Red Sun Farms v. United States ( 2022 )


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  • Case: 20-2230   Document: 71     Page: 1   Filed: 04/14/2022
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    RED SUN FARMS,
    Plaintiff-Appellant
    v.
    UNITED STATES, FLORIDA TOMATO EXCHANGE,
    Defendants-Appellees
    ______________________
    2020-2230
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States Court of International
    Trade in No. 1:19-cv-00205-JCG, Judge Jennifer Choe-
    Groves.
    ______________________
    Decided: April 14, 2022
    ______________________
    JAMES P. DURLING, Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt &
    Mosle LLP, Washington, DC, argued for plaintiff-appel-
    lant. Also represented by JAMES BEATY, DANIEL L. PORTER.
    Also argued by DEVIN S. SIKES, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer
    & Feld LLP, Washington, DC; JEFFREY M. WINTON, Winton
    & Chapman, PLLC, Washington, DC.
    DOUGLAS GLENN EDELSCHICK, Commercial Litigation
    Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of Jus-
    tice, Washington, DC, argued for defendant-appellee
    United States. Also argued by ROBERT K. KIEPURA. Also
    represented by BRIAN M. BOYNTON, JEANNE DAVIDSON,
    Case: 20-2230     Document: 71     Page: 2    Filed: 04/14/2022
    2                                       RED SUN FARMS   v. US
    FRANKLIN E. WHITE, JR.; EMMA T. HUNTER, Office of the
    Chief Counsel for Trade Enforcement & Compliance,
    United States Department of Commerce, Washington, DC.
    MARY JANE ALVES, Cassidy Levy Kent USA LLP, Wash-
    ington, DC, argued for defendant-appellee Florida Tomato
    Exchange. Also represented by JAMES R. CANNON, JR.,
    ULRIKA K. SWANSON, JONATHAN M. ZIELINSKI.
    ______________________
    Before DYK, PROST, and TARANTO, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TARANTO.
    Opinion dissenting-in-part and concurring-in-part filed by
    Circuit Judge DYK.
    TARANTO, Circuit Judge.
    This is one of several appeals argued together to this
    panel, all arising out of an antidumping duty investigation
    to determine whether fresh Mexican tomatoes were being
    imported into the United States and sold at less than fair
    value. The history of the proceedings is described in our
    two accompanying precedential opinions in Confederacion
    de Asociaciones Agricolas del Estado de Sinaloa, A.C. v.
    United States, No. 2020-2232, and Bioparques de Occidente
    v. United States, No. 2020-2265. In this case, we reverse
    and remand.
    I
    A
    “Red Sun Farms” is the trade name under which vari-
    ous identified entities do business. These entities are “U.S.
    producers of fresh tomatoes grown in the United States,
    U.S. importers and resellers of fresh tomatoes from Mexico,
    and foreign producers and exporters of fresh tomatoes from
    Mexico.” Appellant’s Br. 3; see also J.A. 21 (summons).
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    RED SUN FARMS   v. US                                        3
    The complaint in this case was filed against the United
    States in the Court of International Trade (“Trade Court”)
    on December 26, 2019. It begins: “1. Plaintiff Red Sun
    Farms (Naturbell SPR DE RL, San Miguel Red Sun Farms
    SPR DE RL DE CV, Agricola El Rosal SA DE, Jem D Inter-
    national Michigan Inc., and Red Sun Farms Virginia LLC,
    collectively d/b/a Red Sun Farms) by and through its coun-
    sel, states the following claims against the Defendant, the
    United States.” J.A. 24. The caption on the complaint is
    simply “Red Sun Farms, Plaintiff, v. United States, De-
    fendant.” Id. After beginning with the identification of
    “Red Sun Farms” with the above quote, the complaint
    thereafter uses the singular “Plaintiff.” See J.A. 24–36.
    Like the Trade Court, we will follow that usage—which,
    however, raises issues to be addressed on remand, as we
    will discuss.
