Fabrique De Fer De Charleroi S.A. v. United States , 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 1303 ( 2001 )


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  •                          Slip Op. 01-140
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    BEFORE: SENIOR JUDGE NICHOLAS TSOUCALAS
    ________________________________________
    :
    FABRIQUE DE FER DE CHARLEROI S.A.,      :
    :
    Plaintiff,               :
    :
    v.                       :
    :
    THE UNITED STATES,                      :
    :       Court No.
    Defendant,               :       98-02-00359
    :
    and                      :
    :
    BETHLEHEM STEEL CORPORATION and         :
    U.S. STEEL GROUP, A UNIT OF             :
    USX CORPORATION,                        :
    :
    Defendant-Intervenors.   :
    ________________________________________:
    [Commerce’s Remand Results are affirmed in their entirety. Case
    dismissed.]
    Barnes, Richardson & Colburn (Gunter von Conrad and Michael J.
    Chessler) for plaintiff, Fabrique de Fer de Charleroi S.A.,
    currently Usinor Industeel, SA.
    Robert D. McCallum, Jr., Assistant Attorney General; David M.
    Cohen, Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division,
    United States Department of Justice (Velta A. Melnbrencis,
    Assistant Director); of counsel: Robert L. LaFrankie, Office of the
    Chief Counsel for Import Administration, United States Department
    of Commerce, for the United States.
    Dewey Ballantine LLP (Michael H. Stein, Bradford L. Ward and
    Rory F. Quirk) for defendant-intervenor Bethlehem Steel Corporation
    and defendant-intervenor U.S. Steel Group, a Unit of USX
    Corporation, currently United States Steel LLC.
    Dated: December 4, 2001
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                                      Page 2
    JUDGMENT
    I.    Standard of Review
    The Court will uphold Commerce’s 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. § 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
    Consolidated    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 evidence does not prevent an administrative
    agency’s finding from being supported by substantial evidence.”
    Consolo v. Federal Maritime Comm’n, 
    383 U.S. 607
    , 620 (1966).
    II.   Background
    This case concerns Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant
    to Court Remand on Certain Cut-to-Length Carbon Steel Plate from
    Belgium (“Remand Results”), Fabrique de Fer de Charleroi S.A. v.
    United States (“Fabrique”), 25 CIT ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d 801
     (2001),
    ensuing from Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative
    Review of Certain Cut-to-Length Carbon Steel Plate From Belgium
    (“Final Results”), 
    63 Fed. Reg. 2959
     (Jan. 20, 1998), issued by the
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                              Page 3
    United    States   Department    of   Commerce,   International     Trade
    Administration (“Commerce”).       The Final Results, in turn, ensue
    from the antidumping duty order on cut-to-length carbon steel plate
    imported to the United States from Belgium during the 1995-96
    period of review (“POR”).
    During the review, Commerce: (1) determined that the United
    States sale of the cut-to-length carbon steel plate by Fabrique de
    Fer de Charleroi S.A. (“FAFER”) was a constructed export price
    (“CEP”) sale, that is, a sale for which price had to be adjusted
    under subsections (c) and (d) of 19 U.S.C. § 1677a (1994) to
    account for FAFER’s various direct and indirect selling expenses,
    see Fabrique, 25 CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at 805
    ; and (2) issued
    questionnaires to FAFER, seeking data on FAFER’s indirect selling
    expenses related to FAFER’s United States sale.         In its responses
    to Commerce’s questionnaires, FAFER stated that there were no
    indirect selling expenses incurred by FAFER in the United States
    or, alternatively, that all indirect selling expenses had been
    allocated based on information in FAFER’s response.           See 
    id.,
     25
    CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at 804
    .         Missing the information on
    FAFER’s   indirect   selling    expenses,   Commerce,   in   reaching   the
    applicable determination, resorted to facts available, see 
    id.,
     25
    CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at 805
    , specifically to the commission
    rate FAFER normally paid FAFER’s United States affiliates.              See
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                              Page 4
    Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 2962-63.
