Qingdao Sea-Line Trading Co., Ltd. v. United States , 2012 CIT 39 ( 2012 )


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  •                           Slip Op. 12-39
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    ______________________________
    :
    QINGDAO SEA-LINE TRADING CO., :
    LTD.,                         :
    :
    Plaintiff,     :
    :
    v.                      :
    :
    UNITED STATES,                :
    : Before: Richard K. Eaton, Judge
    Defendant,     :
    : Court No. 10-00304
    and                     :
    :
    FRESH GARLIC PRODUCERS        :
    ASSOCIATION, CHRISTOPHER      :
    RANCH, LLC, THE GARLIC CO.,   :
    VALLEY GARLIC, and VESSEY AND :
    CO., INC.,                    :
    :
    Def.-Ints.     :
    ______________________________:
    OPINION AND ORDER
    [Plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the agency record is
    granted, in part, and the Department of Commerce’s Final Results
    are remanded.]
    Dated: March 21, 2012
    Hume & De Luca, PC (Robert T. Hume and Stephen M. De Luca),
    for plaintiff.
    Tony West, Assistant Attorney General; Jeanne E. Davidson,
    Director, Reginald T. Blades, Jr., Assistant Director,
    Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States
    Department of Justice (Richard P. Schroeder); Office of the
    Chief Counsel for Import Administration, United States
    Department of Commerce (Ahran Kang McCloskey), of counsel, for
    defendant.
    Court No. 10-00304                                                     Page 2
    Kelley Drye & Warren, LLP (Michael J. Coursey and John M.
    Herrmann), for defendant-intervenors.
    Eaton, Judge:    This matter is before the court on plaintiff
    Qingdao Sea-line Trading Co., Ltd.’s (“plaintiff” or “Sea-line”)
    motion for judgment on the agency record, pursuant to USCIT Rule
    56.2.     See Pl.’s Br. in Supp. of Mot. J. Agency R. (“Pl.’s
    Br.”).     Defendant, the United States, and defendant-intervenors,
    the Fresh Garlic Producers Association, Christopher Ranch, LLC,
    The Garlic Company, Valley Garlic, and Vessey and Company, Inc.
    (collectively, “defendant-intervenors”), oppose the motion.                 See
    Def.’s Mem. in Opp. to Pl.’s Mot. J. Agency R. (“Def.’s Br.”);
    Def.-Ints.’ Br. in Resp. to Pls.’ Mot. J. Agency R. (“Def.-
    Ints.’ Br.”).
    By its motion, plaintiff, an exporter of fresh garlic1 from
    the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”), challenges the Final
    Results of the United States Department of Commerce’s
    (“Commerce” or the “Department”) New Shipper Review in
    connection with the antidumping duty order on fresh garlic from
    the PRC for the period of review (“POR”) November 1, 2008
    1
    Sea-line is an exporter of whole garlic bulbs, and is
    not itself a garlic grower. It exports the whole garlic bulbs
    grown by Jinxiang County Juxingyuan Trading Co., Ltd.
    (“Juxingyuan”). See Pl.’s Br. 2; Def.’s Br. 20 n.9; Fresh
    Garlic from the PRC, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 61,130
     (Dep’t of Commerce Oct.
    4, 2010) (notice of final results of new shipper review).
    Court No. 10-00304                                             Page 3
    through April 30, 2009.   See Fresh Garlic from the PRC, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 61,130
     (Dep’t of Commerce Oct. 4, 2010) (notice of final
    results of new shipper review) (“Final Results”), and the
    accompanying Issues and Decision Memorandum (Dep’t of Commerce
    Sept. 24, 2010) (“Issues & Dec. Mem.”); Fresh Garlic from the
    PRC, 
    59 Fed. Reg. 59,209
     (Dep’t of Commerce Nov. 16, 1994)
    (antidumping duty order) (the “Order”).    The court has
    jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c) (2006) and 19
    U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2006).
    For the reasons set forth below, plaintiff’s motion is
    granted, in part, and the Final Results are remanded.
    BACKGROUND
    Following plaintiff’s request, the Department initiated the
    New Shipper Review under the Order on June 30, 2009.       See Fresh
    Garlic from the PRC, 
    74 Fed. Reg. 31,241
     (Dep’t of Commerce June
    30, 2009) (notice of initiation of new shipper review).
    Commerce then published its Preliminary Results on May 5, 2010.
    See Fresh Garlic from the PRC, 
    75 Fed. Reg. 24,578
     (Dep’t of
    Commerce May 5, 2010) (notice of preliminary results of new
    shipper review) (“Prelim. Results”).     The contested Final
    Results of the New Shipper Review, in which Commerce calculated
    an antidumping duty rate of 155.33%, were published on October
    4, 2010.
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 4
    Plaintiff’s motion challenges two main aspects of the Final
    Results.    First, Sea-line disputes (a) the Department’s
    selection of a surrogate to value whole garlic bulbs, and (b)
    the inflator used to adjust the value of the garlic bulbs.
    Second, plaintiff challenges the Department’s choice of
    financial statements used to calculate the surrogate financial
    ratios.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “The court shall hold unlawful any determination, finding,
    or conclusion found . . . to be unsupported by substantial
    evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with
    law.”    19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i).
    DISCUSSION
    I. Surrogate Valuation of the Intermediate Input
    A. Legal Framework
    1. Calculation of Normal Value
    Under 
    19 U.S.C. § 1675
    (a)(2)(B), upon request, Commerce
    shall conduct administrative reviews “for new exporters and
    producers.”    The purpose of these new shipper reviews is to
    determine whether exporters or producers, whose sales have not
    been previously examined, are (1) entitled to their own
    antidumping duty rates under the order resulting from the
    Court No. 10-00304                                                       Page 5
    investigation, and (2) if so, to calculate those rates.                  See
    Hebei New Donghua Amino Acid Co. v. United States, 
    29 CIT 603
    ,
    604, 
    374 F. Supp. 2d 1333
    , 1335 (2005).              To calculate these
    rates, Commerce must determine the normal value, export price,2
    and the antidumping duty margin3 for each entry of the subject
    merchandise.      
    19 U.S.C. § 1675
    (a)(2)(A).
    For merchandise exported from a nonmarket economy (“NME”)
    country,4 such as the PRC, Commerce, under most circumstances,
    determines normal value by pricing the factors of production
    2
    The “export price” is generally defined as “the price
    at which the subject merchandise is first sold . . . by the
    producer or exporter of the subject merchandise outside of the
    United States to an unaffiliated purchaser in the United States
    or to an unaffiliated purchaser for exportation to the United
    States.” 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(a).
    3
    An antidumping duty margin is “the amount by which the
    normal price exceeds the export price or constructed export
    price of the subject merchandise.” 
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (35)(A). If
    the price of an item in the home market (normal value) is higher
    than the price for the same item in the United States (export
    price), the dumping margin comparison produces a positive
    number, indicating that dumping has occurred.
    4
    A “nonmarket economy country” is “any foreign country
    that [Commerce] determines does not operate on market principles
    of cost or pricing structures, so that sales of merchandise in
    such country do not reflect the fair value of the merchandise.”
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1677
    (18)(A). “Because it deems China to be a
    nonmarket economy country, Commerce generally considers
    information on sales in China and financial information obtained
    from Chinese producers to be unreliable for determining, under
    19 U.S.C. § 1677b(a), the normal value of the subject
    merchandise.” Shanghai Foreign Trade Enters. Co. v. United
    States, 
    28 CIT 480
    , 481, 
    318 F. Supp. 2d 1339
    , 1341 (2004).
    Court No. 10-00304                                           Page 6
    (the “FOPs”) used to produce the merchandise by using surrogate
    data from “one or more market economy countries that are--(A) at
    a level of economic development comparable to that of the [NME]
    country, and (B) significant producers of comparable
    merchandise.”    19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4)(A)–(B).   Commerce then
    “add[s] an amount for general expenses and profit plus the cost
    of containers, coverings, and other expenses” to the surrogate
    FOP values.     Id. § 1677b(c)(1).   The Department calculates this
    amount using surrogate financial ratios.     Here, because China is
    a NME country, Commerce, pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1),
    selected India as the surrogate country for purposes of
    calculating normal value and to determine the financial ratios.
    2. Intermediate Input Methodology
    Following the Ninth Administrative Review, Commerce ceased
    using its regular method of tallying the FOPs as valued in a
    surrogate country to calculate normal value for garlic exported
    from the PRC.    Commerce changed its methodology because of, what
    it found to be, vagaries and inconsistencies in the reporting of
    the FOPs for garlic farming in China.     Commerce found the FOP
    data to be problematic because of environmental conditions, the
    long growing season for garlic, the unique land leasing
    arrangements, and the lack of adequate books and records
    allowing the Department to establish the accuracy of the
    Court No. 10-00304                                                      Page 7
    reported FOPs.      See Jining Yongjia Trade Co. v. United States,
    34 CIT __, __, Slip Op. 10-134 at 8–11 (Dec. 16, 2010) (not
    reported in the Federal Supplement).
    As a result, beginning with the Tenth Administrative
    Review,5 the Department determined that, “[i]n order to eliminate
    the distortions in our calculation of [normal value] . . . , we
    have applied an intermediate-product valuation methodology to
    all companies,” and endeavored to capture the complete costs of
    producing “fresh garlic” by valuing the “fresh garlic bulb” as
    an intermediate product.        See Fresh Garlic from the PRC, 
    71 Fed. Reg. 26,329
    , 26,331 (Dep’t of Commerce May 4, 2006) (final
    results and partial rescission of antidumping duty
    administrative reviews and final results of new shipper
    reviews).    In other words, rather than basing normal value on
    the sum of the surrogate values for the upstream FOPs reported
    by respondents, Commerce assumed that these costs were all
    contained in the price of the intermediate product, the whole
    garlic bulb itself.       See Jining Yongjia, 34 CIT at __, Slip Op.
    5
    The Tenth Administrative Review for garlic was not the
    first time that the Department used an intermediate input
    methodology; rather, it had previously been used in the Certain
    Frozen Fish Fillets less-than-fair-value determination. See
    Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist Republic of
    Vietnam, 
    68 Fed. Reg. 4986
    , 4993 (Dep’t of Commerce Jan. 31,
    2003) (notice of preliminary determination of sales at less than
    fair value).
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 8
    10-134 at 11.   No party objects to the methodology employing the
    whole garlic bulb as an intermediate input in this New Shipper
    Review.
    Pursuant to statute, the information used by Commerce to
    value the FOPs (here, the whole garlic bulbs) must be the “best
    available information regarding the values of such factors in a
    market economy country or countries considered to be
    appropriate.”   19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1).   In selecting the best
    available information for valuing the FOPs, Commerce’s practice
    is to select surrogate values that “reflect[] a broad market
    average, [are] publicly available, contemporaneous with the
    period of review, specific to the input in question, and
    exclusive of taxes on exports.”     QVD Food Co. v. United States,
    34 CIT __, __, 
    721 F. Supp. 2d 1311
    , 1315 (2010).
