Slip Op. 07-169
UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
:
SHANDONG HUARONG MACHINERY CO., :
LTD., SHANDONG MACHINERY IMPORT :
& EXPORT CORPORATION, LIAONING :
MACHINERY IMPORT & EXPORT :
CORPORATION, AND TIANJIN :
MACHINERY IMPORT & EXPORT :
CORPORATION, :
:
Plaintiffs, :
: Before: Richard K. Eaton, Judge
v. :
: Consol. Court No. 04–00460
UNITED STATES, :
: Public Version
Defendant, :
:
and :
:
AMES TRUE TEMPER, :
:
Deft.-Int. :
:
OPINION
[United States Department of Commerce’s Remand Results
sustained.]
Dated: November 20, 2007
Hume & Associates, PC (Robert T. Hume), for plaintiffs.
Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division,
United States Department of Justice; Jeanne E. Davidson,
Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United
States Department of Justice (Courtney E. Sheehan); Office of the
Chief Counsel for Import Administration, United States Department
of Commerce (Scott Daniel McBride), of counsel, for defendant.
Wiley Rein, LLP (Timothy C. Brightbill, Michael W. Schisa and
Daniel B. Pickard), for defendant-intervenor.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 2
Eaton, Judge: At issue in this consolidated action1 are the
United States Department of Commerce’s (“Commerce” or the
“Department”) final results in the twelfth administrative review
of four antidumping duty orders covering heavy forged hand tools
(“HFHTs”)2 from the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”) for the
period of review beginning on February 1, 2002, and ending on
January 31, 2003 (“POR”). See HFHTs, Finished or Unfinished,
With or Without Handles, From the PRC, 69 Fed. Reg. 55,581 (Dep’t
of Commerce Sept. 15, 2004), as amended, 69 Fed. Reg. 69,892
(Dep’t of Commerce Dec. 1, 2004) (collectively, “Final Results”).
In Shandong Huarong Machinery Co. v. United States, 30 CIT __,
435 F. Supp. 2d 1261 (2006) (“Shandong I”), the court sustained
certain aspects of the Final Results and remanded several issues
to Commerce.
Now before the court are Commerce’s Final Results of
Redetermination (“Remand Results”). The court has jurisdiction
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2000) and 19 U.S.C.
§ 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2000). For the following reasons,
1
This action includes court numbers 04-00460, 04-00526,
04-00644 and 04-00652. See Shandong Huarong Machinery Co. v.
United States, Consol. Ct. No. 04-00460 (CIT Feb. 28, 2005)
(order granting motion to consolidate cases).
2
The four antidumping duty orders at issue cover:
bars/wedges; picks/mattocks; hammers/sledges; and axes/adzes.
See HFHTs, Finished or Unfinished, With or Without Handles, From
the PRC, 69 Fed. Reg. 55,581, 55,582 (Dep’t of Commerce Sept. 15,
2004).
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 3
Commerce’s Remand Results are sustained.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“The court shall hold unlawful any determination, finding,
or conclusion found . . . to be unsupported by substantial
evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with
law . . . .” 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(I).
DISCUSSION
I. The Court Sustains Commerce’s Selection of 139.31% as the
Adverse Facts Available Rate for TMC’s Sales of Bars/Wedges
In Shandong I, the court found that Commerce did not justify
with sufficient factual findings its decision to use, as the
adverse facts available (“AFA”) rate, the highest calculated rate
for TMC in a previous administrative review, namely, the eighth
review covering the period February 1, 1998, to January 31, 1999.
Shandong I, 30 CIT at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1274-75 (“[B]y
merely selecting a rate from a previous review, Commerce has not
provided the court with sufficient factual findings justifying
its application of the 139.31% rate.”).
In the Remand Results, Commerce maintains that the 139.31%
rate is reliable and relevant to Tianjin Machinery Import &
Export Corp. (“TMC”). With respect to the reliability of the
rate, Commerce states that “[t]he 139.31 percent margin was
calculated for the same respondent from verified data submitted
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 4
by that respondent in a recently completed review.” Remand
Results at 8. With respect to the rate’s relevance to TMC,
Commerce relies on similar reasoning: “[S]ince the rate was
calculated for TMC, the Department has determined that the 139.31
percent rate reflected recent commercial activity by the same
company in exporting bars/wedges to the United States.” Id. at 9
(citations omitted).
In addition, to support the finding that the 139.31% rate is
reliable and relevant to TMC, Commerce cites the following
additional factual support:
The Department sought additional information
to test whether TMC’s sales during the eighth
administrative review are reflective of TMC’s
commercial activity during the underlying
review period. The Department obtained
information from the Automated Commercial
System (ACS) of the U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) regarding the sales values
of TMC’s merchandise classifiable under [the]
harmonized tariff schedule subheading . . .
applicable to the merchandise subject to the
bars/wedges order. The Department
specifically queried the two review periods
at issue: February 1, 1998, through January
31, 1999 [the eighth review], and February 1,
2002, through January 31, 2003 [the twelfth
review]. Using this information, the
Department calculated a weighted-average unit
value (AUV) for each period, for TMC’s sales
of merchandise subject to the bars/wedges
order. The Department compared the AUV from
each period and found that TMC’s AUVs for
subject merchandise declined by 38.18 percent
from the earlier to the later period. This
change in TMC’s AUVs values contrasts with
little to no change in the production process
used by the PRC industry to produce
bars/wedges over the last five years, as
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 5
demonstrated by respondent questionnaire
responses and verifications from multiple
administrative review proceedings. Thus,
because the production process of the
industry has generally stayed constant, while
TMC’s U.S. sales values have declined, the
Department concludes that this information
further substantiates the relevance of the
139.31 percent margin as AFA for TMC’s sales
of merchandise under the bars/wedges order.
Id. at 10. In other words, for Commerce, the 139.31% rate is
reliable and relevant to TMC because, while the production
process for bars/wedges generally remained constant between the
eighth and twelfth reviews, TMC nonetheless experienced a 38.18%
decline in the price per kilogram of its bars/wedges sales to the
United States between the two reviews.3 Commerce thus apparently
concludes that, because the U.S. price dropped between the two
periods of review, a calculated twelfth review rate would, if
anything, have been greater than 139.31%.
Commerce also presents, as further factual support for the
139.31% rate, the volatility of TMC’s margins and those of other
respondents in past reviews. In particular, Commerce highlights
the seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth4 administrative reviews of
3
In order to make this comparison, Commerce reduced to a
weighted-average unit value TMC’s sales activities during the
eighth and twelfth reviews: [[ ]] for the
eighth review and [[ ]] for the twelfth
review. See Remand Results, Apps. 2 & 3.
