OPINION
WALLACH, Judge.
I
INTRODUCTION
This case establishes that publication of a case in the
Customs Bulletin Weekly
(“the
Bulletin
”) is not sufficient notice to the United States Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (“Customs”)
to invoke
the deemed liquidation rule of 19 U.S.C. § 1504(d) (“Section 1504(d)”). Plaintiff Travelers Indemnity Company, (“Travelers”) has filed a Motion for Summary Judgment claiming
Bulletin
publication leads to deemed liquidation. Defendant United States has cross-moved. This court exercises jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(a). Because publication of a case in the
Bulletin
did not constitute “notice” under Section 1504(d),
the deemed liquidation rule of Section 1504(d) does not apply. Accordingly, Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment is denied and Defendant’s Cross-Motion, for Summary Judgment is Granted.
II
BACKGROUND
On December 29, 1986, the United States Department of Commerce (“Commerce”) published the final results of the first administrative review of imports from producers of certain Taiwanese color television receivers “CTVs” that entered the United States between October 19, 1983, and March 31, 1985.
See Color Television Receivers, Except for Video Monitors. From Taiwan; Final Results of Anti-dumping Duty Admin. Review,
51 Fed. Reg. 46895 (December 29, 1986) (“the 1983-1985 Review”); Plaintiffs Brief in Support of Its Motion for Summary Judgment (“Plaintiffs Motion”) at 2. One of the Taiwanese producers that participated in the initial review was AOC International (“AOC”). Plaintiffs Motion at 2. In the 1983-1985 Review, Commerce established a cash deposit rate of 1.38% for CTVs that AOC exported to the United States and that had entered American customs territory after December 29, 1986.
Id.
Between November 1987 and March 1988, a company called Funai USA imported 17 entries of AOC-manufactured CTVs into the United States and paid cash deposit of 1.38% ad valorem antidumping duties on the 17 entries.
Id.
On December 16, 1991, Commerce published the final results of a subsequent administrative review of CTVs exported by various Taiwanese producers for the period April 1, 1987 through March 31, 1988.
See Color Television Receivers, Except for Video Monitors. From Taiwan; Final Results of Antidumping Duty Admin. Review,
56 Fed.Reg. 65218 (December 16, 1991) (“the 1987-1988 Review”). The 1987-1988 Review results covered the 17 Funai USA entries at issue.
See id.;
Plaintiffs Motion at 3. Commerce imposed an antidumping duty margin of 7.43% for the 17 Funai USA entries from the 1987-1988 Review period. Plaintiffs Motion at 3. Upon notification of the results of the 1987-1988 Review, AOC appealed Commerce’s final results.
Id.
While the appeal to this court was pending, liquidation remained suspended on the 17 Funai USA entries pursuant to a preliminary injunction under 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(c)(2). This court affirmed both Commerce’s original determination and the remand determination decision.
Zenith Elecs. Corp. v. United States,
18 CIT 1105 (1994),
appeal after remand.
19 CIT 602 (1995). AOC appealed that affirmation to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (“Federal Circuit”).
See Zenith Elecs. Corp., v. United States,
99 F.3d 1576 (Fed.Cir.1996),("Zenith II”).
The Federal Circuit affirmed and held that Commerce had correctly calculated the antidumping duty margin in the 1987-1988 Review.
Id.
at 1579.
Zenith II
was issued by the Federal Circuit on November 7, 1996, but a petition for rehearing with a suggestion for rehearing
en banc
was filed.
Id.
at 1576; Defendant’s Memorandum in Opposition to Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment and In Support of Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment, (“Defendant’s Response and Cross-Motion”) at 3. The petition was denied in an unpublished order on February 26, 1997. Defendant’s Response and Cross-Motion at 3. The time for petitioning for a writ of certiorari expired on May 27,1997, without a petition being filed.
Id.
At that point,
Zenith II
became final, and suspension of the liquidation was removed. Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion at 3;
See Fujitsu Gen. Am., Inc. v. United States,
283 F.3d 1364 (Fed.Cir.2002).
In
Zenith II
the Federal Circuit determined that substantial evidence supported the final results of Commerce’s 1987-1998 Review.