    B. The Garlic Bulb Valuation
    Plaintiff first takes issue with the Department’s selection
    of a non-contemporaneous surrogate value for the garlic bulbs.
    Using the intermediate input methodology, Commerce selected a
    surrogate value for whole garlic bulbs (the “intermediate
    input”) derived from information in the Azadpur Agricultural
    Produce Marketing Committee’s Market Information Bulletin (“APMC
    Bulletin”).
    Court No. 10-00304                                                Page 9
    Because plaintiff reported a garlic bulb input size of over
    55 millimeters, Commerce determined that it was “Grade Super A.”6
    As there were no Grade Super A prices reported in the APMC
    Bulletin for the POR of November 1, 2008 through April 30, 2009,
    Commerce used the Grade Super A prices for the preceding period
    of November 1, 2007 through February 6, 2008.         The Department
    stated that it chose the earlier data because it considered
    garlic bulb size to be the most important criteria in valuing
    the garlic bulbs, overriding other factors, including
    contemporaneousness.     Def.’s Br. 11 (“‘The vast majority of
    evidence indicates that size of the garlic bulbs is given
    significant value in the marketplace.’” (citation omitted)).
    The Department then adjusted these prices for inflation using a
    wholesale price index for India published by the International
    Monetary Fund (the “IMF Index”).       Using this approach, Commerce
    calculated a Grade Super A garlic surrogate value of 54.9902
    rupees per kilogram.7
    6
    “Grade Super A” refers to garlic bulbs of 55
    millimeters or more. It is undisputed that all of Sea-line’s
    exports under review are within the Super A range. Pl.’s Br.
    10; Def.’s Br. 4.
    7
    This final value reflects a clerical correction from
    the Preliminary Results; Commerce subtracted seven percent in
    market fees from the average Super A value in the APMC Bulletin.
    Court No. 10-00304                                         Page 10
    For plaintiff, however, the “best available information” to
    value the whole garlic bulb would have been the published APMC
    Bulletin prices for Grade A garlic (one size smaller than Grade
    Super A) during the POR itself.   Pl.’s Br. 18 (“The Department’s
    selection of non-contemporaneous information for the surrogate
    value of garlic bulbs deviates from the Department’s normal
    practice of using contemporaneous information for selecting
    surrogate values.    The data used by the Department was more than
    a year earlier than the [POR] and as a result of using non-
    contemporaneous information, the surrogate value for [the]
    garlic bulb was heavily skewed.” (internal citation omitted)).
    Thus, while plaintiff appears to argue that contemporaneity must
    trump product-specificity, defendant urges that it reasonably
    concluded that size specificity for garlic was the more
    important factor.    Def.’s Br. 10–13.
    Although it may be that size is a more important factor
    than contemporaneity when valuing the whole garlic bulb, here
    Commerce’s decision to use the earlier grade-specific data,
    rather than the contemporaneous data for a smaller garlic bulb,
    was not adequately explained.   The Department determined that
    the “best available information” was that which most closely
    reflected the garlic size actually exported by plaintiff, even
    though the prices were for garlic sold outside of the POR.
    Commerce states that “garlic size is an important price factor,”
    Court No. 10-00304                                         Page 11
    and therefore prices for Super A grade garlic are more “product-
    specific” to the garlic exported by Sea-line, in comparison to
    the contemporaneous garlic prices available for the smaller
    garlic size.   Issues & Dec. Mem. at 6, 5.
    Although it states that the “vast majority of evidence”
    supports the importance of garlic size, Def.’s Br. 11, the
    Department does not address this evidence, and has not explained
    why garlic bulb size is such an important factor that Commerce
    was justified in using prices outside of the POR.    Rather, the
    Department has simply relied upon its conclusion that size was
    the most significant criterion when valuing the input, without
    further explanation.   Issues & Dec. Mem. at 6. (“[T]he
    Department has determined that the size-specific garlic prices
    available from the Azadpur APMC are preferable because garlic
    size is an important price factor.”).   As a result, Commerce has
    failed to explain why garlic size (product-specificity) trumps
    contemporaneousness in its choice of garlic bulb prices, even
    though such an explanation is required under these
    circumstances.   See Allegheny Ludlum Corp. v. United States, 
    29 CIT 157
    , 168, 
    358 F. Supp. 2d 1334
    , 1344 (2005) (Commerce “must
    explain its rationale . . . such that a court may follow and
    review its line of analysis, its reasonable assumptions, and
    other relevant considerations.”).
    Court No. 10-00304                                           Page 12
    In light of the foregoing, the court holds that Commerce’s
    determination that the APMC Bulletin prices from a prior POR for
    Super A grade garlic were the “best available information” was
    not supported by substantial evidence.   Therefore, this
    determination is remanded.
    C. Price Adjustment
    While preserving its argument that Commerce should have
    used prices from the POR, plaintiff also objects to the use of
    the IMF Index to adjust the surrogate garlic bulb prices from
    the 2007–2008 APMC Bulletin to an appropriate price during the
    POR.   According to plaintiff, should the Department be permitted
    to use prices outside of the POR, these prices should not be
    adjusted by using the IMF Index because it does not account for
    garlic price decreases that occurred in 2008.   Therefore,
    plaintiff insists that either of the two alternative methods it
    proposes for adjusting the price of the garlic bulb would have
    yielded more accurate values.    See Pl.’s Br. 22 (“Either method
    takes into account the garlic specific price changes between the
    07/08 period and the 08/09 period.   The Department’s methodology
    simply failed to reflect garlic specific price changes during a
    time of a world economic recession.”); see also Case Br. from
    Resp. to Sec. of Commerce 4, A-570-831 (June 4, 2010) (P.R. Doc.
    62) (“Pl.’s First Case Br.”); Case Br. from Resp. to Sec. of
    Court No. 10-00304                                           Page 13
    Commerce 9, A-570-831 (August 6, 2010) (P.R. Doc. 67) (“Pl.’s
    Second Case Br.”) (“The prices during the POR were dramatically
    lower than the corresponding period in 2007–2008.”).   Commerce,
    however, provides two reasons to support its use of the IMF
    Index for India.   Issues & Dec. Mem. at 8–9.
    1. Routine Use of a Single, Country-Wide Index
    First, Commerce states that, for the purposes of adjusting
    prices, “it is the Department’s practice to use a single,
    country-wide [wholesale price index].”   Issues & Dec. Mem. at 8.
    Indeed, a single, country-wide wholesale price index was used in
    the Twelfth and Thirteenth Administrative Reviews of fresh
    garlic.   Issues & Dec. Mem. at 8 (“[I]n prior reviews of fresh
    garlic, [Commerce] ha[s] also used the same [wholesale price
    index] methodology utilized in the instant case.”); see also
    Def.’s Br. 7 (“Commerce . . . found that using a single country-
    wide wholesale price index was consistent with its practice . .
    . .”).    With this history in mind, Commerce found “no reason to
    deviate from its established practice,” and believes that it
    properly “exercised its discretion by using an ‘all commodities’
    wholesale price index for India.”   Issues & Dec. Mem. at 9;
    Def’s Br. 15.
    Commerce’s reliance on its past “routine practice” of using
    a single, country-wide wholesale price index standing alone,
    Court No. 10-00304                                            Page 14
    however, does not adequately support its determination.    Indeed,
    Commerce must do more than simply state that its conclusions are
    justified because they are in accord with actions in prior
    reviews; rather, it must “cogently explain why it has exercised
    its discretion in a given manner.”    Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v.
    State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 48 (1983).
    Therefore, were reliance on past practice its sole reason for
    determining that the IMF Index was the best available
    information, the court would find its explanation wanting.
    Here, however, the defendant has provided additional support for
    its use of the IMF Index through its second argument, which the
    court finds convincing.
    2. Plaintiff’s Two Alternative Methodologies Are Not
    Supported by Substantial Evidence
    Commerce’s second argument is that the record lacks
    substantial evidence to support Sea-line’s contention that
    either of the two alternative methods it proposes for adjusting
    the garlic bulb prices “would yield a more accurate adjustment
    to the garlic surrogate value than the method the Department
    used.”   Issues & Dec. Mem. at 8.   With respect to its two
    proposed methodologies, plaintiff argues that Commerce should
    either have: (1) used the Grade Super A prices from the older
    2007–2008 APMC Bulletin and adjusted them for inflation or
    Court No. 10-00304                                        Page 15
    deflation using the wholesale price index supplied by plaintiff,
    which was purportedly based upon data published by India’s
    Ministry of Commerce and Industry, resulting in a surrogate
    value of 28.64 rupees per kilogram; or (2) calculated the ratio
    between the prices for Grades Super A and A garlic in the older
    2007–2008 APMC Bulletin, and applied this ratio to the
    contemporaneous Grade A price to extrapolate a Grade Super A
    price for the POR, resulting in a surrogate value of 19.90
    rupees per kilogram.    Pl.’s Br. 15–16.
    a. Plaintiff’s Indian Wholesale Price Index
    As to its first proposed method, Sea-line maintains that
    the prices should have been adjusted using data it claimed,
    during the administrative proceedings, were published by India’s
    Ministry of Commerce and Industry.   According to plaintiff, this
    data included garlic-specific prices, whereas the IMF Index was
    comprised of a “‘mixture of prices of agricultural and
    industrial goods.’”    Pl.’s Br. 20 (citation omitted).
    Commerce insists, however, that plaintiff’s proffered index
    was not a publicly-available index published by the Indian
    Ministry of Commerce.    See Allied Pac. Food (Dalian) Co. v.
    United States, 
    30 CIT 736
    , 760, 
    435 F. Supp. 2d 1295
    , 1316
    (2006) (“The regulations, in 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    , provide that
    Commerce ‘normally will use publicly available information to
    Court No. 10-00304                                           Page 16
    value factors.’”).   Rather, Commerce asserts that the index was
    “created” by plaintiff based upon information that Sea-line
    stated it had sourced from the website of India’s Ministry of
    Commerce and Industry.   Def.’s Br. 16.   Further, according to
    Commerce, “Sea-line . . . provided no information with respect
    to the government of India garlic price data which presumably
    underpins the garlic [wholesale price index] it calculated.”
    Issues & Dec. Mem. at 8.
    Sea-line submitted its index in its rebuttal to defendant-
    intervenors’ submission of surrogate value data during the
    administrative proceedings, and subsequently reproduced the
    index in its administrative case briefs.    Pl.’s First Case Br.
    7; Pl.’s Second Case Br. 12.   To support its submission, Sea-
    line provided, what turned out to be, an erroneous website
    address as the source of the data, and “provided no explanation
    or context for the data itself, that is, for how the government
    of India compiled the relevant data.”     Def.’s Br. 16.   According
    to defendant, during the administrative proceedings it was
    determined that the website provided by plaintiff did not
    contain the data from which the index was compiled.    Pl.’s Reply
