Nucor Corp. v. United States , 371 F. App'x 83 ( 2010 )


Menu:
  •               NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    2009-1476
    NUCOR CORPORATION, GERDAU AMERISTEEL, INC.,
    and COMMERCIAL METALS COMPANY,
    Plaintiff-Appellants,
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant,
    and
    EKINCILER DEMIR VE CELIK SANAYI A.S.,
    and EKINCILER DIS TICARET A.S.,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    HABAS SINAI VE TIBBI GAZLAR ISTIHSAL ENDUSTRISI A.S,
    and KROMAN CELIK SANAYII A.S.,
    Defendants,
    and
    COLAKOGLU DIS TICARET A.S., COLAKOGLU METALURJI A.S,
    KAPTAN DEMIR CELIK ENDUSTRISI VE TICARET A.S.,
    and KAPTAN METAL DIS TICARET VE NAKLIYAT A.S.,
    Defendants,
    and
    DILER DEMIR CELIK ENDUSTRISI VE TICARET A.S.,
    DILER DIS TICARET A.S.,
    Defendants,
    and
    TAZICI DEMIR CELIK SANAYI VE TURIZM TICARET A.S.,
    Defendants.
    John R. Shane, Wiley Rein LLP, of Washington, DC, argued for plaintiffs-appellants.
    With him on the brief was Maureen E. Thorson.
    Michael T. Shor, Arnold & Porter, LLP, of Washington, DC, argued for defendants-
    appellees Ekinciler Demir ve Celik Sanayi A.S., et al. With him on the brief were Lawrence A.
    Schneider and Francis Franze-Nakamura.
    Appealed from: United States Court of International Trade
    Senior Judge R. Kenton Musgrave
    2
    NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    2009-1476
    NUCOR CORPORATION, GERDAU AMERISTEEL, INC.,
    and COMMERCIAL METALS COMPANY,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant,
    and
    EKINCILER DEMIR VE CELIK SANAYI A.S.,
    and EKINCILER DIS TICARET A.S.,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    HABAS SINAI VE TIBBI GAZLAR ISTIHSAL ENDUSTRISI A.S,
    and KROMAN CELIK SANAYII A.S.,
    Defendants,
    and
    COLAKOGLU DIS TICARET A.S., COLAKOGLU METALURJI A.S,
    KAPTAN DEMIR CELIK ENDUSTRISI VE TICARET A.S.,
    and KAPTAN METAL DIS TICARET VE NAKLIYAT A.S.,
    Defendants,
    and
    DILER DEMIR CELIK ENDUSTRISI VE TICARET A.S.,
    DILER DIS TICARET A.S.,
    Defendants,
    and
    TAZICI DEMIR CELIK SANAYI VE TURIZM TICARET A.S.,
    Defendants.
    Appeal from the United States Court of International Trade in consolidated
    case no. 07-00457, Senior Judge R. Kenton Musgrave.
    ___________________________
    DECIDED: April 12, 2010
    ___________________________
    Before BRYSON and MOORE, Circuit Judges, and FOLSOM, Chief District Judge. *
    BRYSON, Circuit Judge.
    This case concerns an administrative review of an antidumping order relating to
    imports of steel bars for concrete reinforcement (“rebar”) from Turkey. The private
    defendants, referred to collectively as Ekinciler, are Turkish producers and exporters of
    rebar; the plaintiffs are domestic producers of rebar.      At issue is the Commerce
    Department’s calculation of Ekinciler’s costs of production for the 2005-2006 period of
    review. In particular, the dispute concerns Commerce’s treatment of certain items that
    Ekinciler characterizes as foreign exchange losses incurred in 2000-2001.            The
    domestic producers appeal from a final decision of the Court of International Trade,
    Nucor Corp. v. United States, No. 07-457 (Ct. Int’l Trade May 22, 2009), following an
    earlier decision of that court remanding the matter to Commerce, Nucor Corp. v. United
    States, No. 07-457 (Ct. Int’l Trade Apr. 14, 2009). We affirm.
    *
    Honorable David Folsom, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Texas, sitting by designation.