4
The tenth administrative review was the last in which
the Department reviewed TMC’s sales of bars/wedges. Remand
Results at 10.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 6
TMC’s sales of merchandise covered by the bars/wedges order. In
the seventh review, Commerce assigned TMC a rate of 47.88%.
Commerce calculated a 139.31% rate for TMC in the eighth review
(an increase of 92 percentage points); a 0.56% rate in the ninth
review (a 248-fold decrease); and a 0.48% rate in the tenth
review (a negligible change from the ninth review). See Remand
Results at 10. Noting the “wide swings” in TMC’s margins in
three of the last four reviews in which TMC participated,
Commerce concludes that “[a]n increase in its rate for the
underlying review to 139.31 percent . . . is in accordance with
TMC’s rate history.” Id. at 11.
In addition, Commerce finds that the HFHT industry overall
has a “history of volatility.” Id. at 11. In the Remand
Results, Commerce observes “considerable volatility” in Liaoning
Machinery Import & Export Corp., Ltd. and Liaoning Machinery
Import & Export Corp.’s (collectively, “LMC”) and Shandong
Huarong Machinery Co., Ltd.’s (“Huarong”) calculated margins
between the sixth and eleventh administrative reviews.
Specifically, Huarong’s rate went from 34% in the sixth review,
to 1.27% in the seventh review and to 27.28% in the eighth
review. LMC’s rate went from 0.0% in the seventh review, to
27.18% in the eighth review and back to 0.0% again in the tenth
review. Thus, Commerce maintains that (1) “the steep decline in
TMC’s AUVs”; (2) the history of volatility in the antidumping
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 7
rates in the industry generally; and (3) the fact that the
139.31% rate was calculated for TMC in the eighth review all
support the conclusion that its application of the 139.31% rate
as AFA to TMC is supported by the record. Id. at 11.
Plaintiffs’ principal objection to the 139.31% rate is that
it is “not relevant to TMC’s recent commercial activity.”5 Pls.’
Comments on Commerce’s Remand Results (“Pls.’ Comments”) 10
(emphasis in original). Plaintiffs argue that to ensure that
TMC’s margin is calculated as accurately as possible, the
Department should be required to calculate TMC’s actual rate or
5
The court is not persuaded by plaintiffs’ additional
argument that Commerce improperly failed to consider plaintiffs’
claim that the surrogate data used to calculate the 139.31% rate
was tainted by subsidies. Pls.’ Comments 6. Plaintiffs’
subsidization arguments were not a part of the court’s remand
opinion and order, and as such, Commerce was under no obligation
to revisit them. The court notes, however, that a similar
argument was rejected in Tianjin Machinery Import & Export Corp.
v. United States, 31 CIT __, Slip Op. 07-131 (Aug. 28, 2007) (not
reported in the Federal Supplement), where TMC and Huarong,
plaintiffs in that action, contended that Commerce was precluded
from using TMC’s calculated rate from the eighth review of the
orders on HFHTs because that rate was calculated using Indian
data that plaintiffs insisted was distorted by subsidies. The
Court found that the plaintiffs were foreclosed from making that
argument because “(1) plaintiff[s] put no actual evidence of
subsidization on the record, either in this review or during the
eighth review; and (2) the issue of subsidization was not raised
during plaintiffs’ challenge to the final results of the eighth
review before this Court.” Id. at __, Slip Op. 07-131 at 34 n.10
(citing Shandong Huarong Gen. Corp. v. United States, 25 CIT
1226, 177 F. Supp. 2d 1304 (2001)). Here, the same holding
applies. Plaintiffs did not place any actual evidence of
subsidization on the record in either the eighth or twelfth
review, nor did they raise the subsidization issue in the eighth
administrative review.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 8
use a calculated rate from an administrative review more recent
than the eighth review and then add a deterrent amount. Pls.’
Comments 13. Thus, plaintiffs argue that in this case
the Department should have looked to
TMC’s . . . previous calculated highest-
weighted average margins. In TMC’s case, the
Department should have utilized either the
0.56 percent or 0.48 percent weighted-average
margins calculated for the 1999-2000 and
2000-2001 reviews respectively as the
starting point and then added a deterrent
amount, for example, [TMC’s] forgone profits.
Pls.’ Comments 14.
The court cannot credit plaintiffs’ position under the
circumstances of this case. In the Final Results, Commerce found
that the use of facts otherwise available and AFA was appropriate
because of a failure to reveal the pertinent details of an
“invoicing scheme whereby the ‘principal’ employed an ‘agent,’
which was subject to much lower duties than the principal, as a
tool to evade Commerce’s orders.”6 Shandong I, 30 CIT at __, 435
6
TMC, LMC and Huarong were found to be involved in an
invoicing scheme. See Final Results, 69 Fed. Reg. at 55,583. In
particular, Commerce found that
TMC, whose cash deposit and assessment rates
were lower than Huarong[’s], sold blank
invoices to Huarong, which then reported the
entries as TMC’s to Customs and
benefitted from the very low rates applicable
to TMC. Likewise, the record shows
that LMC and TMC sold their invoices to
companies that reported their entries to
Customs as made by LMC or TMC, as
appropriate, and, thus, benefitted from lower
(continued...)
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 9
F. Supp. 2d at 1268. In Shandong I, the court found justified
Commerce’s use of facts otherwise available:
As a result of the inadequate answers found
in the initial section A responses, Commerce
was required to issue several supplemental
questionnaires in order to get the necessary
information to complete its investigation.
Consequently, even though the Companies
ultimately disclosed the circumstances
surrounding their “agency” relationships,
their failure to do so until after the
issuance of several supplemental
questionnaires surely significantly impeded
Commerce’s investigation by requiring the
agency to prolong its review.
Id. at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1269-70 (citations omitted). The
court also found justified Commerce’s use of AFA: “[T]he
Companies’ failure initially to provide the relevant information
with respect to their invoicing arrangement, information that was
fully within their command, justified Commerce’s application of
AFA to the Companies’ sales of bars and wedges.” Id. at __, 435
F. Supp. 2d at 1270.
Because of TMC’s participation in the invoicing scheme, all
of its sales data was necessarily tainted. Thus, no rate could
be calculated using TMC’s actual data. As a result, “[b]ecause
Commerce had permissibly rejected all of TMC’s data as
unreliable, the information remaining upon the record consisted
6
(...continued)
rates.
Shandong I, 30 CIT at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1268 (citation
omitted).