Zenith II
99 F.3d at 1577; Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion at 3. On October 22, 1997, after the Federal Circuit had rejected AOC’s cause of action in
Zenith II,
Customs published the
Zenith II
decision in its
Bulletin
publication. Plaintiffs Motion, Exhibit 4.
On March 18, 2005, Customs liquidated the 17 Funai USA entries, in accordance with electronic message No. 5035206 which was issued by Commerce on February 4, 2005.
Id.
Customs assessed the increased antidumping duties at the 7.43% rate, plus interest, for a total bill of $615,767.17. Defendant’s Response and Cross-Motion at 4. The figure equaled the difference between the cash deposit calculated using the entered rate of 1.38% and the higher final rate of 7.43%, plus accrued interest. Plaintiffs Motion at 5;
id.
Customs sent the bills to Funai USA’s business address in Tetersboro, New Jersey, but upon learning that Funai USA, had dissolved, Customs issued a demand upon Funai USA’s surety, Travelers. Plaintiffs Motion at 5. Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion at 4. Travelers timely filed a protest on September 12, 2005 and the protest was denied on November 10, 2005. Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion at 4. On May 8, 2006, Travelers paid $90,000 to Customs, which was the limit of its liability as surety on Funai USA’s bond. Plaintiffs Motion at 6.
Travelers claims that the October 22, 1997 publication of
Zenith II
in the
Bulletin
constituted notice to Customs of removal of suspension of the 17 Funai USA entries of CTVs. Plaintiffs Motion at 5. Additionally, Travelers asserts the 17 Fu-nai USA entries were deemed liquidated on April 22, 1998, (six months after the publication of the
Zenith II
decision in the
Bulletin)
using an antidumping rate of 1.38%.
Id.
at 5-6. Customs disagrees. Both parties have moved for summary judgment and maintain that there are no genuine issues of material fact to be resolved by a trial on the merits. Plaintiffs Motion at 1-2, 6; Defendant’s Reply and Cross-Motion at 4. The sole issue is whether Customs received notice of the liquidation suspension removal for purposes of Section 1504(d) more than six months before it liquidated the entries at issue.
See
Plaintiffs Motion at 1-2, 6; Defendant’s Response and Cross-Motion at 6.
III
STANDARD FOR DECISION
Summary judgment is appropriate if the court determines that “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there are no genuine issues as to any material fact, and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” USCIT R.56 (d);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
477 U.S. 242, 249, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986). Under 28 U.S.C. § 2640(a)(1), this court reviews
de novo
the denial of an administrative protest under 19 U.S.C. § 1515.
IV
DISCUSSION
A
The Deemed Liquidation Rule Requires Notice to Customs
Travelers bases its entire case upon application of the “deemed liquidation” doctrine. Section 1504(d) provides that when a suspension of liquidation required by statute or court order is removed, Customs shall liquidate the entry within six months after receiving notice of the removal from Commerce, another agency or a court with jurisdiction over the entry. Section 1504(d).- Any entry not liquidated by Customs within six months after receiving such notice shall be treated as having been liquidated at the rate of duty, value, quantity, and amount of duty asserted at the time of entry by the importer of record.
Id.
Because Section 1504(d) provides that an entry will be deemed liquidated by operation of law if Customs does not liquidate the entry within six months of receiving notice, it is “critical to determine ... what constitutes notice of the removal [of liquidation] suspension to Customs.”
Int’l Trading Co. v. United States,
281 F.3d 1268, 1271 (Fed.Cir.2002).
For deemed liquidation to occur: “(1) the suspension of liquidation that was in place must have been removed; (2) Customs must have received notice of the removal of the suspension; and (3) Customs must not liquidate the entry at issue within six months of receiving such notice.”
Fujitsu,
283 F.3d at 1376. The notice Customs must receive to remove suspension is the central issue here. The Federal Circuit has held that specific liquidation instructions from Commerce via email or mailed notice, and publishing notice of a decision in the
Federal Register
are adequate forms of “notice” under Section 1504(d).
