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Interpretation ID: aiam3185

Mr. Jeffrey Libman, President, Edison Rubber Company, P. O. Box 254, Edison, New Jersey 08817; Mr. Jeffrey Libman
President
Edison Rubber Company
P. O. Box 254
Edison
New Jersey 08817;

Dear Mr. Libman: This responds to your letter of November 9, 1979, inquiring if it i permissible for your suppliers to cut off the DOT serial numbers on used tires before selling those tires to your company. You stated in your letter that your company buys used tires from several companies. These tires generally either have cuts in the tread or sidewalls or are out of round. Your company then resells the tires to another company, which resells the tires to the public.; The answer to your question is no. The presence of the DO identification number on tires is required by several of this agency's regulation. Our tire identification and record keeping regulation (49 CFR Part 574) requires that each manufacturer place the DOT number on at least one sidewall of each tire that it manufactures. The number serves several purposes. It is indispensable in aiding consumers to identify tires subject to a recall campaign for safety defects and noncompliance with the safety standards. It also aids this agency in enforcing its tire safety standards. Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards 109 (Passenger car tries, 49 CFR 571.119) and 119 (Tires for vehicles other than passenger cars, 49 CFR 571.119) require that each tire manufacturer certify that its tires conform to all applicable Federal safety standards by branding or molding the DOT number on the tire.; Section 108(a)(2)(A) of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safet Act of 1966, as amended (15 U.S.C. 1397(a)(2)(A)), states that, 'No manufacturer, distributor, dealer, or motor vehicle repair business shall knowingly render inoperative, in whole or in part, any device or element of design installed on... an item of motor vehicle equipment in compliance with an applicable federal motor vehicle safety standard ....' By removing the DOT identification number from a tire, the person would be knowingly rendering inoperative an element of design on the tires which is included on the tire for compliance with the requirements of a Federal motor vehicle safety standard. Section 109 of the Act (15 U.S.C. 1398) specifies a penalty of up to $1,000 for each violation of section 108.; Sincerely, Frank Berndt, Chief Counsel