Norsk Hydro Canada, Inc. v. United States ( 2006 )


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    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    06-1044, -1052
    NORSK HYDRO CANADA, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and
    U.S. MAGNESIUM LLC,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Eric C. Emerson, Steptoe & Johnson LLP, of Washington, DC, argued for plaintiff-
    appellee. With him on the brief were Gregory S. McCue and Michael T. Gershberg. Of
    counsel was Meredith A. Rathbone.
    Stephen C. Tosini, Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United
    States Department of Justice, of Washington, DC, argued for defendant-appellant United
    States. With him on the brief were Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General; David M.
    Cohen, Director; and Jeanne E. Davidson, Deputy Director. Of counsel on the brief was
    Ada E. Bosque, Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel for Import Administration, United States
    Department of Commerce, of Washington, DC.
    Jeffrey M. Telep, King & Spalding LLP, of Washington, DC, argued for defendant-
    appellant U.S. Magnesium LLC. With him on the brief was Stephen A. Jones. Of counsel
    was Joseph W. Dorn.
    Appealed from: United States Court of International Trade
    Judge Donald C. Pogue
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    06-1044, -1052
    NORSK HYDRO CANADA, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and
    U.S. MAGNESIUM LLC,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    __________________________
    DECIDED: December 14, 2006
    __________________________
    Before MICHEL, Chief Judge, PROST, Circuit Judge, and ELLIS,* District Judge.
    ELLIS, District Judge.
    This appeal concerns the interpretation of the countervailing duty laws and the
    division of authority between the two entities responsible for implementing these
    laws—the Department of Commerce (“Commerce”) and the U.S. Customs and Border
    Protection (“Customs”). In this case, Customs collected duties on 1997 magnesium and
    magnesium alloy imports at too high a rate from appellee Norsk Hydro Canada, Inc.
    (“NHC”). Rather than liquidate countervailing duties against NHC at the proper 2.02%
    rate, Customs allowed some duties to be “deemed liquidated” at cash deposit rates
    ranging from approximately 3% to 7%. The government pocketed the difference, and
    *
    The Honorable T.S. Ellis, III, District Judge, United States District Court for
    the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
    as permitted by law, redistributed some of this amount to NHC’s American competitors.
    NHC did not attempt to protest this overcharge by Customs at the time, choosing
    instead to wait several years until Commerce held an annual administrative review of
    the amount of the net countervailable subsidy provided to NHC, at which time NHC
    sought a setoff of the overcharge against duties due on its imports for a later year.
    Commerce rejected this request on the ground that it lacked legal authority to grant the
    setoff. NHC appealed this decision to the Court of International Trade, which agreed
    with NHC and remanded the matter to Commerce with instructions to grant the setoff.
    Following the remand, Commerce made the setoff under protest,1 and the matter then
    returned to the Court of International Trade, which granted judgment for NHC on the
    administrative record. This appeal followed. We now reverse.
    I. Statutory Background
    As an aid to understanding the issues presented, we summarize briefly the law
    governing the setting and collection of countervailing duties.
    A. Countervailing Duties and Subsidies
    If the production of goods abroad is subsidized by a foreign government, the
    goods can be subject to a countervailing duty (“CVD”) when imported2 to the United
    States. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1671
    . In general, the goal of these duties is to protect American
    1
    Specifically, Commerce stated, in an opinion that remains unpublished in the
    Federal Register pending resolution of this case, that it “respectfully disagrees with the
    Court’s holding in Norsk 10/12/2004 Opinion and the Court’s Remand Order” but that it has
    “complied with all the Court’s instructions.” Norsk Hydro Inc. v. United States and U.S.
    Magnesium LLC, Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand, unpublished
    disposition.
    2
    In the jargon of customs law, a particular batch of imported goods is referred
    to as an “entry.” This is not to be confused with the “date of entry,” which is the time that
    a particular entry, or batch of goods, is imported into the United States.
    06-1044, -1052                               2
    firms from unfair competition by setting off the amount of certain export subsidies
    foreign firms selling goods in the United States receive from their government. The
    Secretary of Commerce administers the countervailing duty laws. 
    Id.
     § 1677(1). Two
    showings must be made before a CVD can be imposed: (i) that a government subsidy
    was received, and, (ii) that the subsidy resulted in, or threatens, material injury to
    American industry. Id. § 1671(a). These two determinations are made by separate
    bodies.    The International Trade Commission determines whether material injury to
    American industry has occurred, while Commerce determines whether a subsidy was
    received.3 Subsidies from certain nations may trigger a CVD even in the absence of a
    material injury determination. Id. § 1671(c) (“In the case of any article of merchandise
    imported from a country which is not a Subsidies Agreement country, no determination
    by the Commission under section 1671b(a) . . . or 1671d(b) of this title shall be
    required.”).
    A countervailing duty investigation may be initiated at the request of an interested
    party or on Commerce’s own motion.           Id. § 1671a.     In the course of such an
    investigation, Commerce under 19 U.S.C. § 1671b(b) makes a preliminary
    determination concerning whether a foreign government provided a countervailable
    subsidy, and the International Trade Commission under 19 U.S.C. § 1671b(a) makes a
    preliminary determination concerning whether the foreign subsidy resulted in, or
    threatens, material injury to American industry. If the preliminary investigation discloses
    that a foreign subsidy was provided, Commerce must suspend liquidation of duties, id.
    § 1671b(d)(2), and must require the importer to furnish cash deposits as security for
    3
    This division of authority between Commerce and the International Trade
    Commission is reflected in various statutory provisions. See 
    19 U.S.C. §§ 1671
    (a),
    1671b(a)-(b), 1671d(a)-(b).
    06-1044, -1052                              3
    duties that may be due pending a final determination of the amount of a CVD. 
    Id.
    § 1671b(d)(1)(B). Once Commerce makes a final determination that a countervailing
    subsidy was provided by a foreign government, id. § 1671d(a), and once the
    International Trade Commission has reached a final determination that U.S. industry
    was materially injured as a result, id. § 1671d(b), Commerce then issues an order
    setting the countervailing duty, which is typically expressed ad valorem – that is, as a
    percentage of the value of the imported goods. Id. §§ 1671d(c)(2), 1671e.
    The countervailing duty imposed by Commerce must equal the “net
    countervailable subsidy,” 
    19 U.S.C. § 1671
    (a), which is calculated by subtracting certain
    enumerated fees and setoffs from the amount of the subsidy provided by the foreign
    government. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (6).4 Countervailable subsidies may be divided further
    into “recurring” and “non-recurring” benefits. When an importer receives a non-recurring
    benefit, as occurred here, the benefit must be amortized over the “average useful life” of
    the subsidy. 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.524
    (b)(1)-(d).
    Although countervailing duties must be “equal to” countervailing subsidies, the