    2009-1476                                 2
    I
    Ekinciler contends that it incurred foreign exchange losses in 2000-2001 and
    ultimately booked those losses in a fixed asset account designated “Melt Shop
    Modernization” in 2001. Although it capitalized the items in the melt shop account,
    Ekinciler did not subsequently depreciate the items in that account, as is typically
    required for fixed assets under U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”)
    and International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”). 1
    When Commerce asked Ekinciler to explain its failure to depreciate the disputed
    items, Ekinciler stated that those items did not actually relate to any fixed asset, but
    represented losses incurred on foreign currency loans in 2000 and 2001, when a
    financial crisis in Turkey caused a sharp devaluation of the Turkish Lira relative to the
    borrowed foreign currency. Ekinciler acknowledged that, under U.S., International, and
    Turkish accounting principles, the foreign exchange losses should have been expensed
    (i.e., recorded as a loss) in the year in which they were incurred. In light of the nature of
    the losses, Ekinciler argued that it would be improper to impute depreciation for those
    items during the 2005-2006 period of review. Ekinciler explained that the items were
    not properly capitalizable because they were unrelated to the purchase or construction
    of a fixed asset, and that they should not be considered in the administrative review for
    1
    Under GAAP and IFRS, a company may book costs in one of two ways: (1)
    it may capitalize the item, i.e., record it as an asset that remains on the books in
    subsequent periods, where there is an expected future benefit from the purchase (e.g.,
    for plants, machinery, and equipment that will be utilized for many years); or (2) it may
    expense the item, i.e., record it as a loss in the period in which it was incurred, where
    there is no expected future benefit. If the company capitalizes the cost, it must amortize
    the cost over subsequent periods in order to account for the depreciation of the asset.
    2009-1476                                  3
    2005-2006 because they were not incurred during that period. In support of its position,
    Ekinciler submitted extensive documentation, including its complete fixed asset ledger
    indicating that the company added no significant fixed assets during the 2000-2001
    period. It also introduced three of its foreign currency loan agreements for general
    company financing, as well as journal vouchers and worksheets showing the transfer of
    amounts relating to “foreign currency revaluation” from an expense account for
    “exchange gains/losses from short term bank loans” to the asset account for “Melt Shop
    Modernization.”
    In its final results for the 2005-2006 period of review, Commerce imputed
    depreciation for the entries in Ekinciler’s melt shop account, treating those items as if
    they represented expenses associated with actual fixed assets.        See Certain Steel
    Concrete Reinforcing Bars From Turkey, 
    72 Fed. Reg. 62,630
     (Dep’t of Commerce Nov.
    6, 2007) (final admin. review).    The imputed depreciation had the effect of raising
    Ekinciler’s dumping margin from a de minimis level to 1.66 percent.
    Commerce explained the basis for its decision in an October 31, 2007,
    memorandum. The memorandum began by stating that “[w]hile Ekinciler has provided
    copies of journal entries and loan documents . . . , there is no way to link the documents
    to the ‘asset’ listed in Ekinciler’s financial statement.”   For that reason, Commerce
    stated that it was “not confident that the capitalized expenses specifically relate[d] to”
    foreign exchange losses on general company loans (i.e., losses unrelated to the
    construction or purchase of a fixed asset), as Ekinciler claimed.
    Assuming that Ekinciler’s characterization of the loss was accurate, Commerce
    explained that if Ekinciler had followed proper accounting practices under GAAP and
    2009-1476                                 4
    IFRS it “would have recognized those expenditures as an expense in the year the event
    took place, rather than capitalizing them and treating them as an asset in its books and
    records.” Because Ekinciler had capitalized the items, however, Commerce reasoned
    that it was “unreasonable for Ekinciler to ignore the expense forever and as a result
    artificially inflate its balance sheet” by failing to depreciate the items over time.
    Therefore, because “Ekinciler opted to treat these expenses as an asset” and because
    “it is inherent that an asset recorded in the plant, machinery, and equipment category is
    related to those types of fixed assets,” Commerce imputed depreciation for the items in
    the melt shop account and added the imputed depreciation to Ekinciler’s costs of
    production for the 2005-2006 period of review.
