UST, Inc. v. United States

9 Ct. Int'l Trade 352
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedJuly 31, 1985
DocketCourt No. 81-10-01392
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ct. Int'l Trade 352 (UST, Inc. 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
UST, Inc. v. United States, 9 Ct. Int'l Trade 352 (cit 1985).

Opinion

Ford, Judge:

This action contests the "Final Results of Administrative Review of Antidumping Finding” involving roller chain, other than bicycle, from Japan (46 Fed. Reg. 44488, September 4, 1981), conducted by the U.S. Department of Commerce (Commerce) pursuant to section 751a of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, 19 U.S.C. § 1675(a). Before the Court is plaintiffs’ (UST) motion, under Rule 56.1 for Judgment Upon Agency Record. Defendant opposes said motion and seeks affirmance of the administrative review under challenge. Jurisdiction is pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1516a and 28 U.S.C. § 1581c.

In accordance with this Court’s order of remand in UST, Inc. and Tusbakimoto Chain Company Ltd. v. United States, 8 CIT 82, Slip Op. 84-91 (August 3,1984), the administrative record of this case was amended with the addition of UST’s August 19 and September 18, 1981, submissions to Commerce in the underlying review. UST presently seeks an order amending Commerce’s assessment instructions to the Customs Service to include the chain types enumerated in UST’s August 19, 1981 submissions. These chain types were subsequently determined by Commerce not to have been sold at less than fair value during the relevant period.

Defendant maintains that, insofar as Slip Op. 84-91 denied defendant’s motion for review under Rule 56.1, a complete review of the issues presented in the administrative record is warranted. To amend the assessment instructions in the manner sought by UST would, defendant argues, grant UST’s ultimate relief without a full review upon the record as mandated by statute.

The principal issue in this case is whether Commerce erred in refusing to consider UST’s submissions of August 19 and September 18, 1981, in its administrative review of the antidumping finding on roller chain, other than bicycle, from Japan. In remanding this matter to Commerce to amend the administrative record with UST’s [353]*353submissions, the Court, in Slip Op. 84-91, acknowledged the existence of a definitional dispute between the parties on the scope of the review. The Court therefore supplemented the administrative record prior to its full review thereof. Slip Op. 84-91 was not a final, appealable order and did not resolve the substantive issue before the Court. To the extent that certain factual findings were made in that decision, those findings must be discounted as they were reached without a full review upon the record and without affording the defendant an opportunity to present its argument on the merits. Commerce having completed the administrative record, the Court now considers whether the Commerce determination not to consider data contained in UST’s submissions in reaching its final results of administrative review was "unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law”, pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(l)(B).

The background of this case originates with the publication, on April 12, 1973, of Treasury Decision 73-100 (38 Fed. Reg. 9226), an antidumping finding with respect to roller chain, other than bicycle, from Japan. In this decision, as well as previous publications, including the original Antidumping Proceeding Notice (37 Fed. Reg. 3770, Feb. 19, 1972), the Withholding of Appraisement Notice (37 Fed. Reg. 17768, Aug. 31,1972), the Notice of Determination of Sales at Less than Fair Value (37 Fed. Reg. 25859, Dec. 5, 1972), and the Notice of Determination of Injury (38 Fed. Reg. 6241, March 7,1973), the subject mechandise was simply described as "roller chain, other than bicycle, from Japan.”

Following the transfer of authority for administering the anti-dumping law from the Secretary of the Treasury, on March 28,1980, Commerce undertook an administrative review of T.D. 73-100, pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1675 (hereafter section 751 review). On March 30, 1980, UST requested that Commerce issue a ruling on the scope of the finding on "roller chain, other than bicycle, from Japan” (A.R. 001). In this request, UST asserted that only chain precisely set forth in American National Standards Institute standards B.29.1 and B.29.3 were "roller chain” for purposes of the antidumping finding. UST claimed that there was no consistent definition of roller chain because the petitioner’s definition changed during the various stages of the original investigation and that, as only two chain types were consistent throughout the definitions, only those types constituted roller chain for purposes of the finding.

In May of 1980, Commerce sent questionnaires to UST requesting information on entries of "roller chain other than bicycle, from Japan” for the period April 1, 1979 through March 31, 1980, for the required 751 review (A.R. 588-9). UST’s responses to this request were incomplete in that data were not submitted on all types of roller chain. For chain that was reported, UST provided only price list information, rather than sale-by-sale data as required by the questionnaire (A.R. 356). Further, the responses were inconsistent, [354]*354as UST reported on some chain it alleged was not covered by the finding, while not reporting on other chain of the same class (A.R. 546). Commerce became aware of UST’s failure to submit proper data on all roller chain during discussions regarding the nonconfi-dential summaries submitted on June 25, 1980 (A.R. 546). Thereafter, and repeatedly during the course of the section 751 review, Commerce personnel indicated to UST that at least "all chains containing a roller should be reported” (A.R. 540; A.R. 545; 543-4). Despite these requests, UST did not report on certain chain although it was aware that such non-reporting would subject such chain to automatic margins determined on the basis of best information otherwise available (A.R. 532, 652).

On March 17, 1981, Commerce published its preliminary determination, in which the scope of the review was defined as follows:

Imports covered by this review are shipments of roller chain, other than bicycle, currently classifiable under various provisions of the Tariff Schedules of the United States Annotated (TSUSA), ranging from item numbers 652.1300 through 652.3800.

The preliminary determination also stated that the best information was used to establish dumping liability where company-supplied information was inadequate or no information was received. (A.R. 625)

Commerce sent UST a memorandum on the scope of the dumping order on July 1, 1981 (A.R. 521-524). This memorandum established that, consistent with the questionnaire request for data on all "roller chain, other than bicycle,” the scope of the finding (T.D. 73-100) "includes all roller chain in the generic sense” (A.R. 521). The memorandum explained that the product description was written to cover an entire class or kind of merchandise, rather than just a few types of roller chain. It further provided four general definitions to be used in determining the applicability of the dumping finding to particular types of chain.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ct. Int'l Trade 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ust-inc-v-united-states-cit-1985.