Slip Op. 12- 56
UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
UNION STEEL,
Plaintiff,
and
WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION,
Plaintiff-Intervenor,
Before: Timothy C. Stanceu, Judge
v.
Court No. 09-00130
UNITED STATES,
Defendant,
and
UNITED STATES STEEL CORPORATION
and NUCOR CORPORATION,
Defendant-Intervenors.
OPINION AND ORDER
[Affirming agency decision on model-match methodology, reconsidering a prior decision of the
court, and ordering a second remand, in action contesting final results of an administrative
review of an antidumping duty order]
Dated: April 25, 2012
Donald B. Cameron, Julie C. Mendoza, R. Will Planert, Brady W. Mills, and Mary S.
Hodgins, Morris, Manning & Martin, LLP, of Washington, DC, for plaintiff.
William R. Rucker and Nicolas Guzman, Drinker Biddle & Reath, LLP, of Chicago, IL,
for plaintiff-intervenor.
Tara K. Hogan, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S.
Department of Justice, of Washington, DC, for defendant. With her on the brief were Tony West,
Assistant Attorney General, Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and Claudia Burke, Assistant
Director. Of counsel on the brief was Daniel J. Calhoun, Attorney, Office of the Chief Counsel
for Import Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, of Washington, DC.
Court No. 09-00130 Page 2
Jeffrey D. Gerrish, Ellen J. Schneider, and Robert E. Lighthizer, Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom LLP, of Washington, DC, for defendant-intervenor United States Steel
Corporation.
Timothy C. Brightbill and Alan H. Price, Wiley Rein LLP, of Washington, DC, for
defendant-intervenor Nucor Corporation.
Stanceu, Judge: Plaintiff Union Steel Manufacturing Co., Ltd. (“Union”) brought this
action in 2009 to contest the final determination (“Final Results”) issued by the International
Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce (“Commerce” or the “Department”), that
concluded the Department’s fourteenth periodic administrative review of an antidumping duty
order on imports of certain corrosion-resistant carbon steel flat products (“CORE”) from the
Republic of Korea (“Korea”). Compl. (Mar. 24, 2009), ECF No. 5; Certain Corrosion-Resistant
Carbon Steel Flat Products from the Republic of Korea: Notice of Final Results of the
Fourteenth Admin. Review & Partial Rescission, 74 Fed. Reg. 11,082 (Mar. 16, 2009) (“Final
Results”). The Final Results assigned Union, a Korean producer and exporter of CORE subject
to the order, a weighted-average dumping margin of 7.56%. Final Results, 74 Fed. Reg.
at 11,083.
In its first opinion and order in this case, Union Steel v. United States, 33 CIT __, Slip
Op. 09-47 (May 19, 2009) (“Union Steel I”), the court ruled that Whirlpool Corporation had
plaintiff-intervenor status as of right and enjoined the liquidation of entries of Whirlpool’s
merchandise pending judicial review. In its second opinion and order, Union Steel v. United
States, 35 CIT __, 755 F. Supp. 2d 1304 (2011) (“Union Steel II”), the court held that Commerce
acted lawfully in basing Union’s general and administrative (“G&A”) expenses and interest
expense on financial statements that pertained to seven of the twelve months of the period of
review and in using the “zeroing” methodology in determining Union’s weighted-average
Court No. 09-00130 Page 3
dumping margin for the Final Results. Id. at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1315-16. Further, in
response to defendant’s request for a voluntary remand, the court ordered that Commerce
reconsider its denial of Union’s request for a revision to the model-match methodology
Commerce applied in the fourteenth review. Id. at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1315-16.
Before the court is the determination (“Remand Redetermination”) Commerce issued in
response to the remand order in Union Steel II. Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to
Remand (July 15, 2011), ECF No. 115 (“Remand Redetermination”). In the Remand
Redetermination, Commerce altered its model-match methodology with respect to the treatment
of “laminated” CORE, which is CORE that is coated with a plastic film. In the Final Results,
Commerce considered laminated CORE products to be products identical in physical
characteristics with subject CORE that was painted but not laminated. Under the altered
methodology, Commerce no longer compared subject non-laminated, painted CORE products
with laminated CORE products as products identical in physical characteristics. Id. at 2. The
Remand Redetermination lowered Union’s weighted-average dumping margin from 7.56% to
7.45%. Id. at 18.
Also before the court is Union’s motion requesting that the court reconsider its decision
in Union Steel II affirming the Department’s use of zeroing in the fourteenth administrative
review. Union bases its motion for reconsideration on an intervening judicial decision, Dongbu
Steel Co. v. United States, 635 F.3d 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (“Dongbu”), in which the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (“Court of Appeals”) declined to affirm a judgment of the
Court of International Trade sustaining the Department’s use of zeroing in an administrative
review of an antidumping duty order.
Court No. 09-00130 Page 4
The court affirms the Department’s decision on remand to apply a revised model-match
methodology, which plaintiff supports and defendant-intervenors oppose. The court issues a
second remand order so that Commerce may provide an explanation of its decision to apply
zeroing that addresses the issues identified by the Court of Appeals in Dongbu.
I. BACKGROUND
Background on this litigation is set forth in the court’s prior opinions and orders and
supplemented herein. Union Steel I, 33 CIT at __, Slip Op. 09-47, at 3-7; Union Steel II, 35 CIT
at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1306-07.
Union brought three claims in this action. In Count I of its complaint, plaintiff
challenged the Department’s construction of section 771(35) of the Tariff Act of 1930 (“Tariff
Act”), 19 U.S.C. § 1677(35) (2006), according to which the Department applied its practice of
“zeroing,” i.e., the deeming of the sales a respondent makes in the United States at prices above
normal value to have individual dumping margins of zero rather than negative margins. Compl.
