Dorbest Ltd. v. United States
This is a revision of a Previous Opinion originally issued on October 31, 2006
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Slip-Op. 09-2
UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -x
DORBEST LTD.; RUI FENG WOODWORK
:
(DONGGUAN) CO. LTD.; RUI FENG
:
LUMBER DEV. (SHENZHEN) CO. LTD., :
:
and
:
:
AM. FURNITURE MFRS. COMM. FOR
:
LEGAL TRADE; VAUGHAN-BASSETT
:
FURNITURE CO. INC.; CABINET
:
MAKERS, MILLMEN, & INDUS.
:
CARPENTERS LOCAL 721; UBC S.
:
COUNCIL OF INDUS. WORKERS LOCAL
:
2305; UNITED STEEL WORKERS OF AM. :
LOCAL 193U; CARPENTERS INDUS.
:
UNION LOCAL 2093; TEAMSTERS,
:
CHAUFFEURS,WAREHOUSEMEN & HELPERS :
LOCAL 991; IUE INDUS. DIV. OF CWA :
LOCAL 82472
:
:
Plaintiffs/Defendant:
Intervenors,
:
:
v.
: Before: Pogue, Judge
: Consol. Ct. No. 05-00003
UNITED STATES,
:
:
Defendant,
:
:
DONGGUAN LUNG DONG/DON HE
:
ART HERITAGE INTâL, LTD/SUPER ART :
FURNITURE CO./ARTOWRK METAL &
:
PLASTIC CO./JIBSON INDUS. LTD./
:
ALWAYS LOYAL INTâL; FORTUNE GLORY :
LTD. (HK LTD.)/ NANHAI JIANTAI
:
WOODWORK CO.; FINE FURNITURE
:
(SHANGHAI) LTD.; COASTER CO. OF
:
AM.; COLLEZIONE EUROPA, USA,
:
INC.; FINE FURNITURE DESIGN &
:
MKTG. LLC; GLOBAL FURNITURE, INC.,:
HILLSDALE FURNITURE, LLC;
:
KLAUSSNER INTâL, LLC; MAGNUSSEN
:
HOME FURNISHINGS INC.;
:
L. POWELL CO.; RIVERSEDGE
:
FURNITURE CO.; WOODSTUFF MFG.
:
INC., D/B/A SAMUEL LAWRENCE;
:
SCHNADIG
CORP.; GOOD COS.;
:
STANDARD FURNITURE MFG. CO.
:
:
Defendant-Intervenors. :
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ----x
[Commerceâs remand determination sustained].
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 2
Troutman Sanders LLP (Jeffrey S. Grimson, Donald B. Cameron,
Julie C. Mendoza, R. Will Planert, Brady W. Mills, Mary S. Hodgins)
for Dorbest Limited et al.;
King & Spalding, LLP (Joseph W. Dorn, Stephen A. Jones,
Jeffrey M. Telep, J. Michael Taylor, Elizabeth E. Duall) for the
American Furniture Manufacturers Committee for Legal Trade et al.;
Gregory G. Katsas, Assistant Attorney General; Jeanne E.
Davidson, Director, Patricia M. McCarthy, Assistant Director,
Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of
Justice (Brian A. Mizoguchi); Rachel E. Wenthold, Senior Attorney,
Office of Chief Counsel for Import Administration, U.S. Department
of Commerce, for the United States Department of Commerce;
Mowry International Group, LLC (Jill Cramer and Kristin H.
Mowry) and Howe & Russell, PC (Kevin Russell) on behalf of Art
Heritage International, Limited et al.; and
Trade Pacific, PLLC (Robert
Dongguan Lung Dong/Dong He et al.
G.