NEC Solutions (Am.), Inc. v. United States,
411 F.3d 1340, 1347 (Fed.Cir.2005);
Fujitsu,
283 F.3d 1364 at 1382;
Int’l Trading,
281 F.3d at 1275. These methods of notice are acceptable, but they are not exclusive. Thus, publication in the
Bulletin
must be analyzed as a potential additional method of adequate notice.
B
Publication in the
Bulletin
Does Not Initiate the Deemed Liquidation Rule
The
Bulletin
Is Not a “Familiar Manner of Providing Notice”
In
Int’l Trading,
the Federal Circuit held that publication in the
Federal Register
and direct email to Customs are both sufficient notice under Section 1504(d).
Int’l Trading,
281 F.3d at 1275. Contrary to Travelers’ arguments (Plaintiffs Motion at 9-10), however,
Int’l Trading
does not hold that any publication of a judicial decision affirming the results of an antidumping duty order provides Customs with adequate notice.
Travelers attempts to equate the publishing of
Zenith II
in the
Bulletin
to
publication of final results in the
Federal Register
as “a familiar manner of providing notice to parties” in antidumping proceedings.
Int’l Trading,
281 F.3d at 1275. Travelers believes
Int’l Trading
refers to any general publication of an administrative review or a decision affecting a review, (Plaintiffs Motion at 10), although the case only addresses publication in the
Federal Register
when it says “publication in the
Federal Register
is a familiar manner of providing notice to parties in antidumping proceedings.”
Int’l Trading,
281 F.3d at 1275.
Timing also distinguishes
Int’l Trading.
There, the results were final when published; the results in
Zenith II
were not.
In fact, the
Bulletin
publication of
Zenith II
is not the unambiguous and familiar notice described by
Int’l Trading.
Publication in the
Bulletin
Does Not Impute Knowledge to Customs Employees
In
Fujitsu,
the Federal Circuit held that publication of a court decision does not necessarily result in notice to Customs of removal of liquidation suspension.
Fujitsu,
283 F.3d at 1383. Commerce published notice of a casein the
Federal Register. Id.
at 1369. Commerce then sent Customs an e-mail instructing it to liquidate pertinent entries at the affirmed rate.
Id.
Customs liquidated the entries within six months after the email was sent.
Id.
at 1370. Fujitsu sued claiming Customs received notice before the email was sent because the earlier decision was available commercially in a variety of print and electronic media.
Id.
at 1379-80.
The Federal Circuit determined that the availability of the earlier case in a “variety of commercially available print and electronic media” did not constitute public and unambiguous notice.'
Id.
It rejected the notion that because the decision was widely available through that media, Customs was provided with notice for purposes of Section 1504(d).
Id.
at 1380. The court further stated that “there is no evidence that in fact Customs received general media
notice....” Id.
Travelers is not relying on service of
Zenith II
on Government’s counsel or on its general media publication
(see supra
n. 6). Rather, it relies on the
Bulletin’s
status as a Customs publication. Plaintiffs Motion at 12. That fact alone, however, does not prove that the publication in the
Bulletin
constituted unambiguous and public notice; Travelers has offered neither positive evidence to support its conclusion, nor rebuttal evidence to contest the contrary testimony offered by Defendant.
See
discussion
infra
Part IV D la-d, 2.
Rather, Travelers has asserted that because the
Bulletin
is a Customs publication, the entire agency had notice when
Zenith II
appeared in the
Bulletin.
Plaintiffs Motion at 15; Defendant’s Response
and Cross Motion at 14-15. Imputing knowledge to all Customs employees because of a publication in the
Bulletin
too broadly defines notice. That supposition of implied notice is both factually incorrect and it directly contradicts
Fujitsu’s
holding that publication of a court decision does not necessarily result in receipt by Customs of notice that a suspension of liquidation had been removed.
