Slip Op. 16 - 18
UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
____________________________________
:
MEYER CORPORATION, U.S., :
:
Plaintiff, :
:
v. : Before: R. Kenton Musgrave, Senior Judge
: Court No. 13-00154
UNITED STATES, :
:
Defendant. :
____________________________________:
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Dated: February 23, 2016
Joseph M. Donley, Clark Hill, PLC, of Philadelphia, PA, and John P. Donohue, Reed Smith,
LLC, of Philadelphia PA, for the plaintiff.
Beverly A. Farrell, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S.
Department of Justice, of New York, NY, for the defendant. With her on the brief were Benjamin
C. Mizer, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, and Amy M. Rubin, Assistant Director.
Musgrave, Senior Judge: Before the court is the plaintiff’s motion to compel
production of unredacted copies of certain documents sought in connection with discovery on this
and several related actions filed to seek refund of alleged overpayment of customs duties to U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (“Customs”). For the following reason, the plaintiff’s motion is
denied.
Background
The complaint underlying this motion alleges that the overpayments are due to
Customs’ denial of the arm’s length “first sale rule” of Nissho Iwai American Corp. v. United States,
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982 F.2d 505 (Fed. Cir. 1992), to entries of cookware the plaintiff imported beginning in 2009, and
also due to Customs’ denial of duty-free treatment under the Generalized System of Preferences
(“GSP”), 19 U.S.C. §2461 et seq., to merchandise imported from Thailand, a GSP country.
During discovery, on November 14, 2013, the plaintiff served a request for the
production of documents upon the defendant, seeking, among other things, all documents related to
the audit and internal advice request at issue in this case. From January to April 2014, the defendant
produced nearly 10,000 pages of documents to the plaintiff, in addition to numerous Excel files
maintained by Regulatory Audit (“Reg Audit”). Certain documents were redacted to remove content
claimed as subject to various privileges and protections, including the deliberative process privilege
and the law enforcement privilege. Business proprietary information of others, attorney-client
communications, attorney work product, and Customs’ computer system codes and information were
also redacted. On April 30, 2014, the defendant provided the plaintiff with a detailed privilege log
setting forth by document and Bates number the redacted content, specifying the date, document
type, description of the document, author and recipient, privilege being invoked and the basis for the
assertion.
Following the government’s production, the plaintiff deposed, as fact witnesses, six
Customs persons from Regulations and Rulings, Reg Audit, and the port of San Francisco. The
plaintiff deposed the former Assistant Field Director of Reg Audit in San Francisco, who had retired,
and also deposed Customs pursuant to Rule 30(b)(6).
Approximately one and one-half years after the documents were produced and eight
depositions were taken, the plaintiff filed the instant motion to compel on October 23, 2015,
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challenging Customs’ assertion of the deliberative process and law enforcement privileges, and
seeking the unredacted versions of those documents. The defendant opposes, arguing that the
redacted portions of the documents are subject to the asserted privileges.
The plaintiff cites Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. v. United States, 106 Fed. Cl. 571 (Ct. Cl.
2012) (“Sikorsky”) for the procedural proposition that the privilege can only be invoked by an agency
head or his or her designated subordinate (after careful, personal review, and the reviewer must
identify the specific information that is subject to the privilege and provide reasons for maintaining
the confidentiality of the pertinent record) and for the substantive proposition that the government
must demonstrate the allegedly privileged material is both pre-decisional and deliberative. 106 Fed.
Cl. at 576 (citations omitted). Responding, the defendant provides a Delegation Order from
Customs’ Commissioner as well as the Declaration of Myles Harmon, Acting Executive Director,
Regulations and Rulings (“Harmon Declaration”), asserting the agency’s deliberative process and
law enforcement privileges.
