Timken U.S. Corp. v. United States , 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 1828 ( 2004 )


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  •                             Slip Op. 04-135
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    BEFORE: SENIOR JUDGE NICHOLAS TSOUCALAS
    ________________________________________
    :
    TIMKEN U.S. CORPORATION and             :
    TIMKEN NADELLAGER, GmbH,                :
    :
    Plaintiff,                    :
    :                   Court No.
    v.                            :                   00-09-00454
    :
    UNITED STATES,                          :
    :
    Defendant.                    :
    ________________________________________:
    [The United States Department of Commerce’s Remand Determination
    is affirmed. Case dismissed.]
    Stewart and Stewart (Terence P. Stewart and Geert De Prest)for
    Timken U.S. Corporation and Timken Nadellager, GmbH, plaintiffs.
    Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General, David M. Cohen,
    Director, Jeanne E. Davidson, Deputy Director, Commercial
    Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of
    Justice (Claudia Burke); of counsel: Augusto A. Guerra, Office of
    the Chief Counsel for Import Administration, United States
    Department of Commerce for the United States, defendant.
    Dated:   October 29, 2004
    OPINION
    I.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The   Court   will   uphold    the   United   States    Department   of
    Commerce’s (“Commerce”) redetermination pursuant to the Court’s
    remand unless it is “unsupported by substantial evidence on the
    record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.”              19 U.S.C. §
    Court No.   00-09-00454                                          Page   2
    1516a(b)(1)(B)(i) (1994).        Substantial evidence is “more than a
    mere scintilla.     It means such relevant evidence as a reasonable
    mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.”        Universal
    Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 
    340 U.S. 474
    , 477 (1951) (quoting Consol.
    Edison Co. v. NLRB, 
    305 U.S. 197
    , 229 (1938)).               Substantial
    evidence “is something less than the weight of the evidence, and
    the possibility of drawing two inconsistent conclusions from the
    [same] evidence does not prevent an administrative agency’s finding
    from being supported by substantial evidence.”           Consolo v. Fed.
    Mar. Comm’n, 
    383 U.S. 607
    , 620 (1966).
    II.   BACKGROUND
    The relevant facts and procedural history in this case are set
    forth in the Court’s remand opinion, Timken U.S. Corp. v. United
    States, 28 CIT ___, 
    318 F. Supp. 2d 1271
     (2004).         A brief summary
    is included here.
    Commerce   published   a   final   determination   entitled   Final
    Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews and Revocation
    of Orders in Part on Antifriction Bearings (Other Than Tapered
    Roller Bearings) and Parts Thereof From France, Germany, Italy,
    Japan, Romania, Singapore, Sweden, and the United Kingdom (“Final
    Results”), 
    65 Fed. Reg. 49,219
     (Aug. 11, 2000).           The period of
    review covered by the Final Results is May 1, 1998, to April 30,
    Court No.   00-09-00454                                    Page   3
    1999.    See 
    id.
       On June 15, 2001, the plaintiffs, Timken U.S.
    Corporation and Timken Nadellager, GmbH (collectively, “Timken”)
    moved pursuant to USCIT R. 56.2 for judgment upon the agency record
    challenging one aspect of the Finals Results.1   See Timken’s Mem.
    Supp. R. 56.2 Mot. J. Upon Agency R.   Specifically, at issue was
    whether Commerce properly rejected evidence submitted by Timken
    after the Final Results were published to correct an alleged error
    in the antidumping margin (“post-Final Results invoices”).2
    On March 5, 2004, this Court issued a remand order directing
    Commerce to further investigate the claims raised during the
    administrative proceeding with regards to the error committed by
    the plaintiffs in reporting home-market sales according to channels
    1
    This action was originally brought by The Torrington
    Company and Torrington Nadellager GmbH in September 2000.      See
    Summons ¶ 1. The Torrington Company was acquired by the Timken
    Company on Feb. 18, 2003, and is now known as Timken U.S.
    Corporation.   Timken’s German affiliate is now known as Timken
    Nadellageer, GmbH. See Disclosure of Corporate Affiliations & Fin.
    Interest at 1 (filed with this Court on Feb. 3, 2004).
    2
    After the Final Results were published, Timken’s
    antidumping margin was considerably higher than other companies in
    the   review   prompting  Timken   to  re-examine   its   internal
    classification procedures and questionnaire responses submitted to
    Commerce.    See Timken, 28 CIT __, 
    318 F. Supp. 2d at 1273-75
    .