    to Def. & Def.-Ints.’ Br. 8 (“Pl.’s Reply); Def.’s Br. 16.
    Rather, the data used in plaintiff’s index was later determined
    Court No. 10-00304                                                      Page 17
    to have been derived from the website for the Office of the
    Economic Adviser to the Government of India,8 as indicated by
    plaintiff’s subsequent briefing in this action.               Pl.’s Br. 22.
    The correct source of the data, though, was never presented to
    the Department during the administrative proceedings.                 Because
    Commerce was unable to verify the index, it claims that the
    index was reasonably rejected.          Def.’s Br. 16.
    While acknowledging that its “surrogate value data . . .
    contain[ed] an error,” the plaintiff argues in its papers that
    “[i]f the Department questioned the validity of the garlic
    index, the [D]epartment had the time and resources to assess the
    garlic index.”      Pl.’s Reply 8; Pl.’s Br. 21.          In like manner, at
    oral argument, plaintiff asked the court to find that Commerce
    had an affirmative duty to seek clarification or correction of
    the deficient filing, and asserted that the burden to create an
    adequate record lies with Commerce.            See also Pl.’s Br. 21.
    According to plaintiff,
    [d]efendant does not cite to the record where these
    deficiencies are noted and we are unaware of the
    record evidence that Commerce ever notified Sea-line
    of any deficiencies or errors in its submissions(s)
    with respect to these claims. Nevertheless, Commerce
    had a responsibility to calculate the margins as
    accurately as possible. Commerce has the authority to
    ask parties to answer questions at any time and to
    8
    The website is located at http://www.eaindustry.nic.
    in.
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 18
    extend deadlines. It is unclear how Commerce can
    justify rejecting surrogate value data that contains
    an error without allowing the party to respond.
    Pl.’s Reply 8.   To support this contention, plaintiff cites
    Commerce’s regulation pertaining to “[e]xtension of time limits”
    in antidumping reviews.   
    19 C.F.R. § 351.302
    (b) (2011) (“Unless
    expressly precluded by statute, [Commerce] may, for good cause,
    extend any time limit established by this part.”).
    Defendant counters that “Commerce explicitly addressed the
    garlic index [in the final results] and found that it lacked
    ‘information with respect to the government of India garlic
    price data which presumably underpins the garlic [wholesale
    price index Sea-line] calculated.’”   Def.’s Br. 17 (quoting
    Issues & Dec. Mem. at 8).   Further, defendant argues that “Sea-
    line’s statement [concerning Commerce’s duties with respect to
    the record] reflects a misunderstanding of the evidentiary
    burden that underlies Commerce’s administrative proceedings.”
    Def.’s Br. 17.
    The court agrees with Commerce that Sea-line appears to
    misunderstand its role in these proceedings.   As defendant
    points out, and as the Federal Circuit has recently reiterated,
    “[a]lthough Commerce has authority to place documents in the
    administrative record that it deems relevant, ‘the burden of
    creating an adequate record lies with [respondents] and not with
    Commerce.’”   QVD Food Co. v. United States, 
    658 F.3d 1318
    , 1324
    Court No. 10-00304                                               Page 19
    (Fed. Cir. 2011) (quoting Tianjin Mach. Imp. & Exp. Corp. v.
    United States, 
    16 CIT 931
    , 936, 
    806 F. Supp. 1008
    , 1015 (1992));
    see also Wash. Int’l Ins. Co. v. United States, 33 CIT __, Slip
    Op No. 09-00078 at 11 n.12 (July 29, 2009) (not reported in the
    Federal Supplement) (“It is the interested party to an
    administrative review who bears the burden of production on its
    claim.”); Chia Far Indus. Factory Co. v. United States, 
    28 CIT 1336
    , 1354, 
    343 F. Supp. 2d 1344
    , 1362 (2004) (“Ultimately, the
    burden of creating an adequate record lies with the respondents,
    not Commerce.”).    It is particularly the duty of a party to
    complete the record when, as here, plaintiff is proffering data
    that it claims is the “best available information.”          Therefore,
    under the circumstances, it was simply not Commerce’s duty to
    help Sea-line create an adequate record to support its position.9
    9
    While the parties do not discuss it, there is a
    provision in the antidumping statute pertaining to “deficient
    submissions.” See 19 U.S.C. § 1677m(d). This section states
    that if Commerce “determines that a response to a request for
    information under this title does not comply with the request,
    [Commerce] . . . shall promptly inform the person submitting the
    response of the nature of the deficiency and shall, to the
    extent practicable, provide that person with an opportunity to
    remedy or explain the deficiency.” Id. This provision,
    however, appears to be limited to cases involving “facts
    otherwise available” in the context of deficient responses to
    Commerce’s questionnaires during antidumping investigations and
    reviews. As such, the “deficient submissions” requirement
    extends to submissions where the respondent is supplying
    information about its own company “in response to [Commerce’s]
    request,” which is distinguishable from surrogate valuation
    ( continued . . . )
    Court No. 10-00304                                                                                                                                          Page 20
    Thus, because the Department could not verify the accuracy
    of plaintiff’s proffered index during its administrative
    proceedings, the court finds that Commerce reasonably concluded
    that plaintiff’s contention that the index it created itself
    constitutes the “best available information,” and that its use
    would yield a more accurate result, was not supported by
    substantial evidence.
    b. Plaintiff’s Ratio Methodology
    In addition to its proposed index, Sea-line argues, in the
    alternative, that Commerce should have used the prices for Grade
    A garlic from the APMC Bulletin contemporaneous to the POR, as
    adjusted by using the ratio between Grade Super A and Grade A
    garlic from the older APMC Bulletin.                                                                    To support the soundness
    of this methodology, plaintiff “presumes” that “the price
    relationship between Super-A grade and A grade prices remain
    ‘relatively constant.’”                                             Pl.’s Br. 23; see also Pl.’s First Case
    Br. 10; Pl.’s Second Case Br. 14–15 (“We can presume that [the
    Grade Super A/Grade A] ratio is relatively constant.                                                                                               Therefore,
    we can use the [Grade Super A/Grade A] ratio we know from the
    ( . . . continued )
    proceedings where, as here, a respondent voluntarily proposes
    surrogate value data for Commerce’s consideration.
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 21
    [2007–2008] APMC Bulletin . . . to derive [a Grade Super A]
    value during the POR.”).
    Defendant maintains, however, that plaintiff’s proposed
    ratio methodology was properly rejected because there was
    insufficient evidence on the record to support the claimed
    constant ratio between the two grades.    Def.’s Br. 17-18; see
    also Issues & Dec. Mem. at 9 (“[T]here is insufficient
    historical Azadpur APMC price data (Super-A grade and A grade)
    on the record of this review to serve as the basis for a
    meaningful price ratio.”).   Put another way, Commerce argues
    that one year’s data on the price difference between the
    different grades of garlic bulbs was not sufficient to establish
    that the ratio would be consistent over time.
    As with its arguments with respect to the Indian wholesale
    price index, however, plaintiff maintains that, if the
    Department found its submissions wanting, it was the duty of
    Commerce to seek clarification from plaintiff, and that the
    burden to create an adequate record lies with Commerce “which is
    responsible for conducting the review.”   Pl.’s Br. 23.
    Specifically, plaintiff states that “[i]t is unclear when or
    even if Sea-line was provided an opportunity to present . . .
    ‘historical data’ [establishing the ratio over time] and why the
    Department, which is responsible for conducting the review and
    frequently supplies the data, failed to check.”   Pl.’s Br. 23.
    Court No. 10-00304                                                 Page 22
    Defendant counters that “[o]nce again, Sea-line fails to
    recognize that respondents bear the burden of building a record
    adequate to support their arguments.”        Def.’s Br. 19.
    Furthermore, according to defendant, “Sea-line had the
    opportunity [to] present historical data in its rebuttal to
    [defendant-intervenor’s] surrogate value comments.           Its failure
    to do so left Commerce with no factual basis for adopting Sea-
    line’s alternative proposal.”10       Def.’s Br. 19.    Therefore,
    “because the reliability of Sea-line’s [ratio] method could not
    be confirmed, Commerce acted within its discretion in rejecting
    it.”   Def.’s Br. 18
    The court finds Sea-line’s arguments regarding its
    evidentiary burden unpersuasive.        That is, as discussed above,
    under circumstances such as these, it was not Commerce’s duty to
    help Sea-line create an adequate record to support its position
    that the application of its proposed ratio would result in the
    “best available information.”       See Chia Far Indus. Factory, 28
    CIT at 1354, 
    343 F. Supp. 2d at 1362
     (“Ultimately, the burden of
    creating an adequate record lies with the respondents, not
    Commerce.”).
    10
    According to 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.301
    (c)(1), “[a]ny
    interested party may submit factual information to rebut,
    clarify, or correct factual information submitted by any other
    interested party at any time prior to the deadline . . . for
    submission of such factual information.”
    Court No. 10-00304                                         Page 23
    The court also finds that, in the absence of evidence to
    support the accuracy of plaintiff’s ratio methodology over time,
    Commerce reasonably concluded that the use of the proposed ratio
    was not supported by substantial evidence, and that the method
    was not the “best available information” on the record.    That
    is, because plaintiff provided no evidence tending to establish
    that the ratio it proposed had been constant over a period of
    years, it was not established that using the ratio would result
    in a more accurate adjustment to the older garlic bulb prices
    than the method used by Commerce.   Anshan Iron & Steel Co. v.
    United States, 
    28 CIT 1728
    , 1735, 
    358 F. Supp. 2d 1236
    , 1242
    (2004) (“Commerce is generally at liberty to discard one
    methodology in favor of another where necessary to calculate a
    more accurate dumping margin . . . .”).
    Finally, the court holds that Commerce’s determination that
    the IMF Index constituted the “best available information” on
    the record was reasonable and supported by substantial evidence.
    First, as has been seen, plaintiff failed to demonstrate that
    its two alternatives proposed were the “best available
    information” on the record.   Second, the use of the IMF Index to
    adjust the garlic bulb prices comports with the Department’s
    preference, to which plaintiff does not object and which appears
    to be reasonable in this case, “to use, where possible, . . .
    publicly available [data] which is (1) an average non-export
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 24
    value; (2) representative of a range of prices within the . . .
    POR; (3) product-specific; and (4) duty and tax-exclusive.”
    Issues & Dec. Mem. at 5.   Therefore, Commerce’s use of the IMF
    Index is sustained.
    II. Surrogate Financial Ratios
    A. Legal Framework for Surrogate Financial Ratios
    As noted, to calculate the normal value for merchandise
    from a NME country, Commerce values the FOPs used to produce
    “identical or comparable merchandise in the surrogate country.”
    