    two concepts are not functionally interchangeable.5 The procedures for determining the
    4
    A lengthy technical definition of a countervailable subsidy is contained in 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (5). The essential characteristic of a countervailable subsidy is that a foreign
    government or public entity seeks to encourage exports by conferring a “benefit” on the
    company receiving it. Such “benefits” include, among others, direct contributions, price
    supports, favorable loans or loan guarantees, and foreign government equity investments
    on terms that the country’s private markets would not make.
    5
    In this regard, appellants spill considerable ink urging that the setoff cannot
    be granted because to do so would impermissibly add to the exclusive statutory list of
    subtractions, 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (6), applied to the gross countervailable subsidy to arrive at
    the net countervailable subsidy. This argument misses the mark. NHC is not challenging
    Commerce’s determination of the amount of subsidy NHC received; rather, it is only
    seeking to ensure that the duty it ultimately pays is equal to the subsidy it received. See
    infra section IV.
    06-1044, -1052                                4
    amount of a countervailable subsidy are different from those for collecting the
    countervailing duty; indeed, as noted, the two tasks are undertaken by two different
    entities, Commerce and Customs. More importantly for our purposes, the procedures
    for contesting an erroneous subsidy calculation are different from those for contesting
    an erroneous duty assessment. Compare 
    19 U.S.C. § 1675
     (Commerce administrative
    review of subsidy determination) with 
    id.
     § 1514(a)(5) (Customs protest for liquidation
    error). The procedure for contesting a Customs assessment or liquidation essentially
    involves lodging a timely protest with Customs, the disposition of which is reviewable in
    the Court of International Trade, see infra Section I.B. By contrast, the procedure for
    contesting an erroneous subsidy or CVD determination by Commerce requires an
    objecting party to raise the objection during an administrative review of the CVD order.
    More specifically, Commerce must, upon request, undertake an annual administrative
    review of any issued CVD order. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1675
    (a)(1). During the administrative
    proceeding, Commerce must “review and determine the amount of any net
    countervailable subsidy,” which is the basis for a CVD determination, 
    id.
    § 1675(a)(1)(A), and it is during this review that parties may raise objections, present
    evidence, and submit written arguments relating to the countervailable subsidy
    determination, including submission of written arguments. See 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 351.221
    ,
    351.301, 351.309. In this respect, during its annual review, Commerce typically restricts
    its consideration to entries made during the one year period of review (or “POR”). 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.213
    (e)(2)(i).     Judicial review of the results of these administrative
    proceedings is available in the Court of International Trade, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c); 19
    U.S.C. § 1516a(2), with appeal to this Court. 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(5).
    06-1044, -1052                             5
    B. Liquidation
    While a CVD’s ad valorem rate is determined administratively by Commerce, the
    duty itself is collected by Customs.6      Commerce dictates to Customs the proper
    countervailing duty rate, 19 U.S.C. § 1671e(a), and Customs “liquidates” the duty, that
    is, it makes the “final computation or ascertainment of duties . . . accruing upon entry” of
    the goods. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1500
    (d); 
    19 C.F.R. § 159.1
    . In other words, Commerce sets the
    CVD rate and Customs “liquidates” and collects the duty by applying the ad valorem
    rate to the value of the entered goods.          In those instances where a preliminary
    determination of material injury and countervailable subsidy is made, liquidation is
    suspended pending completion of the investigation. 19 U.S.C. § 1671b(d)(2). In these
    instances, Customs will not know the exact amount of the CVD to collect when the
    goods are actually imported; the CVD is necessarily determined retrospectively, some
    time after the goods enter the United States. See 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.213
    (a). Accordingly,
    to secure payment of a CVD, an importer of goods subject to countervailing duties must
    make cash deposits of the estimated duties at the time of entry.                19 U.S.C.
    §§ 1671b(d)(1)(B), 1671d(c)(1)(B)(ii), 1671e(a)(3). To be sure, the cash deposit rate
    and the actual countervailing duty rate, as ultimately determined by Commerce, may
    vary substantially.
    As noted, liquidation of a duty is suspended while a countervailing duty
    investigation is underway. Id. § 1671b(d)(2). At the conclusion of the investigation,
    6
    At the time of the events giving rise to this dispute, Customs was a bureau
    of the Treasury Department. In 2003 Customs was consolidated with various other
    agencies as the Bureau of Customs and Border Patrol, under the auspices of the
    Department of Homeland Security. 
    6 U.S.C. §§ 203
    , 211. This change did not affect
    Customs’ role and function with respect to CVDs.
    06-1044, -1052                               6
    Commerce instructs Customs on the appropriate countervailing duty rate. Once this
    occurs, the suspension of liquidation is removed and Customs, in general, is required to
    “liquidate the entry . . . within 6 months of receiving notice of the removal.”             
    Id.
    § 1504(d). Yet, the time frame shortens where, as here, liquidation is ordered pursuant
    to an administrative review. In such a case, Customs must, “to the greatest extent
    practicable,” liquidate entries within 90 days. Id. § 1675(a)(3)(B). If an entry of goods
    is not actually liquidated within six months after suspension of liquidation is removed, it
    is “deemed liquidated” by operation of law. Id. § 1504(d). While actual liquidation
    occurs at the rate instructed by Commerce, deemed liquidation under § 1504(d) occurs
    at the (sometimes higher, sometimes lower) cash deposit rate.7
    In the process of liquidating entries, Customs must give parties proper notice,
    and this is so whether the liquidation is actual or deemed.            In particular, “bulletin
    notices” of liquidations must be posted in “a conspicuous place in the customshouse at
    the port of entry . . . or lodged at some other suitable place.” 
    19 C.F.R. § 159.9
    (b); see
    generally 25 C.J.S. Customs Duties § 100. Posting of the bulletin notice triggers the
    limitations period for protesting a liquidation. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1514
    (c)(3)(A); 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 159.9
    (c), 174.12(e)(1); see also Goldhofer Fahrzeugwerk GmbH & Co. v. United
    States, 
    885 F.2d 858
    , 860-861 (Fed. Cir. 1989) (failure to provide adequate courtesy
    notice does not toll limitations period when bulletin notice is adequate). Bulletin notices
    of actual liquidations are dated when posted, 
    19 C.F.R. § 159.9
    (c)(1), while bulletin
    7
    Deemed liquidation was intended to aid importers by giving them “finality as
    to their duty obligations by providing for deemed liquidation at the rate claimed by the
    importers [i.e. the cash deposit rate] unless actual liquidation occurred within specified time
    limits.” Cemex v. United States, 
    384 F.3d 1314
    , 1318 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (internal citations
    omitted). As this case illustrates, however, trading accuracy for finality may be sweet in
    one case and bitter in another.
    06-1044, -1052                                7
    notices of deemed liquidations are dated as of the end of the six month statutory period,
    