Fujitsu,
283 F.3d at 1383. Indeed, Travelers’ argument implicitly seeks to impute knowledge of any Customs employee to the entire Agency and by extension, to hold
all
Customs employees responsible for knowing the information available to
each
employee. Such omniscience may not be implicated by law.
Publication in the
Bulletin
Does Not Constitute Unambiguous Notice to the Reasonable Customs Official
Travelers also relies on
NEC Solutions,
411 F.3d at 1340. That case considered whether an email message Commerce sent to Customs provided unambiguous and public notice that suspension of liquidation had been removed after dumping margins case had become final.
Id.
at 1341-1342. The court held that for notice from Commerce to trigger the six month period within which Customs has to liquidate entries, the notice must be unambiguous that suspension of liquidation has been lifted but does not need to include specific liquidation instructions.
Id.
at 1344. Here, Travelers has not proved the
Bulletin
is unambiguous notice that would be recognized by a “reasonable Customs official”
(id.
at 1346;
see infra
Part IV D la-b), nor has it proven that reading the
Bulletin
is a required task for Customs workers, a position Customs has contradicted by direct evidence.
C
Customs’ Administrative Policies Do Not Require Reading the
Bulletin
Travelers argues that the manner by which Customs proceeds to liquidate entries (OT03 message board) is irrelevant to the issue of whether Customs has received adequate notice of removal of suspension of liquidation because the OT03 message board is also used for accepted forms of notice such as
Federal Register
notices announcing final court decision
(Fujitsu)
or the final results of an administrative review
(Int’l Trading).
Plaintiffs Response to Defendant’s Memorandum in Opposition for Summary Judgment and Opposition to Defendant’s Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment (“Plaintiffs Response”) at 10-13. Travelers cannot however, ignore the reality that publication in the
Federal Register
is an acknowledged, unambiguous and public notice recognized by Customs, this court, and the Federal Circuit. The
Bulletin
is not an unambiguous and public form of notice, particularly because the Customs employees who are charged with liquidation are not: 1) responsible to read the
Bulletin,
2) do not receive the
Bulletin
on a regular basis, and 3) receive notice only through the OT03 message board where the
Bulletin
is never posted.
(See infra
Part IV, D, la-d, 2).
D
While Genuine Issues of Material Fact Defeat Travelers’ Motion, Customs Has Submitted Sufficient Competent Evidence to Support Its Position
CIT Rule 56 standards require that a party seeking summary judgment must on, an issue by issue basis, submit admissible evidence properly cognizable by the court, which supports each element of that party’s claim or defense.
See
USCIT R. 56. On a Motion for Summary Judgment, the movant has the burden of propounding evidence to support the factual allegations in its claims.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
477 U.S. 317, 323, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986)(quoting Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c)) (“a party seeking summary judgment always bears the initial responsibility of informing the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of ‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,’ which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”) A party opposing summary judgment may do so
inter alia,
by demonstrating the incompetence of a witness, the inadmissibility of evidence, or the failure of the evidence to conclusively establish a necessary fact.
In this case, the key contested element is whether
Bulletin
publication constitutes notice to Customs. Defendant has submitted to the court competent declarations demonstrating that, in fact, its employees who are concerned with liquidation neither necessarily regularly read nor rely upon, the contents of that publication.
Travelers has not responded to Defendant’s evidence with competent countervailing evidence.
See
Plaintiffs Response at 2, 11. It failed to do so at its legal peril.
Customs Has Demonstrated the
Bulletin
Is Not an Unambiguous Form of Notice
Defendant has submitted to the court four Customs employee declarations
to demonstrate the ambiguous nature of the
Bulletin.
Each declaration provides relevant factual information on personal knowledge about the way the
Bulletin
interplays with everyday work at Customs, a
Declaration of Dirik Lolkus
In essence, Defendant argues that its employees actually charged with liquidation simply do not necessarily read each copy of the
Bulletin,
and that in any case, they are trained and instructed not to rely on its contents. Central to Customs’ argument is the Lolkus Declaration.
