King Supply Co. v. United States

2011 CIT 2
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedJanuary 6, 2011
Docket09-00477
StatusErrata

This text of 2011 CIT 2 (King Supply 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
King Supply Co. v. United States, 2011 CIT 2 (cit 2011).

Opinion

Slip Op 11 - 2

UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE

: KING SUPPLY COMPANY LLC, d/b/a : KING ARCHITECTURAL METALS, : : Plaintiff, : : v. : Before: R. Kenton Musgrave, Senior Judge : Court No. 09-00477 UNITED STATES, : : Defendant, : : and : : WELDBEND CORP., TUBE FORGINGS : OF AMERICA INC., and HACKNEY : LADISH, INC., : : Defendant-Intervenors. : :

OPINION

[Redetermination of pipe fittings from China used in structural applications as outside scope of antidumping duty order remanded to International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce.]

Decided: January 6, 2011

Barnes, Richardson & Colburn (Thomas V. Vakerics, Stephen W. Brophy, Cortney O'Toole Morgan, Jeffrey S. Neeley, Matthew T. McGrath, and Michael S. Holton), for the plaintiff.

Tony West, Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, Patricia M. McCarthy, Assistant Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Justice (Michael D. Panzera); Office of the Chief Counsel for Import Administration, United States Department of Commerce (Natasha Robinson Coates), of counsel, for the defendant.

Mayor Brown LLP (Simeon M. Kriesberg and Jeffrey C. Lowe), for the defendant-intervenor Weldbend Corporation. Court No. 09-00477 Page 2

Neville Peterson LLP (Lawrence J. Bogard and Casey Kernan Richter), for the defendant- intervenor Tube Forgings of America, Inc.

Saul Ewing, LLP (John Burt Totaro, Jr.) for the defendant-intervenor Hackney Ladish, Inc.

Musgrave, Senior Judge: Presuming familiarity with Slip Op. 10-111 (Sep. 30, 2010)

(“Opinion”), remanding to the International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce

(“Commerce”) the administrative ruling on the scope inquiry of plaintiff King Supply Co. LLC

(“King”) with respect to a certain antidumping duty order on carbon steel butt-weld pipe fittings

(“BWPF”),1 this opinion considers Commerce’s results of remand (“Remand Determination”) that

now, under protest, exclude from the ambit of the Order BWPF imported and used by King only in

architectural or structural applications. Weldbend Corporation and the government urge sustaining

the Remand Determination, while Tube Forgings of America, Inc. (“TFA”) and King argue for

further remand.

I

King requests further remand with instruction to Commerce to identify the specific

language in the Remand Determination that constitutes the scope ruling. See Comments of Plaintiff

on Final Results of Redetermination by the Department of Commerce, dated December 1, 2010

(“King’s Comments”), at 2-3. There is no need, because the Remand Determination is clear: “[i]n

accordance with the Court’s instructions, this redetermination pursuant to remand construes the

1 See Antidumping Duty Order and Amendment to the Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Carbon Steel Butt-Weld Pipe Fittings from the People’s Republic of China, 57 Fed. Reg. 29702 (Dep’t Comm. July 6, 1992) (“Order”). Court No. 09-00477 Page 3

scope of the order as excluding pipe fittings used only in structural applications, such as King’s

fittings used for structural applications, from the Order.”2 Remand Determination at 1.

In addition, King argues the Remand Determination is internally inconsistent.

Specifically, King requests deletion of “only” therefrom because it “may mistakenly be read to the

effect that ‘dual use’ pipe fittings are not excluded from the [Order] as dual use pipe fittings are not

limited in use to structural applications.” King’s Comments at 3. King also requests deletion of

“used by King” to ensure that pipe fittings imported by King ostensibly for resale and eventual use

in structural applications are excluded from the Order. Id. at 3-4.

These requests appear to emanate from examination of page 4 of the Remand

Determination, which explains Commerce’s finding that pipe fittings “imported by King and used

by King in structural applications” are excluded from the antidumping duty order, as compared with

page 5 of the redetermination, which generally explains that pipe fittings used in structural

applications are excluded from the order without regard to the identity of the importer (or user). Cf.

Remand Determination at 4-5 with King’s Comments at 1-4. The government’s detailed response,

with which the court concurs, needs little elaboration:

Consistent with the Court’s order, Commerce excluded pipe fittings used in structural applications from the order without regard to the identity of the importer. This fact is underscored by the language found in the scope ruling on page 5 of the remand redetermination. In its scope ruling, Commerce explains that “[i]n accordance with the Court’s instructions, this redetermination . . . construes the scope of the order as excluding pipe fittings used only in structural applications, such as King’s fittings used for structural applications.” Remand Determination at 5 (emphasis added). The phrase “pipe fittings used only in structural applications” provides that pipe fittings used in structural applications regardless of the identity

2 “Order” was not specifically defined in the Remand Determination, but context, passim, indicates the original antidumping duty order was intended. Court No. 09-00477 Page 4

of the importer are excluded from the order. The words “such as” identify pipe fittings used by King in structural applications as merely an example of such pipe fittings excluded from the antidumping duty order.

The language on page 4 of the remand redetermination, which states that “we find that fittings imported by King and used by King in structural applications . . . are not covered by the scope of the Order,” is not inconsistent with the scope ruling on page 5. This language must be read in the proper context. In the paragraph that precedes the statement in question, Commerce identifies factual evidence presented by King during the scope proceeding that indicated that its pipe fittings were used exclusively in structural applications and not piping systems. Remand Determination at 4. In restating this information about King’s business practice, Commerce responds in the following paragraph [with] its finding that pipe fittings imported and used by King now are excluded from the order. This finding on page 4, when read in its proper context, represents Commerce’s conclusion with respect to coverage based upon specific factual statements made in the preceding paragraph about King’s business practice. There is no basis for interpreting Commerce’s conclusion as to certain facts somehow constitutes the scope ruling itself. Because there is no internal inconsistency in the remand redetermination, King’s request that this matter be remanded to Commerce again should be rejected.

For similar reasons, King’s argument that Commerce should delete the words “used by King” from the remand redetermination is unsupported. See King’s Comments at 3-4; see also Remand Determination at 4 (“[W]e find that fittings imported by King and used by King in structural applications, as described above, are not covered by the scope of the Order”) (emphasis added). King argues that the phrase in question, which is found on page 4 of the remand redetermination, indicates that “in order to be excluded from the order, the imported pipe fittings must be used by King in structural applications.” King’s Comments at 4. King then explains that “pipe fittings imported by King for resale and eventual use in structural applications are covered by the order, an interpretation in direct contradiction of the Court’s order.” Id.

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