Swiff-Train Co. v. United States , 999 F. Supp. 2d 1334 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •                                         Slip Op. 14 - 82
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    :
    SWIFF-TRAIN CO., METROPOLITAN          :
    HARDWOOD FLOORS, INC., BR CUSTOM :
    SURFACE, REAL WOOD FLOORS, LLC,        :
    GALLEHER CORP. and DPR                 :
    INTERNATIONAL, LLC,                    :
    :
    Plaintiffs,  :
    :
    v.                   :            Before: R. Kenton Musgrave, Senior Judge
    :
    UNITED STATES,                         :            Court No. 12-00010
    :
    Defendant,   :
    :
    and                   :
    :
    COALITION FOR                          :
    AMERICAN HARDWOOD PARITY,              :
    :
    Defendant-Intervenor. :
    :
    OPINION
    [Sustaining administrative material injury redetermination in antidumping and countervailing duty
    investigations of multilayered wood flooring from the People’s Republic of China.]
    Decided: July 16, 2014
    William E. Perry and Emily Lawson, Dorsey & Whitney, LLP, of Seattle, WA, for the
    plaintiffs.
    Mary Jane Alves, Attorney, Office of the General Counsel, U.S. International Trade
    Commission, of Washington, DC, for the defendant. With her on the brief were Dominic L. Bianchi,
    General Counsel, Neal J. Reynolds, Assistant General Counsel, and Robin L. Turner, Attorney.
    Jeffrey S. Levin, Levin Trade Law, P.C., of Bethesda, MD, for the defendant-intervenor.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                           Page 2
    Musgrave, Senior Judge: This opinion considers the Remand Views1 of the U.S.
    International Trade Commission (“Commission” or “ITC”) in response to Slip Op. 13-38, 37 CIT
    ___, 
    904 F. Supp. 2d 1336
     (Mar. 20, 2013), addressing certain of the Commission’s material injury
    determinations in the investigations of multilayered wood flooring (“MLWF”) from the People’s
    Republic of China (“PRC”).2 Familiarity with that opinion is presumed. Remanded were (1) the
    decision not to investigate domestic producers of hardwood plywood used for flooring, (2) findings
    on the issue of price suppression/depression, and (3) the impact the subject imports had on the
    domestic industry in light of the collapse of the housing market during the period of investigation.
    Addressing those issues in its Remand Views, the Commission has again determined the domestic
    MLWF industry materially injured by reason of subject MLWF imports. After hearing oral argument
    on the parties’ comments on June 24, 2014, the court must conclude that the Remand Views comply
    with the orders of remand and sustain the material injury determination.
    Discussion
    I
    On remand, the Commission reopened the record to solicit domestic MLWF
    production responses from 20 U.S. hardwood plywood manufacturers. See Multilayered Wood
    Flooring from [the PRC], 
    78 Fed. Reg. 30329
     (USITC May 22, 2013) (solicitation of participation
    in remand proceeding). Written comments on remand were limited to the remanded issues,
    interested parties to the original investigations who participate in the present action, and any new
    1
    PDoc 310R (Oct. 17, 2013), CDoc 555R (Oct. 18, 2013).
    2
    See Multilayered Wood Flooring from [the PRC], Inv. Nos. 701-TA-476 and 731-TA-1179
    (Final), USITC Pub. 4278 (Dec. 2011), PDoc 283 (Dec. 16, 2011).
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                             Page 3
    information obtained by the Commission not through the comment process. The Commission denied
    the request of the U.S. importers, plaintiffs herein, to release a draft producer questionnaire for
    comment, and the Commission here maintains that its definition of the domestic MLWF industry
    as investigated in the original investigations is supported by the record. The court finds that to be
    the case.
    The plaintiffs contend that the Remand Views are procedurally deficient, that as a
    matter of due process they should have been allowed to offer input into the tailoring of the questions
    posed to the domestic hardwood plywood producers upon the reopening of the record. Pls’
    Comments at 7-8. The Commission avers that it simply followed its usual approach for remands and
    that its rules do not require soliciting input on questionnaires issued during remand proceedings.
    Given the record and the parties’ representations, the court cannot find procedural abuse of discretion
    in the Commission’s interpretation of the remand orders and its undertakings thereon.
    Substantively, the plaintiffs complain that the remand questionnaire issued to the
    domestic hardwood plywood producers was simply the same language that appeared in the original
    questionnaire issued to the domestic MLWF industry insofar as it included “just the domestic
    industry definition (i.e., the scope definition)”.3 Noting in their comments that the domestic
    hardwood plywood industry definition explicitly excluded certain hardwood plywood product that
    is subject to and covered by the MLWF orders, i.e., hardwood plywood product that is “unfinished”
    3
    Cf., e.g., scope definition for Hardwood Plywood from [the PRC], Inv. Nos. 701-TA-490
    and 731-TA-1204 (Final), USITC Pub. 4434 at I-7 (Nov. 2013) (“Hardwood and decorative plywood
    is a flat panel composed of an assembly of two or more layers or plies of wood veneers in
    combination with a core. The veneers, along with the core, are glued or otherwise bonded together
    to form a finished product. . . .”) (italics added) with scope definition for MLWF from the PRC.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                              Page 4
    MLWF or suitable for flooring and falls within the scope of the MLWF investigations, and
    emphasizing at oral argument that U.S. Customs and Border Protection has been “stopping” certain
    imports of hardwood plywood on the ground that it could be suitable for use as MLWF, the plaintiffs
    argue that the queried domestic producers of hardwood plywood may not have understood or
    appreciated the inclusiveness of what actually constitutes the scope of the domestic like product, i.e.,
    that the domestic hardwood plywood producers (or the Commission) may not have properly imputed
    “used for MLWF” when answering (or asking) the relevant question, and also that the Commission
    failed to properly ask or consider if their product “is suitable for that use.” Pls’ Comments at 9.