Also in connection with its response, the defendant agreed to provide unredacted
copies of certain documents, and asserted privilege over a document that had previously been
produced in full. The plaintiff’s motion for leave to file a reply having been granted, the
supplemental papers (i.e., the plaintiff’s reply and the defendant’s sur-reply on the plaintiff’s motion
to compel) continue the parties’ dispute over whether Customs’ two audit reports and the lengthy
ruling of HQ H088815 provide sufficient explanation of why Customs denied first-sale and GSP
treatment to Meyer’s imported merchandise.
Court No. 13-00154 Page 4
Discussion
As a preliminary matter, in order to show that a document or certain information in
it is protected by the deliberative process privilege, (1) the department head having control of the
requested information or his or her designated subordinate must make a formal claim (2) by way of
affidavit sufficiently describing the information for which the agency is claiming the privilege and
based on his or her actual consideration thereof. See Elkem Metals Co. v. United States, 24 CIT
1395, 1397-98 (2000); see also, e.g., Landry v. FDIC, 204 F.3d 1125, 1135 (D.C. Cir. 2000), citing
Northrop Corp. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp., 751 F.2d 395, 399 (D.C. Cir. 1984). The same
standard would appear to apply to assertion of the law enforcement privilege. See Tuite v. Henry,
98 F.3d 1411, 1417 (D.C. Cir. 1996). On that basis, the plaintiff contends that the Harmon
Declaration is too general and that paragraph eight thereof is too conclusory in nature. Pl’s Reply
at 3-5, referencing PG&E v. United States, 70 Fed. Cl. 128 (2006) and Greenpeace v. National
Marine Fisheries Serv., 198 F.R.D. 540 (W.D. Wash. 2000). The defendant argues those cases are
distinguishable, as they involved blanket assertions of privilege whereas the Harmon Declaration is
specific, incorporating by reference the privilege log previously provided to Meyer that “describes
every document in detail, by date, the decision to which it relates, document type, title and purpose,
author, recipient, privilege asserted and basis for the assertion of the privilege.” Def’s Sur-Reply at
5 (footnote omitted). Cf. United States v. Optrex America, Inc., 28 CIT 993, 996 (2004), quoting
Burns v. Imagine Films Entertainment, Inc., 194 F.R.D. 589, 594 (1996).
Generally speaking, the deliberative process privilege prevents “injury to the
quality of agency decisions.” NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 421 U.S. 132, 151 (1975). The
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privilege does not protect documents alone, but also “the decision making processes of government
agencies.” Id. at 150. The underlying purpose is to protect the quality of governmental
decision-making by maintaining the confidentiality of advisory opinions, recommendations, and
deliberations that comprise part of the process by which the government formulates law or policy.
See Petroleum Information Corp. v. U.S. Dept. of Interior, 976 F.2d 1429, 1435 (D.C. Cir. 1992).
Information that does not reveal the deliberative process, communications unrelated to the
formulation of law or policy, and routine reports are not shielded by the privilege. See, e.g., id.;
National Wildlife Federation v. U.S. Forest Service, 861 F.2d 1114, 1116-17 (9th Cir. 1988); Seafirst
Corp. v. Jenkins, 644 F. Supp. 1160 (W.D. Wash. 1986). However, information that would reveal
the “give-and-take of agencies’ decision making,” even facts such as whether to hold a meeting and
who should attend a meeting, may fall within the deliberative process privilege. See, e.g.,
Competitive Enterprise Institute v. EPA, 12 F. Supp. 3d 100, 117 (D.D.C. 2014), quoting Coastal
States Gas Corp. v. Dep’t of Energy, 617 F.2d 854, 866 (D.C.Cir. 1980).
Returning to the main case upon which the plaintiff relies, “[m]aterial is pre-
decisional if it address activities antecedent to the adoption of an agency policy.” Sikorsky, 106 Fed.