    Ekinciler challenged the final results in the Court of International Trade. The
    court disagreed with Commerce’s analysis of the depreciation issue and remanded for
    recalculation of Ekinciler’s antidumping margin. The court observed that Commerce
    had treated the items in the melt shop account as fixed assets but had made “no explicit
    finding as to what the account actually represents.” Specifically, Commerce had not
    found that the items booked to the melt shop account actually reflected costs
    “associated with the production of merchandise” during the period of review, as required
    by 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(1)(A). The court observed that Commerce’s only apparent
    rationale for imputing depreciation to the items in the melt shop account was “concern
    over Ekinciler showing an ‘inflated’ balance sheet.” Given Ekinciler’s “uncontroverted”
    evidence as to the nature of the melt shop modernization account at the administrative
    review, the court concluded, “the decision to impute depreciation to the account has no
    basis on the administrative record or in law.” The court therefore remanded the case to
    2009-1476                                 5
    Commerce with directions to redetermine imputed depreciation “without the amount that
    currently reflects the foreign exchange losses in the melt shop modernization account.”
    On remand, Commerce treated the full balance of the melt shop account as
    foreign exchange losses and imputed no depreciation expense to the items in that
    account. The elimination of that depreciation expense resulted in a de minimis dumping
    margin and thus no antidumping duty. The Court of International Trade affirmed the
    revised results, and the domestic producers now appeal to this court. Commerce has
    not taken a position in this appeal.
    II
    In reviewing decisions of the Court of International Trade regarding Commerce’s
    antidumping duty determinations, we apply the same standard of review as the trial
    court. Royal Thai Gov’t v. United States, 
    436 F.3d 1330
    , 1334-35 (Fed. Cir. 2006).
    Therefore, we are required to uphold Commerce’s findings and conclusions unless they
    are “unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance
    with law.” 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i).
    A
    Under the statute governing antidumping duty determinations, Commerce’s
    objective in calculating a foreign entity’s costs of production is to ensure that its
    calculations “reasonably reflect the costs associated with the production and sale of the
    [subject] merchandise” in the period of review. 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(1)(A). We agree
    with the trial court that Commerce failed to adduce substantial evidence showing that
    the disputed items reflected costs associated with fixed assets used for the production
    of rebar in 2005-2006, and that Commerce therefore erred when it imputed depreciation
    2009-1476                                   6
    to those items and treated that depreciation as part of Ekinciler’s costs of production for
    the 2005-2006 period of review.
    As the trial court noted, Commerce did not find that the expenses in the melt
    shop account represented costs relating to plant, machinery, and equipment assets.
    Nor did Commerce point to anything in the evidence that would justify the conclusion
    that the disputed items were assets that had to be depreciated. Commerce’s decision
    to impute depreciation appears to have been based on the items’ presence in a fixed
    asset account, coupled with Commerce’s assumption that “an asset recorded in the
    plant, machinery, and equipment category is related to those types of fixed assets.”
    Commerce’s task in an administrative review is to “consider all available
    evidence on the proper allocation of costs” in order to verify the nature and historical
    treatment of the underlying costs. 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(1)(A). In this case, however,
    Commerce attached little weight to the evidence that the disputed expenditures
    occurred in a period unrelated to the period of review and were recorded in an account
    that historically had not been depreciated.       Moreover, Commerce dismissed the
    extensive documentation provided by Ekinciler regarding the nature of the items in the
    melt shop account. Commerce’s only explanation for doing so was its statement that
    “there is no way to link the documents to the ‘asset’ listed in Ekinciler’s financial
    statement.” Commerce did not discuss the contents of Ekinciler’s documents, however.
    It did not explain why those documents failed to establish the requisite “link,” where any
    perceived gaps existed, or what additional information could have been provided to
    bridge those gaps. Most significantly, Commerce pointed to no contrary documents
    showing that the disputed entries, which are designated in the melt shop account history
    2009-1476                                 7
    simply as “Transfer[s] of Financial Expense,” can be traced to the purchase or
    acquisition of fixed assets.   Commerce thus pointed to no substantial evidentiary
    support for its decision to treat the items in the melt shop account as depreciable fixed
    assets and to disregard the extensive contrary evidence, including Ekinciler’s detailed
    explanation of the nature of the disputed items.
    Commerce’s assertion that there is “no way to link” Ekinciler’s documents to the
    claimed foreign exchange losses is belied by the documents themselves.               The
    accounting worksheets and journal vouchers show that certain “financial expenses”
    were moved out of an account entitled “exchange gains/losses from short term bank
    loans” and that, on the same day, identical amounts were transferred to the melt shop
    account. Even the domestic producers concede as much. They also acknowledge
    generally that the melt shop account contains financial expenses related to bank loans.