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    (c)(4).   Here, the Department has determined
    that the upstream FOP values are captured in the intermediate
    product—the whole garlic bulb.   This surrogate value, however,
    does not take into account the “‘general expenses and profits’
    not traceable to a specific product.”   Dorbest Ltd. v. United
    States, 
    30 CIT 1671
    , 1715, 
    462 F. Supp. 2d 1262
    , 1300 (2006),
    aff’d in part, vacated in part on other grounds (citing 19
    U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1)).   Therefore,
    in order to capture these expenses and profits,
    Commerce must factor (1) factory overhead
    (“overhead”), (2) selling, general and administrative
    expenses (“SG&A”), and (3) profit into the calculation
    of normal value. As with its calculation of the other
    factors of production, Commerce uses surrogate values
    to determine an importer’s financial ratios.
    Id. at 1715, 
    462 F. Supp. 2d at 1300
     (citations omitted).
    Court No. 10-00304                                                      Page 25
    The “surrogate financial ratios”11 are then added to the
    surrogate values of the FOPs (or, as here, the value of the
    whole garlic bulb as the intermediate input).              
    19 U.S.C. § 11
    These “surrogate financial ratios” are calculated as
    follows:
    Factory overhead includes such costs as the cost of
    machinery, spare parts, and rent. Commerce adds
    together all such costs, as expressed on a surrogate
    company’s financial statement, to get the total
    overhead expenditure (“Overheads”); Commerce then
    divides the result by the surrogate firm’s material,
    labor, and energy costs (“MLEs”). Finally, Commerce
    multiplies the result by the derived manufacturing
    cost of the product in question of the investigated
    firm (“MLEp”). The result is the overhead that may be
    allocated to the normal value of the merchandise in
    question (“Overheadp”). . . .
    Next, Commerce adds the surrogate firm’s MLE and
    Overhead (together “the cost of manufacturing”) and
    determines an amount for general expenses (“SG&As”)
    including, for example, expenses such as bank charges,
    travel expenses, and office supplies. Commerce then
    calculates the ratios of the surrogate firms’ SG&A to
    its cost of manufacturing and multiplies this ratio by
    the sum of MLEp and Overheadp; the result is the SG&A
    that may be allocated to the merchandise in question
    (“SG&Ap”). . . .
    Last, Commerce adds an amount for profit. Commerce
    initially calculates the surrogate company’s profit
    ratio which is the ratio of the surrogate company’s
    before-tax profit (“profits”) over the sum of MLEs,
    Overheads, and SG&As. Commerce then multiplies this
    result by the investigated company’s derived MLEp,
    Overheadp, and SG&Ap. The result is the profit that may
    be allocated to the merchandise in question
    (“profitp”).
    Dorbest, 30 CIT at 1715–16 n.36, 
    462 F. Supp. 2d at
    1301 n.36
    (citations omitted).
    Court No. 10-00304                                         Page 26
    1677b(c)(1)(B) (Commerce “shall determine the normal value of
    the subject merchandise on the basis of the value of the factors
    of production utilized in producing the merchandise and to which
    shall be added an amount for general expenses and profit.”
    (emphasis added)).
    The surrogate values used to calculate the ratios are
    derived from surrogate financial statements.   In selecting these
    statements, Commerce “normally will use nonproprietary
    information gathered from producers of identical or comparable
    merchandise in the surrogate country.”   
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    (c)(4).   In doing so, Commerce “narrow[s] the list of
    financial statements meeting this criterion by consider[ing] the
    quality and specificity of the statements, as well as whether
    the statements are contemporaneous with the data used to
    calculate production factors.”    Dorbest Ltd. v. United States,
    
