Huzhou Muyun Wood Co. v. United States
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Opinion
Katzmann, Judge:
*1367
In this second round of litigation, at issue is whether the single sale of multilayered wood flooring was commercially reasonable and thus
bona fide
for the purposes of a "new shipper review," the process for calculating individual antidumping duty rates for a shipper who had not previously exported a product covered by an antidumping order into the United States. Before the court is the United States Department of Commerce's ("Commerce") Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand Order (Dep't Commerce March 6, 2018) ("
Remand Redetermination
"), ECF No. 39, which the court ordered in
Huzhou Muyun Wood Co., Ltd. v. United States
, 41 CIT ----,
BACKGROUND
The relevant legal and factual background of the proceedings involving Muyun Wood has been set forth in greater detail in
Muyun Wood I
,
I. Anti-Dumping Orders and New Shipper Reviews Generally.
Dumping occurs when a foreign company sells a product in the United States for less than fair value, i.e., for a lower price than it sells that product in its home market.
Sioux Honey Ass'n v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.
,
Commerce determines the normal value, export price, and resultant dumping margin for each entry of subject merchandise to determine a company's individual rate.
Commerce may rescind a review if it concludes that "there has not been an entry and sale to an unaffiliated customer in the United States of subject merchandise" during the period of review ("POR"), and that "an expansion of the normal period of review to include an entry and sale to an unaffiliated customer in the United States of subject merchandise would be likely to prevent the completion of the review within the [required] time limits."
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Katzmann, Judge:
*1367
In this second round of litigation, at issue is whether the single sale of multilayered wood flooring was commercially reasonable and thus
bona fide
for the purposes of a "new shipper review," the process for calculating individual antidumping duty rates for a shipper who had not previously exported a product covered by an antidumping order into the United States. Before the court is the United States Department of Commerce's ("Commerce") Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand Order (Dep't Commerce March 6, 2018) ("
Remand Redetermination
"), ECF No. 39, which the court ordered in
Huzhou Muyun Wood Co., Ltd. v. United States
, 41 CIT ----,
BACKGROUND
The relevant legal and factual background of the proceedings involving Muyun Wood has been set forth in greater detail in
Muyun Wood I
,
I. Anti-Dumping Orders and New Shipper Reviews Generally.
Dumping occurs when a foreign company sells a product in the United States for less than fair value, i.e., for a lower price than it sells that product in its home market.
Sioux Honey Ass'n v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.
,
Commerce determines the normal value, export price, and resultant dumping margin for each entry of subject merchandise to determine a company's individual rate.
Commerce may rescind a review if it concludes that "there has not been an entry and sale to an unaffiliated customer in the United States of subject merchandise" during the period of review ("POR"), and that "an expansion of the normal period of review to include an entry and sale to an unaffiliated customer in the United States of subject merchandise would be likely to prevent the completion of the review within the [required] time limits."
II. Initial New Shipper Review Proceedings.
Muyun Wood requested a new shipper review to calculate its dumping duty for its exports during the relevant POR, under the antidumping duty order on multilayered wood flooring from the People's Republic of China ("PRC"), on June 22, 2015. NSR Request. After additional filings by Muyun Wood, Commerce placed data from the sales databases of two mandatory respondents
*1369
3
-- Dalian Dajen Wood Co., Ltd. and Jiangsu Senmao Bamboo and Wood Industry Co., Ltd. ("Senmao") -- from the second administrative review ("AR2") of the multilayered wood flooring antidumping order. Dep't Letter: U.S. Sales Data from the AR2, P.R. 64, C.R. 52-54 (Apr. 12, 2016) ("AR2 data"). Commerce indicated that parties had one week to submit any comments on the data.
Commerce issued its Preliminary Results on May 31, 2016.
Multilayered Wood Flooring From the People's Republic of China
,
Muyun Wood submitted its case brief on July 7, 2016, arguing that its sale was bona fide because the difference in price between its product and the Senmao CONNUM could be explained by differences in the products' characteristics and changes in the market since the AR2, and that the sale did in fact follow commercial norms. Muyun Wood Case Br., C.R. 63, at 10-12. Muyun Wood also provided additional information to support its contention that its U.S. customer resold Muyun Wood's product for a profit. See Muyun Wood Third Suppl. Questionnaire Resp. at Exhibit SQ3-1, C.R. 59 (May 18, 2016).