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 10
of publicly available data, data from past reviews, or data from
other respondents in the current review.” Def.’s Resp. to
Parties’ Remand Comments (“Def.’s Resp.”) 12 (internal citation &
quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, despite plaintiffs’
insistence that Commerce should calculate a rate for TMC’s
bars/wedges, Commerce had no reliable information from which to
do so.
As a result, the court finds that Commerce has supported
with substantial evidence its use of the 139.31% rate. Here, all
of TMC’s sales data is tainted and unsuitable for calculation of
an actual rate. Commerce’s use of the 139.31% rate is relevant
because it was calculated for TMC in a recent review and reliable
because it accords with the volatility observed in TMC’s rate and
that in the industry generally in the five years between the
eighth and twelfth reviews. As noted by the Court of Appeals for
the Federal Circuit, “Commerce is in the best position, based on
its expert knowledge of the market and the individual respondent,
to select adverse facts that will create the proper deterrent to
non-cooperation with its investigations and assure a reasonable
margin.” F.Lii De Cecco Defendant-intervenors Filippo Fara S.
Martino S.p.A. v. United States, 216 F.3d 1027, 1032 (Fed. Cir.
2000). Therefore, the court finds that Commerce’s selection of
139.31% as the AFA rate for TMC’s sales of bars/wedges is
supported by substantial evidence and, accordingly, it is
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 11
sustained.
II. The Court Sustains Commerce’s “Commercial Quantities”
Determination
In the Final Results, Commerce denied SMC’s request, made
pursuant to 19 C.F.R. § 351.222(e)(1) (2004),7 for partial
revocation of the order on hammers/sledges, upon finding that the
regulation’s “commercial quantities” requirement had not been
satisfied. 19 C.F.R. § 351.222(e)(1)(ii). That is, Commerce
examined SMC’s hammer and sledge sales during the three-year
period identified in its request for revocation, i.e., 2000 to
2003 (the “revocation review period”), and found that SMC’s
exports in the year 2000-2001 were “abnormally small” when
7
This regulation provides that an exporter or producer
may ask Commerce to revoke an order with respect to that exporter
or producer if, with the request, that person submits:
(i) The person’s certification that the
person sold the subject merchandise at not
less than normal value during the period of
review . . . and that in the future the
person will not sell the merchandise at less
than normal value;
(ii) The person’s certification that, during
each of the [three] consecutive years . . .
the person sold the subject merchandise to
the United States in commercial quantities;
and
(iii) If applicable, the agreement regarding
reinstatement in the order . . . .
19 C.F.R. § 351.222(e)(1)(i)-(iii).
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 12
compared to exports during the original period of investigation,
November 1, 1989, through April 30, 1990 (“POI” or the “benchmark
period”).
In reaching its conclusion, Commerce relied on its past
practice of comparing the benchmark period to imports during the
revocation review period to determine whether the commercial
quantities requirement has been met. The court found
insufficient Commerce’s reliance on this past practice without
explanation as to how it fulfills the purpose of the regulation:
“What Commerce does not explain is why its . . . practice
fulfills the purpose of the regulation, which is to ensure that
an exporter will continue to participate in fair trade practices
upon revocation.” Shandong I, 31 CIT at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at
1278 (footnote & citation omitted). The court then remanded this
issue to Commerce:
Without further explanation, . . . it is
difficult to see how the . . . “benchmark”
methodology employed by Commerce would
further the purpose of the regulation. That
is, why is Commerce’s method a reasonable way
to ensure the regulation’s goals. For that
reason, the court remands this issue in order
to allow Commerce to provide the court with
an explanation as to how its methodology
results in a reasonable measure of
“commercial quantities.” That is, Commerce
must explain: (1) how it arrived at the
“benchmark period”; (2) why it was reasonable
in its selection; and (3) how a comparison of
the two periods demonstrates that the exports
for the year 2000–2001 do not constitute
commercial quantities.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 13
Id. at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1279.
In the Remand Results, Commerce explains why it believes its
practice is appropriate:
In determining whether a respondent
shipped in commercial quantities, absent
substantial and unusual changes in the
respondent’s business operations, the
Department uses the sales quantity reported
by the respondent during the less-than-fair-
value . . . investigation or the POI as the
benchmark because this period shows the
respondent’s normal commercial behavior
before the imposition of the antidumping
order (i.e., pre-order shipment levels). In
the Final Results, the Department found that
SMC’s average monthly sales quantity during .
. . 2000-2001 . . . was less than three
percent of the average monthly sales quantity
SMC sold during the POI. The Department has
declined to revoke antidumping orders in past
cases when an administrative review period
has a commercial quantity that is only a few
percentage points of the commercial quantity
sold during the benchmark period, normally
the POI.
The “commercial quantities” requirement
ensures that the Department’s revocation
determination is based upon a company’s
normal commercial practice. When making such
an assessment, the Department generally will
use the original POI as a benchmark for a
company’s normal commercial behavior. The
POI is a logical benchmark for this
assessment, because it is the only time
period for which the Department has evidence
concerning the company’s normal commercial
behavior with respect to exports to the
United States without the discipline of the
antidumping duty order. Sales during the
[revocation review period, i.e., 2000-2003]
which . . . are an abnormally small quantity
do not provide a reasonable basis for
determining that the discipline of the order
is no longer necessary to offset dumping.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 14
For purposes of revocation, the Department
must be able to determine that past margins
are reflective of a company’s normal
commercial activity.
Remand Results at 12-13 (citations omitted). In other words,
because SMC’s sales during 2000-2001 (the first year of the
revocation review period) were “abnormally small”8 compared to
its sales during the POI (November 1, 1989, through April 30,
1990), Commerce claims it does not have a reasonable basis on
which to decide to revoke the order. Thus, on remand, Commerce
has again declined to partially revoke the order, upon finding
that the “commercial quantities” requirement has not been
satisfied.
Plaintiff SMC challenges Commerce’s methodology, arguing
that it is unreasonable (1) to use the POI as a benchmark; and
relatedly (2) to base commercial quantities on a comparison of
the POI and the three-year revocation review period (2000-2003).