    The complaint followed the filing, on November 25,
    2019, of the summons that commenced the Trade Court
    case. J.A. 21–23. The summons includes the same caption
    and formulation relating “Red Sun Farms” to five identified
    entities as does the later complaint, but the summons,
    while twice referring to “Plaintiff” (singular), also twice re-
    fers to “Plaintiffs” (plural). J.A. 21. The corporate disclo-
    sure statement filed with the summons states: “Plaintiff
    and its member companies are not publicly-owned.” Form
    13 Corporate Disclosure Statement, Red Sun Farms v.
    United States, No. 1:19-cv-00205 (Ct. Int’l Trade Nov. 25,
    2019), ECF No. 3.
    In the Trade Court, the government flagged the issue
    of who precisely brought this action. In its March 2020 mo-
    tion to dismiss, the government observed, with respect to
    the five identified entities doing business as “Red Sun
    Farms,” that “[i]t is unclear whether all of these parties
    possess standing or can be considered real parties in inter-
    est” and reserved its right to raise additional arguments on
    the subject. J.A. 62 n.1. In April 2020, in a discovery filing,
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    4                                         RED SUN FARMS   v. US
    the government noted the varying singular/plural usage by
    Red Sun Farms and stated that “‘Plaintiff’ Red Sun Farms
    actually consists of several companies, which are” the five
    identified in the quote above. J.A. 180 n.1. We note that,
    in this court, Red Sun Farms, in its certificate of interest
    (Form 9 in this court), used the same formulation quoted
    above from the complaint, i.e., “Red Sun Farms ([the iden-
    tified five entities], collectively d/b/a Red Sun Farms),” to
    designate “all entities represented by the undersigned
    counsel in this case.” Certificate of Interest, Red Sun
    Farms v. United States, No. 2020-2230 (Fed. Cir. Sept. 16,
    2020), ECF No. 3.
    B
    On the merits, Red Sun Farms presented seven claims
    in the complaint. All claims challenge aspects of the final
    determination resulting from Commerce’s continued inves-
    tigation. See Fresh Tomatoes from Mexico: Final Determi-
    nation of Sales at Less than Fair Value, 
    84 Fed. Reg. 57,401
    (Oct. 25, 2019) (Final Determination). The claims fall into
    three categories: (1) that Commerce improperly selected
    new respondents in its continued investigation; (2) that
    Commerce committed timing and procedural errors in
    reaching its final determination; and (3) that Commerce
    utilized flawed methodologies to calculate dumping mar-
    gins, the all-others rate, and cash deposit rates in the final
    determination. Red Sun Farms alleged in the complaint
    that the Trade Court had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c) because Red Sun Farms challenged a final deter-
    mination resulting from a continued investigation under 19
    U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iv).
    The government moved to dismiss on grounds of ripe-
    ness, lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and failure to state
    a claim upon which relief can be granted. The Trade Court
    granted the government’s motion and dismissed the com-
    plaint with prejudice on ripeness grounds because the 2019
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    RED SUN FARMS   v. US                                         5
    suspension agreement remained in place, and there had
    been accordingly no final antidumping order issued based
    on the Final Determination. Red Sun Farms v. United
    States, 
    469 F. Supp. 3d 1403
    , 1408–10 (Ct. Int’l Trade
    2020). Red Sun Farms appeals. We have jurisdiction pur-
    suant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(5).
    II
    Like the appellants in Bioparques de Occidente v.
    United States, No. 2020-2265 [hereafter “Bioparques”], Red
    Sun Farms challenges the Final Determination published
    by the Department of Commerce on October 25, 2019. The
    Trade Court held in this case, as it did in the Bioparques
    case, that these challenges were premature because no fi-
    nal antidumping order had issued. Today we reverse that
    holding in Bioparques, and we do the same in this case, re-
    lying on our opinion in Bioparques—which applies because
    Red Sun Farms’ interests include the present, concrete in-
    terests of exporters bound by the suspension agreement at
    the center of Bioparques. Red Sun Farms’ claims are not
    premature.
    As to statutory jurisdiction, this case differs from Bi-
    oparques. There, we hold that jurisdiction exists based on
    §§ 1516a(g)(3)(A)(i) and 1516a(a)(2)(B)(i); and we do not
    reach the issue of jurisdiction based on §§ 1516a(a)(2)(A)(i)
    and 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iv). Here, Red Sun Farms invokes only
    the latter basis of statutory jurisdiction. We hold, in agree-
    ment with Red Sun Farms, that the Trade Court has stat-
    utory jurisdiction on that basis.