    604 F.3d 1363
    , 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2010).    In addition, “Commerce
    [has] explained that its preference is ‘to use multiple
    financial statements in order to eliminate potential distortions
    that may arise from using those of a single producer,’ as long
    as those financial statements ‘are not distortive or otherwise
    unreliable.’”    Dorbest, 
    604 F.3d at 1374, 1368
     (“Generally, if
    more than one producer’s financial statements are available,
    Commerce averages the financial ratios derived from all the
    available financial statements.”); see also 19 C.F.R. §
    Court No. 10-00304                                            Page 27
    351.408(c)(4) (noting, in the plural, that Commerce “normally
    will use non-proprietary information gathered from producers of
    identical or comparable merchandise in the surrogate country”)
    (emphasis added).
    B. The Financial Statements
    In this case, during the administrative proceedings
    defendant-intervenors submitted financial statements from two
    Indian companies, ADF Foods and Tata Tea, for use in calculating
    the surrogate financial ratios.    Plaintiff submitted statements
    for four companies, including Garlico Industries Limited
    (“Garlico”) and Limtex Tea Limited (“Limtex”), for the same
    purpose.   In making its final determination, the Department
    chose to average the data from Tata Tea’s and Limtex’s
    statements to arrive at the surrogate financial ratios.
    Defendant states that Commerce’s use of the Tata Tea and
    Limtex financial data was reasonable because, in accordance with
    accepted financial ratio standards, “they were contemporaneous
    [and] publicly available.”   Def.’s Br. 21.   Further, these
    financial statements “reflected tea production,” Def.’s Br. 21,
    and “[s]ince the 2002–2003 administrative review [for garlic],
    the Department has considered tea processing to be sufficiently
    similar to garlic processing.”    Issues & Dec. Mem. at 12.
    Therefore, Commerce has relied upon the financial statements of
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 28
    tea producers and exporters since that review.   No party objects
    to the use of surrogate financial statements from tea companies
    to determine the surrogate financial ratios in this case.
    Indeed, both the plaintiff and defendant-intervenors submitted
    financial statements from Indian tea companies for Commerce’s
    consideration, and Sea-line “conced[ed] tea financials can be
    appropriate.”   Pl.’s Br. 16.
    1. Use of the Tata Tea Statement
    Notwithstanding its concession that tea financials are
    appropriate for valuing garlic production, plaintiff argues
    that: (1) the Tata Tea statement does not reflect Sea-line’s
    production process because: (a) it includes financial
    information from non-tea and non-garlic businesses, and (b) the
    financial statements reflect the processing of peeled garlic
    instead of whole garlic; (2) the Tata Tea financial statement
    consolidated information from countries other than India; and
    (3) the Department could have used a smaller subset of the Tata
    Tea data to more accurately represent garlic-related expenses
    and profits.    Pl.’s Br. 16–17.
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 29
    a. Financial Data Does Not Reflect Sea-Line’s
    Production Process
    Sea-line’s first argument is that the Tata Tea financials
    were not appropriate “because they included substantial
    information for non-tea production.”   Pl.’s Reply 10.   According
    to plaintiff, “[t]he products the Tata Tea Group [produces]
    range from tea to [c]offee, pepper, cardamom, sp[i]c[e]s &
    others, timber, veneer/plywood and mineral water.     Among these
    products, the sale of coffee in the Tata Tea Group accounts
    [for] 20.88% of the sales and services.”   Pl.’s Second Case Br.
    18–19.   In connection with this argument, plaintiff states that
    Commerce had previously found that “coffee is not a comparable
    product [to] garlic.”   Pl.’s Second Case Br. 19.
    While the Department acknowledges that Tata Tea’s financial
    statement includes commodities other than tea, most
    significantly coffee, it argues that “sales of tea comprise the
    vast majority of Tata Tea Group’s sales,” while the other
    commodities listed by plaintiff (other than coffee) comprise an
    insignificant fraction of sales.   Issues & Dec. Mem. at 13.    For
    this reason, defendant maintains that “Commerce fulfilled its
    obligation [to chose the best available information] by
    acknowledging that tea did not account for 100 percent of Tata
    Tea’s sales but finding that it still represented the ‘vast
    majority’ of Tata Tea’s activity.”   Def.’s Br. 26.   Therefore,
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 30
    defendant contends that “Sea-line has failed to demonstrate that
    Tata Tea’s consolidated financial statements were not reasonably
    reflective of tea production.”   Def.’s Br. 25.
    As to plaintiff’s claim that Commerce has found that coffee
    production is not equivalent to tea production, Commerce grants
    that it had previously found “‘that the coffee industry is not
    as comparable with the operations of the respondent garlic
    companies as the tea industry. . . . [Therefore,] the coffee
    industry in India does not represent as accurate a surrogate for
    garlic production as does the tea industry.’”     Issues & Dec.
    Mem. at 11 (citation omitted).   Commerce goes on to argue,
    however, that “as conceded by Qingdao Sea-line, sales of tea
    comprise the vast majority of Tata Tea Group’s sales, with sales
    of coffee representing less than one quarter of total sales.”
    Issues & Dec. Mem. at 12–13.   Thus, for Commerce, even though
    coffee production is not “as comparable” to garlic production as
    is tea production, Tata Tea’s financials remain the best
    available information on the record, particularly when averaged
    with Limtex’s financial information, because the great majority
    of Tata Tea’s financials reflect tea production.
    At bottom, Commerce’s argument is that, while not
    reflecting costs related to the production of tea alone, the
    inclusion of Tata Tea’s financial information in the average
    used to calculate the financial ratios, rather than relying
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 31
    solely on Limtex’s alone, produced a more reliable result.     See
    Def.’s Br. 28 (“Commerce acted within its discretion in
    following its well-established practice to use information from
    more than one surrogate producer to better represent the
    surrogate industry.”).
    Additionally, Commerce made the specific finding that the
    production processes used by Limtex and Tata Tea were similar to
    those of Sea-line’s producer, Juxingyuan, and therefore the
    choice to use both surrogate companies was supported by
    substantial evidence.    The Department explained that
    we are using Tata Tea’s and Limtex’s financial data,
    since tea is comparable to subject merchandise (i.e.,
    whole and peeled garlic) and each company’s non-
    integrated production process [i.e., they purchase
    rather than grow their raw material inputs] is similar
    to [Sea-line’s producer] Juxingyuan. We find that the
    resulting financial ratios from the average of Tata
    Tea’s and Limtex’s financial data provide the best
    surrogate for the garlic industry in the PRC as a
    whole, based on the information on the record of this
    review.
    Prelim. Results, 75 Fed. Reg. at 24,582 (unchanged in Final
    Results); see also Def.’s Br. 21.    In other words, because
    Commerce determined that Tata Tea, Limtex, and Sea-line’s
    producer Juxingyuan all purchased their raw material inputs,
    rather than growing them themselves, the statements from these
    companies were the “best available information” on the record.
    Next, plaintiff claims that the Tata Tea financial
    statement is representative of peeled garlic production, and not
    Court No. 10-00304                                           Page 32
    the production of the whole garlic bulbs that Sea-line actually
    exported to the United States.   Therefore, according to
    plaintiff, “the Department selected . . . financial information
    which does not reflect Sea-line’s production processes [because]
    Sea-line’s sale concerns whole garlic rather than peeled
    garlic.”   Pl.’s Br. 25.   To plaintiff, Commerce’s choice
    “neglects the fact that the subject merchandise under this
    review is whole garlic rather than peeled garlic.   The
    production process of surrogate companies shall be specific to
    the respondent under [the] current review, instead of the ‘the
    broader experiences of [the] garlic industry’ in the PRC.”
    Pl.’s Second Case Br. 17–18.   Plaintiff cites Commerce’s
    determinations from previous reviews to support its argument.
    Specifically, Sea-line references the Thirteenth
    Administrative/New Shipper Reviews where “the Department
    determined that . . . ‘Tata Tea’s financial data . . . are more
    comparable [to] that of peeled garlic, which comprises an
    increasing share of all PRC garlic imports.”   Pl.’s Second Case
    Brief 17; see also Pl.’s First Case Brief 11–12.    Sea-line also
    cites the Fourteenth New Shipper Review where “the Department
    continued to regard Tata Tea’s production processes a[s] more
    comparable to that of peeled garlic, which comprises an
    increasing share of all PRC garlic imports.”   Pl.’s Second Case
    Brief 17; see also Issues & Dec. Mem. at 10.
    Court No. 10-00304                                         Page 33
    Commerce does not directly dispute plaintiff’s argument.
    Rather, the Department replies that it
    made no determination in the Final Results that Tata
    Tea was specifically representative of peeled garlic.
    Instead, Commerce determined that it was preferable to
    use more than one financial statement in its