In its October 17, 2016 Issues and Decision Memorandum for the final results of the new shipper review ("
IDM
"), Commerce concluded that Muyun Wood's sale was not
bona fide
and that the new shipper review should be rescinded.
IDM
at 24, P.R. 102, C.R. 67. Based on the new information, Commerce revised its view that Muyun Wood could not demonstrate that its U.S. customer sold Muyun Wood's product at a profit.
IDM
at 21. Commerce also agreed with Muyun Wood that the short sales negotiation was not atypical, given prior communication between Muyun Wood and its U.S. customer at a trade show.
III. Proceedings Before This Court.
Muyun Wood contested Commerce's rescission of the new shipper review on three bases: (1) that Commerce abused its discretion by adding the AR2 data without clarifying its intended use and allowing parties only one week to submit comments; (2) that substantial evidence did not support Commerce's determination that Muyun Wood's sale was not bona fide ; and (3) that Commerce's application of the PRC-entity rate was neither supported by substantial evidence nor in accordance with law.
This court found that Commerce had acted unreasonably by placing the AR2 data on the record a week before the factual record's statutorily required closure and inadequately explaining that information's intended use.
Muyun Wood I
,
*1371
The court also found that substantial evidence did not support Commerce's determination that Muyun Wood's sale was not
bona fide.
When evaluating whether a sale is commercially reasonable, and thus
bona fide
, Commerce employs a totality of the circumstances test.
Tianjin Tiancheng Pharm. Co. Ltd. v. United States
,
(I) the price of such sales;
(II) whether such sales were made in commercial quantities
(III) the timing of such sales;
(IV) the expenses arising from such sales;
(V) whether the subject merchandise involved in such sales was resold in the United States at a profit;
(VI) whether such sales were made on an arms-length basis; and
(VII) any other factor the administering authority determines to be relevant as to whether such sales are, or are not, likely to be typical of those the exporter or producer will make after completion of the review."
The court concluded that Commerce's use of the Senmao data was appropriate, but that Commerce's failure to take into account differences between the Senmao CONNUM and Muyun Wood's product that meaningfully impact the quality and prices of the product and Senmao's dumping margin were unreasonable.
Muyun Wood I
,
IV. Remand Redetermination.
During the remand phase, Commerce released a draft of its redetermination and provided an opportunity to comment on the draft.
Remand Redetermination
at 2. Commerce also reopened the record to add certain new factual information -- the most significant of which was a new sales data set for sales price comparison -- and provided interested parties with an opportunity to "correct, clarify, and rebut" it.
On remand, Commerce reexamined Muyun Wood's sale and again concluded that it was not
bona fide.
Commerce also reexamined the information on whether Muyun Wood's U.S. customer had resold the goods at a profit. Id. at 16. Documents provided by Muyun Wood confirmed that the U.S. customer had resold a majority of the goods for a profit, but a portion remained unsold as of the date of documentation. 11 Id. Although Commerce had found that Muyun Wood had established resale profitability in the original Final Determination , IDM at 16, Commerce concluded on remand that Muyun Wood had failed to establish resale profitability because "the sales documents do not indicate that [the American customer's] goods, in their entirety, were resold at a profit," Remands Results at 16. Commerce concluded that this fact weighed against finding Muyun Wood's sale bona fide. Id.
Regarding the late payment factor at issue in Muyun Wood I , Commerce determined *1373 that information in the record was inconclusive as to whether the alleged late payment was atypical, and thus did not rely on this factor when concluding that Muyun Wood's sale was not bona fide. Id. at 13-15. Commerce also reexamined whether the transaction had been made on an arm's length basis and the expenses arising for the transaction, and again found that both of these factors suggested Muyun Wood's sale was typical and thus bona fide. Id. at 15-17.
Finally, Commerce considered whether any other factors were relevant to its bona fide analysis, and determined that Muyun Wood's sale was subject to increased scrutiny because no others were made during the new shipping review POR. Id. at 17. In light of the singular nature of the sale, the higher sales price, and resell profitability factor, Commerce decided that the totality of the circumstances suggested that Muyun Wood's sale was not bona fide. Id.
Muyun Wood filed its comments on the Remand Redetermination on April 5, 2018. Pl.'s Br. The Government submitted its reply to Muyun Wood's comments on May 7, 2018. Def.'s Br. Oral argument was held before the court on June 18, 2018. ECF No. 53.