The court sustains as reasonable Commerce’s methodology for
determining whether the commercial quantities requirement of 19
C.F.R. § 351.222(e)(1) has been satisfied using the POI as the
benchmark period. “Commerce’s interpretation of its own
regulations must be given effect so long as it sensibly conforms
8
Commerce found “the 2000-2001, 2001-2002, and 2002-2003
review periods represent [[ ]], [[ ]], and [[ ]]%
of SMC’s U.S. sales quantity during the POI, respectively.” Mem.
from Jeff Pedersen, Commercial Quantity Analysis of Shipments of
HFHTs (Hammers/Sledges) to the United States by SMC (Mar. 1,
2004) at 3-4.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 15
to the purpose and wording of the regulations . . . .” Dofasco
Inc. v. United States, 28 CIT 263, 275, 326 F. Supp. 2d 1340,
1350 (2004), aff’d, 390 F.3d 1370 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (citation &
quotation marks omitted). Here, Commerce’s interpretation of the
revocation regulation is reasonable and sensibly conforms to the
purpose of the regulation—ensuring dumping will not ensue upon
revocation of the order.
Under the regulations, before an antidumping duty order may
be partially revoked, the producer or exporter requesting
revocation must have sold the subject merchandise in commercial
quantities at not less than normal value for three consecutive
years. See 19 C.F.R. §§ 351.222(e)(1), (b)(2); Elkem Metals Co.
v. United States, 31 CIT __, __, Slip Op. 07-63 at 4 (May 3,
2007) (not reported in the Federal Supplement) (“[Subsection]
351.222(e)(1) requires a certification that the company sold the
subject merchandise in commercial quantities in each of the three
years forming the basis of the revocation request . . . .”).
This is so that Commerce will have a sufficient factual basis
upon which to determine whether dumping would ensue upon
revocation of the order. Remand Results at 13 (“For purposes of
revocation, the Department must be able to determine that past
margins are reflective of a company’s normal commercial
activity.”).
To determine whether the “commercial quantities” requirement
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 16
has been satisfied, Commerce has devised a methodology by which
it generally compares the quantity of U.S. sales in each of the
three years in the revocation review period to the quantity of
U.S. sales made by the producer or exporter during the original
POI, i.e., the period before the imposition of the antidumping
duty order. Commerce’s stated reason for using the POI as a
benchmark period is that it needs, as a starting point, a period
where the quantities exported to the United States were
unfettered by the antidumping duty order. According to Commerce,
“absent substantial and unusual changes in the respondent’s
business operations,” sales activity during the POI would
indicate the normal commercial practices of the producer or
exporter. Id. at 12.
There is nothing unreasonable in Commerce’s approach.
First, it was reasonable for Commerce to use the POI as a
benchmark because it is the only period with respect to which
Commerce would have evidence of a respondent’s pre-order shipment
levels. These levels can fairly be assumed to reflect the level
of activity that would result were the orders not in place.
Moreover, Commerce’s methodology reasonably allows for deviation
from this practice where there is evidence of a “substantial and
unusual change” in a respondent’s business operations after the
imposition of the order, which would render the POI an unreliable
indicator of what the company’s normal commercial activity is.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 17
No party has cited to any meaningful record evidence that this is
the case here.
Second, while it may be that some other method for
determining commercial quantities could be constructed, the court
finds that determining commercial quantities based on a
comparison of the amount of sales during the POI and the amount
of sales during the three-year revocation review period is not
unreasonable. Rather, the comparison allows Commerce to estimate
what the likely commercial behavior of a respondent would be in
the absence of the order, thus furthering the purpose of the
regulation. Although here the benchmark period is somewhat
remote from the revocation review period, because the existence
of the order can be assumed to have altered commercial behavior,
it is not unreasonable to reference the period before the order
was in place when making comparisons. The court finds Commerce
has sufficiently explained why its benchmark practice fulfills
the purpose of the regulation. See Shandong I, 31 CIT at __, 435
F. Supp. 2d at 1278.
The court further sustains Commerce’s finding that SMC did
not satisfy the commercial quantities requirement for three
consecutive years. The record evidence indicates that in 2000-
2001, SMC’s average monthly sales quantity was less than three
percent of the average monthly sales quantity SMC sold during the
POI. Remand Results at 12. This finding is uncontested.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 18
Commerce’s conclusion that so small a percentage did not give it
a basis for finding that SMC shipped in commercial quantities
cannot be found to violate the regulations. See 19 C.F.R.
§ 351.222(e)(1). As the record supports Commerce’s finding that
SMC did not trade its product in commercial quantities, i.e.,
that the quantities traded were “abnormally small,” as compared
with the benchmark period, Commerce did not have a reasonable
basis to conclude that dumping would not ensue upon revocation.
Remand Results at 13.
Commerce has explained why its benchmark methodology
fulfills the purpose of the regulation and why it results in a
reasonable measure of “commercial quantities.” Accordingly, the
court sustains Commerce’s determination not to revoke the
antidumping duty order with respect to SMC’s sales of
hammers/sledges.
III. The Court Sustains Commerce’s Remand Determination on
Brokerage and Handling
In Shandong I, defendant-intervenor Ames True Temper
(“Ames”) challenged Commerce’s finding that the surrogate value
for brokerage and handling included expenses for loading and
containerization. In that opinion, the court observed that in
the Final Results Commerce declined to determine and separately
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 19
deduct these expenses from its net U.S. price9 calculation
without investigating whether the expenses were in fact counted
in the surrogate value for brokerage and handling. Shandong I,
30 CIT at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1288. Thus, the court
instructed Commerce to reexamine its conclusion on remand, and,
in the event Commerce again found that loading and
containerization expenses were included in the brokerage and
handling surrogate, to provide a thorough explanation for its
finding. Id. at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1288.
With respect to loading expenses, Commerce continued to find
on remand that such expenses were included in the Indian
surrogate value for brokerage and handling derived from Certain
Stainless Steel Wire Rod from India, 64 Fed. Reg. 856 (Dep’t of
Commerce Jan. 6, 1999) (final results) (“Steel Wire Rod from
India”). Remand Results at 18. To factually support this
finding, Commerce examined the questionnaire responses of Viraj
Impoexpo Limited (“Viraj”), a respondent in Steel Wire Rod from
India, and those of TMC and SMC.
9
Pursuant to the antidumping statute, Commerce shall
reduce the price used to establish export price (or U.S. price)
by “the amount, if any, included in such price, attributable to
any additional costs, charges, or expenses, and United States
import duties, which are incident to bringing the subject
merchandise from the original place of shipment in the exporting
country to the place of delivery in the United States . . . .”
19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(2)(A); see Dupont Teijin Films USA, LP v.
United States, 27 CIT 962, 963, 273 F. Supp. 2d 1347, 1349 (2003)
(noting that “export price” is “sometimes referred to as ‘U.S.
price.’”).