    calculation and found that financial statements for
    both Limtex and Tata Tea satisfied its standards for
    surrogate financial ratios.
    Def.’s Br. 26 (citing Issues & Dec. Mem. at 12).   Thus, Commerce
    reiterates that its primary reason for including the Tata Tea
    statement was its desire to use more than one financial
    statement.   Commerce thus explains its determination by
    maintaining that it
    was left with two imperfect scenarios: (1) use
    Limtex’s ratios alone, thus losing the benefit of
    information that reflects the ‘broader experience of
    the surrogate industry’ desired by Commerce; or (2)
    include Tata Tea’s ratios to produce an average, even
    though Tata Tea might be less representative of whole
    garlic production than Limtex.
    Def.’s Br. 27 (internal citation omitted).
    As an initial matter, the court concludes that, should it
    ultimately be found that Commerce did not err in relying on Tata
    Tea’s financial statement, it was reasonable for Commerce to
    average the Limtex and Tata Tea financials.   The Department’s
    threshold decision to use the Tata Tea statement, even though it
    contained data for the production of commodities other than tea,
    was supported by substantial evidence because Commerce
    reasonably explained that the benefit of using more data
    Court No. 10-00304                                                      Page 34
    outweighs the inclusion of a small amount of other products.
    Indeed, both parties have acknowledged that “sales of tea
    comprise the vast majority of Tata Tea Group’s sales, with sales
    of coffee representing less than one quarter of total sales.”
    Issues & Dec. Mem. at 13.         As to the other commodities listed by
    plaintiff (i.e., pepper, cardamom, spices, timber,
    veneer/plywood, and mineral water), the record reveals that
    these sales were insignificant,12 when compared to sales of tea.
    Therefore, it was reasonable for Commerce to conclude that the
    Tata Tea statement largely reflected the production of tea.
    In addition, any negative effect that might result from the
    inclusion of coffee production in the financials would be
    reduced by the averaging of Tata Tea’s and Limtex’s financial
    data.    As noted, Commerce has a reasonable preference to use
    multiple financial statements to eliminate distortions that may
    arise from using those of a single producer.              In other words,
    Commerce has concluded that a greater number of financial
    statements, here two instead of one, will lead to more reliable
    data by evening out any abnormalities present in a single
    producer’s data.      See Fujian Lianfu Forestry Co. v. United
    12
    While coffee comprised 20.88% of Tata Tea’s sales, the
    other non-tea commodities cited by plaintiff all composed less
    than 0.5% of sales, ranging from 0.02% for cardamom to 0.45% for
    mineral water. Petitioners’ Surrogate Data Submission, Ex. 4 at
    108, A-570-831 (Jan. 14, 2010) (P.R. Doc. 40).
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 35
    States, 
    638 F. Supp. 2d 1325
    , 1353 (2009) (“When averaging
    multiple financial ratios from several statements, Commerce
    generally finds that the greatest number of financial statements
    yields the most representative data from the relevant
    manufacturing sector, and thus provides the most accurate
    portrayal of the economic spectrum.”).   This is what Commerce
    intended to achieve here; i.e., any distortions resulting from
    the inclusion of coffee data in Tata Tea’s financials would be
    lessened by averaging the data with Limtex’s financials.
    As to plaintiff’s argument that Commerce failed to choose
    financial statements from surrogate companies with production
    processes that most closely reflect those of Sea-line, however,
    the court finds this issue must be remanded because the
    Department has not adequately explained its decision to employ
    financials from Tata Tea that it had previously found to be
    “more comparable [to] that of peeled garlic.”   Issues & Dec.
    Mem. at 9.   Pursuant to 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    (c)(4), Commerce
    “normally will use nonproprietary information gathered from
    producers of identical or comparable merchandise in the
    surrogate country.”   
    19 C.F.R. § 351.408
    (c)(4) (emphasis added).
    At no point, however, does Commerce explain how the choice of
    the Tata Tea financial statement conforms to this regulation.
    Instead, the Department relies solely on its preference for data
    from more than one source.   See Issues & Dec. Mem. at 12 (“[W]e
    Court No. 10-00304                                            Page 36
    note that it is the Department’s preference to use financial
    data from more than one surrogate producer to reflect the
    broader experience of the surrogate industry.”).    This
    explanation, however, is not adequate because Commerce appears
    to have ignored its own regulation in reaching its
    determination.    Put another way, the Department’s desire to use
    more than one source of financial data to avoid distortions
    cannot form a reasonable basis for relying on a financial
    statement that, as a whole, reflects the production of
    merchandise that is not “identical or comparable” to that
    exported by Sea-line.
    For this reason, and because, as shall be seen in the
    discussion of the Garlico financial statement below, there may
    be other available information on the record, Commerce’s
    decision to use the Tata Tea statement must be remanded.
    b. Multinational, Consolidated Information
    Plaintiff’s second objection to Commerce’s use of the Tata
    Tea statement is that Commerce ignored the directive in Dorbest
    that the Department use values from “comparable countries” when
    it relied on Tata Tea’s consolidated financial statement, which
    included information for countries other than India.    Defendant
    believes that plaintiff waived this argument because it failed
    to raise it before Commerce at the administrative level, and
    Court No. 10-00304                                                      Page 37
    therefore it failed to exhaust its administrative remedies.
    Def.’s Br. 22–24 (“Although Sea-line objected in its case brief
    to Commerce’s use of Tata Tea’s consolidated financial
    statements, it did not advance any argument concerning the
    economic comparability of the countries in which Tata Tea’s
    subsidiaries, associates, and joint ventures . . . were
    located.”).
    In its First Case Brief,13 plaintiff’s two arguments
    regarding the surrogate financial ratios were: (1) that the
    “Department Shall Not Use Tata Tea’s Financial Ratios Because of
    the Department’s Previous Decision That Tata Tea’s Production
    Process Was More Comparable to That of Peeled Garlic”; and (2)
    that the “Department Shall Select Garlico Industries Ltd. as
    [the] Surrogate Company for Financial Ratios in the Final
    Results.”    Pl.’s First Case Br. 11, 12.
    In its Second Case Brief, plaintiff retained its first
    argument as above, but replaced its second argument with “the
    Department Shall Not Use Tata Tea Consolidated Accounts for the
    Financial Ratios Because the Financial Information Includes
    Various Products other than Tea Products.”             Pl.’s Second Case
    13
    Plaintiff submitted two different case briefs from the
    same counsel: one on June 4, 2010 and a subsequent brief on
    August 6, 2010. As neither brief was rejected by the
    Department, both were part of the record before Commerce and are
    part of the record in this action.
    Court No. 10-00304                                                Page 38
    Br. 18.   Because these were the only arguments presented,
    Commerce did not address arguments related to “comparable
    countries” in the Final Results.
    Recognizing that it did not explicitly make an argument
    with respect to the inclusion of countries other than India in
    the Tata Tea financial statement, plaintiff urges that its
    “listing of non-economically comparable countries” in its Second
    Case Brief, and its “mentioning Tata Tea was a multinational
    conglomerate,” amounted to raising the issue, and that the
    Dorbest decision14 should have “alert[ed] Commerce — indeed
    place[d] an affirmative obligation on Commerce — to scrutinize
    the Tata Tea financials.”      Pl.’s Reply 11; see also Pl.’s Second
    Case Br. 18.15
    14
    In Dorbest, the Federal Circuit stated that “the
    statute requires the use of data from economically comparable
    countries ‘to the extent possible.’” Dorbest, 
    604 F.3d at
    1371-
    1372 (quoting 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4)(A)).
    15
    The plaintiff’s passing references to the
    multinational nature of Tata Tea are embedded in its other
    arguments. Specifically, in its First Case Brief, in its
    argument that Tata Tea’s production process is more comparable
    to that of peeled garlic, rather than whole garlic, plaintiff
    states “[t]he company also has large scale and diversified
    business. It has subsidiaries such as Tata Coffee Limited Inc.
    in the United States and Mount Everest Mineral Water Ltd. a
    subsidiary dealing in mineral water business. Tata Tea’s
    business and organizational management is far more advanced and
    matured than Sea-line.” Pl.’s First Case Br. 12. This is the
    only reference to Tata Tea’s multinational activities.
    ( continued . . . )
    Court No. 10-00304                                                                                                                                          Page 39
    Under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2637
    (d), this Court “shall, where
    appropriate, require the exhaustion of administrative remedies.”
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2637
    (d); see also Corus Staal BV v. United States,
    