    19 C.F.R. § 159.9
    (c)(2)(i), and must be posted only “within a reasonable period after
    each liquidation by operation of law.” 
    Id.
     § 159.9(c)(2)(ii). In addition to bulletin notices,
    courtesy notices of actual liquidations and deemed liquidations are typically mailed to
    the importer. Id. § 159.9(d); see generally 25 C.J.S. Customs Duties § 101.
    A liquidation decision itself is “final and conclusive” as to all parties, including the
    United States, unless protested with Customs, and this is so even if the liquidation
    contains a “clerical error, mistake of fact, or other inadvertence” adverse to the importer.
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1514
    (a). Currently, a protest must be filed with Customs within 180 days of
    liquidation, 
    19 U.S.C. § 1514
    (c)(3)(A), although at the time of the liquidation in this case,
    the protest limitations period was 90 days. See 
    19 U.S.C. § 1514
    (c)(3) (1996). If
    Customs denies a protest, an action challenging the denial may be brought in the Court
    of International Trade, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (a); 
    19 U.S.C. § 1515
    , with appeal to this Court.
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(5).
    In addition to a protest, other remedies for liquidation errors exist. Customs may
    sua sponte reliquidate an entry, including an entry “deemed liquidated,” within 90 days
    of its giving notice of the original liquidation to the importer. 
    19 U.S.C. § 1501
    . At the
    time this action accrued, a party also could request Customs to reliquidate an entry
    under 
    19 U.S.C. § 1520
     to correct certain errors, provided it did so “within one year after
    the date of liquidation.”   
    Id.
     § 1520 (c) (2000).8      When an importer could request
    8
    Until 2004, 
    19 U.S.C. § 1520
    (c) allowed for voluntary reliquidation by
    Customs, providing that
    notwithstanding a valid protest was not filed, the Customs Service may . . .
    reliquidate an entry to correct . . . a clerical error, mistake of fact, or other
    inadvertence, not amounting to an error in the construction of law, adverse
    06-1044, -1052                                8
    discretionary reliquidation under § 1520(c), a port director’s failure to reliquidate was
    also a proper subject for a Customs protest. 
    19 C.F.R. § 174.11
    (g).
    II. Facts and Proceedings Below
    The material facts are undisputed. Commerce, at the behest of appellant U.S.
    Magnesium, a domestic producer of magnesium products, investigated certain benefits
    received by NHC, an importer of magnesium and magnesium alloy.9 The investigation
    revealed that NHC received countervailable subsidies in the form of grants from the
    governments of Canada and Quebec.                  Final Affirmative Countervailing Duty
    Determinations: Pure Magnesium and Alloy Magnesium From Canada, 
    57 Fed. Reg. 30,946
     (July 13, 1992).       Commerce amortized these nonrecurring subsidies over
    fourteen years, the average useful life of assets in the magnesium industry, and ordered
    an equal amount to be countervailed each year. 
    Id.
     As a result, magnesium imports
    from Canada are subject to countervailing duty orders, which have been reviewed
    annually since 1992.       Countervailing Duty Orders:        Pure Magnesium and Alloy
    Magnesium From Canada, 
    57 Fed. Reg. 39,392
     (Aug. 31, 1992).
    to the importer . . . when the error, mistake, or other inadvertence is brought
    to the attention of the Customs Service within one year after the date of
    liquidation.
    This voluntary reliquidation provision was repealed in 2004. Pub. L. 108-429, Title II,
    § 2105, Dec. 3, 2004, 
    118 Stat. 3598
    . The § 1520(c) one year limitations period formerly
    applicable to discretionary reliquidation by Customs must be distinguished from the 90 day
    limitations period in § 1514(c)(3) applicable to the importer’s right to file a protest with
    Customs.
    9
    Commerce is obligated by statute to initiate a countervailing duty investigation
    upon the filing of a proper petition by any domestic industry entity. 19 U.S.C. § 1671b(b).
    At the time of this request, U.S. Magnesium was operating under the name Magnesium
    Corporation of America.
    06-1044, -1052                                9
    In 1999, Commerce conducted an administrative review of NHC’s 1997
    magnesium entries. As a result of this review, Commerce set a countervailing subsidy
    rate of 2.02%. Pure Magnesium and Alloy Magnesium from Canada: Final Results of
    Countervailing Duty Administrative Review, 
    64 Fed. Reg. 48,805
    , 48,806 (Sept. 8,
    1999).        Accordingly, on December 8, 1999, Commerce lifted the suspension of
    liquidation then in effect for Canadian magnesium imports and instructed Customs to
    liquidate the 1997 entries and collect countervailing duties at 2.02%. Customs did not
    immediately liquidate some of the 1997 entries, with the result that those entries were
    deemed liquidated by operation of law on March 8, 2000, six months after the 1999
    Final Results were published in the Federal Register. See 
    19 U.S.C. § 1504
    (d) (any
    entry not liquidated within 6 months after suspension of liquidation is lifted will be
    deemed liquidated at cash deposit rate); Int’l Trading Co. v. United States, 
    412 F.3d 1303
    , 1308-09 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (publication of final results in Federal Register lifts
    suspension of liquidation and begins six month period).      In September 2000 and
    February 2001, the port of Port Huron, Michigan gave notice to NHC that its 1997
    entries had been deemed liquidated at the cash deposit rate, which for those entries
    ranged from 3.18% to 7.61%.10 NHC received actual notice of the deemed liquidations
    and courtesy notices from Customs. Yet, NHC (i) never filed a protest with Customs
    under 
    19 U.S.C. § 1514
    (c), (ii) never sought reliquidation under 
    19 U.S.C. § 1520
    (c),
    and (iii) did not commence an action against Customs under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (a).11
    10
    Some of the duties collected were distributed to NHC’s domestic competitors
    under 19 U.S.C. § 1675c.
    11
    NHC contends it would have had no Customs remedy at that point, an issue
    we address later. See infra Section IV.B.
    06-1044, -1052                            10
    Instead, NHC waited until the administrative review of its 2001 entries to allege
    that Customs had over-collected the duties on its 1997 entries, and accordingly
    requested Commerce to setoff the subsidy rate for the 2001 entries by the amount of
    the overpayment on the 1997 entries.12 Commerce concluded it lacked the authority to
    make the requested setoff, stating that it
    does not have authority to address what is essentially a customs protest
    issue concerning entries from a prior, completed review in the context of
    this administrative review. Parties cannot revive an issue for which the
    deadlines for proper challenge have already passed by raising it in an on-
    going administrative proceeding.
    Pure Magnesium and Alloy Magnesium from Canada: Preliminary Results of
    Countervailing Duty Administrative Reviews, 
    68 Fed. Reg. 25,339
     (May 12, 2003). In its
    final results that year, Commerce reiterated that it had properly instructed Customs
    about the assessment rate for 1997 entries at the time of the 1999 review and that it
    lacked statutory authority to correct Customs’ error.       Pure Magnesium and Alloy
    Magnesium from Canada: Final Results of Countervailing Duty Administrative Reviews,
    