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 20
With respect to Viraj, Commerce noted that its delivery
terms were CIF (cost-insurance-freight), “which indicates that
Viraj was responsible for paying all costs incurred at the port
of export.” Remand Results at 18. In addition, Commerce
observed that Viraj separately reported other costs, i.e., inland
foreign freight, international freight, and insurance, indicating
that where individual expenses were made, Viraj separately
accounted for them. Id. Since handling charges were not
included among the port of export costs that Viraj reported,
Commerce inferred that “any charges incurred in handling steel
wire rod coils at the port of export must be included in Viraj’s
[brokerage and handling], as they were not reported by Viraj in
any other field.” Id.
Next, Commerce turned to TMC’s and SMC’s responses.
Commerce noted that, like Viraj, neither TMC nor SMC reported
brokerage and handling separately. Rather, both indicated in
their responses that their brokerage and handling expenses were
included in freight invoices from the freight forwarder. Id. at
18 (citing TMC’s Oct. 10, 2003 Suppl. Quest. Resp. 2; SMC’s Oct.
3, 2003 Suppl. Quest. Resp. 8). Commerce observed that “TMC and
SMC did not report a separate charge for these [brokerage and
handling] expenses or claim that they were included in any other
reported expense category.” Id. Commerce thus concluded:
Since these costs were not elsewhere reported
by Viraj, TMC, or SMC, it is reasonable for
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 21
the Department, based upon record evidence,
to consider the expenses associated with the
movement of merchandise from truck to
container yard and from container yard to
ship, wharfage, stevedorage, berthage,
terminal handling, and lashing to be included
in [brokerage and handling] and covered by
the surrogate value that the Department
applied.
Id. at 18-19.
With respect to containerization expenses, Commerce drew
parallels among Viraj’s, TMC’s and SMC’s responses as well. The
Department noted that “TMC and SMC . . . reported that their
freight forwarder containerized their merchandise as consolidated
cargo,” and that “[s]imilarly, Viraj noted that its steel wire
rod coils were ‘stuffed in containers,’ but did not report a
separate cost for this service or claim that it was included in
any other reported expense.” Id. at 19. Commerce thus concluded
that “[s]ince these costs were not elsewhere reported by Viraj,
TMC and SMC, the Department reasonably concluded, based upon
record evidence, that the cost of containerization is included in
[brokerage and handling] and covered by the surrogate value that
the Department applied.” Id. In sum, Commerce found that
loading and containerization charges were included in the
surrogate value for brokerage and handling:
Viraj’s experience is sufficiently similar to
TMC and SMC that it serves as a reasonable
surrogate value. The port charges [i.e.,
loading] and containerization expenses
incurred by Viraj must be included in its
reported [brokerage and handling] expense
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 22
because Viraj was required to report all such
costs, and there is no reason to believe that
it did not do so.
Id. at 19. Accordingly, Commerce concluded that “[s]ince the
Department finds that Viraj’s reported [brokerage and handling]
captures all relevant costs, the Department continues to find
that its decision in the Final Results to deduct only [brokerage
and handling] from U.S. price was correct.” Id.
Ames maintains that the Department’s determination that
loading expenses were included in the surrogate value for
brokerage and handling “remains premised on speculation, and thus
unsupported by substantial evidence,” despite the additional
explanation Commerce provided on remand. Ames’s Comments on
Commerce’s Remand Results (“Ames’s Comments”) 11. Specifically,
Ames argues that Commerce failed to analyze the issue of whether
wire rod and HFHTs were similar, such that the movement expenses
incurred for one would be similar to the expenses for the other.
Ames continues that “[e]ven to the extent that such merchandise
is similar, the Department still cites no particular evidence,
beyond mere speculation, that the goods incur the same expenses.”
Ames’s Comments 11.
With respect to containerization expenses, Ames makes a
similar argument: “It appears that the Department’s only evidence
for [the conclusion that the cost of containerization is included
in brokerage and handling] is the absence of any statement
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 23
indicating where the containerization costs are reported.”
Ames’s Comments 12. Ames insists that Commerce “thus, without
support, rules out the very real possibility that the
containerization operations were a part of Viraj’s reported
internal cost of manufacture or packing fields, or were invoiced
and performed by a third party for whom the Department did not
request supporting documentation.” Ames’s Comments 12.
The court finds that on remand Commerce adequately explained
the basis for its finding that loading and containerization
expenses were included in the brokerage and handling surrogate.
As this Court has stated, “Commerce’s general mandate . . . to
calculate normal value as accurately as possible on the basis of
the best available information . . . allows Commerce to draw
reasonable inferences from the record . . . .” Hebei Metals &
Minerals Imp. & Exp. Corp. v. United States, 28 CIT 1185, 1203,
Slip Op. 04-88 at 28 (July 19, 2004) (not reported in the Federal
Supplement) (citation omitted).
In Shandong Huarong Machinery Co. v. United States, 31 CIT
__, Slip Op. 07-3 (Jan. 9, 2007) (not reported in the Federal
Supplement), the Court was faced with a substantially similar
issue, and the parties raised similar arguments to those
presented here. In that case, the results of Commerce’s eleventh
administrative review of the antidumping orders on HFHTs were at
issue. There, Commerce relied on record data in Steel Wire Rod
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 24
from India to value brokerage and handling, as it did here.
There, as here, Commerce found that Viraj’s merchandise was
transported by truck, as was the PRC respondent’s merchandise.
Commerce also found, as it did here, based on Viraj’s CIF terms
of delivery, that “Viraj was responsible for paying all costs
incurred at the port of export.” Shandong Huarong Machinery Co.,
31 CIT __, Slip Op. 07-3 at 22; Remand Results at 18. In both
instances, Commerce found it was “reasonable to infer” based on
the record evidence that the respondents in Steel Wire Rod from
India and HFHTs from the PRC would have incurred the expenses
related to moving the merchandise from truck to shipping vessel
and loading it onto the vessel. This is because, like Viraj,
“both TMC’s and SMC’s goods also have to be trucked to the port
and loaded and secured to a vessel.” Remand Results at 18;
Shandong Huarong Machinery Co., 31 CIT __, Slip Op. 07-3 at 22.
Ames does not dispute the facts used by Commerce to reach its
conclusion. Rather, its only claim is that they do not support
with substantial evidence Commerce’s finding.