    The domestic producers argue that Ekinciler cannot establish a link between the
    foreign exchange losses recorded in the melt shop account and the loan agreements in
    the record, which the domestic producers concede represent general company loans
    unrelated to fixed assets. However, we are unaware of any method (and domestic
    producers suggest none) by which Ekinciler could conclusively establish that link. That
    is because the foreign currency loan payments were made over an extended period,
    beginning several years prior to the Turkish financial crisis, and the loan balances were
    continually changing and were subject to varying exchange rates. Thus, it was not
    practicable to match the loan amounts to particular entries for foreign exchange losses
    at any given point in time. Nevertheless, Ekinciler’s journal vouchers and worksheets
    list each of the pertinent loans to which the foreign exchange losses were attributed,
    2009-1476                                 8
    along with the names of the lending banks and the outstanding foreign currency
    balances as of March 2001.       Several of the loans appear to correspond to the
    agreements in the record, in that they were made by the same banks and carried
    balances consistent with the original loan amounts in the agreements of record. In light
    of that evidence, we do not find persuasive the suggestion by the domestic producers
    that Ekinciler’s documents must be disregarded because they do not conclusively prove
    that the loan amounts in the sample loan agreements correspond precisely to the
    expenses listed in the melt shop account.
    Ekinciler also provided Commerce with its complete fixed asset ledger, which
    identified every fixed asset and the year in which it was placed into service. Neither
    Commerce nor the domestic producers pointed to any fixed asset addition in the years
    2000 or 2001 that is significant enough in value to be related to the amounts recorded in
    the melt shop account. In fact, nothing in the history of the melt shop account ties the
    listed expenses to any plant, machinery, or equipment-related fixed asset; rather, all
    entries are designated as financial expenses, such as “Transfer of Foreign Currency
    Difference” and “Transfer of Financial Expense.”
    In essence, Commerce concluded that Ekinciler’s decision to capitalize the
    disputed melt shop account items in 2001 required the imputation of depreciation for
    2005-2006 regardless of whether the items actually represented depreciable fixed
    assets. Commerce admitted that if the melt shop account items represented foreign
    exchange losses, they should have been expensed in the year in which they were
    incurred, rather than capitalized and treated as an asset. Nevertheless, Commerce
    concluded that because “Ekinciler opted to treat these expenses as an asset” (even if
    2009-1476                                   9
    erroneously), the items could not be “indefinitely suspended and not amortized . . . over
    the asset’s useful life[].”    That was error.   Commerce was not justified in imputing
    depreciation merely to “correct” Ekinciler’s “artificially inflated” balance sheet.
    First, as the trial court noted, “Commerce’s mandate does not include acting as
    ‘the financial statements police’[;] it includes calculating only those costs that reasonably
    relate to cost of production during the period of review.” In the absence of substantial
    evidence showing that the items represented costs relating to fixed assets incurred
    during the period of review, Commerce’s imputation of depreciation was not “reasonably
    reflect[ive]” of Ekinciler’s costs of production under section 1677b(f)(1)(A) of the
    antidumping statute.
    Second, to the extent the presence of the capitalized (and undepreciated) items
    in the melt shop account may have made Ekinciler appear more solvent than it actually
    was, it is unclear how (and by how much) any such distortion of the balance sheet might
    have affected Ekinciler’s 2005-2006 costs of production. Any potential effect would be
    both speculative and unpredictable; the putative distortion of the balance sheet might
    even have lowered (rather than raised) Ekinciler’s costs of production, e.g., by reducing
    Ekinciler’s borrowing costs.
    Finally, it is Commerce’s established policy to treat all foreign exchange losses
    as non-depreciable costs for the year in which they were incurred, regardless of
    whether the losses were incurred in connection with the production of merchandise or
    for any other purpose. See, e.g., Certain Frozen Warmwater Shrimp from Ecuador,
    
    2009 WL 2986648
    , at cmt. 17 (Dep’t of Commerce Sept. 15, 2009) (issues and decision
    mem.); Honey from Argentina, 
    2004 WL 3524390
    , at cmt. 6 (Dep’t of Commerce May
    2009-1476                                   10
    27, 2004) (issues and decision mem.). Commerce also admitted that expensing, rather
    than capitalizing, foreign exchange losses is the proper way to treat such items under
    GAAP and IFRS. To the extent that Commerce decided to impute depreciation to the
    melt shop items even though they consisted largely of foreign exchange losses incurred
    in 2000-2001, Commerce was unjustifiably departing from its policy without explanation.