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The court reviews Commerce's remand redeterminations in accordance with the standard set forth in 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i), and thus "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."
DISCUSSION
As noted,
supra
, pp. 1370-72, Commerce takes into account a number of factors when determining whether, under the totality of the circumstances, a sale is
bona fide.
Commerce's determination will be sustained unless it is "unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law." 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i) ;
Changzhou Wujin Fine Chem. Factory Co., Ltd. v. United States
,
Muyun Wood argues that Commerce's determination that Muyun Wood's sale is not bona fide is neither supported by substantial evidence nor in accordance with law because: (1) Commerce's comparison of Penghong's sales data to Muyun Wood's sale price failed to account for key differences between their products; (2) Commerce exceeded the scope of the remand order by considering factors other than the sales price and payment delay; (3) Commerce changed its interpretation of *1374 the same resale profitability data without explanation; and (4) Commerce impermissibly relied on the fact that there was only a single sale during the POR as a factor in its totality of the circumstances analysis. The court considers each of these contentions in turn.
I. Commerce's Sale Price Comparison Is Supported by Substantial Evidence.
The Penghong product's CONNUM was identical to Muyun Wood's CONNUM, the data was from an administrative review contemporaneous with Muyun Wood's sale, and Penghong's product was not subject to an anti-dumping duty margin. Remand Redetermination at 9-10. Muyun Wood contends, however, that Commerce's CONNUM does not take into account all aspects of wood flooring products that affect price -- particularly, surface treatment and veneer type -- and that Commerce ignored evidence of this fact that Muyun Wood introduced to the record. Pl.'s Br. at 5. This argument is not persuasive. Commerce did consider the evidence that Muyun Wood submitted, but reasonably found that Muyun Wood's submissions did not establish that surface treatment and veneer type affected price. Remand Redetermination at 21-23. None of the product examples Muyun Wood provided to illustrate that surface treatment affected price contained important information about various other characteristics -- for example, traits included in the CONNUM -- and thus it could not be ascertained whether surface treatment or one of these other, unaccounted for characteristics caused the price differentials. See Rebuttal Submission at Ex. 1. In addition, although Muyun Wood emphasizes that its sliced veneer production adds value to its product, neither the contract between Muyun Wood and the U.S. customer nor the contracts between the U.S. customer and resale customers mention the sliced veneer characteristic, which supports the conclusion that this characteristic is not commercially meaningful. See Section A Resp. at Ex. A-7; Third Suppl. Resp. at Ex. SQ3-1.
Muyun Wood also suggests that Commerce should only use Penghong's sales prices made in the same month as its own sale; however, Muyun Wood provides no support for why this alternative analysis would be superior to Commerce's or, more importantly, why Commerce's methodology was unreasonable. Further, as Muyun Wood concedes, its sale price would still be higher than the corresponding Penghong price by 19.35 percent. Pl.'s Br. at 3. Thus, Commerce's determination that Muyun Wood's price was high, and therefore atypical, is supported by substantial evidence.
II. Commerce Did Not Exceed the Scope of the Remand Order.
Muyun Wood claims that Commerce exceeded the scope of the remand order by considering factors of the
bona fide
test other than sales price and late payment. Pl.'s Br. at 9-10. Muyun Wood suggests that these were the only issues in controversy, and thus that the court's instruction to Commerce to "determine whether Plaintiff's sale during the POR was
bona fide
as discussed above
" limited Commerce to consideration of the sales price and late payment factors.
Id.
at 9-10 (quoting
Muyun Wood I
,
III. Commerce's New Resale Profitability Interpretation Is Contrary to Law.
In its original
Final Results
, Commerce found that Muyun Wood had established resale profitability; on remand, Commerce instead determined that Muyun Wood failed to establish resale profitability and that this "calls into question whether Muyun's single sale is
bona fide.
"
Remand Redetermination
at 16. Commerce asserts that its new interpretation is consistent with its finding in the
Final Results
, because it had "caveats" about the resale profitability factor.
Id.
at 25-26. However, despite these "caveats," Commerce did find in the
Final Results
that Muyun Wood had adequately established resale profitability -- 78.55 percent was resold for a significant profit.
Remand Redetermination
at 16. Notably, Commerce has not explained why its conclusion has changed in the
Remand Redetermination
despite the fact that the record evidence regarding resale profitability remains the same on remand. Thus, Commerce has acted arbitrarily and capriciously with respect to this factor.