    Claiming several internal mis-classification errors, Timken
    requested Commerce to change the published antidumping margin and
    offered invoices to substantiate its claim.     See 
    id.
       Commerce
    declined to accept these invoices. See 
    id.
     Commerce found that
    the errors were not clerical in nature and the invoices were
    offered well beyond the administrative deadline for submitting new
    factual information. See 
    id.
     Timken subsequently filed its 56.2
    motion. See 
    id.
    Court No.    00-09-00454                                           Page   4
    of distribution for Timken and make any corrections necessary to
    attain the most accurate antidumping margin. See Timken, 28 CIT at
    ___, 
    318 F. Supp. 2d at 1279
     (emphasis added).         On June 7, 2004,
    Commerce submitted its Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to
    Court Remand (“Remand Determination”).        On July 7, 2004, Timken
    filed comments regarding the Remand Determination.               See Pl.’s
    Comments on the Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Ct.
    Remand (“Timken’s Comments”).       Commerce then filed a response to
    Timken’s comments on July 30, 2004.          See Def.’s Resp. to Pl.’
    Comments Regarding the Dep’t of Commerce’s Remand Determination.
    III. DISCUSSION
    Timken bears the burden of showing that the post-Final Results
    evidence changes the disputed channels of distribution (“Channels”)
    classifications, thus changing the published antidumping margin.
    See NTN Bearing Corp. of Am. v. United States, 
    19 CIT 1165
    , 1174,
    
    903 F. Supp. 62
    , 70 (1995) (“A party claiming a level-of-trade
    adjustment    has   the    burden   of   proving   entitlement     to   the
    adjustment.”).      The Channels and associated home-market sales
    reported by Timken, on a questionnaire during the administrative
    review process, determined the levels of trade (“LOT”), which was
    ultimately used to calculate the antidumping margin.        See Timken,
    28 CIT at        , 
    318 F. Supp. 2d at 1273
    .        Timken reported five
    Channels in its home-market sales listing, which Commerce grouped
    Court No.    00-09-00454                                               Page   5
    into three LOT.       See 
    id.
        Channel 1 consisted of sales to large
    original equipment manufacturers (“OEMs”) and was designated as LOT
    1; Channels 2 and 3 consisted of sales to other OEMs and sales
    distributors, respectively, and was designated as LOT 2; and
    Channels 4 and 5 consisted of sales to OEMs and distributors,
    respectively, of an affiliated marketing entity and was designated
    as LOT 3.    See id.; Remand Determination at 9-10.           Timken alleges
    that three types of classification errors occurred.               Accordingly,
    Timken argues that certain sales should be moved from Channel 1
    into a different Channel.
    A.     Commerce Properly Classified the Sales of Sample Units
    in Channel 1
    1.     Timken’s Contentions
    Of the three classification errors in dispute, the first deals
    with products sold as sample or prototype units.                   See Remand
    Determination at 11.       Timken asserts that these sample sales were
    mistakenly   reported     as    sales   to   large   OEMs   and   consequently
    classified in Channel 1.        See Timken, 28 CIT at ___, 
    318 F. Supp. 2d at 1274
    ; Timken’s Comments at 6.          Timken asserts that the sales
    are samples and were not purchased by customers to produce original
    equipment.       See Remand Determination at 11.        As evidence, Timken
    submitted invoices to Commerce which designate the sales at issue
    as samples and indicate delivery to the customer’s prototype
    location.    See 
    id.
         Accordingly, Timken argues that these sales
    Court No.      00-09-00454                                                   Page   6
    should be reclassified into Channel 2 or 3.            See Timken’s Comments
    at 6.
    Timken also argues that under World Finer Foods, Inc. v.
    United States, 
    24 CIT 541
     (June 26, 2000), Commerce cannot “preempt
    correction by imposing evidentiary standards on the corrected
    submission     which   exceed    what    was    required    for    the      original
    (uncorrected) submission.”           Timken’s Comments at 4.       Timken states
    that the post-Final Results invoices are sufficient evidence to
    support reclassifying the sample sales to Channel 2 or 3.                    See 
    id. at 4-5
    .       Timken asserts that Commerce has impliedly required
    additional     proof   other    than    the    post-Final   Results      invoices,
    contrary to World Finer Foods.           See 
    id. 2
    .   Commerce’s Contentions
    Commerce explains that in determining whether home-market
    sales are at a different LOT than United States sales, it examines
    comparable stages in the marketing process and selling functions
    along   the    Channels.       See   Remand    Determination      at   7.      After
    reviewing Timken’s submissions, Commerce asserts that the sales of
    sample units are correctly classified in Channel 1.               See 
    id. at 11
    .