    A
    Under § 1516a(a)(2)(A)(i)(I), “[w]ithin thirty days after
    . . . the date of publication in the Federal Register of . . .
    notice of any determination described in clause . . . (iv) . . .
    of subparagraph (B),” “an interested party who is a party
    to the proceeding in connection with which the matter
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    6                                         RED SUN FARMS   v. US
    arises may commence an action” in the Trade Court by fil-
    ing a summons, to be followed by a complaint within 30
    days thereafter (emphasis added). Clause (iv) of subpara-
    graph (B) reads:
    (B) Reviewable determinations
    The determinations which may be contested under
    subparagraph (A) are as follows:
    ***
    (iv) A determination by the administering author-
    ity, under section 1671c or 1673c of this title, to
    suspend an antidumping duty or a countervailing
    duty investigation, including any final determina-
    tion resulting from a continued investigation which
    changes the size of the dumping margin or net
    countervailable subsidy calculated, or the reason-
    ing underlying such calculations, at the time the
    suspension agreement was concluded.
    § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iv) [hereafter “B(iv)”]. As explained in Bi-
    oparques, § 1673c covers agreements to suspend an inves-
    tigation, § 1673c(c); continued investigations, § 1673c(f)(3);
    and procedures relating to final determinations in those
    continued investigations, id. As also explained in Bi-
    oparques, Congress gave not only domestic-industry enti-
    ties but also the exporter signatories (if they are significant
    enough together) the right to demand a continued investi-
    gation after publication of a suspension agreement.
    § 1673c(g). See Bioparques, slip op. at 17.
    The government agrees that Commerce’s Final Deter-
    mination in the present matter is a “final determination
    resulting from a continued investigation which changes the
    size of the dumping margin.” Oral Arg. at 1:22:40–1:23:02;
    see also Notice of Preliminary Determination of Sales at
    Less Than Fair Value and Postponement of Final Determi-
    nation: Fresh Tomatoes From Mexico, 
    61 Fed. Reg. 56,608
    ,
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    RED SUN FARMS   v. US                                        7
    56,615 (Nov. 1, 1996) (Preliminary Determination) (setting
    preliminary dumping margins); Final Determination, 84
    Fed. Reg. at 57,402 (changing the size of those margins).
    And the government does not dispute that Red Sun Farms
    served its summons within 30 days of publication of the Fi-
    nal Determination and served its complaint within 30 days
    thereafter. The government nevertheless disputes the ap-
    plicability of B(iv).
    The government’s argument is that any challenge un-
    der B(iv) must include a timely challenge to the suspension
    agreement itself—to a “determination by” Commerce “to
    suspend an antidumping duty . . . investigation.”
    § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iv). According to the government, even if
    the challenger’s only grievance is with the final determina-
    tion in the continued investigation, it cannot challenge that
    final determination under B(iv) unless it filed an action
    within 30 days of the publication of the suspension agree-
    ment at issue. It is not enough, says the government, that
    the challenger filed its B(iv) action within 30 days of the
    publication of the final determination that follows that
    agreement. In this matter, it is undisputed that Red Sun
    Farms did not file an action within 30 days of publication
    of the 2019 Agreement.
    We have not ruled on the proper interpretation of B(iv),
    so the government bases its argument on Usinas Siderúr-
    gicas de Minas Gerais, S/A v. United States, 
    201 F. Supp. 2d 1304
     (Ct. Int’l Trade 2002). There, the Trade Court con-
    cluded that B(iv) covers only actions that allege that the
    suspension agreement should not have been executed or
    that it is defective in light of a final determination’s alter-
    ation of margins or reasoning underlying the agreement,
    and it determined that B(iv) actions must be brought
    within 30 days of publication of the suspension agreement.
    
    Id. at 1312
    . The Usinas court reasoned that the statute,
    through its “including” language, “close[ly] reference[s]”
    the underlying suspension agreement, so that a challenge
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    8                                         RED SUN FARMS   v. US
    to the final determination can be brought only as part of a
    challenge to the suspension agreement itself. 
    Id.