¶¶ 8-15. In Count II, Union challenged the Department’s “model match” methodology as
applied in the fourteenth review, claiming that Commerce unlawfully compared Union’s U.S.
sales of non-laminated, painted CORE products to Union’s home market sales of both painted
CORE products and laminated CORE products. Id. ¶¶ 16-17. In Count III, Union challenged
the Department’s decisions to use Union’s 2007 financial statement, prepared for a fiscal year
corresponding to the 2007 calendar year, to determine a G&A expense ratio and the decision to
use the fiscal-year 2007 financial statement (also based on the calendar year) of Union’s parent,
Dongkuk Steel Mill (“DSM”), to determine Union’s interest expense ratio. Id. ¶¶ 18-19. Union
claimed that Commerce should have used the fiscal-year 2006 statements and that, in failing to
Court No. 09-00130 Page 5
do so, impermissibly departed from its practice, established during previous reviews of Union, of
calculating Union’s G&A expense and interest expense ratios using financial statements
applying to the first, five-month portion of the POR (August through December) rather than
financial statements pertaining to the second, seven-month portion of the POR (January through
July). Id.
Addressing Count I of the complaint, the court in Union Steel II sustained the
Department’s use of the zeroing methodology in determining Union’s weighted-average
dumping margin in the fourteenth review. Union Steel II, 35 CIT at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d
at 1314-15. Responding to defendant’s request for a voluntary remand on the claim in Count II,
the court ordered Commerce to “review and reconsider its ‘model match’ methodology” and
alter that methodology “if substantial record evidence does not support a finding that only minor
and commercially insignificant physical differences distinguish Union’s laminated products from
the non-laminated products to which the Department compared Union’s laminated products.” Id.
at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1316. With respect to the claim in Count III, the court sustained the
Department’s decisions to use the 2007, rather than the 2006, financial statements. Id. at __,
755 F. Supp. 2d at 1307-12.
Plaintiff filed its motion for reconsideration on April 5, 2011, relying on the decision of
the Court of Appeals in Dongbu. Pl. Union Steel’s Mot. for Reconsideration (April 5, 2011),
ECF No. 106. On May 9, 2011, defendant and defendant-intervenors Nucor Corporation
(“Nucor”) and United States Steel Corporation (“U.S. Steel”) opposed this motion. Def.’s Resp.
in Opp’n to Pl. Union Steel’s Mot. for Reconsideration (May 9, 2011), ECF No. 114 (“Def.’s
Opp’n”); Def.-Intervenor’s Opp’n to Union Steel’s Mot. for Reconsideration (May 9, 2011),
Court No. 09-00130 Page 6
ECF No. 112 (“Nucor’s Opp’n”); Mem. of Def.-Intervenor United States Steel Corporation in
Opp’n to Pl. Union Steel’s Mot. for Reconsideration (May 9, 2011), ECF No. 113 (“U.S. Steel’s
Opp’n”).
Commerce filed the Remand Redetermination on July 15, 2011. Remand
Redetermination. Plaintiff commented in support of the Remand Redetermination on August 15,
2011. Pl. Union Steel’s Comments on the U.S. Department of Commerce’s July 15, 2011 Final
Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Ct. Remand (Aug. 15, 2011), ECF No. 120. On the same
day, defendant-intervenors filed comments opposing the Remand Redetermination. Comments
on Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Ct. Order (Aug. 15, 2011), ECF No. 118
(“Nucor’s Comments”); United States Steel Corporation’s Comments on the Final Results of
Redetermination Pursuant to Remand Issued by the Department of Commerce (Aug. 15, 2011),
ECF No. 119 (“U.S. Steel’s Comments”). On August 26, 2011, defendant replied to the
comments of defendant-intervenors. Def.’s Resp. to Def.-Intervenors’ Comments on the
Department of Commerce’s Remand Results (Aug. 26, 2011), ECF No. 123.
Finally, on February 15, 2012, Union notified the court of a notice published by
Commerce indicating that going forward Commerce no longer will employ the zeroing
methodology in administrative reviews of antidumping duty orders. Notice of Supplemental
Authority (Feb. 15, 2012), ECF No. 129 (citing Antidumping Proceedings: Calculation of the
Weighted-Average Dumping Margin & Assessment Rate in Certain Antidumping Duty
Proceedings; Final Modification, 77 Fed. Reg. 8,101 (Feb. 14, 2012)). Defendant moved for
leave to reply to this notification on March 6, 2012. Def.’s Mot. for Leave to File Resp. to Pl.’s
Notice of Supplemental Authority (Mar. 6, 2012), ECF No. 130.
Court No. 09-00130 Page 7
II. DISCUSSION
The court exercises jurisdiction under section 201 of the Customs Courts Act of 1980,
28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2006), pursuant to which the court reviews actions commenced under
section 516A of the Tariff Act, 19 U.S.C. § 1516a, including an action contesting the final
results of an administrative review that Commerce issues under section 751 of the Tariff Act,
19 U.S.C. § 1675(a). 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).
The Remand Redetermination altered the model-match methodology as applied in the
fourteenth review so that U.S. sales of Union’s painted CORE products are no longer compared
with home-market sales of products in a category including both painted CORE products and
products that were laminated with plastic. In the Remand Redetermination, Commerce also
“adjusted the cost of production to account for purchases of steel substrate from affiliated parties
in Union’s margin calculation,” citing a remand redetermination Commerce prepared in another
case. Remand Redetermination 2 (citing United States Steel Corp. v. United States, 35 CIT __,
759 F. Supp. 2d 1349 (2011) (“US Steel”)). The court previously ordered that Commerce, in
preparing the remand redetermination at issue in this case, “take into account any other
adjustments to redetermined dumping margins resulting from the court’s remand order in US
Steel, which pertains to the same administrative review that is the subject of this litigation.”
Union Steel II, 35 CIT at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1314 n.6. The court now has affirmed the
Department’s decisions set forth in the remand redetermination responding to the court’s order in
US Steel. United States Steel Corp. v. United States, 36 CIT __, Slip Op. 12-55 (April 25, 2012).