    The Court affirmed Commerce’s use of facts available, see
    Fabrique, 25 CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at 808
    , but ordered
    Commerce to choose another facts available substitute for FAFER’s
    indirect   selling   expenses   because   the   record   indicated   that
    Commerce had determined that no commission was actually paid on the
    United States sale in question.      See 
    id.,
     25 CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at 809-10
    .    The Court noted that
    [it] share[d] FAFER’s bewilderment about Commerce’s
    choice to use the only piece of data admittedly unrelated
    to the transaction at issue as a proxy for FAFER’s
    indirect selling expenses. There could be no rational
    relationship between a matter and . . . data that
    expressly does not apply to that matter under the
    particular facts of the case.
    
    Id.
     (internal citations omitted).
    In accordance with the Court’s remand, Commerce recalculated
    CEP resorting to another facts available, namely, selling, general
    and administrative expenses (“SG&A”) of FAFER’s United States
    subsidiary, Charleroi USA (“Charleroi”).        See Remand Results at 3-
    4.
    III. Contentions of the Parties
    FAFER asserts that Charleroi’s SG&A are unrelated to indirect
    selling expenses actually incurred by FAFER.         See Pl.’s Comments
    Final   Results   Redetermination    Pursuant     Ct.    Remand   (“Pl.’s
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                                    Page 5
    Comments”)    at    2-3;     Pl.’s    Rebuttal     Comments   Final     Results
    Redetermination     Pursuant    Ct.    Remand    (“Pl.’s   Rebuttal”)    at   2.
    Specifically, FAFER contends that Charleroi’s SG&A: (1) bear no
    rational relationship to the actual expenses incurred by FAFER; (2)
    cannot be representative of the sale transaction that took place in
    1996 because Charleroi’s statement covers the 1995 calendar year;
    (3) is preempted by the data provided by FAFER in FAFER’s responses
    to Commerce’s questionnaires. See generally, Pl.’s Comments, Pl.’s
    Rebuttal.    Therefore, FAFER concludes that Commerce’s decision to
    use Charleroi’s SG&A as a substitute for FAFER’s United States
    indirect selling expenses is a violation of this Court’s remand
    order in Fabrique, 25 CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at 813
    .                 FAFER
    further asserts that FAFER’s indirect selling expenses, if any,
    were minimal.      See Pl.’s Rebuttal at 4.
    Commerce contends that Commerce’s use of Charleroi’s SG&A as
    a facts-available proxy for FAFER’s United States indirect selling
    expenses was in accordance with the Court’s remand in Fabrique, 25
    CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at 813
    .              See Remand Results at 3-5,
    Def.’s   Rebuttal    Pl.’s    Comments    Final    Results    Redetermination
    Pursuant Ct. Remand (“Def.’s Rebuttal”) at 4-8.               Bethlehem Steel
    Corporation and U.S. Steel Group support Commerce’s reliance on
    Charleroi’s SG&A and point out that the case was remanded to
    Commerce “for one-–and only one–-purpose: ‘to examine the record to
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                              Page 6
    determine what data should be used as a substitute for FAFER’s
    indirect selling expenses’” and not to “relitigate the merits of
    [Commerce’s]    underlying   determination   regarding   FAFER’s    U.S.
    indirect   selling   expenses.”     See   Def.-Intervenors’   Rebuttal
    Comments Pl.’s Comments Final Results Redetermination Pursuant Ct.
    Remand (“Def.-Intervenors’ Rebuttal”) at 4.
    III. Analysis
    A.    Reasonableness of Facts Available
    The main argument presented by FAFER is that: (1) the facts
    available chosen by Commerce “bear[] no rational relationship to
    [the] expenses actually incurred,” Pl.’s Rebuttal at 2 (emphasis in
    original); and (2) the only reasonable facts available that could
    be used in the given case “is the amount originally calculated in
    the Sales Verification Report.”     Id. at 4.