    Usinas is not precedent for this court, and we conclude
    that the Usinas court read B(iv) too narrowly. A final de-
    termination in a continued investigation that changes the
    dumping margins after the conclusion of the suspension
    agreement, like the Final Determination here, is a “deter-
    mination described in clause . . . (iv) . . . of subparagraph
    (B).” § 1516a(a)(2)(A)(i). And “any” such determination
    may be reviewed by filing a summons within 30 days of
    that determination’s publication (followed by a complaint
    within 30 days thereafter). Id. The language of subpara-
    graph (A) directly applies to these types of determinations,
    in which Commerce’s calculation of dumping margins has
    changed, creating a different set of circumstances from
    those on which the suspension agreement was based.
    The language of B(iv), on which the Usinas court relied,
    does not support a contrary conclusion. The court in Usi-
    nas, agreeing with the government, ruled that the “includ-
    ing” term could have (and therefore had to be given) a
    meaning under which the words following “including” iden-
    tify a component part of what is identified in the words pre-
    ceding “including.” Usinas, 
    201 F. Supp. 2d at
    1310–13
    (using “illustrative,” “component part,” and similar terms
    to identify this interpretation). But that meaning makes
    no linguistic sense in B(iv). A final determination in a con-
    tinued investigation is not naturally described as a part of
    a “determination . . . to suspend”; they are not even made
    at the same time or in the same Commerce document or
    announcement. Indeed, the particular final determina-
    tions identified in B(iv) qualify only if they embody changes
    in the premises of the earlier-made “determination . . . to
    suspend.” A whole/part meaning makes no sense in B(iv),
    unlike in B(i) or B(ii), which refer to a final affirmative de-
    termination as including a negative “part” (and vice versa)
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    RED SUN FARMS   v. US                                        9
    of the single Commerce announcement, with no gap in time
    of publication.
    As the court in Usinas recognized, “including” in legal
    settings can have an “expansive” meaning, 
    201 F. Supp. 2d at 1311
    , under which a provision as a whole encompasses
    both what comes before and what comes after the word.
    Here, such a meaning is supported by the language with
    which subparagraph B begins: “The determinations which
    may be contested under subparagraph (A) clause are as fol-
    lows . . . .” The “including” phrase of B(iv) is naturally un-
    derstood as identifying something as being “includ[ed]”
    among the “determinations which may be contested under
    subparagraph (A),” not (unnaturally) as “includ[ed]” within
    the “determination . . . to suspend.” Accordingly, not only
    the text of subparagraph (A) but also the text of subpara-
    graph (B) supports Red Sun Farms’ interpretation.
    This interpretation also fits with other pertinent as-
    pects of the statute. See, e.g., Merit Mgmt. Group, LP v.
    FTI Consulting, Inc., 
    138 S. Ct. 883
    , 892–93 (2018) (consid-
    ering “[t]he language of [the provision at issue], the specific
    context in which that language is used, and the broader
    statutory structure”). Congress expressly authorized both
    domestic-industry entities and exporter signatories (the
    latter if significant enough together) to trigger a continued
    investigation, § 1673c(g), and the disputed “including”
    clause of B(iv) specifically refers to final determinations re-
    sulting from such continued investigations that change the
    premises existing when the suspension agreement was ex-
    ecuted. The B(iv) provision thus clearly contemplates a
    scenario (among others) in which exporter signatories, hav-
    ing just signed the suspension agreement, are interested
    only in obtaining a correct final determination—whether to
    give them a reason to withdraw from the agreement or,
    conversely, to avoid termination of a satisfactory suspen-
    sion agreement because it is deemed not to adhere to
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    10                                      RED SUN FARMS   v. US
    statutory requirements based on a new incorrect final de-
    termination (e.g., of higher dumping margins).
    The government argues that the Mexican signatories
    could have challenged the suspension agreement within 30
    days of its publication and that such a challenge would
    have served as a placeholder, allowing them to amend their
    complaints later to challenge a final determination in the
    continued investigation once such a final determination
    was published. Oral Arg. at 1:38:42–1:40:10. But the ques-
    tion is not what could be done, but what must be done. And
    not only does the government’s interpretation conflict with
    the text of the statute, as just discussed, but the govern-
    ment has not identified any reason why Congress should
    be understood to have imposed such a placeholder-filing re-
    quirement when the interested party is not yet aggrieved
    by anything and will become aggrieved only later if it sees
    flaws in a final determination that are worth trying to cor-
    rect through litigation. Nor has the government identified
    any support in the legislative history; in fact, no party has
    presented to us any argument based on legislative history.