    On this point, the court must conclude the plaintiffs’ contentions both speculative and
    in conflict with their previous argument on administrative exhaustion. The prior opinion considered
    the plaintiffs’ arguments into investigating potential “producers of the domestic hardwood plywood
    industry used for flooring as part of the domestic like product industry” sufficient for purposes of
    exhaustion, 37 CIT at ___, 904 F. Supp. 2d at 1340, and given the overlap in the definition of
    MLWF and hardwood plywood4 the court deemed the Commission’s explanation of why it had not
    investigated hardwood plywood suitable for use as MLWF flooring (i.e., potentially “unfinished”
    MLWF) insufficiently responsive to the question posed by the plaintiff regarding the scope of the
    domestic MLWF industry. Id. at ___, 904 F. Supp. 2d at 1342. On remand, however, the
    Commission had discretion over what additional information to solicit from the identified domestic
    hardwood plywood producers in upholding its duty to take Commerce’s determination on the scope
    of subject imports at face value in order to define the domestic like product. See, e.g., Federal
    4
    I.e., because “plywood always has an outer veneer, and thus could fall within the scope’s
    definition of MLWF”. 37 CIT at ___, 904 F. Supp. 2d at 1342.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                                Page 5
    Power Commission v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp., 
    423 U.S. 326
    , 333 (1976). Cf. USEC,
    Inc. v. United States, 34 Fed. App’x 725, 730 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (“it is Commerce’s investigation that
    defines the scope of the ITC’s analysis”).5 The plaintiff was provided the opportunity to comment
    on the original questionnaire and instructions at the outset of the investigation,6 and in the instruction
    booklet accompanying the 30-page U.S. Producer Questionnaire issued in the remand proceedings
    (based upon the original MLWF industry questionnaire), the domestic like product definition is
    restated co-extensively with the scope of the investigations. The questionnaire asked, inter alia,
    “Has your firm produced multilayered wood flooring (as defined in the instruction booklet) at any
    time between January 1, 2008 and June 2011?” CDoc 556R (June 26, 2013). For the purpose of
    answering, the questionnaire referred the recipient to the instruction booklet.
    Despite the apparent overlap of hardwood plywood and MLWF in the scope
    definition of MLWF,7 during the remand proceedings none of the 20 domestic producers of
    hardwood responded that they manufactured product used for flooring. The plaintiffs do not explain
    why domestic hardwood plywood producers would be, or should be presumed to be,
    unknowledgeable regarding what constitutes either an “unfinished” MLWF product or a product
    5
    Cf. 
    id.
    6
    Cf. CDoc 555R at 11 n.37, citing PDoc 298R (June 26, 2013) in noting that the
    Commission had considered the plaintiffs’ “letter, the schedule for these proceedings, and
    information on the record of these proceedings”.
    7
    See, e.g., 37 CIT at ___, 904 F. Supp.2d at 1341-42. The Commission’s explanation was
    that “whereas the scope does not include hardwood plywood for flooring or the veneers peeled from
    plywood or logs, it does, for example, include as unfinished MLWF those products manufactured
    by pressing one or more layers of wood veneer to a hardwood plywood core that may or may not yet
    have a tongue and groove or click-and-lock profile, stain, and/or finish”. Id. at __, 904 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1341 (bracketing removed, italics added).
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                             Page 6
    suitable for use as MLWF (and “irrespective” of the actual uses to which their hardwood plywood
    product are put8), nor do they explain why those producers as a whole9 should be singled out, of
    domestic like product, for special questionnaire treatment within the domestic MLWF industry. The
    court therefore finds that the Commission properly complied with the order of remand on this issue.
    II
    The Commission was also asked on remand to make explicit its findings on the effect
    of the subject imports on the price suppression/depression factors. On remand, the Commission
    found evidence that the subject imports depressed prices of the domestic like product, although it
    did not find “significant” price suppression. See Remand Views at 23. The Commission based its
    finding of price depression on the traditional pricing data for one pricing product as well as
    supplemental pricing data, on purchaser questionnaire responses, and on confirmed lost revenue
    allegations. CDoc 555R at 19-20. It found both traditional and supplemental pricing data showing
    overall declines in domestic like product prices in the face of significant underselling by subject
    imports from the PRC. Id. at 31-32; CDoc507 (Oct. 27, 2011) at Tables V-1--V-8; CDoc 525 (Dec.
    8
    The plaintiffs explain that since end-use certifications were not required for the subject
    imports, the actual use of the product is not a “defining characteristic” in the identification of the
    domestic like product, which is co-extensive with the scope language.
    9
    The plaintiffs argue that two domestic hardwood plywood producers’ denials of MLWF
    production conflicts with the record of their actual product. Cf., CDoc 482 (Oct. 4, 2011) at 5-9,
    n.11-20 & Ex. 3-9; CDoc 496 (Oct. 19, 2011) at 14-15 and n.38; CDoc 548R (July 12, 2013) at 6.
    The court cannot conclude, however, that the confidential information of record to which the
    plaintiffs point, and their interpretation of it, amounts to “more than a mere scintilla”, Universal
    Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 
    340 U.S. 474
    , 477 (1951), demonstrating that the Commission did not take
    into account “whatever in the record fairly detracts from its weight”, 
    id. at 487
    , in its definition of
    domestic MLWF industry and its determination not to include any member of the domestic
    hardwood plywood industry therein.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                            Page 7
    5, 2011) (majority views) at 44, n.202; CDoc 553R (Oct. 18, 2013). Between 2008 and 2010, the
    supplemental pricing data showed “overall declines in prices of the domestic like product for birch,
    hickory, maple, oak, red oak, and walnut as well as overall declines in prices of the domestic like
    product for birch products, hickory products, maple products, oak products, and walnut products.”
