Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co. v. United States

991 F. Supp. 2d 1357, 2014 CIT 79, 2014 WL 2960019, 36 I.T.R.D. (BNA) 678, 2014 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 78
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedJuly 2, 2014
DocketConsol. 10-00371
StatusErrata
Cited by4 cases

This text of 991 F. Supp. 2d 1357 (Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co. 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
Gold East Paper (Jiangsu) Co. v. United States, 991 F. Supp. 2d 1357, 2014 CIT 79, 2014 WL 2960019, 36 I.T.R.D. (BNA) 678, 2014 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 78 (cit 2014).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

MUSGRAVE, Senior Judge:

This opinion addresses the Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand (“Redetermination ”) that concern the antidumping duty investigation on Certain Coated Paper from the PRC (“Final Determination”). 1 Familiarity with the prior opinion on the case, 38 CIT -, 918 F.Supp.2d 1317 (2013), is here presumed.

Pursuant to the order of remand, the International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce (“Commerce”) undertook to (1) calculate the value of certain inputs using only market economy purchase prices, (2) use the purchase prices from South Korea and Thailand for the inputs therefrom, (3) correct certain programming errors in the targeted dumping calculation, (4) reconsider the classification of certain sales of the Gold East Companies 2 as export price sales, resulting in no change of that classification, and (5) employ average-to-average comparison methodology in the targeted dumping analysis after finding that, as a result of the revisions with respect to the remanded issues, that method adequately accounted for pricing differences.

Commerce contends the Redetermination complies with the remand order. Two issues remain in dispute here, however. The domestic industry petitioners 3 ar *1359 gue that Commerce’s original determinations in the Final Determination of not treating the reported input prices from Thailand and South Korea as market economy purchases and of using average-to-transaction methodology as the targeting-dumping remedy for the Gold East Companies were proper and correct. Responding, the plaintiffs argue the results of remand should be sustained as is. Considering those results and comments thereon, the court concludes remand is again required.

Discussion

I. Inputs from South Korea and Thailand

The issue concerning the claimed market economy purchase (“MEP”) prices for the inputs from Thailand and South Korea was previously remanded because the record provided insufficient support for believing or suspecting the prices in question had been distorted by subsidies. See 38 CIT at-, 918 F.Supp.2d at 1324; see also 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(l) (2006); 19 C.F.R. § 351.408(c)(1) (2008). Commerce disagrees with the order either to reopen the record and make particularized findings to support the conclusion of distorted input prices or to reverse the decision not to use the input price data and concomitant recalculation of the margin. It opted for the latter under protest. Redetermination at 16.

Having reversed its prior decision, Commerce reiterates that if a country maintains broadly available, non-industry specific export subsidies, its practice has been to find the existence of such subsidies a sufficient reason to exclude the affected input from the factors of production values. Its stated position on not reopening the record is based on its inference of “the existence” of such subsidies, from which it presumes the relevant inputs to have benefitted, and it maintains it is “longstanding practice to not obtain further evidence or conduct a formal investigation to determine whether such prices are subsidized, but instead to base [the] decision only on information available to it at the time it makes its determination.” Id. (bracketing added), referencing inter alia Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and Negative Final Determination of Critical Circumstances: Certain Color Television Receivers From the People’s Republic of China, 69 Fed. Reg. 20594 (Apr. 16, 2004), and accompanying I & D Memo (“CCTR ”) at comment 7.

The petitioners requested during remand that Commerce reopen the administrative record. Petitioners’ Letter to the Department of Commerce dated July 26, 2013, Remand Public Document (“RPDoc”) 1. Commerce declined. Commenting on the draft remand results, the petitioners raised the substance of Memorandum from the Office of Policy to DAS and Office Directors, “NME investigations: procedures for disregarding subsidized factor input prices” (Feb. 2002), which advised that all factor inputs from inter alia South Korea and Thailand should be disregarded. The petitioners pointed out that: (1) it has been Commerce’s consistent position since the memorandum’s publication to infer that the prices of inputs purchased from those countries are likely distorted; (2) Commerce has identified a number of subsidy programs that benefit exporters from Thailand, including the Royal Thai Government’s Tax Coupon Program (“TCP”) and the Investment Promotion Act (“IPA”) (“in existence” they claim since 1977), as recently discussed in Commerce’s 2013 determination on warmwater shrimp from Thailand, covering a period of investigation in 2011 that would have obviously post *1360 dated the POI here 4 ; (3) the TCP was specifically available for the type of input in question here, and the IPA identified producers of that input as a favored industry; and (4) the court has found that the agency’s determination that a company supplying an NME producer was listed as approved for promotion by the Thai Board of Investment under the IPA constituted a showing “by specific and objective evidence” that there was “reason to believe or suspect” that the supplier received subsidies in Fuyao Glass Indus. Group Co. v. United States, 29 CIT 109, 117-18, 2005 WL 280437 (2005). 5 See Petitioners’ Comments on Prelim. Remand at 6-7, Remand Confidential Document (“RCDoc”) 10; RPDoc 10.

The petitioners further criticize the remand results as simply a recalculation of the margin using the MEP values on remand. They argue that without any analysis of whether those values are the best available information leading to the calculation of the most accurate margin, Commerce has given the remand order an interpretation that renders it legally erroneous. Petitioners’ Comments at 9, referencing Borlem S.A.-Empreedimentos Industriais v. United States, 13 CIT 231, 234, 710 F.Supp. 797, 799 (1989) (when issuing remand orders courts must be “mindful of the doctrine of primary jurisdiction”, whose “central purpose ... is to permit courts to give effect to legislative intent underlying the established regulatory scheme by referring matters involving agency expertise back to the agency so that it may, in the first instance, pass upon the issue from its unique administrative perspective”). 6

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991 F. Supp. 2d 1357, 2014 CIT 79, 2014 WL 2960019, 36 I.T.R.D. (BNA) 678, 2014 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gold-east-paper-jiangsu-co-v-united-states-cit-2014.