    68 Fed. Reg. 53,962
     (September 15, 2003) (hereinafter the “Final Results”).
    NHC then filed suit in the Court of International Trade, alleging jurisdiction under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c).         The United States (on behalf of Commerce) and U.S.
    Magnesium13 moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, which motion failed, the Court of
    International    Trade concluding it had jurisdiction.   Norsk Hydro Canada v. United
    12
    By this time, of course, a protest of the deemed liquidation to Customs would
    have been untimely. See 
    19 U.S.C. § 1514
    (c)(3)(A) (1996) (90 day Customs protest
    period).
    13
    The United States and U.S. Magnesium are jointly referred to throughout as
    “appellants.”
    06-1044, -1052                               11
    States, 
    350 F. Supp. 2d 1172
    , 1176-83 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2004) (“NHC I”). Although the
    Court of International Trade concluded NHC may once have had a remedy at Customs,
    it determined that exhaustion of such a remedy was unnecessary before seeking
    redress from Commerce. 
    Id.
     On the merits, the Court of International Trade concluded
    that Commerce not only had authority to make the setoffs, but was required to do so to
    satisfy 
    19 U.S.C. § 1671
    (a). Id.; Norsk Hydro Canada v. United States, 
    374 F. Supp. 2d 1275
    , 1276 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2005) (“NHC II”). On remand, Commerce made the setoffs
    under protest,14 and the Court of International Trade entered final judgment in favor of
    NHC on the administrative record. Norsk Hydro Canada v. United States, 
    391 F. Supp. 2d 1326
     (Ct. Int’l Trade 2005) (“NHC III”). This appeal followed.
    III. Jurisdiction
    The threshold question is whether the Court of International Trade correctly
    concluded it had jurisdiction to hear NHC’s claim. Our review of this ruling is de novo,
    as a trial court’s determination of subject matter jurisdiction is a legal conclusion.
    Consol. Bearings v. U.S., 
    348 F.3d 997
     (Fed. Cir. 2003).
    NHC’s claim in the Court of International Trade was brought under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c), which confers jurisdiction on that court to hear “any civil action commenced
    under section 516A of the Tariff Act of 1930." Section 516A,15 in turn, provides for
    review in the Court of International Trade of certain “reviewable determinations” in
    countervailing duty proceedings for the purpose of “contesting any factual findings or
    legal conclusions upon which the [CVD] determination is based.”              19 U.S.C.
    § 1516a(a)(2)(A)-(B).     Among the list of reviewable determinations is “a final
    14
    See supra note 1.
    15
    Codified at 19 U.S.C. § 1516a.
    06-1044, -1052                             12
    determination . . . under section 1675 of this title.” Id. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii). Section
    1675 provides for administrative review of countervailing duty orders.           Commerce’s
    decision in Final Results that it did not have the authority to order the requested setoff is
    just such a § 1675 “final determination.”          Given this, it follows that the Court of
    International Trade had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c) to hear NHC’s claim that
    Commerce erred in deciding that it had neither the obligation nor the authority to make
    the requested setoff.
    Appellants seek to avoid this result by arguing that the Court of International
    Trade never had jurisdiction because this action, however pled by NHC, is a challenge
    to Customs’ erroneous liquidation of the entries, not to Commerce’s § 1675
    administrative review of the CVD. They assert NHC has attempted by “artful pleading”
    to convert an unreviewable Customs decision into a reviewable Commerce
    determination by raising the Customs decision in Commerce’s administrative
    proceeding.
    This argument, closely scrutinized, fails. It is true that the Court of International
    Trade, like all federal courts, is a court of limited jurisdiction, and that the party invoking
    that jurisdiction bears the burden of establishing it. See Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins.
    Co., 
    511 U.S. 375
    , 377 (1994). It is also true that a party may not expand a court’s
    jurisdiction by creative pleading. As we have noted, “mere recitation of a basis for
    jurisdiction, by either a party or a court, cannot be controlling . . . we look to the true
    nature of the action in the district court in determining jurisdiction of the appeal.”
    Williams v. Sec’y of Navy, 
    787 F.2d 552
    , 557 (Fed. Cir. 1986) (internal citations
    omitted).   Importantly, however, the “true nature” of NHC’s action in the Court of
    06-1044, -1052                                13
    International Trade is an appeal of Commerce’s legal determination that it lacked
    authority to setoff the erroneous liquidations. Given that this is the “true nature” of the
    action, it follows that the matter falls squarely within § 1581(c), and hence the Court of
    International Trade correctly concluded that it had jurisdiction.
    It is also worth noting that appellants mislabel their jurisdictional argument as
    “artful pleading” or as the failure to exhaust remedies. Neither label fits. NHC has not
    engaged in “artful pleading” in the true sense of the term, as there is no contention that
    NHC premised jurisdiction on an impermissibly anticipated defense or counterclaim, or
    intentionally failed to plead a necessary federal issue in order to avoid federal
    jurisdiction. Compare Skelly Oil v. Phillips Petroleum, 
    339 U.S. 667
    , 671-74 (1950); see
    generally Miller, Artful Pleading: A Doctrine in Search of Definition, 76 Tex. L. Rev 1781
    (1998).     To argue, as appellants do, that jurisdiction here is the product of artful
    pleading amounts to no more than argument by epithet.
    Nor does appellant’s argument fare any better when framed as a failure to
    exhaust remedies. In fact, appellants argue not failure to exhaust, but rather that NHC’s
    sole and exclusive remedy was a timely protest to Customs followed, if necessary, by
    Court of International Trade review pursuant to § 1581(a). While it is true that NHC
    could have remedied the deemed liquidations to Customs had it acted in a timely
    fashion16 and that the results of such a protest would have been judicially reviewable
    pursuant to § 1581(a), this case is not a request to review any such protest, but rather a
    request to review Commerce’s legal determination that it has no authority to make the
    requested setoff. To put this point differently, the Court of International Trade correctly
    determined its jurisdiction because the availability of remedies under § 1581(a) at some
    16
    See supra Section I.B and infra Section IV.B.
    06-1044, -1052                               14
    point in the past does not preclude, and indeed has no bearing on, the availability of
    remedies under § 1581(c) today. As the Court of International Trade correctly pointed
    out, § 1581(a) and (c) make no reference to each other; each is a “separate and distinct
    avenue for relief.” NHC I, 
    350 F. Supp. 2d at 1179-80
    . While this fact has substantive
    implications for the redressability of a Customs error by Commerce, it militates against
    reading the statutes to mean that just because relief was once available under
    § 1581(a), it cannot now be available in a Commere administrative proceeding, the
    results of which would be judicially reviewable under § 1581(c).17
    The propriety of jurisdiction in this case is vividly illustrated if one assumes,