    CL555R at 20; CL525 at 44 n.202. The Commission found further “[e]vidence from purchasers’
    questionnaires . . . indicat[ing] that domestic producers were forced to lower prices to compete with
    low-priced imports of MLWF from subject producers in [the PRC].” CL555R at 20 (citing CL525
    at 45 n.204); CL507 at V-26-V-27 (seven of eight responding purchasers reported that domestic
    producers reduced prices to compete with prices of MLWF from the PRC). The Commission found
    that purchaser confirmations of domestic producers’ lost revenue allegations further demonstrated
    that the domestic industry lowered prices due to low-priced imports of MLWF from the PRC. CDoc
    555R at 20; CDoc525 at 45; CDoc 507 (Oct. 27, 2011) (final staff report) at V-27, V-29.
    The plaintiffs argue that the Commission’s analysis improperly emphasizes
    traditional pricing data for one product. The foregoing, however, indicates more than mere emphasis
    on traditional pricing for one product. As requested, furthermore, the Commission also addressed
    the Dissenting Commissioner’s analysis of the issue, CDoc 555R at 20-23, and the majority found
    that the record showed “domestically produced MLWF faced competition from a large and growing
    volume of substitutable MLWF that was lower priced and that the domestic industry lowered its
    prices”, id. at 19-20. See also CDoc 525 at 44 & n.202; CDoc 553R. In the case of hand-scraped
    products, the Commission found that both the traditional and supplemental pricing data showed
    nearly universal underselling of the domestic like product by subject imports, and that declines in
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                                Page 8
    domestic like product prices exceeded any decline during this period in the cost of raw materials
    used to manufacture MLWF. The Commission concluded that the domestic industry’s lowering of
    its prices for these hand-scraped products by more than its cost declines demonstrated that these
    price declines were not due to lower demand, the severe economic downturn, or fluctuating raw
    material costs, but instead corresponded to the significant and significantly increasing volume of
    low-priced subject imports. CDoc 555R at 20, 32; CDoc 525 at 31, 40, 43-45 & nn.141, 149, 189,
    200, 203-05; CDoc 507 at V-1, V-26--V-27, V-29, Table V-1; CDoc 553R at question 2.
    In the final analysis, substantial evidence in the record supports the Commission’s
    price effects analysis. It, too, must therefore be sustained.10
    10
    In passing, the Commission contends that in situations where there has been significant
    underselling by subject imports, where this underselling has enabled subject imports to maintain and
    gain market share at the domestic industry’s expense, and where a significant and significantly
    increasing volume of subject imports has adversely impacted the domestic industry, the Commission
    is not required to find that there also is significant price depression or significant price suppression.
    ITC Resp. to Pls’ Comments on Remand Determinations at 18, referencing CDoc 555R at 17-18 &
    CDoc 525 at 34-54 (emphasis omitted). The Commission explains that under the statute, a lack of
    price depression and/or price suppression does not preclude a finding of adverse price effects based
    on significant underselling, nor does it prevent it from making affirmative determinations if the
    significant underselling enables subject imports to maintain a significant volume in the U.S. market
    and/or to increase significantly. Id., referencing CDoc 555R at 17-18. The Commission points out
    that since its finding of significant underselling by a significant volume of subject imports was
    sustained in the prior opinion, its price effects analysis should also be sustained on that basis. Id.
    at 18-19 & n.21, referencing, inter alia, U.S. Steel Group v. United States, 
    96 F.3d 1352
    , 1364-65
    (1996) (if substantial evidence supports the Commission’s determinations as a whole they are to be
    sustained even if one or more findings are unsupported by substantial evidence), Grupo Industrial
    Camesa v. United States, 
    85 F.3d 1577
    , 1582 (Fed. Cir. 1996), & CDoc 555R at 17-18, 23.
    However, the precise issue of price depression and suppression was not apparently presented in
    Grupo, see also 
    18 CIT 461
    , 
    853 F. Supp. 440
     (1994), and notwithstanding the Commission’s
    position here, “[s]ection 1677(7)(C)(ii) requires the Commission to undertake two distinct analyses
    to examine (1) the significance of underselling and (2) the causal connection between subject imports
    and price depression and/or suppression”, which are “two statutorily-mandated discrete inquiries”.
    Altx, Inc. v. United States, 
    25 CIT 1100
    , 1109, 1110, 
    167 F. Supp. 2d 1353
    , 1365 (2001). See also
    (continued...)
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                                Page 9
    III
    The court also remanded for fuller examination of causation in accordance with 19
    U.S.C. §1673d(b), specifically with regard to “the effect that the severe disruption of the home
    building and remodeling industries had on the domestic like product industry” in the determination
    of whether subject imports were the material cause of injury.
    A
    The Remand Views interpret that order as follows:
    We understand our burden under Mittal Steel Point Lisas Ltd. v. United States, 
    542 F.3d 867
     (Fed. Cir. 2008), is to identify substantial evidence in the record
    demonstrating the domestic industry is materially injured by reason of subject
    imports notwithstanding any record evidence of other factors that might also be
    having adverse effects on the industry at the same time. While the type of analysis
    posited by respondents might be one way to conduct such an inquiry, the Federal
    Circuit has been clear in holding that the Commission has discretion in choosing its
    methodology for assessing causation and need not follow any rigid formula, such as
    that proposed by respondents. . . . Congress has delegated this finding to the
    Commission because of the agency’s institutional expertise in resolving injury issues.
    . . . As the Federal Circuit also has made clear, since the statute does not define the
    phrase “by reason of,” the question of whether the injury to the domestic industry by
    subject imports satisfies the material injury threshold notwithstanding any injury
    from other factors falls within the Commission’s discretion and is reviewable under
    the substantial-evidence standard.
    Remand Views at 33 n.142.
    According to the plaintiffs, this statement demonstrates the Commission’s
    determination to avoid the duty to undertake “but for” causation analysis, which is not simply a “type
    of analysis” they “posited” but a requirement under law. E.g., Pls’ Comments at 20, referencing
    10
    (...continued)
    Nucor Corp. v. United States, 
    414 F.3d 1331
    , 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2005). In any case, the Commission’s
    clarification of its position on remand is helpful. Cf. Altx, Inc. v. United States, 
    370 F.3d 1108
    , 1117
    (Fed. Cir. 2004).