Gosselink)
on
behalf
of
Decided: January 7, 2009
POGUE, Judge: This matter returns to court after a second
partial remand following the courtâs most recent decision, Dorbest
Ltd. v. United States, 547 F. Supp. 2d 1321 (CIT 2008) (âDorbest
IIâ). Dorbest II remanded the matter to the Department of Commerce
(âCommerceâ) so that it could: (1) determine the correct heading of
the
Harmonized
Tariff
Schedule
of
India
(âHTS[I]â)
for
the
valuation of Dorbestâs cardboard input, id. at 1337, (2) provide
adequate support or explanation for its selection of surrogate
companies for use in the calculation of SG&A financial ratios, id.
at 1344, (3) explain its reasoning in calculating offsets to SG&A
and interest expenses with short-term interest income earned on
working capital accounts or current assets, id. at 1347-8, and (4)
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 3
calculate the separate rate for non-mandatory respondents without
creating or using data known to be invalid, id. at 1351.
Also
before the court is Petitioner AFMCâs contention that Commerce must
correct a ministerial error with respect to the valuation of
rubberwood.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The court reviews remand determinations for compliance with
the courtâs remand order.
See NMB Sing. Ltd. v. United States, 28
CIT 1252, 1259-60, 341 F. Supp. 2d 1327, 1333-34 (2004) (affirming
International Trade Commissionâs determinations on remand where the
determinations
were
in
accordance
with
law,
supported
by
substantial evidence, and otherwise satisfied the remand order);
see also Olympia Indus., Inc. v. United States, 23 CIT 80, 82-83,
36 F. Supp. 2d 414, 416 (1999) (affirming after âreview[ing]
Commerce's
Resultsâ
compliance
and
with
the
finding
these
instructions
determination
to
in
be
its
Remand
supported
by
substantial evidence and in accordance with law). In addition, any
factual
evidence
findings
and
the
on
remand
agencyâs
must
legal
be
supported
by
determinations
substantial
must
be
in
accordance with law. 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B); see, e.g., Huaiyin
Foreign Trade Corp. v. United States, 322 F.3d 1369, 1374 (Fed.
Cir. 2003); AG der Dillinger Huttenwerke v. United States, 28 CIT
94,
95,
310
F.
Supp.
2d
1347,
1349
(2004)
(holding
remand
determination to legal and factual standards set out in 19 U.S.C.
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 4
§ 1516a(b)(1)(B)).
DISCUSSION
The court considers each issue in turn:
1. Valuation of Cardboard
Dorbest II granted Commerceâs request for a voluntary remand
to âdetermine under which subheading Dorbestâs [cardboard] input
would properly be classified,â and further directed Commerce to
âdetermine
whether
the
data
put
forth
by
Dorbest
regarding
distortion to data in subheading 4808.1000 necessitates alteration
of the data used or the selection of a different subheading.â
Dorbest II, 547 F. Supp. 2d at 1338.
On
4808.1000
remand,
Commerce
provided
the
determined
better
that
HTS[I]
classification
for
subheading
Dorbestâs
cardboard input. Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court
Remand, Dorbest Ltd.; Rui Feng Woodwork (Dongguan) Co. Ltd.; Rui
Feng Lumber Dev. (Shenzhen) Co. Ltd. v. United States, Consol.
Court No. 05-00003 July 15, 2008) (âFinal Resultsâ) at 4.
In
support of this determination, Commerce compared Dorbestâs own
description of its input with the subheadings at issue, noting that
Dorbest described its cardboard input as âpaper cardboard.â Id. at
4 (quoting Dorbest Response to HTS Request, Attachment 1, May 26,
2004, P.R. 1152, fr.7).
HTS[I] heading 4808 covers âPaper and paperboard, corrugated
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 5
(with or without glued flat surface sheets), creped, crinkled,
embossed or perforated, in rolls or sheets, other than paper of the
kind described in 4803.â
Subheading 4808.1000 in turn covers
âCorrugated paper and paperboard, whether or not perforated.â
Commerce also considered Subheading 4808.9000, which is a residual
or basket category, âotherâ, covering items not covered by the
first three subheadings of heading 4808.
Generally, such basket
categories should be used only when no more specific category is
appropriate. See Witex, U.S.A., Inc. v. United States, 28 CIT 1907,
1916-17 & n. 16, 353 F. Supp. 2d 1310, 1319 & n. 16 (2004).