Court No. 09-00130 Page 8
A. The Remand Redetermination Lawfully Determined that the Non-Laminated, Painted CORE
May Not Be Compared to the Laminated Core as Products “Identical in Physical Characteristics”
In an administrative review, Commerce determines, for each entry of the subject
merchandise, the normal value, the export price or constructed export price, and the dumping
margin. 19 U.S.C. § 1675(a)(2). Determining a dumping margin requires Commerce to
compare the export price or constructed export price with the normal value, which typically is
based on the price at which the foreign like product is sold for consumption in the exporting
country (the “home market”). Id. § 1677b(a)(1)(B). The statute directs in § 1677(16)(A) that
Commerce, in determining the foreign like product, first seek to compare a U.S. sale of subject
merchandise with a home-market sale of merchandise “which is identical in physical
characteristics with, and was produced in the same country by the same person as, that
merchandise.” If no such comparison can be satisfactorily made, Commerce, in accordance with
§ 1677(16)(B), seeks to match the subject merchandise with merchandise produced in the same
country, produced by the same person, that is “like that merchandise in component material or
materials and in the purposes for which used,” and “approximately equal in commercial value to
that merchandise.” If the latter comparison cannot be satisfactorily made under § 1677(16)(B),
Commerce is to seek to match the subject merchandise under § 1677(16)(C) with merchandise
produced in the same country and by the same person that is “of the same general class or kind
as the subject merchandise . . . like that merchandise in the purposes for which used, and . . . may
reasonably be compared with that merchandise.”
To determine the sales in the home market that matched the sales of subject merchandise,
a process to which Commerce refers as “model matching,” Commerce requested information
from respondents on “Product Characteristics,” including, as is relevant here, “Type.” See Letter
Court No. 09-00130 Page 9
from Commerce to Dongbu Steel Co., Ltd. 34 (Dec. 6, 2007) (Admin. R. Doc. No. 4454).1 The
questionnaire directed respondents to classify each of their CORE products within one of four
type categories: (1) “Clad (metals bonded by the hot-rolling process), less than 3/16" in
thickness”; (2) “Coated/plated with metal: Painted, or coated with organic silicate,
Polyvinylidene Fluoride (‘PVDF’)”; (3) “Coated/plated with metal: Painted, or coated with
organic silicate, All Other (i.e., other than PVDF)”; and (4) “Not painted, and not coated with
organic silicate.” Id. In response, Union proposed reporting its sales of laminated CORE using
an additional type category described as “Coated/plated with metal: Laminated with film.”
Letter from Union to the Sec’y of Commerce B-5-B-6 (Feb. 4, 2008) (Admin. R. Doc. No. 4530)
(“Union’s Feb. 4, 2008 Questionnaire Resp.”).
In the Final Results, Commerce rejected Union’s proposal that laminated CORE
comprise a separate type category for model-matching purposes and accordingly included
laminated CORE within the “other painted” type category. Issues & Decisions Mem.,
A-580-816, ARP 7-07, at 7-8 (Mar. 9, 2009) (Admin. R. Doc. No. 4868) (“Decision Mem.”). As
a result, Commerce compared, as merchandise “identical in physical characteristics” for
purposes of § 1677(16)(A), subject merchandise consisting of non-laminated, painted CORE
with not only home-market, non-laminated, painted CORE but also with Union’s home-market
sales of laminated CORE products, which Union did not sell in the U.S. market during the POR.
Union Steel II, 35 CIT at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1312. Commerce explained its rejecting Union’s
1
The administrative record includes the cover letter that the International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce (“Commerce” or the “Department”) sent to each
respondent with the initial information requests in this review but includes the full information
request only for another respondent in the review, Dongbu Steel Co., Ltd. The court presumes
that the information requests were identical.
Court No. 09-00130 Page 10
proposed change to the model-match criteria by stating that Union had “not provided substantial
evidence that 1) the model-match criteria are not reflective of the subject merchandise in
question, 2) there have been industry-wide changes to the product that merit a modification, or
3) there is some other compelling reason.” Decision Mem. 7. Commerce noted that Union had
shown certain differences in costs between laminated and non-laminated, painted CORE
products, but called these differences “overstat[ed]” and rejected Union’s proposed change as
“the same methodology that the Department considered in the previous review and found to be
without merit.” Id.2
In response to Union’s challenging before the court the Department’s decision to reject
Union’s proposed change to the model-match methodology, Compl. ¶¶ 16-17, defendant
requested a voluntary remand. Union Steel II, 35 CIT at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1312-13. The
court’s remand order on the model-match issue was “in essentially the form proposed in
defendant’s draft order, but updated to reflect the significant development” since the voluntary
remand request. Id. at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1313. The development to which the court referred
was the court’s decision in litigation challenging the final results of the previous (thirteenth)
administrative review of the order, in which the court held the Department’s model-match
methodology “unlawful absent a finding of fact, supported by record evidence, that laminated
CORE and painted, nonlaminated CORE are ‘identical in physical characteristics’ within the
meaning of that statutory provision [i.e., 19 U.S.C. § 1677(16)(A)].” Id. at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d
2
Commerce also considered and rejected the argument that “laminated products were not
considered when the model-match methodology was developed” and the argument that a
Commerce memorandum from a previous review indicated that “certain laminated products were
outside the scope.” Issues & Decisions Mem., A-580-816, ARP 7-07, at 7 (Mar. 9, 2009)
(Admin. R. Doc. No. 4868) (“Decision Mem.”).
Court No. 09-00130 Page 11
at 1314 (citing Union Steel v. United States, 35 CIT __, __, 753 F. Supp. 2d 1317, 1322-23
(2011) (“Union Steel III”)). The court’s remand order allowed the Department to “reopen the
record to investigate whether only minor and commercially insignificant physical differences
distinguish Union’s laminated products from the non-laminated products to which the
Department compared Union’s laminated products” and ordered that:
if substantial record evidence does not support a finding that only minor and
commercially insignificant physical differences distinguish Union’s laminated
products from the non-laminated products to which the Department compared
Union’s laminated products, the Department must alter the model match
methodology that was applied in the Final Results so that laminated and
nonlaminated CORE products are not compared according to 19 U.S.C.