    The filing requirement urged by the government also
    would be an awkward fit with the timing requirements of
    the statute. The government’s interpretation would re-
    quire parties that might later want to challenge a final de-
    termination in a continued investigation—without even
    knowing the results of that determination—to file a chal-
    lenge to the suspension agreement within 30 days of the
    agreement’s publication. Of course, it is conceivable that a
    final determination might issue within that very brief pe-
    riod, despite the work needed to resume an investigation
    that has been suspended and arrive at a final determina-
    tion. But the government has supplied no sound basis for
    concluding that Congress was acting on the assumption
    that a final determination would issue in that period or oth-
    erwise in time for it to be evaluated before the end of the
    30-day period from the publication of the suspension
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    RED SUN FARMS   v. US                                       11
    agreement. Indeed, Congress allowed for 20 days after the
    publication of a suspension agreement for domestic-indus-
    try entities or exporter signatories just to file a request for
    continued investigation, § 1673c(g), and for 75 days after
    the preliminary determination for Commerce to make a fi-
    nal determination, which may be further extended to 135
    days, see § 1673d(a)(1)–(2). Here, the Final Determination
    was published on October 25, 2019, which is 31 days after
    the September 24, 2019 publication of the suspension
    agreement. Final Determination, 84 Fed. Reg. at 57,402
    n.8. Red Sun Farms did not know the results of the contin-
    ued investigation, let alone have time to evaluate it, within
    30 days of the agreement’s publication.
    We hold that an affirmative final determination in a
    continued investigation may be challenged under
    § 1516a(a)(2)(A)(i)(I) within 30 days of the publication of
    the final determination under § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iv), which
    provides the Trade Court jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c). On the record before us, those provisions support
    Trade Court jurisdiction over Red Sun Farms’ challenge to
    the Final Determination. The dismissal must therefore be
    reversed, and the case remanded.
    B
    On remand, the Trade Court should address issues
    raised by the naming of “Red Sun Farms” as the lone
    “Plaintiff” in the caption of the case. The summons and
    complaint use “Red Sun Farms” as the collective litigation
    name of the group of the five identified domestic and for-
    eign producers, exporters, and importers, which, the filings
    assert, use “Red Sun Farms” as their trade name in con-
    ducting business; but the summons also refers to the five
    companies as “Plaintiffs.” We note here some issues raised
    by these facts, and the others recited above. We do not de-
    cide which ones need to be addressed and resolved on
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    12                                        RED SUN FARMS   v. US
    remand, whether other issues need to be addressed and re-
    solved, and what consequences might follow.
    One issue is whether the five entities doing business
    under the Red Sun Farms name are actually already plain-
    tiffs in this case and should be named in the caption. If so,
    the question might arise whether some of the five entities
    (for example, perhaps the domestic producers) might lack
    standing. If the five entities are not yet parties, a question
    might arise whether they can be made parties.
    Another issue is whether Red Sun Farms is itself an
    entity with legal capacity to sue. USCIT Rule 17(b)(3)
    states that for non-corporations, capacity to sue is deter-
    mined “by the law of the appropriate state, except that . . .
    a partnership or other unincorporated association with no
    such capacity under that state’s law may sue or be sued in
    its common name to enforce a substantive right existing
    under the United States Constitution or laws.” Regarding
    the first clause, state law appears to differ on use of a trade
    name when bringing suit. Compare, e.g., America’s Whole-
    sale Lender v. Pagano, 
    866 A.2d 698
    , 700 (Conn. App. Ct.
    2005) (“Because the trade name of a legal entity does not
    have a separate legal existence, a plaintiff bringing an ac-
    tion solely in a trade name cannot confer jurisdiction on the
    court.”), with Sam’s Wholesale Club v. Riley, 
    527 S.E.2d 293
    , 296 (Ga. Ct. App. 1999) (“A corporation conducting
    business in a trade name may sue or be sued in [its] trade
    name.” (quoting Carrier Transicold Div. v. Southeast Ap-
    praisal Resource Assocs., 
    504 S.E.2d 25
    , 26 (Ga. Ct. App.