Furthermore, because Dorbestâs own description of its product seems
to fit under subsection 4808.1000, there is a good reason to favor
this heading unless it is unreasonable, for some other reason, to
do so.
Dorbest claims, however, that information from Infodrive India
demonstrates that 4808.1000 is not an appropriate heading for two
reasons.
items
in
First, Dorbest claims that Infodrive data show that many
4808.1000
are
âmisclassifiedâ,
and
second,
a
large
percentage of the items classified under 4808.1000 are finished
cardboard boxes, a value-added product that differs from Dorbestâs
product.
In response, Commerce contends that the data from Infodrive
are, at least in this case, unreliable, as they are significantly
incomplete, because they do not cover or include at least 40% of
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 6
all imports classified under 4808.1000.
Furthermore because the
information
in
in
Infodrive
is
presented
a
large
number
of
different units of measurement, many of which are incommensurable,
Commerce contends that it is not able to use this data to check its
otherwise reasonable determination to use subheading 4808.1000.
Final Results at 5-6.
Dorbestâs arguments on this point are essentially similar to
those that the court previously rejected when made with regard to
Dorbestâs resin input.
Dorbest II, 547 F. Supp. 2d at 1333.
Here
the court notes, once again, that when Commerce weighs or evaluates
the evidence and chooses between imperfect alternatives, so long as
its decision is supported by substantial evidence, the court must
affirm.
has
As in the earlier decision regarding resin, here Commerce
evaluated
the
evidence
and
chosen
between
imperfect
alternatives for valuing Dorbestsâ cardboard input. As there is
substantial evidence supporting its decision, that decision is
affirmed. See also, Nippon Steel Corp. v. United States, 458 F.3d
1345, 1350-52 (Fed.Cir.2006)(concluding that âsubstantial evidenceâ
connotes reasonableness review).
Dorbest also argues that Commerceâs valuation of cardboard in
its
remand
determination
is
unfair
because
other
received different values during the investigation.
without merit.
respondents
This claim is
As no other parties contested the original value
selected by Commerce, Commerce did not have occasion to reexamine
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
the
cardboard
valuations
Page 7
assigned
to
the
other
respondents.
Therefore, because these other cardboard valuations were not at
issue here, they were not part of the courtâs remand order to
Commerce, and Commerce therefore had no duty to consider them.
2. SG&A Financial Ratios
In its initial remand to Commerce, Dorbest Ltd. v. United
States, 30 CIT _, 462 F. Supp. 2d 1262 (2006)(âDorbest Iâ), the
court noted that Commerce generally considers quality, specificity,
contemporaneity
and
representativeness
when
judging
the
appropriateness of surrogate values for use in the calculation of
financial ratios. Id. at 1301. The court emphasized âthat Commerce
must apply its selection criterion in a consistent and uniform
manner,
otherwise
its
selection
could
become
arbitrary
and
capricious.â Id.
In Dorbest II
the court again remanded this issue with
instructions to Commerce that it must support its conclusion that
including data from four companies much smaller than Dorbest -Fusion Design Private Ltd., DnDâs Fine Furniture Ltd., Nizamuddin
Furniture Ltd., and Swaran Furniture Ltd. --
did not distort the
calculated financial ratios, given the apparent correlation between
company size and financial ratios.
1343-44.
Dorbest
II
Dorbest II, 547 F. Supp. 2d at
specifically
noted
that
âCommerceâs
determination to include SG&A ratios which it has determined are
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 8
âcomparableâ to those of companies of other sizes may be within the
agencyâs discretion, if based on proper findings regarding the
effect of including much smaller companies in its data set.
Commerceâs remand determination, however, does not contain such
findings.â Id. at 1343.
In its Final Results, Commerce again made no such findings.
Instead, Commerce claims that their prior method of calculation,
the one the court previously rejected, is sufficient, and that a
more sophisticated approach is neither necessary nor, given the
data Commerce has, possible.
Final Results at 19.