§ 1677(16)(A) . . . .
Id. at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1316.
In the Remand Redetermination, Commerce concluded that reopening the record was not
necessary. Remand Redetermination 5. Noting that the record contained evidence pertaining to
the cost of manufacture, sales price, production processes, and marketing of both laminated and
non-laminated, painted CORE, the Department stated that “sufficient factual information already
exists on the record for the Department to determine whether the physical differences
distinguishing laminated CORE products and non-laminated, painted CORE products are minor
and not commercially significant.” Id. Upon considering the record evidence, Commerce
determined that the two groups of products were not identical in physical characteristics when
considered under 19 U.S.C. § 1677(16)(A). Id. Commerce based this determination on four
findings: (1) the two product groups are distinguished by significant physical differences, id. at 7
(“[L]aminated CORE products by their very nature are not painted products” and “are coated by
attaching a plastic film to a CORE substrate”); (2) “the cost of production for laminated CORE
Court No. 09-00130 Page 12
products is higher than other non-laminated, painted CORE products,” id.; (3) “the unit price for
laminated CORE products is considerably higher than the unit price of non-laminated, painted
CORE products,” id. at 8; and (4) laminated and non-laminated products are marketed
differently, the record evidence having demonstrated that “Union and Unico (Union’s affiliate)
both differentiate between laminated CORE products and non-laminated, painted CORE
products in their brochures,” id.
The Department’s determination on remand not to compare laminated and non-laminated,
painted CORE as products “identical in physical characteristics,” 19 U.S.C. § 1677(16)(A), rests
on essential factual findings that are supported by substantial record evidence. Specifically, the
evidence justified the Department’s findings that the two groups of products differed physically
(because of the presence of laminate as opposed to paint) and also differed as to cost of
manufacture, sales price, and marketing. The record evidence, considered on the whole,
supported the finding that the physical differences had commercial significance.
Substantial evidence supports the Department’s finding that the products are physically
different, with a Union questionnaire response indicating that, unlike non-laminated, painted
CORE, laminated CORE has “either a coating of PET (‘Polyethylene Telephthalate’)3 film that is
thermally-sealed onto heated, primer-coated CORE substrate after it passes through a drying
oven or a colored PVC (‘Polyvinyl Chloride’) film attached to the CORE substrate using an
adhesive.” Union’s Feb. 4, 2008 Questionnaire Resp. B-5-B-6; see also Letter from Union to
the Sec’y of Commerce 28 (July 16, 2008) (Admin. R. Doc. No. 4675) (“Union’s July 16, 2008
3
This document, as well as certain others, refers to “Telephthalate,” as opposed to the
more commonly recognized term “terephthalate.”
Court No. 09-00130 Page 13
Questionnaire Resp.”) (“The only substantive difference between laminated products and other
painted CORE products is that a laminated CORE product is one that is coated with a film,
typically either a PET film or a PVC film, instead of being coated with paint.”).
Substantial evidence also supports the Department’s findings that “the cost of production
for laminated CORE products is higher than other non-laminated, painted CORE products” and
that “the unit price for laminated CORE products is considerably higher than the unit price of
non-laminated, painted CORE products.” Remand Redetermination 7-8. In its February 2008
questionnaire response, Union reported that “[l]aminating the steel increases production costs . . .
and the sales price” by a substantial percentage. Union’s Feb. 4, 2008 Questionnaire Resp. B-6.
Union also expressed, in a supplemental questionnaire response in July 2008, that “[b]ecause
PET film and PVC are more expensive than the various paints used for other color coated
products, including PVDF, and require more complicated know-how, the production cost and
sales price are higher than other painted products.” Union’s July 16, 2008 Questionnaire
Resp. 30. These statements are supported by an exhibit to the July 2008 supplemental
questionnaire response showing, first, that the cost to manufacture a unit of laminated CORE
significantly exceeded the cost to manufacture a unit of non-laminated, painted CORE. Id.
exhibit B-20. Second, this exhibit shows that Union’s per-unit sale price for laminated CORE
significantly exceeded the per-unit sale price for the “all other” type of painted CORE. Id.
Next, substantial evidence supports the Department’s finding that laminated and non-
laminated, painted CORE are marketed differently. Remand Redetermination 8. As part of a
January 2008 questionnaire response, Union submitted a document labeled “Union’s and
UNICO’s Product Brochures” listing laminated and non-laminated, painted CORE under
Court No. 09-00130 Page 14
different headings on different pages. Letter from Union to the Sec’y of Commerce exhibit A-28
(Jan. 22, 2008) (Admin. R. Doc. No. 4504). One page referred to “High-tech Steel” and
described three brand names of products that appear to be laminated CORE: (1) “Unipet,” which
features “[t]hermally laminated PET film”; (2) “Unilux,” which is described as “[t]hermally
laminated silver-or-aluminum-deposited high-lux reflection film on the surface of electro-
galvanized steel”; and (3) “White Board,” which is described as “[t]hermally laminated solid
white PET film on the steel surface.” Id. exhibit A-28, at 570.4 Another page referred to “Pre-
painted Steel” and listed several “Available Products,” none of which was advertized as
laminated or as coated in PET or PVC film. Id. exhibit A-28, at 569. Also supporting the
finding that these types of CORE are marketed separately is an exhibit to the July 2008
supplemental questionnaire response that includes a brochures for Unipet labeled “PET Film-
laminated Steel Sheets” and printouts from the website of Unico referring to CORE products
marketed with reference to their laminated quality. Union’s July 16, 2008 Questionnaire Resp.
exhibit B-21.
In summary, Commerce permissibly reached an ultimate determination that laminated
CORE products and non-laminated (“other painted”) CORE products were distinguished by
physical differences that were not minor and were commercially significant. Each of the factual
findings that were essential to the Department’s decision was supported by substantial record
evidence.