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                            Page 10
    Mittal Steel, supra, Bratsk Aluminum Smelter v. United States, 
    444 F. 3d 1369
     (Fed. Cir. 2006), and
    Gerald Metals, Inc. v. United States, 
    132 F.3d 716
    , 722 (Fed. Cir. 1997).
    The court disagrees with the plaintiffs’ characterization in part. The reference to
    “type of analysis posited” refers to the “natural experiment”11 the respondents proffered, not “but
    for” analysis per se. That appears plain from the Commission’s expression of its discretion over
    causation methodology for its findings of fact and from the reference to the reviewing standard of
    “substantial evidence” on the record.
    The defendant-intervenor argues the Commission should not have been required to
    perform a “but for” test of causation at all, since the cases upon which the plaintiffs rely all turned
    on the fact that the subject imports were commodity products in markets also consisting of fairly
    traded and price-competitive non-subject imports, and the Commission determined that MLWF is
    not a commodity product.12 If “but for” methodology was in fact the functional equivalent of a
    compulsory legal standard, it argues, the Federal Circuit would not have couched the mode of
    analysis as a “not necessarily dispositive, but important” analytical framework. Rather, the
    defendant-intervenor argues the “controlling standard” of 19 U.S.C. §1516a(b)(1)(B) is whether the
    “causative connection between subject imports and the condition of the domestic industry -- i.e., the
    ‘by reason of’ portion of the statute -- is established by substantial evidence on the record and is
    otherwise in accordance with law”. Def-Int’s Comments at 7-9, referencing, inter alia, Mittal Steel,
    11
    The plaintiffs attribute the term to Commissioner Pinkert’s characterization of the period
    from 2009 onward. Pl’s comments at 25, referencing PDoc 202 (Oct. 14, 2011) at 86-87.
    12
    A commodity product is one that is “generally interchangeable regardless of its source.”
    Bratsk, 
    444 F.3d at 1371
    .
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                             Page 11
    
    542 F.3d at 874-75
    . See PDoc 283 at 5-6, 28-31, 33-34, 53. This argument, however, does not
    appear to distinguish between the legal standard for cause-in-fact under 19 U.S.C. §1673d(b)(1),
    which is necessarily governed by the “in accordance with law” aspect of 19 U.S.C.
    §1516a(b)(1)(B)(i), and the “substantial” standard for the evidence necessary to support findings on
    cause-in-fact. The court will attempt to clarify.
    Broadly speaking, the Federal Circuit has interpreted section 1673d(b) as equivalent
    to the “substantial factor” test of causation-in-fact. See, e.g., Mittal Steel, 
    542 F.3d at 879
     (“Bratsk
    . . . required the Commission to consider the ‘but for’ causation analysis in fulfilling its statutory
    duty to determine whether the subject imports were a substantial factor in the injury to the domestic
    industry, as opposed to a merely ‘incidental, tangential, or trivial’ factor”) (italics added), quoting
    Nippon Steel Corp. v. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 
    345 F.3d 1379
    , 1381 (Fed. Cir. 2003). “Substantial
    factor” analysis subsumes “but for” causation analysis, albeit with multiple acts and effects for
    consideration.13 Thus, “inquiry into ‘but for’ causation [i]s a proper part of the Commission’s
    13
    See Restatement (Second) of Torts §431 (1965); W. P. Keaton, D. Dobbs, R. Keeton, D.
    Owen, Prosser & Keeton on Torts (5th ed. 1984) §41, p. 265; see, e.g., June v. Union Carbide Corp.,
    
    577 F.3d 1234
    , 1247 (10th Cir. 2009); Shawmut Bank, N.A. v. Kress Assoc’s, 
    33 F.3d 1477
    , 1495
    (9th Cir. 1994). “The word ‘substantial’ is used to denote the fact that the defendant’s conduct has
    such an effect in producing the harm as to lead reasonable men to regard it as a cause, using that
    word in the popular sense, in which there always lurks the idea of responsibility, rather than in the
    so-called ‘philosophic sense’ which includes every one of the great number of events without which
    any happening would not have occurred.” Comments to §431. In tandem, it will be noted that
    although “material” modifies the “injury” language of 19 U.S.C. §1673d(b) and not the cause-in-fact
    language (i.e, “by reason of”), Mittal and Nippon have effectively equated the “substantial” of
    “substantial factor” analysis with “material” with regard to injury. Cf. 
    542 F.3d at 879
     (“incidental,
    tangential, or trivial”) with 
    19 U.S.C. §1677
    (7)(A) (“‘material injury’ means harm which is not
    inconsequential, immaterial, or unimportant”). That is consistent with the “substantial factor” test,
    which effectively melds cause-in-fact and legal or “proximate” cause into an encompassing analysis.
    See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Torts § 431. The court’s prior opinion on the subject, see 37 CIT
    (continued...)
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                                Page 12
    responsibility to determine whether the injury to the domestic industry is ‘by reason of’ the subject
    imports.” Mittal, 
    542 F.3d at 877
    . In other words, if the Commission undertakes a proper
    “substantial factor” analysis and finds subject imports the legal cause of material injury, then the
    Commission has, perforce, necessarily determined that subject imports are the “but for” cause of
    injury. But, the converse does not follow: if the record or its analysis is unclear as to a not-
    immaterial factor’s impact on material injury, or if its consideration has been omitted altogether, then
    the legality of the causation analysis is thrown into doubt. See, e.g., Bratsk.14 To that extent, at least,
    the plaintiffs were and are correct: a finding of cause-in-fact must express, at a minimum (and
    howsoever expressed), the fundamental sufficiency of a “but for” analysis.15 See Bowman Transp.,
    Inc. v. Arkansas-Best Freight Sys., Inc., 
    419 U.S. 281
    , 286 (1974) (agency decisions of less than
    ideal clarity will be upheld if the agency’s path may reasonably be discerned).
    13
    (...continued)
    at ___, 904 F. Supp. 2d at 1347, was for a record that would reflect distinct analysis of both cause-in-
    fact and legal cause nonetheless.
