In Ford Motor Company v. the U.S., the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reversed a CIT decision, ruling that so long as an importer's claim for post-entry duty refunds for NAFTA preferential treatment of imports was timely filed within one year of importation, the Court of International Trade has jurisdiction to consider whether Customs should accept Ford’s late-filed NAFTA Certificates of Origin.
Russian producer-exporter PSC challenged the International Trade Administration’s use of a 43.58% adverse antidumping duty rate in the April 2007 - March 2008 AD review of magnesium metal from Russia. PSC VSMPO-AVISMA Corporation and VSMPO-Tirus, U.S., Inc. (collectively, PSC) had withdrawn from the review, citing the burden of multiple verifications, among other causes.
The Watanabe Group asked the Court of International Trade to reconsider and vacate its decision upholding the ITA’s assignment of the China-wide rate of 258.21% in the antidumping duty administrative review of certain lined paper products from China for the period September 2007 through August 2008.
Lindsey Manufacturing Company and two of its executives have filed a motion to dismiss their indictment on paying bribes to employees of Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE), a state-owned utility company, in violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). The defendants will argue that employees of a state owned corporation do not qualify as foreign officials under the FCPA. A hearing on the motion is scheduled for March 21, 2011.
In the May 2007 - April 2008 antidumping duty administrative review of ball bearings and parts thereof from Japan, the International Trade Administration selected only the 4 largest producer/exporters as mandatory respondents and reviewed no others, “due to limited resources.” Asahi Seiko Co., Ltd. challenged the results, arguing that by not being selected for review it was deprived of the chance to possibly earn revocation by demonstrating zero or de minimis margins. However, the court ruled that because it withdrew its request for review when the 4 mandatory respondents were selected (in an attempt to avoid being assigned the “all others” rate), Asahi failed to exhaust its administrative remedies and therefore could not challenge the review results. See ITT’s Online Archives or 11/22/10 news, 10112204, for BP summary of similar court decision on the prior year’s review) (Slip Op. 11-24, dated 03/01/11)
In the second remand of the April 2006 -- March 2007 antidumping duty administrative review of pure and alloyed magnesium metal from the Russian Federation, the Court of International Trade ordered the International Trade Administration to recalculate the value of chlorine gas used in the production process. Producer/exporter PSC VSMPO Avisma Corporation and VSMPA Tirus, U.S., Inc. challenged the ITA’s subsequent redetermination results, arguing that the agency relied on an incorrect database in its recalculations. However, the court found the agency had supported its decision with substantial evidence and dismissed the plaintiff’s claim. (See ITT’s Online Archives or 09/02/10 news, 10090217, for BP summary of prior court decision.)
In Chubb Insurance Company of Europe S.A., v. UPS Supply Chain Solutions, Inc.1, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Central District of California ruled that “third party” suits seeking indemnification2 and contribution (compensation) in connection with international air cargo shipments are rights to recourse and therefore, are not subject to the Montreal Convention's two-year statute of limitations on the right to damages.
Domestic producers U.S. Steel Corporation and Nucor Corporation challenged the International Trade Administration’s methods in the final results of the August 2006 -- July 2007 antidumping duty administrative review of corrosion-resistant carbon steel flat products from Korea. The domestic producers faulted the ITA for failing to adjust Union Steel Manufacturing Co., Ltd. of Korea’s costs to account for steel substrate purchases from affiliated suppliers, and for not collapsing or grouping Pohang Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. and Pohang Coated Steel Co., Ltd. (collectively, POSCO) together with Union as a single entity in the AD calculations. The CIT granted the ITA’s voluntary remand request to review its decision not to include an adjustment for the value of steel substrates supplied by affiliates, and ordered the agency to review its decision not to collapse Union and POSCO and treat them as a single entity. (Slip-Op. 11-19, dated 02/15/11)
Following earlier court remands that questioned the International Trade Administration’s application of an adverse, China-wide rate of 139.31% to bars and wedges produced and exported by Tianjin Machinery Import and Export Corp. and Shandong Huarong Machinery Co., Ltd., a rate based on the highest margin calculated for Tianjin in a review five years earlier, the ITA repeatedly defended the high rate as tied to the case facts and warranted by the respondents’ participation in a fraudulent invoicing scheme. The Court of International Trade has now sustained the 139.31% rate for Tianjin. However, for bars and wedges produced and exported by Shandong Huarong, the court ordered the ITA to find a lesser adverse rate tied either to a single calculated rate in the period of review or to what the firm would have received had it cooperated, plus “a built-in increase as a deterrent to non-compliance” in either case.
A Turkish pasta producer, Marsan Gida Sanayi ve Ticaret A.S., under new ownership, Gidasa Sabanci Gida Sanayi ve Ticaret A.S., sought to preserve the company’s prior countervailing duty rate for its goods from Turkey, but the International Trade Administration, using a new CVD changed circumstances methodology it had previously been considering, found that the successor company was no longer the same subsidized entity and instead should get the “all others” cash deposit rate of 9.38%. (The new approach, among other concerns, seeks evidence of “significant changes in operations, ownership, corporate or legal structure” that could affect the nature and extent of a company’s subsidy levels.) The Court of International Trade found the ITA’s interpretation reasonable and upheld its final determination. (Slip-Op. 11-20, dated 02/16/11)