4
The brochure describes a fourth brand, “Univure,” which the brochure does not identify
clearly as either laminated or painted CORE. Letter from Union to the Sec’y of Commerce
exhibit A-28, at 570 (Jan. 22, 2008) (Admin. R. Doc. No. 4504) (describing Univure as “Layer
of patterns printed on the steel surface by removing the laminated printed film with various
patterns.”).
Court No. 09-00130 Page 15
Defendant-intervenors offer several reasons why they believe the court is required by law
to reject the Department’s decision on the model-match issue as set forth in the Remand
Redetermination. The court rejects these arguments.
Nucor argues that the Department’s decision is arbitrary and not supported by substantial
evidence, alleging that “the Department has failed to explain why the record evidence that it
previously found unconvincing or inconclusive now provides a sufficient basis to make a model-
match change.” Nucor’s Comments 2. In support of this argument, Nucor cites the Issues and
Decision Memorandum incorporated into the Final Results (“Decision Memorandum”) in
asserting that Commerce previously found that “any differences in physical characteristics,
production processes, and marketing between laminated and painted CORE are minor.” Id. at 3
(citing Decision Mem. 7-8). Nucor also argues that “the Department previously determined that
cost and price data on the record supported maintaining the current model-match criteria.” Id.
at 4. Further, Nucor argues that the Department’s findings in the Remand Redetermination were
not consistent with the Department’s findings in certain proceedings of the thirteenth
administrative review of the order. Nucor’s Comments 3 (citing “an initial remand
determination related to the previous administrative review”). U.S. Steel makes a similar
argument, maintaining that the Remand Redetermination is inconsistent with the Department’s
statements in certain proceedings in the thirteenth administrative review (“13AR”). U.S. Steel’s
Comments 6-10. U.S. Steel argues, specifically, that the Department’s statements were
“inconsistent with specific assessments made by Commerce in the 13AR,” id. at 7, such as
statements regarding the significance of physical differences, id., differences in production
processes, id. at 8, and differences in production costs, id. at 9.
Court No. 09-00130 Page 16
These arguments are unpersuasive. Commerce reached new findings of fact in
determining whether the physical differences between laminated and non-laminated, “other
painted” CORE products were minor and not commercially significant. It did so to comply with
the court’s previous opinion and order, in which the court held that comparing laminated CORE
with painted, non-laminated CORE as identical merchandise is unlawful absent a valid finding of
fact that these two groups of products are “identical in physical characteristics” within the
meaning of 19 U.S.C. § 1677(16)(A). Union Steel II, 35 CIT at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1315-16.
The order directed that Commerce review and reconsider its model-match methodology,
including, specifically, the decision to deny Union’s request that the methodology be changed
with respect to the treatment of laminated CORE. Id. at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1315-16. The
order gave Commerce the option of reaching these factual determinations on the existing record
or reopening the record “to investigate whether only minor and commercially insignificant
physical differences distinguish Union’s laminated products from the non-laminated products to
which the Department compared Union’s laminated products.” Id. at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d
at 1316. Commerce determined that it did not need to reopen the record to make the factual
determinations necessary for compliance with the court’s remand order. For the reasons the
court discussed previously in this opinion and order, the findings on which Commerce based its
ultimate model-match determination are supported by substantial record evidence and,
accordingly, must be upheld on judicial review. Any contrary factual determinations that the
Department may have reached in deciding the model-match issue in the Final Results, or in a
previous administrative review are, therefore, of no moment.
Court No. 09-00130 Page 17
Moreover, it appears that the premise of Nucor’s argument as to the Final Results is
misguided. Although finding broadly that “the current model match methodology regarding
laminated products is reflective of subject merchandise in the instant review,” Decision Mem. 7,
Commerce, in preparing the Final Results, did not set forth clear and specific findings regarding
differences in physical characteristics, production processes, marketing, or price between the
laminated and the non-laminated, painted CORE products that were the subject of the fourteenth
administrative review.5 As a general matter, the Decision Memorandum analyzed whether
Union had shown that the model-match criteria were not reflective of the subject merchandise in
question, whether there had been industry-wide changes to the product that merited a
modification, or whether there was some other compelling reason to change the model-match
criteria. In contrast, the Remand Redetermination, as directed by the court, expressly addressed
5
The Issues and Decision Memorandum stated as follows:
Although Union cites to certain cost information based on its questionnaire
responses submitted in this review, it is the same methodology that the
Department considered in the previous review and found to be without merit.
Union’s cost information showed a comparatively large cost difference when
Union isolated the raw material used solely for lamination, compared with raw
material used for some other painted products. This analysis overstates the
differences between laminated and other painted products because it does not
account for the numerous aspects of total production cost which are the same for
painted and laminated products.
Thus, consistent with the previous reviews of CORE form Korea, the Department
finds that the current model match methodology regarding laminated products is
reflective of subject merchandise in the instant review. Further, neither changes in
industry standards nor other compelling reasons have been presented. Therefore,
we have not changed our model-match methodology in this respect.
Decision Mem. 7-8.
Court No. 09-00130 Page 18
the question of whether the physical differences between laminated and non-laminated, painted
CORE products were minor and not commercially significant.
Nucor is also incorrect in arguing that the Remand Redetermination is deficient for lack
of a satisfactory explanation for the Department’s change in position. As the Remand
Redetermination explains, Commerce changed its position upon applying the legal standard that
Congress established in 19 U.S.C. § 1677(16)(A), as judicially construed.
Nucor objects, further, that Commerce is reversing its position “based on the data and
views of one CORE producer” who “only began challenging the Department’s model-match
before the Court of International Trade after the 13th administrative review,” and that “there is
no evidence on the record that the model-match hierarchy proposed by Union is representative of
the Korean CORE industry, let alone the CORE industry as a whole.” Nucor’s Comments 5.
