The following lawsuits were recently filed at the Court of International Trade:
Alternative characteristics used by the Commerce Department that were supplied by antidumping duty respondent LG Chem to set control numbers (CONNUMs) in an AD investigation had no relationship to actual prices and costs, and are distortive and create the potential for manipulation, AD petitioner The Ad Hoc Coalition of American SAP Producers said in a Feb. 17 complaint at the Court of International Trade (The Ad Hoc Coalition of American SAP Producers v. U.S., CIT # 23-00010).
Plaintiff Risen Energy Co. will appeal a December 2022 Court of International Trade opinion involving the 2017-18 administrative review of the antidumping duty order on solar cells from China. Per a Feb. 21 notice, Risen will take the case to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. In the proceeding, the trade court upheld Commerce's surrogate value picks for silver paste, a solar cell input, backsheet and ethyl vinyl acetate and its decision to use partial neutral facts available instead of adverse facts available (see 2301050026) (Risen Energy Co., Ltd. v. United States, CIT # 20-03743).
A Commerce remand determination on welded carbon steel pipes and tubes should be upheld by the Court of International Trade despite a separate Commerce remand redetermination that dual-stenciled pipe and tube is not covered by an antidumping duty order on circular welded carbon steel pipes and tubes, the government argued in a brief filed Feb. 17 (Saha Thai Steel Pipe Public Company, Limited v. United States, CIT # 21-00627).
"Post hoc" arguments from the Commerce Department and BlueScope Steel that the Australian exporter's deduction of antidumping duties from a transfer price was not a reimbursement of antidumping duties are contradicted by documents that confirm a deduction of the duties from the price BlueScope Steel charged to an affiliated importer, plaintiff-appellant U.S. Steel Corp. argued in a Feb. 17 reply brief at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (U.S. Steel Corp. v. United States, Fed. Cir. # 22-2078).
The Commerce Department illegally reversed its initial decision that lemon juice exporter Louis Dreyfus Co. was not affiliated with its primary fresh lemon supplier on the grounds that the company had no close supplier relationship with the lemon grower, U.S. company Ventura Coastal argued in a Feb. 16 complaint at the Court of International Trade. In the complaint, Ventura also railed against Commerce's decision to exclude certain administrative expenses pertaining to services provided by Louis Dreyfus' parent company or affiliated holding companies from the exporter's general and administrative expense rate calculation (Ventura Coastal v. United States, CIT # 23-00009).
The Court of International Trade in a confidential Feb. 17 order partially granted the U.S. motion to dismiss an antidumping duty case brought by Cambodian mattress makers. In the order, Judge Gary Katzmann also partially granted a motion for judgment from the plaintiffs, led by Best Mattresses International Co. Katzmann gave the litigants until Feb. 23 to review the opinion for confidential information (Best Mattresses International Co. v. United States, CIT Consol. # 21-00281).
The government owes interest on refunded duty overpayments made with a prior disclosure, importer Otter argued in a Feb. 16 motion at the Court of International Trade. Government arguments that repayments of voluntary tenders are not subject to interest accruals means that penalties for prior disclosures could never be enforced if they were made before a penalty was issued, Otter said (Otter Products v. United States, CIT #22-00033).
The Court of International Trade in a Feb. 17 opinion set aside a March 2022 decision in a customs spat over reimported swimsuits to hear an additional argument from the U.S., though the court ultimately reached the same conclusion.
The Commerce Department gave a further explanation as to why its significant changes practice pertaining to successorship applies in a countervailing duty changed circumstances review where the predecessor company was not individually examined. Submitting remand results on Feb. 16 to the Court of International Trade, Commerce cited its standard established in the 2009 Pasta from Turkey CVD CCR to claim that it will make an affirmative successorship finding "only where there is no evidence of significant changes in the requesting party's operations, ownership, corporate or legal structure." This was not the case with plaintiff GreenFirst Forest Products' acquisition of Rayonier A.M. Canada's (RYAM's) lumber mills, the agency said (GreenFirst Forest Products v. United States, CIT # 22-00097).