However, as
Commerce correctly recognizes, merely repeating arguments that have
already been rejected will not suffice. Because Commerce has chosen
to add no new arguments or analysis, it has decided to exclude the
companies in question from its calculation of SG&A ratios. Id.
As
both Dorbest and the court are satisfied with Commerceâs decision
to remove the companies in question -- even if not with Commerceâs
reasons -- the court now affirms Commerceâs calculation of SG&A
ratios.
3. Interest Income
In Dorbest II the court remanded to Commerce its consideration
of interest income, directing it to âexplain its reasoning and its
factual determinations regarding the offset of SG&A expenses with
short-term interest [for DnD and Raghbir].â
Dorbest II, 547 F.
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Supp. 2d at 1347-48.
Page 9
Because Commerce has now excluded DnD from
its calculations of surrogate financial ratios, only the offset for
Raghbir is at issue.
In its Final Results, Commerce explained its practice of
allowing an offset to SG&A and interest expenses for short-term
interest income earned on investments of working capital accounts,
that
is,
current
assets.
Final
Results
at
25.
See
also
Antifriction Bearings (Other Than Tapered Roller Bearings) and
Parts Thereof From the Federal Republic of Germany; Final Results
of Antidumpting Duty Administrative Review, 56 Fed. Reg. 31692,
31734
(Depât
Commerce
Commerce
explained
July
that,
11,
1991)
because
it
(final
does
not
determination).
take
long-term
interest income to relate to current operations, it does not offset
interest
expense
investments.
with
interest
income
Final Results at 26.
earned
on
long-term
Commerce further explained
that, in cases arising from non-market economies that do not allow
for a detailed analysis of the assets that generate interest
income, it has established the practice of examining the assets on
the balance sheet of the surrogate financial statement so as to
determine the ratio or percentage of short term to total interestbearing
assets.
Antidumping
Duty
Id.
See
also
Notice
Administrative
Review
of
Final
and
Results
Final
of
Partial
Rescission: Certain Cut-to-Length Carbon Steel Plate from Romania,
72 Fed. Reg. 6522 (Depât Commerce February 12, 2007) (final
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
determination).
Page 10
This percentage is then applied to the interest
income earned to give an approximation of the short-term portion of
total interest income.
Final Results at 26.
However, in the present case Commerce did not need to use this
method as, in its investigation of Raghbirâs balance sheets, it
found all of the interest-bearing assets of the company to be
short-term in nature.
Final Results at 27.
Having presented
evidence that all of Raghbirâs interest-bearing assets are âcurrent
assetsâ, and finding that there was no evidence of interest earned
from long-term investments, Commerce concluded that any interest
income earned by Raghbir must be short-term in nature.
27.
Id. at 26-
Given this, Commerce concluded that it was appropriate to
offset all of Raghbirâs interest income against its interest
expenses.
Id. at 28.
As these conclusions are supported by
substantial evidence, and are furthermore not contested by any
party, the court affirms Commerceâs conclusion as to interest
income.
4. Calculation of the Separate Rate
After the courtâs initial remand to Commerce in Dorbest I,
Commerce adjusted Dorbestâs margin as a result of Dorbestâs and
AFMCâs court challenges.
Final Results at 28.
Because AFMCâs
complaint also addressed the margin applicable to other mandatory
and
non-mandatory
(separate
rate)
respondents,
Commerce
also
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 11
calculated new rates for those companies.
Id. at 28-29.
However,
in recalculating the separate rate on remand, Commerce took into
account only the changes that resulted from AFMCâs challenge and
not those that resulted from Dorbestâs challenge.
As a result,
when calculating the separate rate, Commerce used an invalid and
fictitious rate of 8.52% for Dorbest, rather than the rate of 2.87%
that Commerce actually assigned to Dorbest after remand.
29.
Id. at
As the separate rate is a weighted average of the rates
assigned
to
mandatory
respondents,
using
this
invalid
and
fictitious rate resulted in a higher rate being assigned to the
separate rate parties.
In Dorbest II, the court remanded this issue, noting that,
while the separate rate companies (referred to collectively as âArt
Heritageâ) were not entitled to the benefits of Dorbestâs claim,
because they were not parties to that action, Commerce also could
not use or create data that it knew to be invalid when better data
was easily available.