Nucor submits that approval of Union’s proposal “has the potential to encourage future
manipulation of the model-match criteria by respondents.” Id. The court finds no merit in this
wide-ranging objection. Union unquestionably had the right under section 516A of the Tariff
Act, 19 U.S.C. § 1516a, to challenge as contrary to 19 U.S.C. § 1677(16)(A) the Department’s
model-match methodology as applied to its own products in the fourteenth review. Upon
judicial review, the court was required to adjudicate Union’s claim according to the applicable
standard of review, under which the court must “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).
U.S. Steel argues that Commerce failed to apply the correct legal standard in determining
that the physical differences are commercially significant. U.S. Steel’s Comments 4-6.
Court No. 09-00130 Page 19
According to U.S. Steel, the correct legal standard, as sustained by the Court of Appeals in
Pesquera Mares Australes Ltda. v. United States, 266 F.3d 1372, 1385 (Fed. Cir. 2001), is an
“industry-wide” standard under which the physical differences must be recognized as
commercially significant by an industry as a whole rather than by only an individual producer.
U.S. Steel’s Comments 5. U.S. Steel argues that Commerce erred in the Remand
Redetermination when it “did not apply the industry-wide standard” and instead “based its
analysis solely on Union’s cost of production, prices and product brochures.” Id. at 6. U.S.
Steel argues that “[l]ike the case in Pesquera, here there was absolutely no evidence of industry-
wide acceptance of the difference between paints and laminates as a commercially meaningful
difference.” Id. This was legal error, U.S. Steel maintains, because Commerce was obliged to
supply a reasoned analysis upon changing its prior policies and standards. Id.
U.S. Steel’s argument misconstrues the holding in Pesquera. The case does not hold that
Commerce must find a basis in commercially-established, industry-wide product standards
before concluding that any two groups of products are not “identical in physical characteristics”
for purposes of 19 U.S.C. § 1677(16)(A). In Pesquera, the Court of Appeals cited approvingly
the Department’s relying on industry-wide standards for concluding that there was no
commercially significant difference between “premium” salmon and “super-premium” salmon.
Pequera, 266 F.3d at 1385. The Court of Appeals opined on the advantage of industry-wide
standards in the context of the issue before it, which arose because the two grades of salmon
were shown by record evidence to differ in only minor, commercially insignificant respects, such
as the presence of certain minor aesthetic flaws. Id. at 1383-85. Pesquera upheld the
Department’s comparing as identical sales of salmon meeting a quality grade of “super
Court No. 09-00130 Page 20
premium” with sales of salmon meeting only the quality grade of “premium” because Commerce
found, based on substantial record evidence, that most industry participants did not distinguish
between the two grades. Id. This case presents facts distinctly different from Pesquera. Here,
the two groups of products compared in the Final Results were not shown by substantial record
evidence to be “identical in physical characteristics” within the meaning of the statutory
provision.
U.S. Steel also contends, inaccurately, that Commerce improperly construed evidence
that laminated and non-laminated, painted CORE go through separate production processes as
establishing that these products had commercially significant physical differences. U.S. Steel’s
Comments 8-9. Commerce did not base its conclusion of commercial significance solely on the
“the fact that different production processes happen to be used.” Id. at 8. Instead, Commerce
determined that different production processes resulted in the physical differences that, for
various reasons grounded in record evidence, were commercially significant. Remand
Redetermination 9 (“Union’s questionnaire responses, and Union’s price and cost data,
demonstrate that the physical differences between laminated CORE products and non-laminated,
painted CORE products are neither minor nor commercially insignificant.”).
For the reasons discussed in the foregoing, the court must affirm the decision in the
Remand Redetermination not to compare the subject non-laminated, painted CORE with home-
market laminated CORE as merchandise identical in physical characteristics under 19 U.S.C.
§ 1677(16)(A). Based on the Department’s valid findings and the reasoning set forth in the
Remand Redetermination, the court affirms the Department’s decision to classify the laminated
Court No. 09-00130 Page 21
CORE products as a separate type category and thereby exclude Union’s home-market sales of
this laminated CORE from the respective comparisons.
B. The Court Reconsiders its Prior Decision Upholding the Use of Zeroing in the Fourteenth
Review and Orders an Appropriate Remand
Plaintiff seeks reconsideration of the court’s decision in Union Steel II affirming the
Department’s use of the zeroing methodology. Plaintiff argues that after Union Steel II was
issued, Dongbu Steel Co. v. United States, 635 F.3d 1363, established that the court’s decision
affirming zeroing was incorrect. Pl.’s Mot. 1-2. In Union Steel II, the court relied on various
decisions of the Court of Appeals, issued prior to Dongbu, which had upheld the Department’s
use of zeroing in administrative reviews despite the Department’s having ceased applying the
zeroing methodology in original investigations. Union Steel II, 35 CIT at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d
at 1315. Plaintiff argues that the prior decisions of the Court of Appeals are not precedents
supporting the use of zeroing in this case, citing language in Dongbu in which the Court of
Appeals stated that it had “never considered” the precise question of whether Commerce
permissibly could interpret the language of 19 U.S.C. § 1677(35) one way with respect to
investigations and another way with respect to reviews. Pl.’s Mot. 3-4; Dongbu, 635 F.3d
at 1370.
The court first addresses the question of the authority under which it may reconsider its
prior order. The authority under which plaintiff moves, USCIT Rule 59(a)(2), does not apply
here. See Union Steel v. United States, 35 CIT __, __, 804 F. Supp. 2d 1356, 1366-67 (2011)
(“Union Steel IV”). USCIT Rule 59(a)(2) applies “[a]fter a nonjury trial” and allows the court to
reconsider prior decisions when a party moves for a new trial or rehearing “not later than 30 days
after the entry of the judgment or order.” USCIT R. 59(b). Although the Court of International
Court No. 09-00130 Page 22
Trade previously has concluded that the concept of a “nonjury trial” encompasses matters, such
as this case, decided on the agency record, see NSK Corp. v. United States, 32 CIT 1497, 1502,
593 F. Supp. 2d 1355, 1362 (2008), Rule 59(a)(2) does not authorize the court to hear plaintiff’s
motion because that motion, filed on April 5, 2011, came more than thirty days after the court’s
February 15, 2011 decision in this case. See USCIT R. 6(b)(2) (“The court must not extend the
time to act under . . . 59(b)”). Nothing in the court’s rules, however, provides that USCIT
Rule 59 is the only method by which the court may reconsider a prior order. See Timken Co. v.