    FAFER misreads the purpose of the Court’s remand in Fabrique,
    25 CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at 813
    , as well as the purpose and
    gist of the term “facts available.”          Facts available are, by
    definition, a proxy figure used by an agency when the agency lacks
    actual data necessary for the calculation.1     Indeed, if the agency
    1
    “In general[,] [i]f . . . necessary information is not
    available on the record, or . . . an interested party or any other
    person . . . fails to provide such information . . . in the form
    and manner requested . . . or . . . provides such information but
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                       Page 7
    had the actual figure and failed to use it, such action would be a
    violation of the agency’s statutory duty.      Conversely, if the
    agency lacks the actual figure, a reading of the statute as a
    requirement to use “facts available” that should be, de facto,
    actual data would render the statutory purpose of 19 U.S.C. § 1677e
    obsolete.   Indeed, it would be anomalous to require the agency to
    use the “de facto actual data” where the agency has none; such
    scheme would serve as an incentive to members of the regulated
    industry to conceal the actual data and obtain a premium if they
    could succeed in obstructing the agency’s operation while keeping
    a cooperative disguise.    In sum, reliance on “facts available”
    inherently implies the usage, wholly or partly, of surrogate data
    that is not actual.     Consequently, in the case at bar, if “the
    amount originally calculated in the Sales Verification Report,”
    Pl.’s Rebuttal at 4, does not include all of FAFER’s possible
    indirect selling expenses in the given transaction,2 Commerce must
    the information cannot be verified . . . , [Commerce] shall . . .
    use the facts otherwise available in reaching the applicable
    determination . . . .” 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a) (1994).
    2
    FAFER asserts “[t]he amount that should serve as a proxy for
    [FAFER’s United States] indirect selling expenses is zero because
    of the circumstances of the sale in question.” Pl.’s Rebuttal at
    4. In support of this position, FAFER points out that during the
    transaction at issue “FAFER did not follow [FAFER’s] general
    practices,” and Commerce verified the fact that “the particular
    sale in question [is] not . . . a normal sale, since it was a
    single sale.” Pl.’s Comments at 1-2. FAFER further adds that the
    transaction at issue was unique because of the fact that Charleroi
    had minimal participation in the sale. Id. at 2.
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                       Page 8
    resort to facts available, that is, data necessarily other than the
    amount designated in the Sales Verification Report.
    The issue, therefore, is what facts available would constitute
    reasonable surrogate data.   Admittedly, there cannot be a bright-
    line test or all-inclusive definition.   Rather, the issue shall be
    This very last claim was disputed by Commerce which noted that
    [Commerce] has determined that [Charleroi] did act as
    more than a processor of sales documents and a
    communications link between the unaffiliated U.S.
    customer and FAFER . . . . Although FAFER sets minimum
    list prices, [Charleroi] negotiates the sale with the
    customer. . . . [Charleroi] essentially negotiates all
    sales in accordance with FAFER's minimum price list and
    the sales take place in the United States, not in
    Belgium.
    Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review of
    Cut-to-Length Carbon Steel Plate From Belgium, 
    62 Fed. Reg. 48,213
    ,
    48,215 (Sep. 15, 1997) (citations omitted).
    Thus, Commerce determined that Charleroi’s “participation was
    actually so significant as to warrant classifying the sale as a CEP
    sale.”    Remand Results at 6.      Consequently, Commerce issued
    questionnaires to FAFER and, missing the information on FAFER’s
    indirect selling expenses, resorted to the facts available.
    While the Court does not share Bethlehem and U.S. Steel
    Group’s opinion that FAFER is attempting to relitigate the
    applicability of facts available (indeed, facts available equal to
    zero would yield the same net result as the decision that facts
    available do not apply), the Court finds that FAFER is not
    assailing the reasoning but rather the result reached by Commerce,
    which is outside the Court’s standard of review.        It is the
    province of an agency and not the Court to examine the record and
    reach a conclusion on the issue whether the particular sale
    involves indirect selling expenses. See Writing Instrument Mfrs.
    Ass’n, Pencil Section v. United States, 
    21 CIT 1185
    , 1195, 
    984 F. Supp. 629
    , 639 (1997).
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                              Page 9
    decided on a case-by-case basis.        The Court, however, pointed out
    that reasonable surrogate data is “‘the most reasonable estimate,’
    . . . that is, the estimate most rational under the circumstances
    . . . .” among the entire data available on the record.        Fabrique,
    25 CIT at ___ n.4, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at
    810 n.4 (emphasis omitted).
    Moreover, “[t]he mere possibility that [a random figure chosen]
    could be an amount near the amount [that would be] arrived [at] on
    the basis of [reasonable surrogate data]” cannot validate that
    random figure. 
    Id.
     Therefore, the Court holds that: (1) surrogate
    data does not have to be necessarily related to the data missing;
    and (2) it is permissible to analogize the missing item to an item
    from the groups that are probably present in the transaction but
    not to an item from the groups that are admittedly not a part of
    the transaction.     Indeed, any conclusion otherwise would be a
    perfect sophism; Commerce, then, would be required to derive
    surrogate data from the very data missing, wholly or partly, in
    other words, to fasten Commerce’s calculations to a vacuum.