    14
    Subsequent elucidation in Mittal Steel on Bratsk explained that “[a]n important element
    of the causation inquiry -- not necessarily dispositive, but important -- is whether the subject imports
    are the ‘but for’ cause of the injury to the domestic injury”. Mittal Steel, 
    542 F.3d at 876
    . Such
    elucidation simply reflects the minimum required to support the legal sufficiency of any finding of
    cause-in-fact. See, e.g., Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 
    490 U.S. 228
    , 240 (1989); The Adeline, 
    9 Cranch 244
    , 257 (1815).
    15
    It was for that reason that, although a decision on the Commission’s finding that MLFW
    is not a commodity product was deferred and the finding on non-substitution of subject MLWF and
    other flooring products was sustained, see 37 CIT at ___ n.5 & ___ n.9, 904 F. Supp. 2d at 1342 n.5
    & 1347 n.9, the matter was remanded, in order to address the plaintiffs’ broader argument
    concerning the effect of demand elasticity on causation, and the tectonic shock of the recent Great
    Recession upon the housing market, as the prior views of the Commission did not appear to have
    made an adequate causal analysis in those respects, see id. at ___, 904 F. Supp. 2d at 1347-48.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                          Page 13
    In this matter, the Commission has properly framed the legal basis upon which to
    determine whether subject imports are the cause-in-fact of material injury, to wit, “notwithstanding
    any injury from other factors”. That is an obvious expression of a “but for” cause-in-fact inquiry.
    Cf. Mittal, 
    542 F.3d at
    879 n.2 (summarizing remarks of two former commissioners). The question
    then becomes whether the Commission has properly isolated subject imports and considered the
    impact of those other factors in context when reaching the conclusion that subject imports are a “but
    for” cause of injury. See 37 CIT at ___, 904 F. Supp. 2d at 1348.
    B
    On the methodological and factual sufficiency of the Commission’s analysis, the
    plaintiffs argue the Commission has merely paid lip-service to “but for” causation. They contend
    their particular “natural experiment” data demonstrates the fallacies of the Remand Views on “but
    for” causation, even as they acknowledge that their argument invades to a degree the traditional
    realm of the fact finder. See Pls’ Comments at 16 (the Commission “has discretion on how to apply
    the methodology to be used to determine whether the ‘but for’ causation standard is met”).
    The validity of methodology depends upon the circumstance of the particular fact to
    be proven. “[C]ourts must accord deference to the agency in its selection and development of proper
    methodologies”, Thai Pineapple Pub. Co. v. United States, 
    187 F.3d 1362
    , 1365 (Fed. Cir.1999)
    (italics added), but that, of course, merely begs the question. In the general international trade
    context, methodology is reviewed depending upon type under either or both the “substantial evidence
    of record” and “in accordance with law” standard(s) of 19 U.S.C. §1516a(b)(1)(B)(i). An analytic
    construct drawn from a fact finder’s a priori knowledge, for example, is generally reviewed for
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                            Page 14
    reasonableness under the “in accordance with law” provision. Methodological validity may also be
    revealed from any “feedback” from the record or the parties, e.g., in light of the reasonableness of
    the conclusion to which the method leads when assessing the substantiality of the evidence of record
    supporting or detracting from the conclusion, i.e., the “substantial evidence” standard. See generally,
    e.g., Hynix Semiconductor, Inc. v. United States, 
    424 F.3d 1363
    , 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2005); Mid
    Continent Nail Corp. v. United States, 34 CIT ___, ___, 
    712 F. Supp. 2d 1370
    , 1377-78 (2010);
    Micron Tech., Inc. v. United States, 
    19 CIT 829
    , 835-36, 
    893 F. Supp. 21
    , 30 (1995); Ceramica
    Regiomontana, S.A. v. United States, 
    10 CIT 399
    , 405, 
    636 F. Supp. 961
    , 966 (1986). Here, so long
    as the method chosen reasonably addresses the “but for” question of causation relevant to the
    material injury issue (i.e., “by reason of”), the Commission’s discretion over the method employed
    will be sustained. If the methodology is valid, then the question simply resolves to whether analysis
    of the substantiality of the evidence of record supports the conclusion drawn.
    1
    The Commission found from the period of investigation (“POI”) that
    but for the unfairly traded subject MLWF imports from [the PRC] in the U.S. market
    during the POI, the domestic industry would have been materially better off both
    during the housing market collapse and during the developing recovery that followed.
    On remand, we therefore affirm the conclusion that subject imports of MLWF from
    [the PRC] had a significant adverse impact on the domestic industry during the POI.
    Remand Views at 47.16
    16
    The Commission further states that in accordance with the court’s remand instructions,
    it has evaluated in detail the impact of the subject imports on the domestic industry within the
    context of the business cycle and conditions of competition that are distinctive to the affected
    industry, and that the Commission specifically addressed the economic impact issues identified as
    affecting the domestic like product industry in the Dissenting Views of the initial determination. See
    (continued...)
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                            Page 15
    This conclusion is drawn from findings on a number of factors: (i) subject imports
    and the domestic like product competed in the U.S. market primarily based on price; (ii) traditional
    quarterly pricing data indicated that subject imports of MLWF undersold the domestic like product
    throughout the POI; (iii) low-priced subject imports gained sales and market share directly at the
    domestic industry’s expense; (iv) by underselling the domestic like product at significant margins
    while selling products that were highly substitutable for the domestic like product and competing
    in the same geographic markets and channels of distribution, subject imports were able to maintain
    a significant volume in both absolute terms and relative to consumption in the United States, increase
    significantly relative to domestic production, and capture significant market share from the domestic
    industry; (v) subject “low-priced imports of MLWF” have depressed prices of the domestic like
    product in the U.S. market; and (vi) such low-priced, directly competitive subject imports had a
    materially injurious impact on the domestic industry. Id. at 28-36.