    contrary to what occurred here, that Commerce had decided it did have authority to
    make the setoff. In that circumstance, we doubt that U.S. Magnesium would be arguing
    that the Court of International Trade lacked jurisdiction over an appeal from such a
    determination made in the course of the Commerce proceeding. To the contrary, it is
    clear that U.S. Magnesium would be attempting to invoke the Court of International
    Trade’s jurisdiction to dispute Commerce’s substantive authority. It is pellucidly clear
    from this that § 1581(c) properly provided the Court of International Trade jurisdiction to
    review Commerce’s legal determination concerning the setoff whatever that
    determination might be.
    17
    Nor did the Court of International Trade abuse its discretion in refusing to
    impose an “exhaustion” requirement under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2637
    (d). We have our doubts
    about the Court of International Trade’s argument based on legislative acquiescence to the
    Serampore decision, 
    350 F. Supp. 2d at 1180-82
    , as it is highly questionable whether
    legislative inaction in response to any particular judicial decision construing a statute should
    be presumed to reflect affirmative approval rather than unawareness or sheer inertia. The
    absence of prejudice to Commerce from NHC’s delay, however, is sufficient to sustain the
    Court of International Trade ’s exercise of its discretion in this regard.
    06-1044, -1052                                15
    Appellants’ cited cases do not persuade us to the contrary. This is not a case
    like the ubiquitously-cited American Air Parcel Forwarding v. United States, 
    718 F.2d 1546
     (Fed. Cir. 1983), where a litigant seeks to invoke the Court of International Trade’s
    § 1581(i) residual jurisdiction because the litigant cannot pass muster under any of the
    more specific grants of jurisdiction in § 1581(a)-(h).       Rather, here NHC seeks to
    substitute one specific grant of jurisdiction, namely § 1581(c), for another specific
    jurisdictional grant no longer available, namely § 1581(a). As long as plaintiff alleges an
    injury actionable under subsection (c), there is no reason to disallow it simply because,
    at one time, that injury would have been redressable under subsection (a).18 Nor is the
    Juice Farms v. United States, 18 Ct. Int’l. Trade 1037 (1994), case cited by appellants
    on point. Although it is true that Juice Farms held that challenges to liquidations cannot
    be brought under § 1581(c), it did so in the context of a direct appeal of a Customs
    liquidation protest, not an appeal of a Commerce determination in a countervailing duty
    proceeding. Finally, the case of Nichimen v. United States, 
    938 F.2d 1286
     (Fed. Cir.
    1991), is also of no avail to appellants. They cite it for the proposition that the Court of
    International Trade lacks jurisdiction over a Customs protest when the substance of that
    protest is a challenge to a Commerce decision, and ask that we now apply the converse
    rule, namely that the Court of International Trade lacks jurisdiction over a contested
    18
    On the other hand, to say, as NHC and the trial court do, that Congress
    intended an “election of remedies” between subsections (a) and (c) of § 1581 goes too far,
    as the two subsections were intended as remedies for distinct injuries: Customs errors in
    (a), and Commerce errors in (c). The more reasonable inference is that Congress had no
    intent in this regard because it did not foresee that a party would ask Commerce, in an
    administrative proceeding reviewing a CVD order, to correct a Customs error relating to the
    order. The fact that Congress may not have anticipated the specific procedural posture of
    this case, however, does not authorize this Court or the Court of International Trade to
    erect jurisdictional hurdles for plaintiffs who otherwise meet the requisites for a § 1581(c)
    action.
    06-1044, -1052                               16
    Commerce duty proceeding when the substance of the protest challenges a Customs
    error. This argument fails because the Court of International Trade’s lack of jurisdiction
    over some claims in Nichimen resulted from the fact that the decisions in that case were
    not amenable to Customs protest at all under the applicable protest statute. See id. at
    1290-92. By contrast, the administrative review statute here in issue, § 1675(a)(1)(A),
    clearly grants Commerce legal authority to “determine the amount of any net
    countervailable subsidy” during annual reviews, and Commerce reached the legal
    conclusion that it had no authority to adjust the amount of countervailable subsidy by
    the CVD overpayments. As noted, Commerce’s legal decisions in the administrative
    process are subject to judicial review under 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(A) and 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c).    Nichimen cannot be read for some broader principle of law barring
    otherwise-proper Court of International Trade jurisdiction when CVD determinations
    might have been challenged at an earlier point. In short, the case law does not support
    the notion that jurisdiction under § 1581(c) is disallowed simply because jurisdiction
    formerly available under § 1581(a) no longer exists.
    Once the issue presented to the Court of International Trade and reviewed here
    is properly framed not as a challenge to the erroneous liquidation, but rather as a
    challenge to Commerce’s determination that it lacked the authority to make the setoff, it
    is apparent that the Court of International Trade correctly determined its jurisdiction.
    This is so because Commerce’s decision that it lacked authority to remedy the deemed
    liquidation was a “legal conclusion upon which its determination is based.”19 19 U.S.C.
    19
    Just because Commerce concluded that it lacked authority to make the
    requested setoff hardly means it is not drawing a “legal conclusion.” A legal position by an
    agency that it lacks authority is no less a legal conclusion for interpreting agency authority
    narrowly.
    06-1044, -1052                               17
    § 1516a(a)(2)(A). As such, it is reviewable under § 1581(c), even though NHC would
    have been time-barred had it attempted to protest the deemed liquidation to Customs.
    IV. The Merits
    We next review the Court of International Trade’s decision that Commerce had
    both the power and the obligation to make the requested setoffs. And we use the same
    standard of review the Court of International Trade used in reviewing the Commerce
    administrative record: Commerce’s determinations of fact must be sustained unless
    unsupported by substantial evidence in the record and its legal conclusions must be
    sustained unless not in accordance with law. 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i). We review
    the Court of International Trade’s legal conclusions de novo. PPG Indus. v. United
    States, 
    978 F.2d 1232
    , 1236 (Fed. Cir. 1992).
    We begin, as we must, with the language of the applicable statutes. The parties
    correctly argue that Commerce’s authority to make the requested setoffs, if it exists,
    must be found in 
    19 U.S.C. §§ 1671
    (a) and 1675. The Court of International Trade
    based its conclusion that Commerce not only had the authority but also an obligation to
    make the setoffs on an interpretation of those two provisions, and they are the
    provisions chiefly urged by NHC. Section 1671(a) imposes countervailing duties as a
    general matter. It provides that where a foreign government is providing countervailable