    Save Domestic Oil, Inc. v. United States, 
    357 F.3d 1278
    , 1283-84 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (“[I]f
    Commerce has a routine practice for addressing like situations, it must either apply that
    practice or provide a reasonable explanation as to why it departs therefrom.”).
    B
    The domestic producers argue that the trial court improperly found facts and,
    based on those findings, directed Commerce to reach a particular result. In doing so,
    the domestic producers argue, the court acted in contravention of its statutory mandate.
    Under 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(c)(3), when the Court of International Trade holds that
    its decision is “not in harmony with” Commerce’s antidumping duty determination, “the
    matter shall be remanded [to Commerce] for disposition consistent with the final
    disposition of the court.”   We have interpreted that statute to limit the Court of
    International Trade “to affirmances and remand orders; an outright reversal without a
    remand does not appear to be contemplated by the statute.” Altx Inc. v. United States,
    
    370 F.3d 1108
    , 1111 n.2 (Fed. Cir. 2004); see also Nippon Steel Corp. v. Int’l Trade
    Comm’n, 
    345 F.3d 1379
    , 1381 (Fed. Cir. 2003).
    We do not regard the trial court as having found facts or entered an
    impermissible order of reversal. What the trial court held was that substantial evidence
    did not support Commerce’s decision that Ekinciler’s costs of production for the period
    2009-1476                                11
    of review included an amount equal to the imputed depreciation on the disputed items in
    the melt shop account. In doing so, the court stated that Ekinciler’s evidence “on the
    nature of the melt shop modernization account” was “uncontroverted.” The domestic
    producers contend that, in order to reach the latter conclusion, the trial court must have
    independently evaluated Ekinciler’s evidence and found, as a factual matter, that the
    disputed items consist entirely of foreign exchange losses on general company loans.
    That is not so.
    While both Commerce and the domestic producers argued before the trial court
    that the melt shop items did not constitute foreign exchange losses, no evidence in the
    record controverted Ekinciler’s documentation as to the nature and origin of the costs
    reflected in that account.   Nor was there any evidence that the melt shop items
    consisted of costs incurred during the period of review in connection with the acquisition
    or construction of a production-related fixed asset. Commerce did not make such a
    finding, nor did it refer to any evidence that would support such a finding other than the
    fact that the account was labeled as an asset account.         The domestic producers
    likewise failed to identify any such evidence. Moreover, as we have noted, even if
    Ekinciler’s treatment of the melt shop items may have had some effect on Ekinciler’s
    costs of production during the period of review, Commerce provided no basis for its
    assumption that the effect would systematically raise Ekinciler’s costs and that it would
    do so in an amount equal to the depreciation that Commerce imputed to those items.
    Thus, given the lack of evidence that the disputed items “reasonably reflect[ed]”
    Ekinciler’s costs of producing the relevant merchandise in the relevant period, the trial
    court correctly held that Commerce’s decision to impute depreciation with regard to the
    2009-1476                                12
    disputed items was unsupported by substantial evidence and therefore unsustainable
    as a matter of law. 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(1)(A).
    Having reached the conclusion that Commerce had erred in calculating
    Ekinciler’s costs of production, the court properly remanded the matter to Commerce for
    a recalculation of the antidumping margin without the unsupported depreciation costs.
    That type of remand to Commerce “for disposition consistent with the final disposition of
    [the trial] court,” is expressly contemplated by the statute. 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(c)(3).
    It is true that, by ruling that Commerce’s decision imputing depreciation to the
    items in the melt shop account was not legally or factually supportable, the court limited
    Commerce’s options on remand. But that is frequently the result when a court overturns
    an agency’s factual finding for lack of substantial evidence, particularly if the factual
    issue is binary in nature. Even though a reviewing court’s decision that substantial
    evidence does not support a particular finding may have the practical effect of dictating
    a particular outcome, that is not the same as the court’s making its own factual finding.
    In light of the absence of evidentiary support in the record for including the imputed
    depreciation for the melt shop account items in Ekinciler’s costs of production, we
    uphold the decision of the Court of International Trade affirming Commerce’s remand
    determination in this case.
    2009-1476                                 13