    More precisely, for the period January 2008-June 2011, the Commission found that
    demand declined by 9.2 percent but that the declines in many of the domestic industry’s performance
    indicators generally exceeded the decline in demand and were indicative of the industry’s poor
    performance. CDoc 555R at 43-44; CDoc 554R (Oct. 17, 2013) (noting, e.g., that the domestic
    industry’s U.S. shipments, production, net sales quantities, and net sales values declined
    substantially). Subject import market share increased significantly by underselling at significant
    margins and regardless of demand conditions. The subject imports’ U.S. shipments declined overall,
    but the decline was significantly less than the decline in demand, indicating that subject imports were
    16
    (...continued)
    Remand Views at 43-46; see also infra.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                         Page 16
    able to significantly increase their market share of the U.S. market over the course of the POI.
    Importantly, the Commission found that the domestic industry’s loss of market share to unfairly
    traded subject imports that significantly undersold the domestic like product throughout the POI was
    not a function of any declines in demand. CDoc 555R at 44; CDoc 525 at 35, 45, 48-49, 53-54.
    Focusing on demand between 2008 and 2009, the Commission found that the
    domestic industry’s already poor condition worsened in 2009, as declines in the domestic industry’s
    2008 to 2009 performance indicator generally exceeded the 15.7 percent decline in demand between
    2008 and 2009. CDoc 555R at 44-45; CDoc 525 at 48-49; CDoc 554R (noting that the domestic
    industry’s U.S. shipments, production, net sales quantities and net sales values declined
    substantially). Subject imports’ overall decline in U.S. shipments was less than the decline in
    demand. As a result, during this period of declining demand, subject imports had significantly
    increased their share of the U.S. market. CDoc 555R at 45 & n.198; CDoc 525 at 35, 48-49; CDoc
    554R. Accordingly, the domestic industry’s loss of market share to unfairly traded subject imports
    that significantly undersold the domestic like product between 2008 and 2009 could not be described
    as a function of demand. Thus, notwithstanding the demand decline between 2008 and 2009 and an
    overall demand decline during the POI, subject imports from the PRC “had a material impact on the
    domestic industry” during this period. CDoc 555R at 45; CDoc 525 at 49.
    The Commission also focused on the relative effects of subject imports and demand
    during the January 2009 to June 2011 period, and found that during this period some of the domestic
    industry’s performance factors indicated apparent U.S. consumption improvement but that they
    generally lagged the overall improvement in market demand during a time when subject imports
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                           Page 17
    continued to increase their market share by significantly underselling the domestic like product; that
    U.S. consumption apparently increased 7.8 percent between 2009 and 2010, but that the domestic
    industry’s U.S. shipments of MLWF and net sales quantity increased only marginally and its net
    sales value actually declined. CDoc 555R at 45-46 & n.204; CDoc 525 at 46-54; CDoc 554R. The
    domestic industry disproportionately bore the burden of economic downturns during these periods,
    did not share proportionately in market improvements, consistently suffered losses and experienced
    steep employment and wage declines. General market demand conditions did not adequately explain
    the changes in the domestic industry’s indicators at the end of the POI. CDoc 555R at 46.
    The Commission further concluded that the apparent improvement in the domestic
    industry’s negative performance at the end of the POI was due less to enhanced sales related to a
    general economic recovery than to the “severe measures” the domestic industry undertook to remain
    competitive in the face of significant low-priced subject imports. Specifically, the Commission
    found that the domestic industry’s apparent financial improvements were driven in large part by
    partial abandonment of domestic production in favor of low-cost subject imports, asset impairments,
    and significant SG&A cost cutting while operating at low capacity. The domestic industry slashed
    SG&A expenses, decreased its unit cost of goods sold, undertook asset impairments, laid off
    workers, and actually furthered the increase in subject imports from the PRC. The financial data also
    reflected the benefit but not the cost of such partial production abandonment. CDoc 555R at 46-47
    & n.207; CDoc 525 at 47-54. Thus, the Commission found that the decline in the domestic
    industry’s financial losses at the end of the POI did not “sever” any causal connection between the
    domestic industry’s condition and subject imports. CDoc 555R at 47; CDoc 525 at 49-52.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                            Page 18
    2
    The plaintiffs argue the Commission’s “but for” methodology is legally
    unsupportable, and they complain they are being “penalized for the collapse in demand that occurred
    in 2008.” They allege the Commission disregarded the data of the “natural experiment” of the period
    2009 through the end of the POI, June 2011, to which they pointed on remand and during the
    investigation; and they argue their submission thereon in its own right proves the Commission’s
    causation analysis is irrational. See, e.g., Pls’ Comments at 20.
    The plaintiffs contend the “natural experiment” data shows the following (court’s
    omissions here of citations to the administrative record): (i) shipments to the U.S. market of both the
    U.S. like product and subject imports increased; (ii) flooring demand in the United States
    substantially stabilized or declined only slightly (albeit at a level far below 2008 and earlier years,
    which the plaintiffs contend provides an unfair comparison); (iii) U.S. producer prices for U.S.
    shipments overall were essentially flat, fluctuating very modestly, but ending the period effectively
    where they began; (iv) U.S. industry performance, including shipments and profitability, improved
    sharply, in that the industry’s operating income margin improved by 3.4 percentage points from 2008
    to 2009, and by 2.1 percentage points from interim 2010 to interim 2011. Pls’ Comments at 25-26.
