Ausimont SPA v. United States

25 Ct. Int'l Trade 865, 2001 CIT 92
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedAugust 2, 2001
DocketCourt 98-10-03063
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 865 (Ausimont SPA 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
Ausimont SPA v. United States, 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 865, 2001 CIT 92 (cit 2001).

Opinion

Opinion

Musgrave, Judge:

Plaintiffs Ausimont SpA and Ausimont USA (“Au-simont”) move for Rule 56.2 judgment upon the agency record for the August 1, 1996 through July 31, 1997 review period (“POR”) compiled by the International Trade Administration, United States Department of Commerce (“Commerce”) sub nom. Granular Polytetraflouroethylene Resin From Italy: Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 63 Fed. Reg. 49080 (Sep. 14,1998) (“Final Results”.) The Defendant United States (the “government”) and the Defendant-intervenor E.I. DuPont de Nemours (“DuPont”) urge that the Final Results be sustained as published.

Two issues are presented for consideration: (1) whether the “normal value” 1 (“NV”) of the subject merchandise was based on home market sales which were made outside the ordinary course of trade or not in the usual commercial quantities, and (2) whether it was improper not to include imputed credit expenses and inventory carrying costs in the denominator of the constructed export price (“CEP”) profit allocation ratio (“CEP profit”). The first issue requires remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Commerce’s treatment of CEP profit is sustained.

Background

Since 1988, Ausimont USA has imported polytetraflouroethylene (“PTFE”) subject to Granular Polytetraflouroethylene Resin From Italy: Antidumping Duty Order, 53 Fed. Reg. 33163 (Aug. 30, 1988). In 1993, Commerce determined that “wet reactor bead” constituted “imported parts and components” of granular PTFE resin and that the val *866 ue-added difference in transforming the one into the other was “small” and that therefore the outstanding order encompassed wet reactor bead. Granular Polytetraflouroethylene Resin From Italy: Final Affirmative Determination of Circumvention of Antidumping Duty Order, 58 Fed. Reg. 26100 (Apr. 30, 1993) (“Circumvention Determination”.) See 19 U.S.C. § 1677j (1988). That determination was sustained in Ausimont v. United States, 19 CIT 151, 882 F. Supp. 1087 (1995).

The instant POR was publicly initiated 2 on September 25,1997 via a questionnaire issued to Ausimont SpA containing a glossary which read in part: “[i]n calculating [NV], the Department will consider only those sales in the comparison market that are * * * made under conditions and practices that, for a reasonable period of time prior to the date of sale of the subject merchandise, have been normal for sales of the foreign like product.” Letter with Questionnaire from Commerce to Ausimont of 9/24/97 app. I at 10 (PDoc 3, Fiche 4, Fr. 19). See Def s 3 PubApp 3 at app. I. Ausimont responded on November 6,1997 with “diskettes and printouts * * * containing] a sale-by-sale listing of all virgin and filled PTFE granular resin, plus wet reactor bead, sold in Italy during the period” and explanation: that granular PTFE resin is sold in a polyethylene-lined drum and “wet reactor bead is sold in a bag”; that all of Ausimont SpA’s customers constituted “one class of customers only — unrelated fabricators who transform granular PTFE resin into semifinished and finished manufactured products”; and that there was “one channel of distribution only — shipment of orders directly from Ausimont’s plant or warehouse to the customers” on a “delivered basis” via unrelated common carrier. Letter with Questionnaire Response from Ausimont to Commerce of 11/06/97 (“QR 1”) (PDoc 13, Fiche 5, Frs. 1,16, 26, 29, 32, 36, 38, 45; CDoc 1, Fiche 13, Frs. 1,16, 26, 29, 32, 36, 38, 45). See Def.’s ConfApp 1.

On February 23,1998, Commerce sent a supplemental questionnaire and matching instructions to Ausimont requiring that it

note that * * * data is also required in the U.S. and comparison market sales listings for wet reactor bead products in both markets[, e]nsure that you have provided home market sales of all products that can be matched to reactor bead that is further manufactured in the United States[,] and provide a complete description of the home market products and sales that you believe are the most appropriate comparisons to [imported] wet reactor bead * * *.

Letter with Supplemental Questionnaire from Commerce to Ausimont of 2/23/98, Sec. A, 3-4 (PDoc 18, Fiche 8, Frs. 40, 43-44; CDoc 4, Fiche 19, Frs. 57, 60-61). See Def s ConfApp 2, Sec. A, 3-4. On March 16,1998, *867 Ausimont responded, in particular noting that the “appropriate home market reactor head code is provided with each individual further-manufactured sales transaction in Ausimont’s U.S. sales listing.” Letter with Supplemental Questionnaire Response from Ausimont to Commerce of 3/16/98 (“QR 2”) at “SQR-9” and “SQR-10” (PDoc 21, Fiche 9, Frs. 1, 20-21; CDoc 5, Fiche 20, Frs. 1, 20-21). See Def s ConfApp 3 at “SQR-9” and “SQR-10.”

Commerce verified Ausimont’s responses at the Bóllate offices (Mila-no, Italy) over April 6-10,1998. See Verification Memorandum of 5/4/98 (PDoc 28, Fiche 11, Fr. 14; CDoc 10, Fiche 22, Fr. 47); Defs ConfApp 5. The verification report notes correction of “a minor error in reporting the calculation of the packing costs for wet reactor bead for certain home market and U.S. sales” which had been submitted by Ausimont officials and describes discussion of wet reactor bead sales in general and a “preselected” sale of wet reactor bead in particular. Id. (PDoc 28, Fiche 11, Frs. 16, 23-24; CDoc 10, Fiche 22, Frs. 47, 56-57); Def s ConfApp 5 at 4, 8-9.

The preliminary analysis for the POR noted

three sales transactions in the home market of wet reactor bead, comprising approximately 2.10 percent of the total quantity sold and 1.73 percent of the total value sold of the foreign like products. * * * [T]otal sales of further manufactured wet reactor bead in the U.S. market comprise more than [ ] percent (by volume and value) of all subject merchandise sales in the U.S. market.
The size of the margin in these preliminary results is due, to a large extent, to the fact that the U.S. sales of further manufactured wet reactor bead have relatively a high cost of further manufacturing (i.e. on the average is approximately [ ] percent of the sales value), which, when deducted with the other charges and adjustments from the U.S. price, yields a substantially lower value than the foreign unit price of wet reactor bead sales in the home market. Our analysis of the company’s sales data for both the U.S. and home markets shows that the average net U.S. unit price [of wet reactor bead] is approximately US$[ ]/lb., whereas the average wet reactor bead sale [price in the home market] is approximately US$[ ]/lb. We note that in the previous review, there were no sales in the home market of wet reactor bead, and all U.S. sales of further manufactured wet reactor bead were matched to the constructed value for such sales.

Analysis Memorandum of 5/4/98 (PDoc 29, Fiche 11, Frs.

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