    subsidies on imported goods and an American industry is injured or threatened as a
    result, “there shall be imposed upon such merchandise a countervailing duty . . . equal
    to the amount of the net countervailing subsidy.”     
    19 U.S.C. § 1671
    (a) (emphasis
    added).   And § 1675(a)(1)(A) provides that “at least once during the 12 month period
    beginning on the anniversary date of the publication of a countervailing duty order . . .
    06-1044, -1052                             18
    the administering authority shall . . . review and determine the amount of any net
    countervailable subsidy.” Because § 1671 requires the “duty imposed” to be “equal to
    the amount of the net countervailing subsidy,” NHC contends that Commerce must take
    into account the past erroneous liquidations when, in the course of a § 1675 review
    proceeding, it undertakes to determine duties for a later year. Otherwise, NHC argues,
    the overall duty imposed will be greater than the amount of the overall subsidy benefit
    received, a result forbidden by the statute.
    The success of NHC’s argument turns on two controverted interpretations of
    § 1671. Specifically, NHC argues, and the Court of International Trade agreed, that
    duties are “imposed” when the relevant entry is liquidated or collected. NHC I, 
    350 F. Supp. 2d at 1180-82
    . If duties are “imposed” when liquidated or collected, then the
    duties liquidated and collected must equal the subsidy received to avoid an imposition
    error.    In contrast, if, as appellants argue, duties are “imposed” earlier in the CVD
    process, when the subsidy and material injury determinations are made, an error later in
    the CVD process (such as during liquidation), while still an error, does not cause an
    imposition error as to that POR.
    NHC also argues, as it must to prevail, that § 1671's requirement that the CVDs
    must equal the countervailing subsidy applies to the entire useful life of a nonrecurring
    subsidy, rather than to each POR therein. The Court of International Trade agreed with
    this proposition as well. NHC I, 
    350 F. Supp. 2d at 1184
    . The significance of this issue
    is that, even if we grant that duties are “imposed” when liquidated, the appellants would
    still prevail if PORs are sufficiently inviolable that Commerce is not obligated to correct
    mistakes from one POR in another. Of course, appellants argue that PORs are distinct
    06-1044, -1052                                 19
    and that mistakes in one are not correctable in another, or at least that Commerce acted
    reasonably in so holding.
    If we accept both propositions – that duties are imposed when liquidated and that
    the integrity of the POR may be violated to ensure that duties imposed equal subsidies
    received – then Commerce arguably violates § 1671 by refusing to take past erroneous
    liquidations into account when calculating countervailable subsidies in subsequent
    PORs. This is so because the duty “imposed” over the life of the subsidy would be
    greater than the value of the subsidy itself. In contrast, if appellants’ arguments are
    accepted, the statute’s mandate that duties “imposed” equal the net countervailable
    subsidy would not be violated by Commerce’s refusal to alter the CVD rate to account
    for liquidation errors from a prior POR, since those errors do not affect imposition in the
    current POR. We address each link in the chain of NHC’s argument in turn: first, when
    duties are “imposed,” and second, whether countervailing duties must equal
    countervailable subsidies over multiple PORs or merely during each POR considered
    separately. On both points, we find appellants’ arguments persuasive.
    A. The Meaning of “Impose”
    First, NHC raises the possibility that the appellants may have procedurally
    forfeited the issue of the meaning of “impose” by not raising the issue below, see NHCI
    I, 
    350 F. Supp. 2d at
    1181 n.8, or in its initial brief before this Court. We disagree. In
    Consolidation Coal v. United States, 
    351 F.3d 1374
    , 1378 (Fed Cir. 2003), we stated
    that preserving an issue for appeal does not require “the incantation of particular words;
    rather, it requires that the lower court be fairly put on notice as to the substance of the
    issue.” (internal citations omitted). The Court of International Trade knew it had to
    06-1044, -1052                              20
    construe the term “imposed,” see NHC I, 
    350 F. Supp. 2d at 1180-82
    , and it is obvious
    here, as well. We conclude it is proper to resolve this issue on appeal.
    We turn now to the merits of the issue. NHC argues that duties are “imposed”
    when “assessed” and that they are “assessed” when liquidated.              In support, they
    contend Commerce itself has interpreted “imposed” to mean “assessed and paid,” and
    that it would be unreasonable for Commerce to use a different definition here. It is true
    that Commerce has occasionally interpreted “imposed” to mean “assessed,” but it is
    also true that it has done so only in a different statutory context, namely the
    anti-dumping laws.    See Serampore Indus. v. United States, 
    675 F. Supp. 1354
    ,
    1358-60 (Ct. Int’l Trade 1987) (construing then 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(d)(1)(D) (1982); now
    codified at § 1677a(c)(1)(C)). Regardless of how Commerce has interpreted “impose”
    in the anti-dumping context, in the CVD context it is obvious that the imposition and
    assessment or liquidation of duties are distinct events and it does not make sense,
    therefore, to equate them. In particular, § 1671(a) establishes the substantive criteria
    for whether CVDs should be “imposed.” And because it is Commerce that decides
    whether those criteria are satisfied, it follows that CVDs are “imposed” before
    liquidation, since Commerce is not involved in liquidation. Specifically, § 1671(a) and
    § 1671d are clear that CVDs are “imposed” once determinations about (i) material injury
    and (ii) countervailable subsidy are made.      Those determinations are made by the
    International Trade Commission and Commerce, respectively. Neither of those bodies
    engage in the assessment or liquidation of duties, which is instead carried out by
    Customs after receiving instructions from Commerce.20 It is clear, therefore, that in the
    20
    Numerous authorities make this clear. For example, the countervailing duty
    law at 19 U.S.C. § 1671e(a)(1) provides that “[Commerce] shall publish a countervailing
    06-1044, -1052                             21
    CVD context, imposition of CVDs and assessment or liquidation of those duties are
    distinct events that should not be equated or conflated.
    Given that the CVD laws clearly state that such duties are “imposed” by
    Commerce but “assessed” when liquidated by Customs, we reject NHC’s invitation to
    construe “impose” in § 1671 to mean “liquidate.”21 Instead, we read the CVD statutes
    as the appellants propose: Commerce imposes CVDs, then Customs assesses and
    liquidates them. As a consequence, Commerce’s failure to make the setoffs does not
    result in the imposition (in the relevant sense) of a duty greater than the benefit
    received.   Commerce “imposed” the duties in the prior POR by entering an order
    correctly instructing Customs about the amount of duties to be collected,22 and once it
    duty order . . . which directs customs officers to assess a countervailing duty equal to the
    amount of the net countervailable subsidy.” This proposition also finds support in a recent
    rulemaking establishing procedures for the transfer of antidumping and countervailing
    duties to domestic producers. See Distribution of Continued Dumping and Subsidy Offset