See
SKF USA Inc. v. United States
,
IV. Commerce's Treatment of the Singular Nature of the Sale Is Unreasonable.
The "singular nature" of the transaction under evaluation in a new shipper review is not one of the statutory factors enumerated in
V. Commerce's Determination that the Sale Is Not Bona Fide Is Not Supported by Substantial Evidence.
In sum, by definition, totality of the circumstances analyses are specific to particular cases, and the impact of various factors in determining whether a transaction is
bona fide
may vary depending on the circumstances of the transaction. What is constant, however, is the basic Congressional rationale for requiring determinations based on
bona fide
sales: to ensure that a producer does not unfairly benefit from an atypical sale to obtain a lower dumping margin than the producer's usual commercial practice would dictate.
See
Muyun Wood I
,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the court concludes that Commerce's determination *1377 that Muyun Wood's sales price was high is supported by substantial evidence and that Commerce did not exceed the scope of the remand redetermination by considering the totality of the circumstances of the sale. However, Commerce's ultimate conclusion that the sale was not commercially reasonable overall and not bona fide is not supported by substantial evidence. Consequently, the rescission of the new shipper review cannot be upheld. Commerce is ordered to proceed with Muyun Wood's new shipper review. Judgment shall be entered accordingly.
SO ORDERED .
Further citations to the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, are to the relevant provision of Title 19 of the U.S. Code, 2012 edition. Citations to
The Statement of Administrative Action "shall be regarded as an authoritative expression by the United States concerning the interpretation and application of the Uruguay Round Agreements and this Act in any judicial proceeding in which a question arises concerning such interpretation or application."
In antidumping duty investigations or administrative reviews, Commerce may select mandatory respondents pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1677f-1(c)(2), which provides:
If it is not practicable to make individual weighted average dumping margin determinations [in investigations or administrative reviews] because of the large number of exporters or producers involved in the investigation or review, the administering authority may determine the weighted average dumping margins for a reasonable number of exporters or producers by limiting its examination to-
(A) a sample of exporters, producers, or types of products that is statistically valid based on the information available to the administering authority at the time of selection, or
(B) exporters and producers accounting for the largest volume of the subject merchandise from the exporting country that can be reasonably examined.
By [ [ ] ]. "[ [ ] ]" denotes information designated by a party as business proprietary information, which is not disclosed in the published opinion. Section 777 of the Tariff Act of 1930 prohibits disclosure of information "designated as proprietary by the person submitting the information" absent consent. 19 U.S.C. § 1677f(b)(1)(A). The business proprietary information is provided in the confidential version of the opinion issued to the parties. See U.S.CIT Rule 73.2.
Sales of individual products are denominated by product control numbers denoted as "CONNUMs."
By [ [ ] ].
The U.S. customer in question was [ [ ] ].
[ [ ] ] sales, exactly.
The quantity of Penghong's sales ranged from [ [ ] ] square meters to [ [ ] ] square meters, and Muyun Wood's sales quantity was [ [ ] ]. Remand Redetermination at 9.
Penghong's sales price ranged from $[ [ ] ] per square meter to $[ [ ] ], and its average sales price was $[ [ ] ].
Specifically, documentation showed that [ [ ] ] had resold 78.55 percent of the product by [ [ ] ], over [ [ ] ] from the original sale, with a gross profit margin of [ [ ] ] percent. The resale profitability of the remaining 21.45 percent of Muyun Wood's sale was not established.
The
Tianjin
court indeed suggested that the price factor was the most important; however, two other statutory factors -- namely, payment that was nine months late and inconsistencies in import documentation -- supported the determination that the sale was not
bona fide.
Tianjin
,
As discussed supra , Commerce determined the payment timing factor -- which was at issue in Muyun Wood I -- was inconclusive. Remand Redetermination at 13. Although in its briefing Muyun Wood expressed some concerns about Commerce's analysis of this factor, Pl.'s Br. at 15-16, both parties agree that Commerce did not rely upon it when finding Muyun Wood's sale not bona fide , Oral Arg. The payment timing factor is thus not in dispute in this case. Id.
78.55 percent with a gross profit margin of [ [ ] ] percent. Remand Redetermination at 16.
Related
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324 F. Supp. 3d 1364, 2018 CIT 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huzhou-muyun-wood-co-v-united-states-cit-2018.