It is apparent that here Commerce has been reasonable in the
inferences it has drawn from the facts. Thus, the court sustains
as reasonable and supported by substantial record evidence,
Commerce’s inference that the surrogate value for brokerage and
handling includes the expenses incurred in loading and
containerizing the merchandise.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 25
IV. The Court Sustains Commerce’s Valuation of Ocean Freight
Expenses
When calculating normal value in a nonmarket economy (“NME”)
country, Commerce’s regulations provide that Commerce
normally will use publicly available
information to value factors. However, where
a factor is purchased from a market economy
supplier and paid for in a market economy
currency, [Commerce] normally will use the
price paid to the market economy supplier. In
those instances where a portion of the factor
is purchased from a market economy supplier
and the remainder from a nonmarket economy
supplier, [Commerce] normally will value the
factor using the price paid to the market
economy supplier.
19 C.F.R. § 351.408(c)(1). Here, Commerce determined it would
use the actual, market economy prices that TMC and SMC paid to
their market economy suppliers to value ocean freight expenses,
if their market economy ocean freight purchases were
“meaningfully significant.” Remand Results at 19 (citing 19
C.F.R. § 351.408(c)(1) and Shakeproof Assembly Components, Div.
of Ill. Tool Works v. United States, 268 F.3d 1376 (Fed. Cir.
2001)).
In Shandong I, the court found wanting Commerce’s
explanation of its decision to aggregate TMC’s and SMC’s market
economy purchases as a single input, and remanded the matter:
Although Commerce insists that its decision
to aggregate is reasonable, and that the
resultant aggregated amount rendered the
total significant, it has not given a
sufficient explanation of why that is so.
Thus, the court remands this issue to afford
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 26
Commerce an opportunity to provide a more
complete explanation of its decision to
aggregate.
Shandong I, 31 CIT at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1291 (citation
omitted).
In the Remand Results, Commerce explained that “for the
purposes of determining whether or not the [market economy]
inputs are significant, the Department does not consider ocean
freight to different ports to be a different service or input.”
Remand Results at 21. Rather, Commerce found “shipping by a
particular method of conveyance to be a single input, albeit with
differing prices to different ports. The input, conveyance of
goods by a particular method, is the same regardless of whether
the destination is near or far.” Id. Commerce continued:
If there were purchases from [market economy]
and NME service providers within any single
mode of transportation, the Department would
conduct its significance test in aggregate
for that particular mode of transportation,
as was done in the Final Results. However,
within any single method of conveyance, the
Department has never treated freight service
to different locations as different inputs.
While the distance of ocean freight is
important, and may be a factor among several
factors in how expensive the conveyance is,
the service being purchased is still the
same; namely, movement of goods. Moreover,
ocean freight carriers normally stop at
various ports of call on their way to
different destinations to ensure the vessel
is full of cargo. We do not believe it would
be reasonable to consider freight service to
different ports of call to be different
inputs. For example, in instances where a
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 27
single ocean vessel has several ports of call
on its itinerary for a given voyage, it is
not clear to the Department how each stop can
be considered a different “input” or service
apart from the rest of the voyage. Thus, the
Department’s practice is to determine whether
or not this service – ocean freight – is
purchased in significant amounts from a
[market economy] supplier on an aggregate
basis.
Id. at 21-22. Thus, when applying its “meaningfully significant”
test, Commerce continued to treat aggregated market economy ocean
freight shipments as a single input rather than considering each
shipment to a different port as a separate input.
Ames argues that Commerce failed to support with evidence
its treatment of ocean freight as a single input. Specifically,
Ames takes issue with Commerce’s assertion that “ocean freight
carriers normally stop at various ports of call on their way to
different destinations to ensure the vessel is full of cargo,” as
a reason it cannot calculate port-to-port charges: “What is
missing . . . is any evidence that the vessels involved in
transporting the respondents’ merchandise made stops at multiple
ports of call.” Ames’s Comments 12-13. Thus, Ames objects to
Commerce’s decision to aggregate ocean freight expenses.
The court sustains Commerce’s valuation of ocean freight
expenses. Pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1) and the
accompanying regulation, Commerce is to value the factors of
production “based on the best available information regarding the
values of such factors in a market economy country . . . .” 19
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 28
U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1); see also 19 C.F.R. § 351.408(c)(1). “While
Congress has left it within Commerce’s discretion to develop
methodologies to enforce the antidumping statute, any given
methodology must always seek to effectuate the statutory
purpose—calculating accurate dumping margins.” Shakeproof
Assembly Components Div. of Ill. Tool Works, Inc. v. United
States, 23 CIT 479, 483, 59 F. Supp. 2d 1354, 1358 (1999), aff’d,
268 F.3d 1376 (Fed. Cir. 2001); see also Allied-Signal Aerospace
Co. v. United States, 996 F.2d 1185, 1191 (Fed. Cir. 1993)
(stating that the purpose behind the antidumping statute “is to
facilitate the determination of dumping margins as accurately as
possible within the confines of extremely short statutory
deadlines”).
Ames faults Commerce’s reasoning, alleging a failure by
Commerce to support with record evidence its assertion that the
ships carrying respondents’ freight stopped at multiple ports of
call. Ames’s Comments 13. Ames’s argument, however, overlooks
an important point. The main consideration in Commerce’s
decision to treat TMC’s and SMC’s market economy purchases of
ocean freight as a single input is that ocean freight is a single
service, i.e., the movement of goods. In addition, the movement
of goods is made by a single mode of transportation. That being
the case, the number of stops a vessel makes en route to its
final destination does not require the valuation of multiple
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 29
inputs. That is, while the distance between each port may vary,
the “service” purchased is indivisible.
As Commerce explained, distance is “important, and may be a
factor among several factors in how expensive the conveyance is,”
and the record supports this statement. Remand Results at 22;
see, e.g., SMC’s Sec. C Questionnaire Resp. at C-2 (indicating
the price for the service of moving goods paid to a market
economy supplier is “based on weight and destination”). That is,
the distance traveled and the ports visited may be important for
some purposes, but when the mode of transportation remains the
same, that mode constitutes a single input. Looked at in this
way it can hardly be said that treating ocean freight as a single
input is unreasonable. Shieldalloy Metallurgical Corp. v. United
States, 20 CIT 1362, 1368, 947 F. Supp. 525, 532 (1996) (“[A]s
long as the agency’s methodology and procedures are reasonable
means of effectuating the statutory purpose, and there is
substantial evidence in the record supporting the agency’s
conclusions, the court will not impose its own views as to the
sufficiency of the agency’s investigation or question the
agency’s methodology.”) (internal citation & quotation marks
omitted). Thus, the court finds Commerce’s decision to aggregate
ocean freight shipments as a single input and upon doing so to
find that the purchase of these services was meaningfully
significant to be reasonable and supported by substantial
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 30
evidence on the record.