United States, 6 CIT 76, 78, 569 F. Supp. 65, 68 (1983); Union Steel IV, 35 CIT at __,
804 F. Supp. 2d at 1367.
The alternative authority cited by plaintiff, USCIT Rule 60(b)(6), also is inapplicable to
plaintiff’s motion because it applies only to a final judgment, which has not yet been entered in
this case. See USCIT Rule 60(b)(6) (stating that “the court may relieve a party . . . from a final
judgment, order or proceeding for . . . any other reason that justifies relief.”). As the advisory
notes to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure clarify, Rule 60(b) applies only to final decisions.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b), advisory notes (“[I]nterlocutory judgments are not brought within the
restrictions of the rule.”).
Instead, the court may reconsider its decision in Union Steel II pursuant to its general
authority, which is recognized by USCIT Rule 54, to reconsider a non-final order prior to
entering final judgment. Rule 54 states that “any order . . . that adjudicates fewer than all the
claims or the rights and liabilities of fewer than all the parties does not end the action . . . and
may be revised at any time before the entry of judgment.” USCIT R. 54(b). As has been
observed with respect to Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b), motions for reconsideration not subject to
Court No. 09-00130 Page 23
Rule 60(b) “are left subject to the complete power of the court rendering them to afford such
relief from them as justice requires.” See Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b), advisory notes. The court
previously relied on this general authority in its decision reconsidering the order upholding the
use of zeroing in the thirteenth administrative review of this order. Union Steel IV, 35 CIT at __,
804 F. Supp. 2d at 1367 (citing Timken, 6 CIT at 78, 569 F. Supp. at 68 (“[T]he court retains the
plenary power to modify or alter its prior non-final rulings, particularly where the equitable
powers of the court are invoked.”)).6
The court concludes that reconsideration of its prior decision affirming the use of zeroing
is warranted. In two decisions issued in 2011, JTEKT Corp. v. United States, 642 F.3d 1378,
1383-85 (Fed. Cir. 2011) and Dongbu, the Court of Appeals held that the final results of
administrative reviews in which zeroing was used must be remanded so that Commerce may
explain its interpreting the language of § 1677(35) inconsistently with respect to the use of
zeroing in investigations and the use of zeroing in administrative reviews. Following the
decisions of the Court of Appeals in JTEKT Corp. and Dongbu, remands to Commerce for such
an explanation have been ordered in previous cases before this Court. See, e.g., SKF USA Inc. v.
United States, 35 CIT __, __, 800 F. Supp. 2d 1316, 1326 (2011); SKF USA Inc. v. United States,
35 CIT __, __, Slip Op. 11-94, at 10-13 (Aug. 2, 2011); JTEKT Corp. v. United States, 35 CIT
__, __, 780 F. Supp. 2d 1357, 1363-64 (2011).
6
Although this Court in a prior case “declin[ed] to find the authority to rehear
interlocutory orders under USCIT Rule 54(b),” it did so when reconsideration under USCIT
Rule 59(a)(2) remained available, and thus that case did not involve the issue before the court in
this case, in which the time for a motion under USCIT Rule 59 has lapsed. NSK Corp. v. United
States, 32 CIT 1497, 1502 n.7, 593 F. Supp. 2d 1355, 1362 n.7 (2008).
Court No. 09-00130 Page 24
The court does not have before it a statutory construction by the Department that is
satisfactory under the reasoning of Dongbu and JTEKT Corp. Therefore, the court will set aside
its previous affirmance of the use of zeroing in Union Steel II and will direct Commerce to
provide the explanation contemplated by the Court of Appeals in Dongbu and JTEKT Corp.,
each of which questioned the Department’s construction of § 1677(35) and declined to affirm the
judgment of the Court of International Trade upholding the use of zeroing in an administrative
review of an antidumping duty order. See Dongbu, 635 F.3d at 1371-73; JTEKT Corp., 642 F.3d
at 1383-85. The Decision Memorandum attempts to explain the inconsistent interpretation of
§ 1677(35) using a rationale essentially the same as the one the Court of Appeals rejected in
JTEKT Corp. Decision Mem. 10-11. After providing a list of distictions between investigations
and administrative reviews, the Decision Memorandum summarily concludes that “[b]ecause of
these distinctions,” the Department’s inconsistent interpretation of § 1677(35) was not
“improper.” Id.7 Missing is reasoning adequate to link the identified distinctions to the
7
The entire discussion on the statutory construction issue reads as follows:
The Federal Circuit (Federal Circuit) has found the language and congressional
intent behind section 771(35) of the Act to be ambiguous. Furthermore, antidumping
investigations and administrative reviews are different proceedings with different
purposes. Specifically, in antidumping investigations, the Act specifies particular
types of comparisons that may be used to calculate dumping margins and the
conditions under which those types of comparisons may be used. The Act discusses
the types of comparisons used in administrative reviews. [The] Department’s
regulations further clarify the types of comparisons that will be used in each type of
proceeding. In antidumping investigations, the Department generally uses
average-to-average comparisons, whereas in administrative reviews the Department
generally uses average-to-transaction comparisons. The purpose of the dumping
margin calculation also varies significantly between antidumping investigations and
reviews. In antidumping investigations, the primary function of the dumping margin
is to determine whether an antidumping duty order will be imposed on the subject
(continued...)