    502 F.3d 1370
    , 1379 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (“[A]bsent a strong
    contrary reason, the court should insist that parties exhaust
    their remedies before the pertinent administrative agencies.”).
    Therefore, “[o]rdinarily, when a party fails to make an argument
    in proceedings below, the argument is waived.”                                                                                     CEMEX, S.A. v.
    United States, 
    133 F.3d 897
    , 902 (Fed. Cir. 1998); see also Sage
    ( . . . continued )
    Similarly, in its Second Case Brief, plaintiff references
    Tata Tea’s multinational activities in its argument that the
    Tata Tea statements are inappropriate because they include
    information for non-tea products. This reference is limited to
    the following:
    The consolidated financial statement includes
    financial information of Tata Tea Limited’s
    subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures (“Tata Tea
    Group”). The Tata Tea Group covers 24 subsidiaries
    with voting power between 78.79 – 100% located in nine
    countries in the world, including U.S.A., U.K.,
    Canada, Australia, Kenya, Malawi, Poland, Czech
    Republic and Cyprus. The Tata Tea Group also includes
    15 joint ventures located in 6 overseas countries and
    4 associates in 2 overseas countries.
    Although the Department stated that it does not
    examine “the surrogate company’s ‘business experience’
    (i.e. size, profit, etc.)”, the diversified
    multinational operation also expands its products far
    beyond tea, which was determined by the Department to
    be a comparable product of garlic.
    Pl.’s              Second Case Br. 18 (internal citations omitted).
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 40
    Prods., Inc. v. Devon Indus., Inc., 
    126 F.3d 1420
    , 1426 (Fed.
    Cir. 1997) (“With a few notable exceptions, such as some
    jurisdictional matters, appellate courts do not consider a
    party’s new theories, lodged first on appeal.”).
    Here, the court finds that no matter how either of
    plaintiff’s two case briefs is read, there can be no claim that
    it raised before Commerce the argument that the Tata Tea
    statement included data from many different, non-economically
    comparable countries, and therefore that argument cannot be
    considered here.   That is, the mere listing of the countries
    covered by the Tata Tea statement, combined with the issuance of
    a decision by the Federal Circuit, cannot be construed as
    plaintiff having raised an argument that Commerce was bound to
    address.   Indeed, the
    underlying principle [behind the exhaustion
    requirement] is that “courts should not topple over
    administrative decisions unless the administrative
    body not only has erred but has erred against
    objection made at the time appropriate under its
    practice.” The doctrine of exhaustion thus works to
    serve two basic purposes: It allows the administrative
    agency to perform the functions within its area of
    special competence (to develop the factual record and
    to apply its expertise), and—at the same time—it
    promotes judicial efficiency and conserves judicial
    resources, by affording the agency the opportunity to
    rectify its own mistakes (and thus to moot controversy
    and obviate the need for judicial intervention).
    Ta Chen Stainless Steel Pipe, Ltd. v. United States, 
    28 CIT 627
    ,
    644, 
    342 F. Supp. 2d 1191
    , 1206 (2004) (quoting United States v.
    Court No. 10-00304                                         Page 41
    L.A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc., 
    344 U.S. 33
    , 37 (1952)); see also
    Richey v. United States, 
    322 F.3d 1317
    , 1326 (Fed. Cir. 2003)
    (“Exhaustion . . . serves ‘the twin purposes . . . of protecting
    administrative agency authority and promoting judicial
    efficiency.’” (quoting Sandvik Steel Co. v. United States, 
    164 F.3d 596
    , 600 (Fed. Cir. 1998))).   Accordingly, the court finds
    that because plaintiff failed to raise the issue of “comparable
    countries” during the administrative proceedings, and thus
    failed to exhaust its administrative remedies, it will not
    consider the issue here.
    c. Use of Smaller Subset of Data to More
    Accurately Represent Garlic-Related Figures
    Next, plaintiff contends that “if the Department wanted to
    use some Tata Tea data, the Department could have adjusted the
    Tata Tea data to represent more accurate garlic related
    figures.”   Pl.’s Br. 17.   To accomplish this, plaintiff suggests
    that “in the alternative to the complete Tata Tea financials, if
    the Department continued to believe Tata Tea financials were
    appropriate, the Department could use the financial information
    of Tata Tea Limited, not the consolidated statements as these
    cover Tata Tea’s international operations which are not
    comparable to Sea-line.”    Pl.’s Br. 26.
    Court No. 10-00304                                         Page 42
    While plaintiff asserts that “Sea-line made a detailed
    calculation of the Tata Tea Limited financials” for Commerce to
    consider, Pl.’s Br. 26, the full description of this
    alternative, which only appears in plaintiff’s Second Case Brief
    (not its First Case Brief) was limited to the following:
    For the purpose of comparison, Sea-line used financial
    information of Tata Tea Limited to derive the
    financial ratios. [The] Table . . . below provides
    the comparison of the financial ratios derived from
    Tata Tea consolidated accounts as submitted by the
    [defendant-intervenors] and the financial ratios
    derived from Tata Tea Limited.
    Pl.’s Second Case Br. 19.
    The “detailed calculation,” however, was confined to a
    simple table listing certain values, with no information as to
    how Sea-line derived these “limited” values.   Thus, Sea-line
    offers a table it claims was derived from Tata Tea Limited’s
    financials, without revealing what was left out and what was
    included in the data.   According to defendant, plaintiff offered
    no explanation as to how it constructed its submission.
    Defendant notes, moreover, that “Sea-line fails to explain how
    its alternative ‘Tata Tea Limited’ ratio would correct the
    alleged defect in Tata Tea’s consolidated statement.”   Def.’s
    Br. 27.   In other words, it was entirely unclear what was backed
    out of the complete Tata Tea statement and why.
    The court finds that it was reasonable for Commerce to
    reject plaintiff’s redacted Tata Tea data.   In the absence of
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 43
    any explanation of how the data in plaintiff’s proffered table
    was derived (i.e., what was included from the Tata Tea
    Consolidated data and what was left out), Commerce reasonably
    determined not to rely on it.   Plaintiff provided the table
    “[f]or the purpose of comparison.”   Pl.’s Second Case Br. 19.
    It is apparent, however, that no comparison can be made without
    a clear idea of how the table was constructed, and how it
    accomplished the purpose of being a more accurate representation
    of plaintiff’s business than Tata Tea’s consolidated statement.
    In light of Commerce’s reasonable criteria of “consider[ing] the
    quality and specificity of the statements,” Dorbest, 
    604 F.3d at 1374
    , it was reasonable for Commerce to conclude that the full
    Tata Tea financial statement, as published in its Annual Report,
    was more reliable than the subset extracted by plaintiff.
    For these reasons, the court finds that Sea-line has not
    demonstrated that its submission was the “best available
    information” on the record, and therefore Commerce’s decision to
    reject it was reasonable and supported by substantial evidence.
    2. Use of the Garlico Statement
    In addition to its objections to the use of the Tata Tea
    statement, plaintiff also argues for the use of the Garlico
    statement, stating that the “Garlico financial statements on the
    administrative record were more representative of Sea-line’s
    Court No. 10-00304                                           Page 44
    business during the [new shipper] POR than the financial
    statements of Tata Tea.”   Pl.’s Br. 26.   According to plaintiff,
    this is because Garlico “produces garlic-related products and
    engages in garlic production.   It is the most comparable company
    for surrogate financial ratios.”   Pl.’s First Case Br. 3.
    Defendant asserts, however, that “Sea-line . . . waived its
    Garlico argument when it failed to raise the argument in its
    case brief.   Accordingly, Commerce was under no obligation to
    further address the issue.”   Def.’s Br. 29.   Defendant-
    intervenors also take this position, stating that “the
    administrative record makes clear that Sea-line abandoned this
    [Garlico] argument during the proceedings before the Commerce
    Department” because
    Sea-line’s August 6, 2010 case brief contains no
    argumentation urging the Department to rely on the
    Garlico financial statements to calculate surrogate
    financial ratios in the final results. Thus, the only
    reasonable conclusion is that Sea-line abandoned its
    argument concerning Garlico’s financial statements and
    thereby failed to exhaust its administrative remedies
    with the Department.
    Def.-Ints.’ Br. 18–19 (internal citation omitted).
    In its First Case Brief, however, plaintiff did argue that
    the “Department Shall Select Garlico Industries Ltd. as
    Surrogate Company for Financial Ratios in the Final Results.”
    Pl.’s First Case Br. 12.   Even though the Department had both
    the Garlico’s financial statement and this argument before it,
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 45
    it is apparent that Commerce only addressed the arguments
    presented in plaintiff’s Second Case Brief, summarized as
    follows: “Sea-line contends the Department should not use Tata
    Tea’s financial ratios for the final results because: 1) in the
    past, the Department has found Tata Tea’s production process to
    be more comparable to that of peeled garlic, and 2) because Tata
    Tea’s financial ratios include products other than tea.”    Issues
    & Dec. Mem. at 9.    This is an accurate description of
    plaintiff’s objections as presented in its Second Case Brief,
    see Pl.’s Second Case Br. 17–19, but it does not explain why
    Commerce did not address the Garlico issue raised in plaintiff’s
    earlier papers.
    Plaintiff’s complete argument regarding Garlico in its
    First Case Brief is as follows:
    Sea-line submitted to the Department [the] financial
    ratios of Garlico. Garlico is a wholesaler dealing
    with various garlic products such as garlic slices,
    garlic flakes, raw garlic, garlic granules and garlic
    pow[d]er. Because of similar merchandise and business
    between Garlico and Sea-line, Garlico is the most
    comparable surrogate company in the current review.
    The Department shall select Garlico’s financial ratios
    as surrogate financial rates.
    Pl.’s First Case Brief 12 (internal citation omitted).
    The court holds that because plaintiff’s Garlico argument
    was raised in its First Case Brief, which Commerce did not
    reject, and thus that submission is part of the record, Commerce
    was obliged to evaluate the Garlico statement.   Therefore, the
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 46
    Department should have explained, and supported with substantial
    evidence, why the Tata Tea and Limtex statements were
    nonetheless the best available information, taking the Garlico
    financial statement into account.
    While Commerce made a threshold decision to use an average
    from two tea producers, not from garlic producers such as
    Garlico, this determination did not relieve Commerce of its
    responsibility to discuss its decision not to use the Garlico
    statement.   See Timken U.S. Corp. v. United States, 
    421 F.3d 1350
    , 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (“[I]t is well settled that an
    agency must explain its action with sufficient clarity to permit
    ‘effective judicial review.’” (quoting Camp v. Pitts, 
    411 U.S. 138
    , 142–43 (1973))); see also Dorbest Ltd. v. United States, 35
    CIT __, __, 
    755 F. Supp. 2d 1291
    , 1296 (2011) (“At a minimum, in
    making its data choices, [Commerce] must explain the standards
    it applied and make a rational connection between the standards
    and the conclusion.” (citing Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v.
    United States, 
    750 F.2d 927
    , 933 (Fed. Cir. 1984))).
    CONCLUSION AND ORDER
    Based on the foregoing, it is hereby
    ORDERED that plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the agency
    record is GRANTED, in part, and Commerce’s Final Results are
    REMANDED; it is further
    Court No. 10-00304                                          Page 47
    ORDERED that Commerce issue, upon remand, a redetermination
    that complies in all respects with this Opinion and Order, is
    based on determinations that are supported by substantial record
    evidence, and is in all respects in accordance with law; it is
    further
    ORDERED that Commerce, in preparing the Remand
    Redetermination, shall fully explain its decision to use the
    garlic bulb prices from the older 2007–2008 APMC Bulletin to
    value the whole garlic bulb, and fully explain why garlic bulb
    size is such an important factor that it justifies using prices
    outside of the POR; it is further
    ORDERED that Commerce, on remand, is directed to revisit
    its use of the Tata Tea financial statement and, if it continues
    to use the statement, explain why it constitutes the best
    available information, taking into account Commerce’s previous
    finding that it better reflects the production of peeled garlic,
    as distinct from the production of Sea-line’s whole garlic
    bulbs, and how its use satisfies Commerce’s regulation regarding
    the use of “information gathered from producers of identical or
    comparable merchandise”; it is further
    ORDERED that Commerce, in preparing the Remand
    Redetermination, shall evaluate the Garlico statement submitted
    by plaintiff, and determine if it constitutes the best available
    information for use, either by itself or together with the other
    Court No. 10-00304                                                                                       Page 48
    financial statements, to calculate the surrogate financial
    ratios; it is further
    ORDERED that Commerce file the Remand Results on or before
    July 23, 2012; it is further
    ORDERED that Comments to the Remand Results shall be due
    thirty (30) days following the filing of the Remand Results; it
    is further
    ORDERED that Replies to such Comments shall be due fifteen
    (15) days following the filing of the Comments.
    /s/ Richard K. Eaton
    Richard K. Eaton
    Dated:                     March 21, 2012
    New York, New York
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 10-00304

