrier must present all required information to CBP in the time 

and manner prescribed in paragraph (a) of this section.

    (2) Dual party presentation. The United States importer, or its 

Customs broker, may elect to present to CBP a portion of the required 

information that it possesses in relation to the cargo. Where the 

broker, or the importer (see Sec.  113.62(j)(2) of this chapter), elects 

to submit such data, the carrier is responsible for presenting to CBP 

the remainder of the information specified in paragraph (d) of this 

section.

    (3) Party receiving information believed to be accurate. Where the 

party electronically presenting the cargo information required in 

paragraph (d) of this section receives any of this information from 

another party, CBP will take into consideration how, in accordance with 

ordinary commercial practices, the presenting party acquired such 

information, and whether and how the presenting party is able to verify 

this information. Where the presenting party is not reasonably able to 

verify such information, CBP will permit the party to electronically 

present the information on the basis of what the party reasonably 

believes to be true.

    (d) Cargo information required. The following commodity and 

transportation information, as applicable, must be electronically 

transmitted to and received by CBP for all required incoming cargo 

arriving in the United States by truck, to the extent that the 

particular CBP-approved electronic data interchange system employed can 

accept this information:

    (1) Conveyance number, and (if applicable) equipment number (the 

number of the conveyance is its Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) or 

its license plate number and state of issuance; the equipment number, if 

applicable, refers to the identification number of any trailing 

equipment or container attached to the power unit);

    (2) Carrier identification (this is the truck carrier identification 

SCAC code (the unique Standard Carrier Alpha Code) assigned for each 

carrier by the National Motor Freight Traffic Association; see Sec.  

4.7a(c)(2)(iii) of this chapter);

    (3) Trip number and, if applicable, the transportation reference 

number for each shipment (the transportation reference number is the 

freight bill number, or Pro Number, if such a number has been generated 

by the carrier);

    (4) Container number(s) (for any containerized shipment) (if 

different from the equipment number), and the seal numbers for all seals 

affixed to the equipment or container(s);

    (5) The foreign location where the truck carrier takes possession of 

the cargo destined for the United States;



[[Page 676]]



    (6) The scheduled date and time of arrival of the truck at the first 

port of entry in the United States;

    (7) The numbers and quantities for the cargo laden aboard the truck 

as contained in the bill(s) of lading (this means the quantity of the 

lowest external packaging unit; containers and pallets do not constitute 

acceptable information; for example, a container holding 10 pallets with 

200 cartons should be described as 200 cartons);

    (8) The weight of the cargo, or, for a sealed container, the 

shipper's declared weight of the cargo;

    (9) A precise description of the cargo or the Harmonized Tariff 

Schedule (HTS) numbers to the 6-digit level under which the cargo will 

be classified (generic descriptions, specifically those such as FAK 

(``freight of all kinds''), ``general cargo,'' and ``STC'' (``said to 

contain'') are not acceptable);

    (10) Internationally recognized hazardous material code when such 

cargo is being shipped by truck;

    (11) The shipper's complete name and address, or identification 

number, from the bill(s) of lading (for each house bill in a 

consolidated shipment, the identity of the foreign vendor, supplier, 

manufacturer, or other similar party is acceptable (and the address of 

the foreign vendor, etc., must be a foreign address); by contrast, the 

identity of the carrier, freight forwarder, consolidator, or broker, is 

not acceptable; the identification number will be a unique number to be 

assigned by CBP upon the implementation of the Automated Commercial 

Environment); and

    (12) The complete name and address of the consignee, or 

identification number, from the bill(s) of lading (the consignee is the 

party to whom the cargo will be delivered in the United States, with the 

exception of ``FROB'' (Foreign Cargo Remaining On Board); the 

identification number will be a unique number assigned by CBP upon 

implementation of the Automated Commercial Environment).

    (e) Date for compliance with this section. The incoming truck 

carrier and, if electing to do so, the United States importer, or its 

Customs broker, must present the necessary cargo data to CBP at the 

particular port of entry where the truck will arrive in the United 

States on and after 90 days from the date that CBP has published a 

notice in the Federal Register informing affected carriers that:

    (1) The approved data interchange is in place and fully operational 

at that port; and

    (2) The carrier must commence the presentation of the required cargo 

information through the approved system.