Court No. 09-00130 Page 25
Department’s varying constructions of the words of the statute in the two contexts. The Court of
Appeals concluded in JTEKT Corp. that providing this list of distinctions “failed to address the
relevant question—why is it a reasonable interpretation of the statute to zero in administrative
reviews, but not in investigations?” JTEKT Corp., 642 F.3d at 1384.8
The arguments other parties to this case advance in opposition to reconsideration are not
persuasive. Defendant argues that Dongbu does not justify reconsideration because Dongbu was
limited to its unique procedural setting, in which Commerce lacked opportunity to respond to the
plaintiff’s statutory interpretation argument. Def.’s Opp’n 4-5. The court does not read the
opinion in Dongbu so narrowly as to consider the reasoning of Dongbu inapplicable here. To do
so would miss the more general point that in Dongbu, as well as in JTEKT Corp., the Court of
Appeals refused to affirm a judgment of the Court of International Trade upholding the use of
zeroing in an administrative review. Moreover, JTEKT Corp. vacated a judgment upholding the
7
(...continued)
imports. In administrative reviews, in contrast, the dumping margin is the basis for
the assessment of antidumping duties on entries of merchandise subject to the
antidumping duty order. Because of these distinctions, the Department’s limiting of
the Final Modification to antidumping investigations involving average-to-average
comparisons does not render its interpretation of section 771(35) of the Act in
administrative reviews improper. Therefore, because section 771(35) of the Act is
ambiguous, the Department may interpret that provision differently in the context of
antidumping investigations involving average-to-average comparisons than in the
context of administrative reviews.
Decision Mem. 10-11.
8
In litigation arising from the sixteenth administrative review of the order at issue in this
case, the Court of International Trade upheld an explanation by Commerce addressing the
statutory construction issue identified in Dongbu Steel Co. v. United States, 635 F.3d 1363 (Fed.
Cir. 2011) and JTEKT Corp. v. United States, 642 F.3d 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2011). Union Steel v.
United States, 36 CIT __, Slip Op. 12-24 (Feb. 27, 2012). Neither that explanation nor one
similar to it is before the court in this proceeding.
Court No. 09-00130 Page 26
Department’s use of zeroing when the Department not only had an opportunity to explain such
use but did so using essentially the same rationale offered here.
U.S. Steel argues that the court should not reconsider its decision upholding zeroing
because Dongbu did not hold the Department’s inconsistent interpretations of § 1677(35) to be
unlawful but merely held these interpretations to be insufficiently explained and, therefore, did
not change the controlling law. U.S. Steel’s Opp’n 5-6. Although U.S. Steel is correct that the
Court of Appeals has not held the Department’s interpretations unlawful, it does not follow that
reconsideration is inappropriate. JTEKT Corp. and Dongbu signify that the Department’s
interpretation of § 1677(35) is unsustainable absent an explanation different from the one the
Department put forth in the fourteenth review. See JTEKT Corp., 642 F.3d at 1383-85; Dongbu,
635 F.3d at 1371-73.
Nucor’s objections are similarly unpersuasive. Nucor cites the fact that Union’s motion
for reconsideration was filed more than thirty days after the court’s decision in Union Steel II,
thus making reconsideration under USCIT Rule 59(a) unavailable, and also cites the
inapplicability of USCIT Rule 60(b) to the non-final order issued in Union Steel II. Nucor’s
Opp’n 2-4. Nucor’s arguments err in failing to recognize the court’s general authority to
reconsider non-final orders.
In summary, remand in this case is appropriate so that Commerce may alter its decision
to apply zeroing with respect to Union in the fourteenth review or, alternatively, provide an
explanation as contemplated in JTEKT Corp. and Dongbu, i.e., an explanation of how the
language of 19 U.S.C. § 1677(35) as applied to the use of zeroing permissibly may be construed
Court No. 09-00130 Page 27
in one way with respect to investigations and the opposite way with respect to administrative
reviews.
III. CONCLUSION AND ORDER
Upon consideration of all proceedings and submissions herein, and upon due
deliberation, it is hereby
ORDERED that the Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand (July 15,
2011), ECF No. 115 (“Remand Redetermination”) be, and hereby are, AFFIRMED with respect
to the decision stated therein to modify the model-match methodology of the International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce (“Commerce” or the “Department”); it is further
ORDERED that Defendant’s Motion for Leave to File Response to Plaintiff’s Notice of
Supplemental Authority, as filed on March 6, 2012, be, and hereby is, GRANTED, and that
Defendant’s Response to Plaintiff’s Notice of Supplemental Authority be, and hereby is,
accepted as filed on March 6, 2012; it is further
ORDERED that plaintiff’s Motion for Reconsideration, filed on April 5, 2011, be, and
hereby is, GRANTED; it is further
ORDERED that the court’s previous affirmance of the Department’s decision in Certain
Corrosion-Resistant Carbon Steel Flat Products from the Republic of Korea: Notice of Final
Results of the Fourteenth Admin. Review & Partial Rescission, 74 Fed. Reg. 11,082 (Mar. 16,
2009) (“Final Results”) to apply the zeroing methodology be, and hereby is, set aside; it is
further
ORDERED that, on remand, Commerce must reconsider its decision in the Final Results
to apply the zeroing methodology and must either alter that decision or explain how the language
of 19 U.S.C. § 1677(35) permissibly may be construed in one way with respect to the use of the
zeroing methodology in antidumping investigations and the opposite way with respect to the use
of that methodology in antidumping administrative reviews, and shall recalculate any
antidumping duty margin applied to plaintiff that is affected by an alteration of that decision; it is
further
ORDERED that Commerce shall file the second remand redetermination with the court
not later than sixty (60) days from the date of this Opinion and Order, and that plaintiff and
defendant-intervenors shall have thirty (30) days from the date on which Commerce files the
second remand redetermination to file any comments thereon; and it is further
Court No. 09-00130 Page 28
ORDERED that defendant shall be allowed fifteen (15) days from the last filing of any
comments by plaintiff or defendant-intervenors in which to file a rebuttal or other response to the
comments of plaintiff or defendant-intervenors.
/s/ Timothy C. Stanceu
Timothy C. Stanceu
Judge
Dated: April 25, 2012
New York, New York