    1998)). If Red Sun Farms lacks capacity to sue under ap-
    propriate state law, the question arises whether it has ca-
    pacity to sue under the “except that” clause of USCIT Rule
    17(b)(3) as a partnership or other unincorporated associa-
    tion suing to enforce substantive rights under Title 19 of
    the U.S. Code. We note, finally, that if capacity to sue is
    missing, a question could arise about whether the defect is
    jurisdictional. See generally 6A Charles Alan Wright &
    Case: 20-2230     Document: 71     Page: 13    Filed: 04/14/2022
    RED SUN FARMS   v. US                                     13
    Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1559
    (3d ed.).
    III
    We reverse the Trade Court’s decision and remand for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion and our
    decision in Bioparques.
    The parties shall bear their own costs.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
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    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    RED SUN FARMS,
    Plaintiff-Appellant
    v.
    UNITED STATES, FLORIDA TOMATO EXCHANGE,
    Defendants-Appellees
    ______________________
    2020-2230
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States Court of International
    Trade in No. 1:19-cv-00205-JCG, Judge Jennifer Choe-
    Groves.
    ______________________
    DYK, Circuit Judge, concurring-in-part and dissenting-in-
    part.
    I join part II.B of the majority opinion, but I respect-
    fully dissent from the majority’s holding that 19 U.S.C.
    § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iv) (“B(iv)”) provides a basis for jurisdic-
    tion. Subsection B(iv) on its face, in the context of the stat-
    ute as a whole, and given its history, permits challenges to
    a final determination resulting from a continued investiga-
    tion only if the appealing party has previously filed a chal-
    lenge to the suspension agreement. Both the Trade Court
    in Usinas Siderúrgicas de Minas Gerais, S/A v. United
    States, 
    201 F. Supp. 2d 1304
     (Ct. Int’l Trade 2002), which
    has “expertise in addressing antidumping issues and deals
    on a daily basis with the practical aspects of trade
    Case: 20-2230    Document: 71      Page: 15   Filed: 04/14/2022
    2                                       RED SUN FARMS   v. US
    practice,” Int’l Trading Co. v. United States, 
    281 F.3d 1268
    ,
    1274 (Fed. Cir. 2002), and the government on appeal agree.
    I
    Subsection B(iv) was originally enacted in 1979. The
    Trade Agreements Act of 1979 for the first time permitted
    Commerce to enter into suspension agreements, see S. Rep.
    96-249, at 67–68 (1979), and provided for judicial review of
    such agreements in subsection B(iv), see Pub. L. No. 96-39,
    § 1001, 
    93 Stat. 144
    , 301 (1979). Congress “narrowly cir-
    cumscribed” Commerce’s “authority” to enter into suspen-
    sion agreements, S. Rep. 96-249, at 71, allowing only those
    agreements that were “in the public interest, [could] be ef-
    fectively monitored by the United States, and me[t] specific
    criteria,” 
    id. at 68
    . In particular, the statute authorized
    agreements that “eliminate[d] completely the injurious ef-
    fect of exports to the United States of [the subject] mer-
    chandise,” but only so long as Commerce could show:
    (A) the suppression or undercutting of price levels
    of domestic products by imports of that merchan-
    dise will be prevented, and
    (B) for each entry of each exporter the amount by
    which the estimated foreign market value exceeds
    the United States price will not exceed 15 percent
    of the weighted average amount by which the esti-
    mated foreign market value exceeded the United
    States price for all less-than-fair-value entries of
    the exporter examined during the course of the in-
    vestigation.
    19 U.S.C. § 1673c(c)(1)(A), (B). These provisions reflected
    Congress’s desire to allow Commerce to enter into suspen-
    sion agreements eliminating the injurious effects of ex-
    ports—the type of agreement at issue here—only when the
    agreement remedied price discrimination determined to
    exist in antidumping proceedings, thus “serv[ing] the inter-
    est[s] of the public and the domestic industry affected.” S.
    Rep. 96-249, at 71.