Mr. Lolkus is a Senior Import Specialist at the Port of Los Angeles. Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion, Attachment B: Declaration of Dirik Lolkus (“Lolkus Declaration”) at 1 ¶ 1. Lolkus was the team leader of Team 737, the team which handled the entries at issue and he has no recollection of noticing the 1997
Zenith II
decision in the
Bulletin. Id.
at 2 ¶ 4. More importantly, however, he sets out clearly, the general practices in which he and his team are trained:
[I]mport specialists are instructed to stay current on information relating to their work, and providing a copy of the
Bulletin
is one way that import specialists are encouraged to stay current. However, reading the
Bulletin
is not required. It is up to each specialist, to the extent he or she believes necessary or appropriate to review the
Bulletin
for information that may be relevant.
Lolkus Declaration at 1-2 ¶¶ 2-5 (emphasis in original).
He goes on:
[I]mport specialists are specifically instructed that the
only
source for instructions upon which they are to take action with respect entries subject to antidumping or countervailing duties ... are the instructions contained in messages that are posted to what is known as the OT03 bulletin board.
Id.
¶¶ 5, 7 (emphasis in original).
Defendant has offered probative evidence that the
Bulletin
is not the unambiguous notice of
Int’l Trading.
Import specialists are not required to read the
Bulletin,
and the amount of time an import specialist might spend on reading the
Bulletin
varies widely. Lolkus Declaration at 2-3 ¶¶ 3, 5-7. Given its failure to refute Lolkus’s testimony, Travelers has not proved that the
Bulletin
is a “familiar manner of providing notice” as described in
Int’l Trading,
281 F.3d at 1275.
The Lolkus Declaration is evidence that the
Bulletin
is not unambiguous notice to the “reasonable Customs official.”
NEC Solutions,
411 F.3d at 1346. Defendant has given unchallenged evidence from a “reasonable Customs official” (Lolkus) that illustrates that publication in the
Bulletin
was not unambiguous notice.
Id.
The Lolkus Declaration is relevant to the core question here,
and is made upon personal knowledge, it is properly submitted under CIT Rule 56(c), and to the extent it might represent hearsay, it would qualify for a business records exception under Fed.R.Evid. 803(6).
See United States v. Emenogha,
1 F.3d 473, 485 (7th Cir.1993); USCIT R. 56(c). The Lolkus Declaration factually demonstrates that Customs’ employees may properly fulfill their duties without reading the
Bulletin,
that the
Bulletin
is specifically not regarded as a proper source for liquidation information, and that it may well have no significance at all to a Customs officer doing his or her routine liquidation duties. Lol-kus’s Declaration is supported by other competent evidence.
Declaration of David, Genovese
Defendant argues that: (1) Customs employees who actually liquidate are not required to read each copy of the
Bulletin,
(2) the Los Angeles antidumping duty branch employees did not likely know about
Zenith II,
and (3) that Customs workers may only receive liquidation messages from the OT03 electronic
Bulletin
board. Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion at 9; Defendant’s Reply at 4-5; Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion, Attachment D: Declaration of David Ge-novese (“Genovese Declaration”) ¶¶ 3-7.
Genovese addresses those issues. The Branch he heads
acts as a liaison between field offices (the ports) and Com-
meree concerning the liquidation of entries,
id.
at 2 ¶ 3, and as part of its duties it actually prepares the liquidation instructions for the OT03 message board which it checks with Commerce before posting.
Id.
at 2 ¶ 5.
Mr. Genovese states that import specialists at the ports are “instructed that the OT03 electronic bulletin board is the
only
source they are to rely upon for processing any affected entries.”
Id.
(emphasis added). He adds that “reading the
Bulletin
is not required of personnel in this Branch.”
Id.
at 2 ¶ 5.
The “Branch does not receive a copy of the[Bulletin],” and it does “not have any record of the
[Zenith II]
opinion having been pointed out to us for purposes of reading or reviewing or for taking action up to and including the time we received the instruction which we subsequently disseminated at Message 5035206 dated February 4, 2005.” Genovese Declaration at 2 ¶ 7.