    to Affected Domestic Producers, 
    66 Fed. Reg. 33,920
    , 33,922 (June 26, 2001) (proposed
    rule) (“[A]ntidumping or countervailing duties accruing on imported merchandise are not
    assessed until each entry . . . is liquidated.”).
    21
    NHC also argues that, to the degree “imposed” is ambiguous, the Charming
    Betsy canon requires that we construe the term “impose” in § 1671(a) consistent with
    Article 19:4 of the WTO Subsidies and Countervailing Measures Agreement, to mean “the
    final assessment of duties,” in other words, liquidation. The rule of interpretation
    announced in Murray v. Schooner Charming Betsy, 6 U.S. (2 Cranch) 64, 118 (1804),
    instructs that domestic law should be interpreted consistently with American international
    obligations to the degree possible. Even if our interpretation of § 1671(a) is inconsistent
    with Article 19:4, which is doubtful, NHC’s argument fails for several reasons. First, it was
    not presented to the Court of International Trade. See NHC I, 
    350 F. Supp. 2d 1172
    .
    Second, Article 19.4 is not self-executing and therefore “cannot become binding
    domestically unless Congress implemented it through domestic legislation.” Defenders of
    Wildlife v. Hogart, 
    330 F.3d 1358
    , 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2003). Indeed, Congress has precluded
    challenges to agency action on the grounds that they are inconsistent with Uruguay Round
    Agreements, of which Article 19:4 is a part. 
    19 U.S.C. § 3512
    (c)(1)(B).
    22
    Moreover, because we believe the statutes are quite clear that “imposition”
    and “assessment” are distinct steps in the CVD process, we need not reach the question
    of deference under step two of the Chevron analysis. See Chevron v. Natural Res. Def.
    Council, 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842-843 (1984). Were we to do so, however, we would find
    06-1044, -1052                               22
    did so it was entitled to assume that liquidation would occur consistent with its
    instructions for that POR.        Because Commerce is entitled to so assume, it is not
    obligated to correct an assessment or liquidation error from a past POR when reviewing
    the correctness of the duties imposed in the instant POR.
    In short, an assessment error as to one entry does not cause an imposition error
    as to that entry because assessment is a distinct step in the CVD process that occurs
    after imposition. Put another way, an assessment error as to one entry also does not
    cause an imposition error as to a future entry or POR – unless Commerce is required by
    the statute to take account of errors from prior PORs. We take this question up next
    and resolve it in the negative.
    B. The POR
    The second issue we must resolve is whether the Court of International Trade
    erred in holding that Commerce is legally required to take account of entries outside the
    POR in order to implement the statutory mandate that countervailing duties must equal
    countervailable subsidies. If Commerce’s review pursuant to § 1675(a) is limited solely
    to the 2001 entries, then it follows that Commerce correctly concluded that there could
    be no setoff.
    Analysis of this question properly begins with the text of the statute governing
    administrative review of Commerce’s countervailing duty decisions.                  Section
    1675(a)(1)(A) provides that
    at least once during each 12-month period beginning on the anniversary of
    the date of publication of a countervailing duty order . . . the administering
    authority, if a request for such a review has been received and after
    Commerce’s interpretation reasonable for the same reasons elaborated herein. See supra
    Section IV.A.
    06-1044, -1052                               23
    publication of notice of such review in the Federal Register, shall review
    and determine the amount of any net countervailable subsidy.
    While the text of § 1675 is silent on the length of the POR, Commerce has interpreted
    this statute to mean that only entries received during the one-year period under review
    may be considered.      Specifically, the pertinent regulation provides that, “except as
    provided . . . an administrative review under this section normally will cover entries . . .
    during the most recently completed calendar year.” 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.213
    (e)(2)(i).23
    This interpretation of § 1675 by Commerce is entitled to deference here unless
    Congress has expressed a contrary view or the interpretation is unreasonable.          See
    Chevron v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842-43 (1984). The statute’s
    silence on this matter confirms that Congress has not expressed a contrary view. Thus,
    we move on to the reasonableness of Commerce’s construction.
    We are persuaded that Commerce’s interpretation is reasonable, indeed invited
    by the statute. This is so because the statute contemplates annual reviews, and hence
    limiting § 1675 review to entries made during the POR in issue reasonably serves
    important goals of finality and efficiency. Given that Commerce undertakes annual
    reviews, it would be duplicative and wasteful for later reviews to revisit matters subject
    to review in prior PORs.        Revisiting issues that were resolved in prior review
    proceedings would impair the finality of any one annual review, potentially prolonging a
    CVD dispute far beyond the year to which it relates. The same potential exists with
    23
    The qualifier “normally” in the regulation does not contemplate wholesale
    abandonment of the POR concept in some cases, but rather a pragmatic modification of
    some aspect of normal review procedures, such as the use of a fiscal year rather than a
    calendar year as the relevant period, or similar technical changes. Cf. Certain Welded
    Carbon Steel Pipes and Tubes from Thailand: Final Results of Antidumping Duty
    Administrative Review, 
    63 Fed. Reg. 55,578
     at cmt. 9 (October 16, 1998) (construing the
    analogous regulation governing anti-dumping PORs as providing flexibility to use sale date
    rather than entry date to determine which goods belong in which PORs).
    06-1044, -1052                              24
    respect to issues relating to entries from a prior year that were not raised for Commerce
    review during the appropriate POR. With respect to these issues there is also the risk
    that, owing to the passage of time, relevant evidence might be lost.                 The
    reasonableness of Commerce’s interpretation finds further support in the reported
    decisions, which while not directly on point, are nonetheless persuasive.         These
    decisions upheld as reasonable Commerce’s decision to confine its review to entries
    made during the POR by permitting discretionary recission of administrative reviews
    where no entries were made during the POR. See e.g., Allegheny Ludlum v. United
    States, 
    346 F.3d 1368
    , 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2003); Chia Far Indus. Factory Co. v. United
    States, 
    343 F. Supp. 2d 1344
    , 1373-74 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2004). For these reasons, we
    believe Commerce’s construction of § 1675 is reasonable.
    NHC’s arguments to the contrary do not persuade us. NHC first argues that if
    Commerce is allowed to construe § 1675(a)(1)(A) to preclude it from correcting a prior
    POR Customs liquidation error, Commerce will not calculate correctly the net
    countervailing subsidy, and thus violate the law by instructing Customs to collect a CVD
    that does not equal the net countervailable subsidy.24 See 
    19 U.S.C. § 1671