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    RED SUN FARMS   v. US                                       3
    To ensure such symmetry, Congress required Com-
    merce to publish its affirmative preliminary dumping de-
    termination together with the suspension agreement,
    making issuance of a preliminary determination prerequi-
    site to Commerce’s suspension decision.                    See
    § 1673c(f)(1)(A) (“If the administering authority deter-
    mines to suspend an investigation . . . it shall . . . publish
    notice of [the] suspension . . . and issue an affirmative pre-
    liminary determination . . . with respect to the subject mer-
    chandise, unless it has previously issued such a
    determination in the same investigation.”); see also S. Rep.
    No. 96-249, at 68 (“Upon accepting an agreement, [Com-
    merce] would publish notice in the Federal Register of the
    suspension together with notice of an affirmative prelimi-
    nary determination, unless such a determination has al-
    ready been made during an investigation.”).
    If a suspension agreement were alleged to be incon-
    sistent with any of the statutory requirements, Congress
    provided interested parties two routes to challenge the
    agreement—either in an administrative proceeding before
    the International Trade Commission (“ITC”), see
    § 1673c(h)(1), or in the Trade Court under subsection B(iv).
    Given that the statutory grounds for challenging suspen-
    sion agreements were failure to remedy discrimination, it
    appears likely that Congress primarily contemplated chal-
    lenges to agreements by domestic producers. As originally
    enacted, subsection B(iv) authorized Trade Court review of
    suspension agreements by providing:
    (B) Reviewable determinations
    The determinations which may be contested under
    subparagraph (A) are as follows:
    ***
    A determination by the administering authority,
    under section [1671c or 1673c] of this Act, to sus-
    pend an antidumping duty or a countervailing duty
    investigation.
    Case: 20-2230       Document: 71    Page: 17   Filed: 04/14/2022
    4                                        RED SUN FARMS   v. US
    93 Stat. at 301.
    The statute was amended in 1984 to incorporate the
    underlined language:
    (B) Reviewable determinations
    The determinations which may be contested under
    subparagraph (A) are as follows:
    ***
    (iv) A determination by the administering author-
    ity, under section [1671c or 1673c] of this title, to
    suspend an antidumping duty or a countervailing
    duty investigation, including any final determina-
    tion resulting from a continued investigation which
    changes the size of the dumping margin or net sub-
    sidy calculated, or the reasoning underlying such
    calculations, at the time the suspension agreement
    was concluded.
    Pub. L. No. 98-573, § 623, 
    98 Stat. 2948
    , 3041 (1984) (em-
    phasis added).
    II
    The genesis of the 1984 amendment is clear enough.
    Subsection B(iv) as originally enacted did not account for
    the fact that the 1979 version of § 1673c permitted sus-
    pended investigations to be continued within 20 days of a
    suspension agreement’s publication at the request of (1)
    the foreign exporter-subjects, or (2) domestic industries
    and related labor unions, trade, and business associations,
    see 93 Stat. at 168; § 1673c(f)(3), (g), and that these final
    determinations might affect the validity of the suspension
    agreement. For example, continued investigations and
    their resulting final determinations could give rise to situ-
    ations in which a final determination reduced the dumping
    margin so that the domestic producers’ grounds for chal-
    lenging the suspension agreement were eliminated, giving
    Case: 20-2230     Document: 71    Page: 18    Filed: 04/14/2022
    RED SUN FARMS   v. US                                       5
    rise to a problem that could be resolved by appealing the
    final determination.
    Congress accordingly amended subsection B(iv) to per-
    mit challenges in the same proceeding to the suspension
    agreement and the final determination, incorporating the
    “including” language at issue here. The connection be-
    tween the final determination and the suspension agree-
    ment is evident from the language of the provision itself.
    The amendment did not enable the Trade Court’s review of
    all final determinations—it limited review only to those fi-
    nal determinations that altered the size of the dumping
    margins (or reasoning) in effect at the time of the suspen-
    sion agreement’s execution. It permitted parties to chal-
    lenge the changes reflected in the final determination, for
    example a higher or lower dumping margin that might af-
    fect the validity of the suspension agreement. Since a final
    determination does not go into effect until it is embodied in
    an antidumping order, the only purpose of allowing a chal-
    lenge to the final determination before that order issues is
    because the final determination could affect the suspension
    agreement. The Trade Court in Usinas reached the same
    conclusion:
    The focus of [subsection B(iv)] is thus on Com-
    merce’s determination to suspend the investiga-
    tion. Judicial review . . . is effectively limited to
    those cases where it is alleged that the assump-
    tions underlying the suspension determination—
    i.e., Commerce’s findings in the preliminary deter-
    mination—have changed so as to (arguably) render
    some aspect of the suspension determination defec-
    tive.