    This is exactly the point misinterpreted by FAFER.             FAFER
    reads Fabrique, 25 CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d at 810
    , to mean that
    the proxy   figure   shall   bear   a   “rational   relationship   to   any
    indirect selling expenses actually incurred” by FAFER.              Pl.’s
    Comments at 2 (emphasis in original). The Court, however, remanded
    Fabrique, 155 F. Supp. 2d. 801, not because Commerce failed to use
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                               Page 10
    a surrogate figure related to the expenses actually incurred by
    FAFER, but rather because Commerce chose to use a figure that
    admittedly could not have been analogized with the data missing in
    the transaction under review.      See 
    id.,
     25 CIT at ___, 
    155 F. Supp. 2d 809
    -10.
    B.     Charleroi’s SG&A as Facts Available
    All FAFER’s United States sales or other operations are made
    through Charleroi.     See Remand Results at 7, Comment 1 (quoting
    FAFER’s Questionnaire Response at 3, Oct. 21, 1996).          Charleroi’s
    financial statement covers the period from January 1, 1995, through
    December 31, 1995, that is, the period overlapping with the POR at
    issue.     In addition, Charleroi’s financial statement provides data
    on Charleroi’s SG&A expenses, that is, the ratio of Charleroi’s
    general expenses to the cost of manufacturing. See Magnesium Corp.
    of Am. v. United States, 
    166 F.3d 1364
    , 1371 (Fed. Cir. 1999).
    General expenses can encompass many items, including such common
    ones as overhead and such occasional ones as financial losses or
    domestic freight.     See, e.g., American Silicon Techs. v. United
    States, 
    261 F.3d 1371
     (Fed. Cir. 2001); SKF USA, Inc. v. United
    States, 
    254 F.3d 1022
     (Fed. Cir. 2001); Campbell Soup Co. v. United
    States, 
    107 F.3d 1556
     (Fed. Cir. 1997).
    The    missing   data   at   issue   is   FAFER’s   indirect   selling
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                                 Page 11
    expenses.     Indirect selling expenses may include salespersons’
    salaries, warehousing, personnel assistance, pre-sale home-market
    transportation      expenses,     expenses     incurred    by    a    foreign
    manufacturer on behalf of its related United States importer, and
    so on.   See generally, Torrington Co. v. United States, 
    68 F.3d 1347
     (Fed. Cir. 1995); Torrington Co. v. United States, 
    44 F.3d 1572
     (Fed. Cir. 1995); Asociacion Colombiana de Exportadores de
    Flores v. United States, 
    901 F.2d 1089
     (Fed. Cir. 1990).              In sum,
    indirect selling expenses are the expenses that do not result from,
    or   cannot   be   tied    directly   to   specific   sales,   but   that   may
    reasonably    be   attributed    to   such   sales.     Therefore,    FAFER’s
    indirect selling expenses could be analogized to general expenses
    of Charleroi during the comparable time periods because: (1) FAFER
    does all of its United States business through Charleroi (thus,
    inclusive of the transaction at issue); (2) the expenses are of
    comparable nature; and (3) there is no data on record verifying
    that SG&A are admittedly not a part of the transaction.
    Based on the foregoing, the Court affirms the Remand Results
    in their entirety.        The “[C]ourt will sustain the determination if
    it is reasonable and supported by the record as a whole, including
    whatever fairly detracts from the substantiality of the evidence.”
    Negev Phosphates, Ltd. v. United States, 
    12 CIT 1074
    , 1077, 
    699 F. Supp. 938
    , 942 (1988) (citations omitted, emphasis supplied).
    Court No. 98-02-00359                                        Page 12
    Therefore, this Court concludes that Commerce has complied
    with the Court’s remand, and it is hereby
    ORDERED that the Remand Results filed by Commerce on October
    1, 2001, are affirmed in their entirety; and it is further
    ORDERED that since all other issues were previously decided,
    this case is dismissed.
    ______________________________
    NICHOLAS TSOUCALAS
    SENIOR JUDGE
    Dated:    December 4, 2001
    New York, New York