    The plaintiffs contend that the difference between observed industry performance during the POI and
    this “counterfactual state” is what constitutes the “legally cognizable” effects on the U.S. industry
    that are “by reason of” the subject imports, and that the Commission must determine the extent to
    which, in order to properly determine whether, they are materially injurious. They contend their
    effort relies “in full” on all of the pricing data submitted through the original U.S. Producers’
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                           Page 19
    Questionnaires, and they accuse the Commission of “cherry picking” that fails to consider the
    administrative record as a whole,17 with especial reliance on “product 7” in which underselling
    occurred “to support a biased analysis of pricing.” Id. n.16. “Thus, even if imports have not had an
    adverse impact overall, prices of imports of some products may be below U.S. producer prices, or
    declining in relation to those prices -- as long as prices of imports of other products are above U.S.
    producer prices or increasing.” Id. The decline in U.S. producer prices from 2009 onwards was not
    the result of increased subject imports or due to increasing demand, they contend, because flooring
    demand generally declined only slightly during this period. If imports affected prices during a period
    of stable-to-declining demand, they continue, then an increase in subject import sales in the U.S.
    market would necessarily have resulted in lower U.S. prices. The only other possible analytic
    explanation, according to the plaintiffs, is that U.S. demand for MLWF is highly elastic (i.e.,
    geometrically corresponding to a flat or horizontal demand curve that “locks down” price within
    relevant ranges of volume sold), and such elasticity, they argue, effectively “insulated” domestic
    MLWF producers from the effect of increased imports.
    Continuing, the plaintiffs acknowledge that in the original final determination the
    Commission challenged the theory that a high demand elasticity for MLWF is consistent with the
    ability and willingness of consumers to substitute one kind of flooring product for another based on
    17
    “A reviewing court must consider the record as a whole, including that which ‘fairly
    detracts from its weight’, to determine whether there exists 'such relevant evidence as a reasonable
    mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.’” Nippon Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    458 F.3d 1345
    , 1351 (quoting Universal Camera Corp. v. NLRB, 
    340 U.S. 474
    , 477-78 (1951)). The
    plaintiffs argue that a pricing index that makes full and symmetric use of all the prices submitted by
    U.S. producers would reveal deficiency in the present investigation, and they imply theirs is such an
    index.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                          Page 20
    price incentives. See PDoc 283 at 27, 48, CDoc 525 at 27, 48. But, they argue, elasticity does not
    depend upon substitution, as indicated by the fact that increased sales of MLWF from 2009 onward
    “did not reduce” U.S. producers’ MLWF prices overall despite the flat to slightly declining U.S.
    demand. Because substitution among flooring products is incidental to their elasticity point, they
    contend, the Commission never directly rebutted the reasoning by challenging any of the four facts
    on which their analysis depends. As additional support, they point to the Commission’s observation
    in the hardwood plywood investigations that “we do not find that the record shows a significant
    negative correlation between subject imports and the industry’s condition, much less a causal
    relationship”, Pls’ Comments at 27, referencing Hardwood Plywood from [the PRC] (Investigation
    Nos. 701-TA-490 and 731-TA-1204 (Final)) at 25, and the plaintiffs contend the same is true in the
    MLWF investigations for the period from 2009 onwards.
    The plaintiffs therefore request that the court reconsider finding that the
    Commission’s conclusion that MLWF did not displace non-MLWF flooring products is supported
    by substantial evidence, arguing that the Commission’s stated reasoning is based on a “palpable
    inaccuracy” in characterizing the factual record.18 They argue the table relied upon by the
    Commission shows that the market share of MLWF among all flooring products increased by 0.1
    percentage point (from 1.6 percent to 1.7 percent of the U.S. flooring market) between 2008 and
    2010, contrary to the Commission’s assertion that the share was “stable” over this period, with the
    gain actually occurring between 2009 and 2010 as U.S. sales of MLWF by both importers and U.S.
    18
    I.e., the Commission stated in its original final determinations: “We find no evidence that
    substitute flooring products took sales from MLWF during the period of investigation; MLWF
    products accounted for a steady share of sales of all flooring products between 2008 and 2010.”
    PDoc 283 at 27, CDoc 525 at 27.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                          Page 21
    producers increased after having remained “stable” at 1.6 percent from 2008 to 2009 as overall
    flooring demand declined due to the housing collapse. They contend that while 0.1 percent appears
    small, it represents the increased share of MLWF sales within the entire U.S. flooring market:
    Based on total flooring sales in 2009, for instance, 0.1 percent of the market amounts
    to approximately 17,493,400 square feet (derived from Final Staff Report, C.R. 507
    at II-12, Table II-4 (Oct. 27, 2011)/P.R. 235 at II-12, Table II-4 (Nov. 2, 2011))
    whereas the increase in U.S. sales of MLWF over this period amounted to
    22,291,000 square feet over this same period. 
    Id.
     In other words, the increase in
    MLWF’s share of the U.S. flooring market from 2009 to 2010 was roughly similar
    in magnitude to the actual increase in MLWF sales over that year, based on the same
    data and mode of reasoning that the ITC employed. This rough equivalency cannot
    support the ITC’s conclusion regarding substitutability.
    Pls’ Comments at 27-29 n.19.
    The plaintiffs argue for re-visiting this “factual error” regarding substitution of
    flooring products, contending that the Catalina Research data on which the Commission has relied
    is in no way inconsistent with MLWF displacing other non-MLWF flooring products. 
    Id.,
    referencing CDoc 548R at 17-19; CDoc 550R; PDoc 303R at 17-19 (July 15, 2013). Pointing to the
    Remand Views’ segregated discussion of the collapse-year 2008 and the conclusion that subject
    imports caused injury because “[t]he declines in the domestic industry’s performance indicators
    between 2008 and 2009 . . . generally exceeded the 15.7 percent decline in demand”, the plaintiffs
    argue such a “summary conclusion” of the economic impact issues is not a valid part of a full “but
    for” analysis because the fact that MLWF constitutes just 1.6 percent of the broader U.S. flooring
    market immerses MLWF in a “sea” of other potentially substitutable flooring products and reinforces
    the independent conclusion that MLWF demand must be highly elastic, since basic principles of
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                          Page 22
    microeconomics establish that demand tends to be more elastic in the presence of potential
    substitutes.