Dorbest II, 547 F. Supp. 2d at 1351.
See
also D & L Supply Co. v. United States, 113 F.3d 1220, 1223 (Fed.
Cir. 1997) (deciding, under the 1988 version of the antidumping
law, that â[i]nformation that has conclusively been determined to
be inaccurate does not qualify as the âbest informationâ under any
test, and certainly cannot be said to serve the âbasic purposeâ [of
the statute] of promoting accuracy.â ); F.lli De Cecco Di Filippo
Fara S. Martino S.p.A. v. United States, 216 F.3d 1027, 1032 (Fed.
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 12
Cir. 2000)(affirming Court of International Tradeâs ruling that
Commerce
could
not
use
a
rate
that
had
discreditedâ by Commerceâs own investigation).
been
âthoroughly
In the courtâs
April 1 order, the court further clarified that Commerce could not
use a rate which Commerce knew to be incorrect when better data was
available.
Apr.
1,
Dorbest Ltd. v. United States, No. 05-cv-00003 (CIT
2008)
(order
granting
defendantâs
motion
for
clarification).
While Commerce has agreed to follow the courtâs instructions
and not use invalid, fictitious data in calculating the separate
rate, the agency does so only âunder protestâ, asserting, along
with AFMC, that there is âno legal basis to alter the separate rate
based on Dorbestâs lawsuit.â
Final Results at 32.
This claim
shows two misunderstandings.
First, the court has not ordered
Commerce to change the separate rate âbased on Dorbestâs lawsuitâ,
but rather on the basis of well established law that requires
Commerce to use the best data available and not to use data it
knows to be inaccurate.
That Dorbestâs action was the cause of
Commerceâs gaining this more accurate data does not make Dorbestâs
action the basis of the required change.
Secondly, it is well
established that the court may exercise its discretion upon remand
to prevent the court from knowingly affirming a determination with
errors.
Maui Pineapple Co. v. U.S., 27 CIT 580, 603, 264 F. Supp.
2d 1244, 1264 (2003). Here, as in Maui Pineapple, the Art Heritage
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 13
companies are not entitled to the fruits of Dorbestâs suit, but the
court in turn is not required to affirm a determination it (and
Commerce) knows to be mistaken.
For these reasons the court
affirms Commerceâs determination of the separate rate.
5. Rubberwood
Finally, the court considers Commerceâs decision once again
not to correct a ministerial error, with respect to rubberwood, on
the grounds that the complaint asking for the change was filed in
an untimely manner.
Final Results at 33.
The court has already
dealt with this issue in its previous decision, noting that, while
it is within Commerceâs discretionary powers to correct this error,
even when notified of it in an untimely manner, Commerce is not
required to do so âgiven the length of time that had elapsed, and
the fact that the rubberwood issue was not before Commerce on
remand, and thus was not a âliveâ issue.â
2d at 1348.
Dorbest II, 547 F. Supp.
Nothing has changed with regard to this issue since
the courtâs earlier determination.
Additionally, as the court
affirms the rest of Commerceâs determination, to remand on this
one, untimely filed, complaint would be especially burdensome,
weighing against such a remand.
For these reasons, the court
affirms Commerceâs decision not to reopen the question of the
valuation of rubberwood.
Consolidated Ct. No. 05-00003
Page 14
CONCLUSION
In summary, the court finds as follows:
(i) Commerce's valuation of cardboard is affirmed;
(ii)
Commerce's
selection
of
surrogate
companies
for
the
computation of the financial ratios is affirmed;
(iii) Commerceâs calculation of financial ratios with respect to
interest income is affirmed;
(iv) Commerceâs calculation of the separate rate is affirmed
(v) Commerceâs decision not to revisit a clerical error in the
valuation of rubberwood is affirmed.
Judgment will be entered accordingly.
/s/ Donald C. Pogue
Donald C. Pogue, Judge
Dated:
January 7, 2009
New York, New York