V. The Court Sustains Commerce’s Decision Not to Make A
Circumstances-of-Sale Adjustment to TMC’s Normal Value
In the market economy context, Commerce is authorized to
make a circumstances-of-sale adjustment to normal value to
account for differences in expenses, including differences in
“direct selling expenses,” incurred in the U.S. and foreign
markets. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a)(6)(C)(iii); see also 19 C.F.R.
§§ 351.410(a) & (b). Under Commerce’s regulations, “direct
selling expenses” include “commissions . . . that result from,
and bear a direct relationship to, the particular sale in
question.” 19 C.F.R. § 351.410(c). Normally, “the Department
makes a [circumstances-of-sale] adjustment by deducting
comparison market10 commissions [from normal value] and adding
U.S. commissions. But it also offsets commissions with indirect
selling expenses.”11 Remand Results at 25. In addition,
10
Here, the “comparison market” means the foreign home
market.
11
Indirect selling expenses are “selling expenses, other
than direct selling expenses . . . (see [19 C.F.R.] § 351.410),
that the seller would incur regardless of whether particular
sales were made, but that reasonably may be attributed, in whole
or in part, to such sales.” 19 C.F.R. § 351.412(f)(2) (defining
“indirect selling expenses” in the context of constructed export
price offset). This Court has described indirect selling
expenses as “those ‘sales-related’ expenses that do not vary with
the quantity sold or are not related to a particular sale. They
are, quite simply, a part of the cost of doing business.” Agro
(continued...)
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 31
Commerce “will make a circumstances of sale adjustment to [normal
value] where commissions are paid in one market and not the
other.” Id. at 25 (citing 19 C.F.R. § 351.410(e)).12 “The
statutory purpose of the circumstance-of-sales adjustments is to
allow for a fair ‘apple-to-apple’ comparison of sales in the
[foreign home market and the U.S. market] at the specific common
point in the chain of commerce when the merchandise is leaving
the factory gates.” AOC Int’l, Inc. v. United States, 13 CIT
716, 718, 721 F. Supp. 314, 317 (1989), rev’d on other grounds
sub nom. Zenith Elecs. Corp. v. United States, 77 F.3d 426 (Fed.
Cir. 1996) (internal quotation marks omitted; citing Smith-Corona
Group, SCM Corp. v. United States, 713 F. 2d 1568, 1572 (Fed.
Cir. 1983)); see also Koyo Seiko Co. v. United States, 36 F.3d
1565, 1568 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (“To ensure that the quantum of
antidumping duties is calculated in a fair manner, both foreign
market value and United States price are subject to certain
adjustments in order to achieve a common point at which to
perform the price comparison.”).
11
(...continued)
Dutch Indus., Ltd. v. United States, 30 CIT __, __, Slip Op. 06-
40 at 7 (Mar. 28, 2006) (not reported in the Federal Supplement)
(citation omitted).
12
Title 19 C.F.R. § 351.410(e) provides that Commerce
“normally will make a reasonable allowance for other [i.e.,
indirect] selling expenses if [Commerce] makes a reasonable
allowance for commissions in one of the markets under
consideration, and no commission is paid in the other market
under consideration.”
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 32
According to Commerce, in the NME context, it generally does
not make a circumstances-of-sale adjustment to normal value for
commissions. Shandong I, 30 CIT at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1293
(“Commerce maintains an established practice of not making
circumstances-of-sale adjustments in NME cases.”). In Shandong
I, Ames challenged Commerce’s decision in the Final Results not
to make a circumstances-of-sale adjustment to normal value to
account for commissions that TMC paid to its affiliated U.S.
sales office. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a)(6)(C)(iii). Ames argued
that the record contained sufficient evidence to make the
adjustment in the same way it would be made in a market economy
situation. Shandong I, 30 CIT at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1292.
The court remanded this issue, finding that Commerce’s
reliance solely on its past practice was insufficient:
[I]t is apparent that Commerce’s past
practice to refrain from making
circumstances-of-sale adjustments in NME
situations is based on its conclusion that,
in most such cases, there is not enough
information on the record to make a
determination based on substantial evidence.
While this may be true in most cases, the
court observes that Commerce does not cite
any evidentiary basis for its determination
in this case, other than its past practice.
For that reason, the court remands this issue
to Commerce to allow the agency to further
explain its determination that the record
here was devoid of substantial evidence to
permit a circumstances-of-sale adjustment.
Shandong I, 30 CIT at __, 435 F. Supp. 2d at 1293.
On remand, Commerce “continues to find that the record does
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 33
not contain the level of detail necessary to make appropriate
adjustments to [normal value] to account for commissions.”
Remand Results at 25. In doing so, Commerce first states that
“Ames has oversimplified the Department’s methodology with
respect to the treatment of selling commissions” by failing to
acknowledge that where commissions are paid in either the U.S.
market or the comparison market but not both, Commerce offsets
the commissions paid with indirect selling expenses in accordance
with 19 C.F.R. § 351.410(e). Id. In the Remand Results,
Commerce sets out the methodology it uses in market economy
investigations:
Where commissions are paid in the comparison
market [the foreign home market] but not in
the U.S. market, the Department offsets the
comparison market commissions, which are
deducted from [normal value], by adding to
[normal value] an amount for U.S. indirect
selling expenses. This offset is the lesser
of (1) the amount of the commission paid in
the comparison market, or (2) the amount of
indirect selling expenses incurred for U.S.
market sales.
Id. at 26 n.10. Commerce continues:
Where commissions are paid in the U.S. market
but not in the comparison market, the
Department offsets the U.S. commission, which
is added to [normal value], by deducting from
[normal value] an amount of indirect selling
expenses for comparison market sales. The
offset is the lesser of (1) the amount of the
commission paid in the U.S. market, or (2)
the amount of indirect selling expenses
incurred on comparison market sales.
Id. at 26 n.11. Ames does not dispute this methodology.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 34
Applying its methodology to the facts of this case, Commerce
observes that TMC had not paid selling commissions on some of its
U.S. sales:
In the instant case, TMC reported that
certain of its U.S. sales had no commissions.
For those U.S. sales that did not have a
commission, the Department would need to know
the amount of indirect selling expenses
incurred with respect to those sales in order
to determine the commission offset to be
applied to the [normal value] for those
sales. We do not request PRC respondents to
report U.S. indirect selling expenses for
[export price] sales, as those expenses are
internal PRC expenses and thus considered
unreliable. Therefore, we would not have
appropriate information to use to offset any
surrogate commissions deducted from [normal
value].