Cl. at 571 (internal quotes and citation omitted). However, “[a] claim of deliberative process
privilege, even when properly established, is not absolute[; t]he deliberative process privilege is
qualified, requiring the court to balance the interests of the parties for and against disclosures.” Id.
at 577 (citations omitted). Thus, “[t]he privilege may be defeated by a showing of evidentiary need
by a plaintiff that outweighs the harm that disclosure of such information may cause to the
defendant.” Id. (internal quotes and citation omitted). The privilege may also be waived if the
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government produces documents related to the subject matter of the privileged matter or produces
the privileged matter in other litigation. Id. (citations omitted). “While documents may be
pre-decisional and deliberative when originated, they will not be entitled to any deliberative privilege
if they are applied by the decisionmakers --as ‘secret law’-- or otherwise expressly adopted or
incorporated by reference into the final decision.” USX Corp. v. United States, 11 CIT 419, 420-21,
664 F. Supp. 519, 522 (1987) (citations omitted). “In addition, factual material contained in
deliberative documents also falls outside of the privilege, to the extent that it is severable.” Id., 11
CIT at 421, 664 F. Supp. at 522.
At the defendant’s request, the court has examined, in camera, the unredacted
versions of the documents sought (which process should not be interpreted as impugning the veracity
of the defendant’s assertions of privilege), and after such examination, the court concludes that all
the redacted information is clearly either business proprietary, agency proprietary, or work product
prepared in anticipation of, and therefore antecedent to, one or more “decisions”. The defendant
summarizes those decisions potentially covered by Meyer’s broad request for production as follows:
• Audit Report 811-07-OFO-AU-21434, August 31, 2009: In this “main” audit, CBP
concluded that the transaction between Meyer’s manufacturer and related middleman
on cookware from Thailand did not meet the requirements for first sale because it
was not shown to be at arm’s length [and that] certain cookware . . . did not qualify
for GSP due to the exclusion of non-originating material that did not undergo a
double substantial transformation. Meyer disagreed with the findings of Reg Audit
and requested that the agency seek Internal Advice from [Regulations and Rulings],
which [the agency] did.
• HQ H088815, September 28, 2011: In response to the request for internal advice,
CBP ruled that Meyer’s use of the “first sale” price on its Thai merchandise was
improper, that certain pots and pans manufactured in Thailand did not qualify for
GSP because certain materials did not undergo a double substantial transformation
in Thailand, and that certain cookware sets did not qualify for GSP treatment.
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• Follow-Up Audit Report 811-11-OFO-F1-21434, June 12, 2012: CBP conducted
a follow-up audit, resulting in the issuance of a report, which sought to determine if
Meyer was in compliance with HQ H088815 and to compute the loss of revenue
based on the ruling’s holdings on first sale, GSP and sets.
Def’s Resp. at 5.
The court therefore concludes that the Harmon Declaration’s invocation of privilege
with respect to such redacted information is not improper, that there is no indication that any of the
redactions in the remaining1 documents challenged by the plaintiff are or have been used by the
agency in dealings with the public, that none of the exceptions to the clam of privilege otherwise
applies, and that the plaintiff does not persuade that it has an evidentiary need that outweighs the
harm that disclosure of such information may cause to the defendant. To the extent the plaintiff
disagrees with Customs’ analysis and denial of its protest, the burden is on the plaintiff to establish
its entitlement to first-sale and GSP treatment in accordance with the facts and law established
during judicial review that is de novo.
Conclusion & Order
Therefore, in accordance with the foregoing, upon review of the motion of the
plaintiff to compel the defendant to produce full unredacted versions of documents identified on
Exhibit A to the plaintiff’s brief on its motion, it must be, and hereby is
ORDERED that the plaintiff’s motion to compel is denied.
So ordered.
Dated: February 23, 2016 /s/ R. Kenton Musgrave
New York, New York R. Kenton Musgrave, Senior Judge
1
As part of its consideration of the plaintiff’s motion to compel, the defendant explains that
it released several redactions to the plaintiff. See Def’s Resp. at 7-8 & n.7.