Because it provides factual evidence tending to prove that reading the copy of
Zenith II
in the
Bulletin
was neither necessary to prepare the OT03 notice, nor that it was actually read by his Branch, the Genovese Declaration supports Defendant’s contention that the
Zenith II
publication in the
Bulletin
did not constitute unambiguous notice of the sort required by the deemed liquidation rule.
See
discussion
infra
Part IV, D, la. That is not to say that the OT03 posting board is the only notice to Customs,
see Fujitsu,
283 F.3d at 1364, just that the
Bulletin
publication here was not notice under the facts provided.
c.
Declaration of Karen Biehl
One of Traveler’s central assumptions is that publication in the
Bulletin
is equivalent to notice to all Customs employees. “There is no question that each
Bulletin
is circulated widely within Customs because the Government Printing Office ‘currently prints approximately 2,700 copies of each issue’ ”. Plaintiffs Motion at 15 citing
id.
Ex. 9 at 6, Defendant’s Response to Plaintiffs First Interrogatory and Request for Production (April 26, 2007), Answer to Interrogatory No. 15. As a factual proposition Defendant attacks this assumption through the Declaration of Karen Biehl, Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion. Attachment A: Biehl Declaration (“Biehl Declaration”).
Biehl-notes that under current practice 2,421 copies of the
Bulletin
are printed and that “about 2000” copies are sent to Customs offices where, according to Defendant, it currently employs approximately 43,000 people. Biehl Declaration at 2 ¶ 6; Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion at 15 n. 16 (citing
Performance and Accountability Report,
Fiscal Year 2006, at 2,
available at
http://nemo.cbp.gov/of/ customs_report.pdf.) Neither party seems to be aware of the numbers for 1997, though Ms. Biehl asserts the practices are the same. Biehl Declaration at 2 ¶ 7.
Ms. Biehl’s statements, while not dispos-itive since they deal with an unrecorded past, tend to indicate that Customs followed its current practice of distributing the
Bulletin
to its employees at a ratio of less than twenty to one. Plaintiff has not even attempted to refute that factual assertion. Thus, the evidence presented in the Biehl Declaration tends to disprove Plaintiffs assertion that publication in the
Bulletin
necessarily reached all Customs employees.
d
Declaration of Edward Maurer
In its Motion for Summary Judgment, Plaintiff relies on discovery responses where Defendant states that: (1) the
Bulletin’s
purpose “is generally, to educate and inform the public of matters concern
ing • Customs and related subjects”
(Plaintiffs Motion at 15 Ex. 9 at 2 ¶ 3) and (2) the subtitle of the
Bulletin
including the language “Weekly Compilation of Decisions ... Concerning Customs and Related Matters of the ... U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ...”
(id.),
to prove that “one or more of the members of Team 737 generally reviews the
Bulletin
”
(id.
Ex. 10 at 2 ¶ 4) and that a Customs’ employee may read “one or more of the items in the
Bulletin
quite carefully”
^. Ex. 10 at 2 ¶3).
Even without further contradiction, Plaintiffs reliance upon these Responses for the propositions stated is, at best, attenuated. Defendant has not, however, chosen to rest on that failure. Edward Maurer, a lawyer at Customs, provided a declaration stating that he reviewed publication of the
Bulletin
for the years 1995 through 2000
and determined that publication of Federal Circuit opinions during that time “did not seem to follow any consistent pattern.” Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion, Attachment D: Declaration of Edward N. Maurer at 1 ¶ 3. His analysis of the timing of case publication supports that conclusion.
Id.
at 2 ¶¶ 4a-6.
Thus, because publication of Federal Circuit opinions is not consistent, the
Bulletin,
according to Defendant, cannot be relied upon for notice, and therefore there was no reason any Customs employee should have been expected to take notice from it. The argument is persuasive, not least, because Plaintiff provides no
facts
to refute it. Rather, Plaintiff continues in its (Response and Opposition) to either attempt to apply the facts demonstrated by Defendant to its version of the law,
(see, e.g.