Id. (footnote omitted). In other words, with respect to TMC’s
U.S. sales that had no U.S. commissions, using its market economy
methodology, Commerce would have to determine the amount of
indirect expenses that TMC incurred in the PRC with respect to
those U.S. sales. However, as Commerce observes, determining the
indirect expenses that TMC incurred in the PRC with respect to
U.S. sales is impossible because that information is internal,
PRC-company information and is therefore considered unreliable.13
13
Because PRC-company information is unreliable, Commerce
considers commissions to be a standard selling cost that is
included in selling, general and administrative expenses
(“SG&A”). See, e.g., Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts Thereof,
Finished and Unfinished, From the PRC, 63 Fed. Reg. 63,842,
63,852-53 (Dep’t of Commerce Nov. 17, 1998) (final results)
(“[Commissions are] standard selling costs and, as such, are
(continued...)
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 35
Because this sales information is considered unreliable, Commerce
does not request it.
Commerce continues its analysis with respect to TMC’s U.S.
sales that had commissions:
For those [of TMC’s] U.S. sales that had
commissions associated with them, we would
also need to be able to accurately quantify
the indirect selling expenses in the
surrogate [selling, general and
administrative expenses (“SG&A”)] data so as
to properly offset the U.S. commission, to
the extent that the U.S. commission is
greater than the surrogate commission. In
this instance, the survey data from the 2,024
Indian companies used for SG&A indicates that
some part of the sales by those companies did
have commissions. However, the Department
cannot reasonably assume that all of the
sales by those Indian companies had
commissions. Instead, we find it reasonable
to assume that some portion of the Indian
sales did not have commissions. Therefore,
to the extent that the surrogate SG&A
reflects sales that have no commissions
associated with them, we would need to take
into account indirect expenses as an offset
to the U.S. commission. In other words,
assuming the U.S. commission is greater than
the surrogate commission, we would not simply
deduct the surrogate commission [from normal
value] and add the U.S. commission [to normal
value]; we would further offset any remaining
difference with indirect selling expenses of
the surrogate, in accordance with our normal
practice. Therefore, in attempting to
calculate the commission offset, the
Department would need to identify the amount
of indirect selling expenses incurred by the
2,024 companies on Indian market sales.
Although there are a few line items of
13
(...continued)
properly categorized under SG&A.”).
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 36
expenses in the survey data that may include
some or all of the indirect selling expenses
of the surveyed companies (such as
“Advertisement” or “Insurance”), the
Department has no way of separating the
indirect selling expenses from direct selling
expenses, nor indirect selling expenses from
general or administrative expenses. For this
reason, the Department cannot calculate the
indirect selling expenses incurred on sales
reflected in the Indian surrogate data, and
therefore the Department cannot be certain
that the commission offset would be accurate.
Id. (footnote omitted; emphasis added). Put another way, when
TMC incurred U.S. commissions (a direct selling expense) but no
commissions were paid in its home market, Commerce would, in a
market economy context, adjust normal value downward to the
extent of domestic indirect selling expenses.14 Here, to
determine if it could produce a number representing these
indirect selling expenses, Commerce turned to the Indian
surrogate data used for selling, general and administrative
expenses (“SG&A”) and found that it could not separate the
indirect selling expenses from the general or administrative
expenses of the 2,024 Indian companies whose data comprise the
surrogate SG&A data. Thus, Commerce found the available data
insufficient to make an accurate circumstances-of-sale adjustment
to normal value where U.S. sales commissions were present.
14
The justification for the adjustment is that it may be
reasonable to assume that some of the functions accounted for in
the indirect selling expenses in the foreign home market were
those paid for by the commissions paid in the U.S. market.
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 37
Next, Commerce noted that because it normally does not make
circumstances-of-sale adjustments in NME proceedings, it “did not
examine whether TMC’s commissions were made at arm’s-length, nor
did it request the affiliated agent’s actual expenses, during the
underlying review.” Remand Results at 27. Commerce determined
that “[w]ithout this information, the Department cannot determine
the proper amount of any adjustment for the commission.” Id.
The court sustains Commerce’s finding, on remand, that the
record does not support a circumstances-of-sale adjustment in
this case because Commerce has adequately explained its decision
not to make such an adjustment and supported that decision with
substantial evidence from the record. “The party seeking a
direct . . . adjustment bears the burden of proving entitlement
to such an adjustment.” SKF USA Inc. v. INA Walzlager Schaeffler
KG, 180 F.3d 1370, 1377 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (citing Fujitzu Gen.
Ltd. v. United States, 88 F.3d 1034, 1040 (Fed. Cir. 1996)).
Ames’s arguments to the contrary notwithstanding, it is evident
that sufficient evidence was not placed on the record to make the
adjustment. That being the case, the court finds reasonable
Commerce’s decision not to make a circumstances-of-sale
adjustment to TMC’s normal value in this case.
VI. The Court Sustains Commerce’s Remand Determinations With
Respect To Which There is No Dispute
With respect to the issues of (1) Commerce’s application of
Consol. Court No. 04-00460 Page 38
AFA to sales of merchandise covered by the axes/adzes and
bars/wedges orders, and (2) Commerce’s valuation of pallets, no
party objects to the Remand Results, and the court finds them to
be supported by substantial evidence and otherwise in accordance
with law.
CONCLUSION
In accordance with the foregoing, the court sustains
Commerce’s Remand Results. Judgment shall be entered
accordingly.
/s/Richard K. Eaton
Richard K. Eaton
Dated: November 20, 2007
New York, New York
UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
:
SHANDONG HUARONG MACHINERY CO., :
LTD., SHANDONG MACHINERY IMPORT :
& EXPORT CORPORATION, LIAONING :
MACHINERY IMPORT & EXPORT :
CORPORATION, AND TIANJIN :
MACHINERY IMPORT & EXPORT :
CORPORATION, :
:
Plaintiffs, :
: Before: Richard K. Eaton, Judge
v. :
: Consol. Court No. 04–00460
UNITED STATES, :
: Public Version
Defendant, :
:
and :
:
AMES TRUE TEMPER, :
:
Deft.-Int. :
:
JUDGMENT
This case having been submitted for decision and the court,
after deliberation, having rendered a decision therein; now, in
conformity with that decision, it is hereby
ORDERED that the United States Department of Commerce’s
Final Results of Redetermination, issued pursuant to the court’s
opinion and order in Shandong Huarong Machinery Co. v. United
States, 30 CIT __, 435 F. Supp. 2d 1261 (2006), are sustained;
and it is further
ORDERED that this case is dismissed.
/s/Richard K. Eaton
Richard K. Eaton
Dated: November 20, 2007
New York, New York