Armco, Inc. v. United States

733 F. Supp. 1514, 14 Ct. Int'l Trade 211, 14 C.I.T. 211, 1990 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 735
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedMarch 29, 1990
DocketCourt 88-05-00381
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 733 F. Supp. 1514 (Armco, Inc. 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
Armco, Inc. v. United States, 733 F. Supp. 1514, 14 Ct. Int'l Trade 211, 14 C.I.T. 211, 1990 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 735 (cit 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

MUSGRAVE, Judge.

BACKGROUND

The plaintiffs in this action are United States manufacturers of carbon steel wire rod. The defendant-intervenor Amalgamated Steel Mills, Berhad (“A.S.M.”) is a Malaysian company that manufacturers carbon steel wire rod and has at times exported this product to the United States. At the time of the investigation in this case it was the only Malaysian producer of steel wire rod. The plaintiffs filed a countervailing duty petition with the Department of Commerce (“Department”) on September 3, 1987 in which they asserted that Malaysian companies exporting carbon steel wire rod to the United States received from the Malaysian Government “bounties or grants” with relation to those exports, within the meaning of the United States countervailing duty statute, 19 U.S.C. § 1303 (1988). In its Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty Determination, 1 published on April 18, 1988, the plaintiffs as conferring coun-tervailable benefits did confer such benefits, that some of the programs did not, and that some of the programs were of a coun-tervailable nature but were not used by Malaysian producers or exporters of carbon steel wire rod during the relevant period of the Department’s investigation (calendar year 1986). The Department derived a net rate of the countervailable subsidies received by Malaysian producers and exporters of carbon steel wire rod of 17.71 percent ad valorem.

In the present action before this Court, the plaintiffs contest two specific negative findings made by the Department with regard to programs included by the Department in the latter two of these three categories. First, the plaintiffs challenge the Department’s finding that during the period of the Department’s investigation, no Malaysian producers of carbon steel wire rod used benefits available from the Malaysian Government under Section 29 of the Investment Incentives Act of 1968, as amended in 1983 (“Section 29”). Section 29, at all times relevant in this action, made available to most Malaysian companies an abatement of Malaysian taxes in the amount of five percent of the f.o.b. value of a company’s export revenues in a taxable year. Second, the plaintiffs contest the Department’s determination that tax depreciation allowances for plant facilities available under Section 3 of the Investment Act of 1967, which allowances the plaintiffs allege to exceed the useful lives of the assets depreciated, did not confer counter-vailable bounties or grants. The plaintiffs assert A.S.M. received benefits under these two programs that should have been found by the Department to be countervailable. The plaintiffs move this Court to reverse these two negative findings of the Department and to remand this case to the Department for a redetermination.

Section 29 Tax Abatements

According to the Department’s Preliminary Negative Countervailing Duty Determination in this matter, 2 Section 29 of the Malaysian Investment Incentives Act of 1968 (hereinafter Section 29), by an amendment effective in 1984, made available to most Malaysian manufacturing companies a flat deduction from taxable income of five percent of the f.o.b. value of export revenues in a taxable year. This deduction applied to tax returns filed in the assessment years 1985 and 1986. The Promotion of Investments Act of 1986, effective Janu *1516 ary 1, 1986, repealed the Investment Incentives Act of 1968, retaining the tax abatement of five percent of the amount of export sales but limiting the availability of the abatement to resident trading and agricultural companies (as opposed, presumably, to manufacturing companies).

The source of the dispute between the plaintiffs and the defendants as to whether the defendant A.S.M. received countervaila-ble benefits under Section 29 lies partly in the methods of tax assessment and payment in Malaysia and partly in the corporate structure and operations of A.S.M. and its subsidiaries. Pursuant to the Malaysian tax methodology, Malaysian companies pay Malaysian income taxes in the year after the fiscal year in which the underlying income was earned. Correspondingly, the companies also receive any tax credits or deductions in the later year. Angkasa Marketing, Berhad (“Angkasa”), a wholly-owned marketing subsidiary of A.S.M., exported to the United States in 1984 and 1985 wire rod manufactured by the parent company A.S.M. At the time of the events in this case, Angkasa was the only Malaysian exporter to the United States of steel wire rod. In 1986, the year of the Department’s investigation at issue, Angkasa claimed the Section 29 tax abatement, based on its 1985 exports to the United States, against Malaysian taxes on its 1985 income. At the beginning of 1986, the activity of exporting the wire rod products was transferred from Angkasa back to the parent A.S.M.

In March 1986 the plaintiffs in the present action filed a countervailing duty complaint concerning these tax benefits claimed by Angkasa against the taxes it paid in 1985 on its 1984 income. In its preliminary determination of this complaint, the Department found that the Section 29 benefits received by Angkasa on its 1985 returns were countervailable, but that because of Angkasa’s particular tax and income situation in 1985, the benefits actually realized were not sufficiently large to warrant the imposition of countervailing duties on Angkasa’s exports to the United States. 51 Fed.Reg. 20,324, 20,326 (1986).

On September 3, 1987 the plaintiffs filed with the Department the countervailing duty petition at issue in the present case. Along with the other Malaysian Government programs alleged in their petition to be countervailable, the plaintiffs repeated their request for an imposition of countervailing duties on Angkasa’s exports to the United States on the basis of benefits received by Angkasa under Section 29, this time against its 1986 taxes paid on its 1985 income. While finding that several of the programs implicated by the plaintiffs warranted the imposition of countervailing duties, the Department again refused to impose such duties on the benefits under Section 29 which were previously found to be of a countervailable kind; this time, however, the Department’s reasoning was different. In its preliminary determination, the Department decided that the Section 29 benefits received by Angkasa on its 1985 imports were not countervailable, because by the time of the investigation at issue and the review period of this investigation —1986—Angkasa was no longer exporting to the United States, this task having been shifted — advantageously—to the parent A.S.M. before the beginning of the review period. Because of the “tax-lag” system of revenue collection used by the Malaysian Government, then, — collecting taxes on one year’s income in the following year — the Department found that the export subsidy received by Angkasa from Section 29 benefits, which benefits had previously been determined to be of a countervailable nature, was not countervailable.

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Bluebook (online)
733 F. Supp. 1514, 14 Ct. Int'l Trade 211, 14 C.I.T. 211, 1990 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armco-inc-v-united-states-cit-1990.