    
    201 F. Supp. 2d at 1312
    .
    It is difficult to think that subsection B(iv) was de-
    signed to enable an importer to challenge the final dump-
    ing margin so that it could decide whether to withdraw
    from a suspension agreement. The legislative history
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    6                                        RED SUN FARMS   v. US
    discloses no such purpose, and the entire focus of the Con-
    gressional concern was with agreements that failed to suf-
    ficiently remedy dumping, not with agreements that were
    overly restrictive.
    III
    Nonetheless, the majority holds that a party with
    standing to bring a subsection B(iv) action may challenge
    the final determination resulting from a continued investi-
    gation without first challenging the suspension agreement
    itself. Maj. Op. 11. As discussed above, the language and
    history of the statute contradict any such notion. While it
    is true that depending on context, the term “including” may
    be expansive, nothing here suggests that Congress in-
    tended a reading that would allow freestanding challenges
    to a final determination unrelated to the suspension agree-
    ment itself. To the contrary, Congress limited the types of
    challenges that can be brought to these determinations “by
    ‘close reference’ to the underlying suspension agreement.”
    Usinas, 
    201 F. Supp. 2d at 430
    .
    The majority also suggests that the statute’s use of the
    word “determinations” in describing “[t]he determinations
    which may be contested under subparagraph (A),” shows
    that it would be “unnatural[]” to read subsection B(iv)’s in-
    cluding clause as being limited to the “determination . . . to
    suspend.” Maj. Op. 9. But the use of the word “determina-
    tions” in the introductory language simply refers to the
    multiple determinations listed in subsections B(i)–(viii), it
    does not show that subsection B(iv) contains multiple inde-
    pendently-challengeable determinations.
    So too, nothing in § 1516a(a)(2)(A)’s timing require-
    ments supports the majority’s approach. The statute re-
    quires that a party seeking to challenge a suspension
    agreement file a summons “[w]ithin thirty days after” pub-
    lication of “notice of any determination described in [sub-
    section B(iv)],” § 1516a(a)(2)(A), a provision included in the
    1979 version of the statute, see 93 Stat. at 301. The
    Case: 20-2230     Document: 71     Page: 20    Filed: 04/14/2022
    RED SUN FARMS   v. US                                       7
    majority contends that interpreting subsection B(iv) to re-
    quire a challenge to the final determination within 30 days
    of the suspension agreement presents an “awkward fit” be-
    cause parties seeking to challenge a final determination in
    a continued investigation will not “know the results of the
    continued investigation, let alone have time to evaluate it,
    within 30 days of the agreement’s publication.” Maj. Op.
    10, 11. But there is no awkward fit. A final determination
    reached after a continued investigation necessarily post-
    dates the publication of a suspension agreement. The stat-
    ute’s requirement that parties file a summons “[w]ithin
    thirty days after” publication of “notice of any determina-
    tion described in [subsection B(iv)]” simply means that an
    interested party must first challenge the agreement for
    failing to satisfy the statutory requirements within 30 days
    of its publication, and may later amend that complaint to
    challenge the final determination. To be sure, domestic
    producers or importers might like to know the outcome of
    the final determination in deciding whether to challenge
    the suspension agreement. But under either the majority’s
    reading of the statute or my reading, it is simply too late to
    challenge the suspension agreement if it has been more
    than 30 days since the agreement’s publication.
    For these reasons, I would refrain from holding that
    the Trade Court has jurisdiction under § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iv)
    to hear Red Sun Farms’ claims and would affirm the deci-
    sion of the Trade Court. 1
    1   Having relied on jurisdiction under subsection
    B(iv), Red Sun Farms cannot amend its complaint to allege
    jurisdiction under subsection B(i) because it did not timely
    comply with the NAFTA notice requirements under
    § 1516a(g)(3)(B).