    Commerce notes that sample sales are described only in the Channel
    1 classification (sales to large OEMs) and not in Channel 2 or 3
    classifications.       See 
    id. at 11-12
    .           Commerce argues that the
    invoices themselves further reiterate the original classification
    Court No.    00-09-00454                                             Page    7
    made by Timken because the post-Final Results invoices are marked
    as sales for sample units.        See 
    id. at 13
    .       Moreover, Commerce
    maintains that the original classification is accurate because
    Commerce verified Timken’s questionnaire responses, including the
    descriptions    of   the   marketing   stages   and    selling    functions
    associated with each LOT.       See 
    id.
       Commerce asserts that Timken
    has failed to produce evidence demonstrating that the sample units
    were not bought or later used to produce original equipment.               See
    
    id. at 14
    .
    Furthermore, Commerce contends that it has not imposed a
    higher evidentiary standard.       See Remand Determination at 19-20.
    Rather, Commerce has conducted an analysis to determine whether
    record evidence supports reclassifying the disputed transactions
    into a different Channel.       See 
    id. at 20
    .     Commerce argues that
    “[i]n accordance with [its] statutory obligation, [Commerce has]
    focused [its] analysis on the associated marketing stages and
    selling functions.”        Id.; see generally 
    19 CFR § 351.412
    (c)(2)
    (1999).     Commerce determined that the record evidence, including
    the   post-Final     Results     invoices,      does    not      support    a
    reclassification of the claimed errors.         See Remand Determination
    at 21.
    Moreover, Commerce argues that Timken’s application of World
    Finer Foods is without merit.      The Court’s focus in that case was
    Court No.    00-09-00454                                             Page   8
    the difference between verified and unverified submissions in an
    administrative    review    and   here,   Commerce      verified    Timken’s
    questionnaire responses during the administrative review.                See
    Remand Determination at 21.       Courts must rely on the finality of
    verification findings, otherwise such findings could be attacked as
    less credible.    See 
    id.
     (citing FAG Kugelfischer Georg Schafer AG
    v. United States, 
    25 CIT 74
    , 106-7, 
    131 F. Supp. 2d 104
    , 133
    (2001)).    Here, Commerce verified Timken’s questionnaire responses
    as part of the administrative review and properly relied upon the
    verification report during the redetermination.            See 
    id.
        Thus,
    Commerce concludes that reclassifying the sample sales would not
    obtain a more accurate dumping margin.        See id.
    3.   Analysis
    The Court finds that Commerce’s determination regarding the
    post-Final Results invoices and Timken’s questionnaire responses
    reasonably support the original classification. Timken argues that
    the post-Final Results invoices conclusively demonstrate that the
    sample sales should be classified into Channel 2 or 3.                While
    “corrective”     information      submitted     after     the      completed
    administrative    review    may    contradict    previously        submitted
    questionnaire     information,     Timken     confirmed      the     Channel
    descriptions during Commerce’s verification. Accordingly, Timken’s
    Channel descriptions must be considered credible because of the
    Court No.      00-09-00454                                            Page     9
    Court’s due deference given to verification reports.                  See FAG
    Kugelfischer, 25 CIT at 106-7, 
    131 F. Supp. 2d at 133
     (stating that
    not   giving    deference    “would    leave   every   verification    effort
    vulnerable to successive subsequent attacks, no matter how credible
    the evidence and no matter how burdensome on the agency further
    inquiry would      be”)   (citations    omitted).      The   Court   will   not
    supersede Commerce’s conclusions if Commerce reasonably verifies
    the information submitted during the administrative review and the
    verification     is   supported   by   substantial     evidence.      See    
    id.