Defendant’s Response and Cross Motion at 15 n. 16), or to ignore them entirely. The failure to assert genuine issues of contravening material facts is, when taken with the law, fatal to Plaintiffs case.
Plaintiff Has Not Refuted Customs’ Declarations and Has Not Adequately Proven That the
Bulletin
Is Unambiguous Notice
Defendant relies on the factual information submitted in the Customs workers’ declarations
to prove its summary judgment argument that the publication of
Zenith II
in the
Bulletin
did not constitute unambiguous notice and that Travelers has not met its burden of proving that there are no genuine issues of fact. The declarations offer proof that the Customs employees who liquidated the entries had: (1) no responsibility to read the
Bulletin
:(2) were not aware of the publishing of the
Zenith II
decision in the
Bulletin;
and (3) did not rely on the
Bulletin
to liquidate
the entries.
See
Lolkus Declaration at 2-3 ¶ 3, Genovese Declaration at 2 ¶¶ 5-7. Travelers argues that the Customs workers’ declarations are irrelevant. Plaintiffs Response at 2. Travelers however, does not provide any evidence to contradict the proof provided through the declarations because it claims the issue to address is solely “whether Customs, as an agency, received legally adequate notice that the suspension of liquidation had been removed, not whether a particular individual actually read the
Zenith [II]
decision in the
Bulletin” Id.
When the party moving for summary judgment supplements its Motion for Summary Judgment by affidavit or other material, the non-moving party “cannot respond with mere allegations.”
(see First Nat’l Bank v. Cities Serv. Co.,
391 U.S. 253, 289, 88 S.Ct. 1575 20 L.Ed.2d 569 (1968)), nor may the non-moving party rest on mere assertions made in pleadings, legal memoranda, or oral argument.
See Berckeley Inv. Group Ltd. v. Colkitt,
455 F.3d 195, 201 (3d Cir.2006); USCIT R.56(e). Customs has submitted proof that the
Bulletin
is not unambiguous notice. Travelers has neither refuted Customs’ evidence nor does it provide any case law, statutes, affidavits, declarations, or otherwise to demonstrate that the declarations are irrelevant or inadmissible.
See
Plaintiffs Response at 10-11. Travelers’ assertions of fact, unreinforced by evidence, are only unfounded assertions. A “non-moving party is required to provide opposing evidence under [CITjRule 56(e)
only if the moving party has provided evidence sufficient, if unopposed, to prevail as a matter of law.”
Saab Cars USA, Inc. v. United States,
434 F.3d 1359, 1369 (Fed.Cir.2006).
See e.g., Sweats Fashions, Inc. v. Pannill Knitting Co., Inc. 833 F.2d 1560, 1562 (Fed.Cir.1987)
(“where a movant has supported its motions with affidavits or other evidence
which, unopposed, would establish its right to judgment,
the nonmovant ... must proffer countering evidence”) (emphasis added). The Customs declarations prove that the
Bulletin
is not unambiguous notice and provide evidence that reinforces Customs’ summary judgment claim. Travelers’ failure to offer countervailing evidence: 1) is fatal to its claim that the
Bulletin
constitutes unambiguous notice, and 2) renders its motion for summary judgment untenable.
When a motion for summary judgment is made and supported as provided in of the adverse party’s pleading, but the adverse party’s pleading by affidavits or as otherwise provided in this rule, must set forth specific facts showing there is a genuine issue for trial. If the adverse party does not so respond, summary judgment, if appropriate shall be entered against the adverse party.
V
CONCLUSION
Plaintiff has not proven on the basis of law or fact that publication in the
Bulletin
is unambiguous notice, nor has Plaintiff responded to or refuted Defendant’s factual declarations. Additionally, Plaintiff has not proven that publication in the
Bulletin
is the same sort of unambiguous notice as publication in the
Federal Register.
Given that ambiguity, the deemed liquidation rule does not apply. For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED, Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED. The antidumping duty rate 7.43% that was applied to the 17 Funai USA entries of CTVs from November 1987 to March 1988 is AFFIRMED.