Citation Numbers: 2012 CIT 39

Filed Date: 3/21/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/25/2018

Authorities (23)

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Hebei New Donghua Amino Acid Co. v. United States , 29 Ct. Int'l Trade 603 ( 2005 )

Dorbest Ltd. v. United States , 30 Ct. Int'l Trade 1671 ( 2006 )

Shanghai Foreign Trade Enterprises Co., Ltd. v. United ... , 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 480 ( 2004 )

Anshan Iron & Steel Co., Ltd. v. United States , 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 1728 ( 2004 )

Qvd Food Co., Ltd. v. United States , 658 F.3d 1318 ( 2011 )

Sandvik Steel Company v. United States, Fujitsu Ten ... , 164 F.3d 596 ( 1998 )

Allied Pacific Food (Dalian) Co. Ltd. v. United States , 30 Ct. Int'l Trade 736 ( 2006 )

Qvd Food Co., Ltd. v. United States , 34 Ct. Int'l Trade 1166 ( 2010 )

Fujian Lianfu Forestry Co., Ltd. v. United States , 33 Ct. Int'l Trade 1056 ( 2009 )

Tianjin MacHinery Import & Export Corp. v. United States , 16 Ct. Int'l Trade 931 ( 1992 )

Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Assn. of United States, Inc. v. State ... , 103 S. Ct. 2856 ( 1983 )

Camp v. Pitts , 93 S. Ct. 1241 ( 1973 )

Sage Products, Inc. v. Devon Industries, Inc., Defendant/... , 126 F.3d 1420 ( 1997 )

Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. v. The United ... , 750 F.2d 927 ( 1984 )

Dorbest Ltd. v. United States , 755 F. Supp. 2d 1291 ( 2011 )

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

Ta Chen Stainless Steel Pipe, Ltd. v. United States , 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 627 ( 2004 )

Stephen W. Richey v. United States , 322 F.3d 1317 ( 2003 )

cemex-sa-v-the-united-states-and-the-ad-hoc-committee-of-az-nm-tx-fl , 133 F.3d 897 ( 1998 )

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