    Submissions made after the Final Results are issued are an attempt
    to reclassify specific sales into a different Channel, not to
    change the Channel descriptions.3              Merely submitting invoices
    marked as sample sales does not fulfill Timken’s burden.                    Such
    evidence fails to adequately describe the selling or marketing
    stages required to reclassify those sales from Channel 1 into
    Channel 2 or 3.       See NTN, 19 CIT at 1174, 903 F. Supp. at 70; see
    also 
    19 CFR § 351.412
    (c)(2) (stating that Commerce “will determine
    that sales are made at different levels of trade if they are made
    at    different       marketing   stages       (or   their    equivalent)”).
    Accordingly, Commerce has reasonably determined that the sample
    sales are properly classified in Channel 1.
    3
    If the Channel descriptions are incomplete or incorrect,
    then   Timken   should   have  argued   and   presented   evidence
    substantiating such a claim.
    Court No.       00-09-00454                                                      Page    10
    The Court is also unpersuaded that Commerce is attempting to
    hold    Timken    to     an    excessive      evidentiary       standard.        Timken’s
    interpretation of World Finer Foods is flawed.                       World Finer Foods
    speaks to the reliability of corrective information proffered post-
    review when there was no verification of submissions during the
    administrative review.               See World Finer Foods, 24 CIT at 550
    (“Ordinarily,       there      is    no    verification       of    submissions    in    an
    administrative review.              Therefore, there is no reason for Commerce
    to infer greater reliability in the information initially submitted
    as opposed to the information submitted for corrective purposes.”).
    When a verification has occurred, as it has here, the verified
    information      must     be    considered        more   reliable       than   unverified
    information.      See id.; see also FAG Kugelfischer, 25 CIT at 106-7,
    
    131 F. Supp. 2d at 133
    .             Failing to give due deference to verified
    information would be a tragic waste of time, resources, and energy
    with    seemingly      no     end    to    the    administrative        review   process.
    Furthermore,       the      facts     in    World     Finer     Foods    dealt    with    a
    respondent’s submission of information to correct clerical or
    ministerial errors, which this Court has already stated is not the
    situation here.          See Timken, 28 CIT at ___, 
    318 F. Supp. 2d at 1279
    .
    Timken    bears        the   burden       of   showing      sufficient    evidence
    meriting an adjustment.              See NTN, 19 CIT at 1174, 903 F. Supp. at
    Court No.    00-09-00454                                       Page    11
    70.   The Court agrees that the invoices submitted by Timken are of
    the kind of evidence that should be sufficient to support its
    claim. The Court, however, finds that the invoices must fit within
    the   verified    Channel   descriptions   from    the   questionnaire.
    Moreover, Commerce has reasonably explained why the post-Final
    Results invoices do not support reclassifying the sample sales into
    another Channel.
    B.    Commerce Properly Classified Certain Sales to Large
    Rather Than to Small OEMs in Channel 1
    1.   Timken’s Contentions
    The second alleged classification error involves certain sales
    classified in Channel 1 as sales to a large OEM of auto-parts.        See
    Timken’s Comments at 7.     Timken argues that Commerce should have
    classified these sales in Channel 2 as sales to a “small” OEM.        See
    Remand Determination at 14. Timken asserts the “sales were shipped
    to a factory division of a large OEM that is involved in activities
    [that Timken] associates with small OEMs.” Id. Timken states that
    it erred when making its internal classification because the
    customers had similar names.      See Timken’s Comments at 7.         As
    evidence of this error, Timken submitted invoices and corresponding
    purchase orders showing that the sales in dispute were shipped to
    a small OEM.     See Remand Determination at 14.    Timken accordingly
    requests that Commerce reclassify these sales into Channel 2.         See
    id.
    Court No.       00-09-00454                                                  Page    12
    2.       Commerce’s Contentions
    Commerce asserts that Timken’s claim to reclassify these sales
    from a large to a small OEM rest upon the size of the OEM’s end
    product.     See Remand Determination at 15 & 19.                 “Large” actually
    refers to the size of the manufacturer, regardless of the size of
    the end product.            See id. at 7.        Timken did not submit “factual
    information to substantiate that the party identified on the
    invoice should be considered a small OEM as opposed to a large OEM”
    to    warrant     a   reclassification.           Id.   at   14-15.    Furthermore,
    Timken’s claim does not focus on the marketing stage and selling
    functions, which is how Commerce differentiates between LOT.                        See
    id.    Accordingly, Commerce argues that Timken failed to meet its
    burden.
    3.       Analysis
    Timken has the burden to show a reclassification is warranted.