    . It is true
    that if § 1675 is construed to limit Commerce’s consideration to entries made within the
    POR, Commerce will not be able to correct a liquidation error by Customs. But this
    possibility occurs only if the Customs error is never remedied by way of a timely protest
    to Customs or by Customs sua sponte, as contemplated by the statutes. See 
    19 U.S.C. §§ 1514
    , 1501. In other words, this possibility is accommodated by the statutes in the
    provision of Customs remedies. Customs carries out the liquidations, and the statutes
    24
    This was the position of the Court of International Trade. See NHC I, 
    350 F. Supp. 2d at 1182-83
    .
    06-1044, -1052                             25
    give it the power to correct its own errors. Once a liquidation error is remedied by
    Customs, the CVD collected will equal the subsidy, as required by the statute.
    The fact that the liquidation in this case was deemed, rather than actual, does not
    change this analysis or the conclusion reached here. We have quoted the Court of
    International Trade with approval to the effect that a deemed liquidation adverse to an
    importer is protestable. See Cemex v. United States, 
    384 F.3d at 1318
     (Fed. Cir. 2004)
    (“If a deemed liquidation or any liquidation is adverse to an importer, it has its protest
    remedies under 
    19 U.S.C. § 1514
     and access to judicial review under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (a).”) (quoting Cemex v. United States, 
    279 F. Supp. 2d 1357
    , 1362 (Ct. Int’l
    Trade 2003)).25    Moreover, it is also true that at the pertinent time, a denial of a
    § 1520(c) request for reliquidation would have been a protestable Customs decision,
    with further review available in the Court of International Trade and this Court, if
    necessary. 
    19 C.F.R. § 174.11
    (g). And, although an importer may no longer request
    discretionary reliquidation to correct an erroneous deemed liquidation, Customs may
    nonetheless correct an error adverse to an importer by reliquidating sua sponte under
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1501.26
     In short, at the time of the erroneous deemed liquidations at issue,
    25
    NHC, citing U.S. Shoe v. United States, 
    114 F.3d 1564
    , 1569 (Fed. Cir.
    1997), argues that deemed liquidations are not Customs decisions and hence not
    protestable. This is too broad a reading of our decision in U.S. Shoe. Neither presented
    nor addressed there was the question whether a deemed liquidation is protestable to
    Customs where, as here, a Commerce order has issued requiring Customs to liquidate at
    a specific rate, but Customs nonetheless ignores this order and allows liquidation to occur
    at an incorrect rate.
    26
    United States v. Cherry Hill Textiles, 
    112 F.3d 1550
    , 1560 (Fed. Cir. 1997),
    which held that Customs could not reliquidate under § 1501 once deemed liquidation
    occurred, is not to the contrary, as we there construed an older version of § 1501 which
    provided only for reliquidation of entries originally liquidated under § 1500, unlike the
    current statute, which permits reliquidation of “a liquidation made in accordance with
    section 1500 or 1504.” Since § 1504(d) is the deemed liquidation provision, it follows that
    deemed liquidations are subject to reliquidation by Customs.
    06-1044, -1052                              26
    Customs remedies were available to NHC. The availability of such remedies to correct
    liquidation errors means that Commerce’s interpretation of § 1675 is not unreasonable,
    as it need not cause liquidation errors to distort countervailing duties.
    NHC’s     second   argument     against    the   reasonableness      of   Commerce’s
    construction of § 1675 is that Commerce in its annual reviews in fact considers events
    outside the POR when it amortizes the countervailing subsidy over a fourteen year
    period.   This argument also fails.     Amortization of a non-recurring subsidy is not
    inconsistent with preserving the integrity of separate PORs; it simply reflects that a
    non-recurring subsidy received in one POR may provide a “benefit” in other PORs. This
    is far different from effectively reopening past PORs to allow setoffs in subsequent
    PORs, as Commerce was asked to do here.
    The authorities cited by NHC to prove otherwise are not persuasive.               In
    particular, the hypothetical posed by the Commerce Department in Certain Pasta from
    Italy is not analogous. There, Commerce suggested that if an importer repays part of a
    prior non-recurring subsidy to the foreign government during a later POR, Commerce
    would reduce the amount of subsidy to be countervailed. See Certain Pasta From Italy:
    Final Results of the Fourth Countervailing Duty Administrative Review 
    66 Fed. Reg. 40,987
     at cmt. 7 (Dec. 12, 2001).       This statement does not help NHC for several
    reasons. First, Commerce ultimately concluded that it could set off repaid subsidies
    only if they were not yet countervailed, that is, if they were received and repaid during
    the current POR. Certain Pasta From Italy: Preliminary Results and Partial Recission of
    Countervailing Duty Administrative Review, 
    67 Fed. Reg. 16,722
    , 16,726 (Apr. 8, 2002).
    Second, repayment of a nonrecurring subsidy to a foreign government is different from
    06-1044, -1052                               27
    overpayment of duties intended to countervail a nonrecurring subsidy. Commerce acts
    reasonably in treating the two cases differently.
    In summary, Commerce’s refusal to consider the 1997 entries during the 2001
    POR reflected a permissible interpretation of § 1675.   That other interpretations may
    also be plausible does not render Chevron deference inappropriate. Therefore we defer
    to Commerce’s interpretation under Chevron.
    V. Conclusion
    There remains only the proper disposition of the appeal. For the reasons stated
    herein, the judgment of the Court of International Trade is REVERSED and the matter is
    REMANDED so that the setoff issued by Commerce at the Court of International
    Trade’s direction can be vacated.
    REVERSED and REMANDED
    06-1044, -1052                              28
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2006-1044

Filed Date: 12/14/2006

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016

Authorities (21)

Ppg Industries, Inc. v. The United States, and Vitro ... , 978 F.3d 1232 ( 1992 )

Norsk Hydro Canada Inc. v. United States , 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 1683 ( 2004 )

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Cemex, S.A. v. United States , 27 Ct. Int'l Trade 1187 ( 2003 )

Goldhofer Fahrzeugwerk Gmbh & Co. v. The United States , 885 F.2d 858 ( 1989 )

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United States v. Cherry Hill Textiles, Inc., and ... , 112 F.3d 1550 ( 1997 )

Gene A. Williams v. Secretary of the Navy , 95 A.L.R. Fed. 453 ( 1986 )

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Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America , 114 S. Ct. 1673 ( 1994 )

Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, ... , 104 S. Ct. 2778 ( 1984 )

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Chia Far Indus. Factory Co., Ltd. v. United States , 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 1336 ( 2004 )

Nichimen America, Inc., Formerly Known as Nichimen Co., Inc.... , 938 F.2d 1286 ( 1991 )

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Skelly Oil Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co. , 70 S. Ct. 876 ( 1950 )

International Trading Co. v. United States , 412 F.3d 1303 ( 2005 )

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