American Grape Growers v. United States

604 F. Supp. 1245, 9 Ct. Int'l Trade 103, 9 C.I.T. 103, 1985 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 1605
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedMarch 11, 1985
DocketCourt 84-4-00575
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 604 F. Supp. 1245 (American Grape Growers v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of International Trade primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Grape Growers v. United States, 604 F. Supp. 1245, 9 Ct. Int'l Trade 103, 9 C.I.T. 103, 1985 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 1605 (cit 1985).

Opinion

Memorandum Opinion and Order

WATSON, Judge:

In this opinion the Court rules on a motion to dismiss made by defendant-intervenor Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc. (Sea-grams), joined in by defendant intervenor Wellington Importers, Ltd. (Wellington) and supported by the defendant International Trade Commission (ITC).

The motion to dismiss attacks the standing of the plaintiffs to bring this action under the Trade Agreements Act of 1979, as well as their “standing” to be petitioners in the administrative proceeding of which this action is a judicial review.

This action was brought to obtain judicial review of the ITC determinations that there was no reasonable indication of material injury or threat of material injury by reason of importations of table wine from France and Italy, which were alleged to be subsidized and sold at less than fair value. 1

The motion has five prongs: In the first, the standing of those plaintiffs who are grape growers is attacked on the ground that they are not “interested parties” within the meaning of 19 U.S.C. § 1516(a). This point is well taken and they must be dismissed from the action.

The term “interested parties,” insofar as it is germane here, is limited to producers of a product like that subject to investigation. 19 U.S.C. § 1677(9). Obviously, table wine and grapes are different products. The only possible justification of standing for the grape growers is a reading of the law which would make an exception for agricultural raw products.

Plaintiffs argue that Congress intended to include producers of raw agricultural products within the industry producing the more advanced product. The Court does not agree that this momentous enlargement of the normal understanding of the term industry and of the concept of “like product” is found in the law.

An interested party, in the terms relevant here, is simply defined in 19 U.S.C. § 1677(9)(C), as a producer of a “like product,” which is further defined in 19 U.S.C. § 1677(10) as a product like the article subject to an investigation.

It is true that in discussing the question of determining whether an industry is being materially injured the legislators did focus on the “special nature of agriculture,” and used the example of the “livestock sector” in which apparently favorable economic signs in the beef producing industry could, in reality, indicate the hardship of the cattle raisers. S.Rep. No. 96-249, 96th Cong., 1st Sess. 88 (1979), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1979, p. 381. But this recognition of the subtleties of injury determination in the agricultural area is a far cry from the promulgation of a general rule that in all cases the producers of agricultural raw products be joined with the industry producing the final product.

The logic of the legislative concern summarized above extends only to agricultural products which are completely devoted to *1248 the production of the more advanced product under investigation. Grapes, of which 55 percent are apparently used in wine production, are utilized to a significant extent for other purposes, notably, as fruit and for the production of raisins. The other uses are too extensive to allow the production of grapes to be considered part and parcel of the production of table wine.

The grape growers argue that the ITC has accepted other agricultural raw products as part of an industry producing a more advanced product. They point to investigations in which orange growers were included in the frozen concentrated orange juice industry; 2 sheep growers and feed lot operators were included in the lamb meat industry; 3 sugar beet and sugar cane growers were included in the sugar producing industry; 4 tomato growers were included in the tomato end-product industry; 5 and red raspberry growers were included in the end-product industry. 6

In those instances however, substantially all of the raw product was dedicated to the production of the product under investigation. Assuming this to be a proper understanding of the concept of industry and a correct interpretation of the legislative intent, it still does not benefit the grape growers in this action. Their raw agricultural product is not dedicated to the same extent to the production of table wine. It cannot be accepted that they fall within the original description of interested parties, even when it is given an expansive application to special agricultural situations.

As a final point on the question of the standing of the grape growers, the Court considers this a situation in which it is possible to reason backwards from the amendment made to include them in the definition of “industry” in the Trade and Tariff Act of 1984. 7 In some circumstances reasoning from an amendment may be a double-edged sword. It might be a specific expression of something that was already in the law. Here however, it is clear that what has been done is the addition of grape growers to a category in which they would normally not belong.

The plain language of the amendment and the limitation of the inclusion to a period of two years 8 strongly suggests that the purpose was the temporary addition of grape growers and not the expression of a permanent pre-existing meaning of the term “industry.”

All these considerations lead the Court to conclude that, under the Trade Agreements Act of 1979, grape growers were not part of the industry for the purpose of an investigation of injury to the table wine industry and were not interested parties within the meaning of the law.

The remaining grounds of the motion to dismiss are rejected.

The movants assert that those plaintiffs who make table wine were too small a percentage of the table wine industry to be proper petitioners on behalf of that industry. For this proposition, they rely on Gilmore Steel Corp. v. United States, 8 CIT -, 585 F.Supp. 670 (1984). This point, however, is not properly raised in a motion *1249 to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds. It does not relate to a party’s standing to bring an action in this Court or to any other aspect of the jurisdiction of the Court. It attacks one of the implicit determinations of the ITC, namely, the determination that the petitioners were entitled to file a petition in the administrative proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
604 F. Supp. 1245, 9 Ct. Int'l Trade 103, 9 C.I.T. 103, 1985 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 1605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-grape-growers-v-united-states-cit-1985.