    See NTN, 19 CIT at 1174, 903 F. Supp. at 70.                     Merely submitting
    invoices,       written     in   German    with    scant     explanations,    is    not
    sufficient to explain why the sales to these large OEMs should be
    reclassified in Channel 2.               Timken claims that these sales were
    shipped to a factory division of a large OEM.                   Commerce, however,
    has reasonably explained why the invoices inadequately describe the
    marketing stages and selling functions of the sales to classify
    them    as   sales     to    a   small    OEM.      Commerce    even   admits      that
    Court No.      00-09-00454                                                  Page    13
    bifurcation of sales to a single customer could be classified into
    different      Channels.       See   Remand    Determination         at    15.      If
    bifurcated, then sales made to a division of a large OEM could be
    classified as sales to a small OEM.             Respondent still bears the
    burden of showing that a bifurcation is warranted.                   Here, Timken
    has    not    produced   evidence    showing   the     need   for    bifurcation.
    Furthermore, Timken did not challenge Commerce’s explanation that
    Channels are defined by the size of different customers and not by
    the    size   of   the   end   product.    Accordingly,        the    Court      finds
    Commerce’s explanation is reasonable and supported by substantial
    evidence.
    C.     Commerce Properly Classified the Sales of Replacement
    Parts in Channel 1
    1.   Timken’s Contentions
    The third alleged classification error deals with replacement
    parts sold to a large OEM and classified under Channel 1.                          See
    Remand Determination at 15-16.            Timken asserts that these sales
    were    for    replacement,     repair,   or   spare    parts;       not    for    the
    manufacture of original equipment.             See id.        Rather than being
    classified in Channel 1, Timken claims that the replacement parts
    should have been classified in Channel 3.                See id. at 16.            To
    substantiate its claim, Timken submitted invoices internally marked
    in different ways to indicate that the products sold were to be
    used as replacement parts.           See id. at 15-16.
    Court No.     00-09-00454                                               Page         14
    2.   Commerce’s Contentions
    Commerce    asserts      that    after    reviewing   the    invoices         and
    questionnaire     responses,      a    reclassification     to    Channel       3    is
    unsupported. See Remand Determination at 16. Timken has failed to
    explain     the   marketing     stages    or     selling    functions      of       the
    replacement parts and how such sales would merit a reclassification
    to Channel 3.4       See id. at 20.       Furthermore, the invoices do not
    support the type of sales described in Channel 3 activities, which
    are sales to distributors or competing producers.                 See id. at 16-
    17.       Commerce    argues    that     the    invoices    submitted      do       not
    substantiate Timken’s claim that the products were used only as
    replacement parts and not for normal production activities.                         See
    id. at 17.
    3.   Analysis
    Timken has the burden to show that the products were indeed
    marketed and sold as replacement parts.             See NTN, 19 CIT at 1174,
    903 F. Supp. at 70.      A mere notation or shipping code on an invoice
    was deemed inadequate by Commerce for explaining the marketing and
    selling    functions    associated       with    these   sales.      See    Remand
    Determination at 15-17.         Commerce has repeatedly stated that its
    focus, when determining LOT and Channels, is the marketing and
    4
    Such parts were originally sold through Channel 1
    “presumably after the requisite plant certification.” See Remand
    Determination at 20.
    Court No.    00-09-00454                                            Page   15
    selling functions associated with home-market sales. See id. at 15
    & 19.    To reclassify certain sales into another Channel, Timken
    must focus on the marketing stages.         See 
    19 CFR § 351.412
    (c)(2).
    While    replacement   parts   are    not   listed   in    the   Channel   3
    description, they are also not in the Channel 1 or 2 descriptions.
    Thus, Timken’s argument, which they have failed to make, must also
    include why the replacement sales are more appropriately classified
    in Channel 3 as opposed to Channel 1.       Accordingly, the Court finds
    that Commerce’s interpretation is reasonable because Commerce has
    defined Channels on the size of buyers within each consumer group.
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    Commerce has sufficiently met its burden of reviewing the
    disputed classifications       with   the   post-Final    Results   invoices
    submitted by Timken.       Commerce has also provided a reasonable
    explanation of its determination that the antidumping margin is as
    accurate as possible with no need to make further corrections.
    Judgment will be entered accordingly.
    /s/ Nicholas Tsoucalas
    NICHOLAS TSOUCALAS
    SENIOR JUDGE
    Dated:      October 29, 2004
    New York, New York