    More broadly, they contend the Commission has confused U.S. consumption with
    demand. They argue demand “certainly” fell by more than 15.7 percent during 2008, because
    housing starts, which in January 2008 had stood at a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 1.1 million
    units, by January 2009 had declined by 55 percent to just 0.5 million units. By contrast, they argue,
    consumption dropped by less than the fall in demand, principally because (they further contend) of
    increased purchases of MLWF at the expense of other flooring products induced by variations in
    relative price among the various products. They argue this “confusion” on the part of the
    Commission is evident elsewhere in the remand determinations, for instance at page 45, footnote
    202, of the Remand Views where the Commission cited increasing U.S. consumption from 2009
    onwards as evidence of increasing demand. Their point, however, is that the Commission has never
    contested record evidence showing that the drivers of demand downstream (housing starts and
    remodeling/renovation activity, from which demand for flooring is derived) both declined modestly
    over the relevant periods. See Remand Views at 45 n.202.
    The plaintiffs argue housing starts that determine MLWF demand in early 2009 “must
    be counted from mid- to late-2008, since flooring is among the last products installed in a new home,
    and homes take a number of months to construct.” Pls’ Comments at 23 n.12. They point out that
    the Commission quoted them as arguing that “but for” injury could only have occurred in the face
    of increased supply from 2009 onwards if “demand for MLWF increased to absorb the increased
    supply, resulting in unchanged pricing.” 
    Id.,
     referencing Remand Views at 45 n.202 (citing PDoc
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                            Page 23
    303R at 15, CDoc 548R at 15; CDoc 550R). Therefore, the plaintiffs contend, it is clear that they
    were and are distinguishing between increases in supply and increases in demand by noting that
    supply increased. The plaintiffs argue that “[n]aturally, both an increase in supply or demand could
    result in increased U.S. consumption, which is why separate indicators of demand, such as
    downstream drivers (housing starts and renovation/remodeling activity) are needed to distinguish
    these two possibilities.” 
    Id.
     (court’s italics). “The ITC’s confusion is stark since it cited the
    increased consumption as evidence of increased demand, without reference to any facts that
    distinguish supply changes from demand changes.” 
    Id.
     at 24 n.12. The plaintiffs also find no
    probative value in the Commission’s comment that “[a]lmost all of the domestic industry’s
    performance indicators declined significantly from 2008 to 2009, and even those factors that
    improved somewhat between 2009 and 2010 remained at lower levels in 2010 than in 2008.” Pls’
    Comments at 22-23, referencing Remand Views at 33-34. That is, they perceive no significance from
    the fact that the industry’s performance indicia of housing starts and remodeling activity had not
    recovered to levels at or near the beginning of the POI following their collapse through the end of
    2008 and into early 2009. See PDoc 235 at II-7 (Nov. 2, 2011) (public final staff report), CDoc 507
    at II-7. The plaintiffs also take issue with a similar statement regarding MLWF pricing, whereby the
    Commission noted that “the traditional quarterly pricing data show lower prices of the domestic like
    product at the end of the POI than in the first quarter of the POI.” Remand Views at 31.
    The plaintiffs contend, then, that even if, hypothetically, the Commission had rejected
    their proffered “but for” analysis based on some source of “substantial evidence” sufficient to satisfy
    judicial review, the Commission would still be required to offer its own “but for” analysis, which
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                            Page 24
    they contend it continues not to do. They also take issue with the Commission’s rationale that the
    domestic industry’s apparent recent financial improvements were driven in large part by “partial
    abandonment of domestic production capacity in favor of low-cost subject imports, asset
    impairments, and significant cost-cutting of SG&A expenses while operating at low capacity
    utilization.” Remand Views at 46 (footnote omitted). This point, the plaintiffs claim, serves only to
    underscore that the Commission is not analytically constructing a counterfactual state of the
    industry’s condition and diverts attention from the fact that increased U.S. shipments of subject
    imports from 2009 onward did not impair the industry’s ability to capture its cost-rationalization
    benefits in the form of higher profits, because imports did not, they claim, “result in” lower U.S.
    producer prices. “Prices are the nexus where competition plays out -- not costs”, the plaintiffs
    emphasize:
    Cost rationalization, i.e., closing high-cost, obsolete capacity, . . . is commonplace
    among many industries that seek to right-size in the wake of a recession. Because the
    housing collapse was even more severe than the general decline in business activity
    throughout the broader economy, it is even more likely that upstream industries that
    serve housing would use the demand crisis as an opportunity to rationalize costs. . . .
    [D]espite closing obsolete capacity, the industry as a whole actually increased U.S.
    shipments from 2009 onwards so the loss of this capacity did not constrain sales. In
    summary, . . . increased sales of subject imports are not responsible for the industry’s
    decision to improve its structure through cost rationalization efforts, [and] the lack
    of effect of the imports on U.S. producer prices was important in the industry’s
    ability to pocket these savings in the form of higher operating margins achieved after
    2009.
    Pls’ Comments at 29-30.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                         Page 25
    3
    Despite the quality of the arguments the plaintiffs propound, the court cannot
    conclude that the Remand Views are unsupported by substantial evidence on the record or not in
    accordance with law.
    The plaintiffs assert that the Commission should have focused its causation analysis
    on the January 2009-June 2011 period rather than the entire POI and assigned “no probative value”
    to the fact that the domestic industry’s performance indicators were lower in 2010 than in 2008,
    because its prices at the end of the POI were lower than in 2008, and that between January 2009 and
    June 2011 demand “substantially stabilized,” shipments increased, the domestic industry’s prices
    were flat, and the domestic industry’s operating margins improved. The Commission rejected the
    plaintiffs’ request on remand to emphasize the shorter POI period of January 2009-June 2011,
    because it found no basis to deviate from its normal practice of considering data for the three most
    recent calendar years plus applicable interim periods. See CL555R at 44 n.195. The court cannot
    find that the decision not to emphasize a shorter POI period was an abuse of its discretion.
    In accordance with the orders of remand, the Commission evaluated the effect that
    the severe disruption of the home building and remodeling industries had on the domestic like
    product industry in determining whether subject imports were the material cause of injury, and in
    addition to the full POI, the Commission assessed the relative effects of demand and subject imports
    during 2008-2009 and during January 2009 to June 2011, the periods the plaintiffs’ brief
    emphasized. By doing so, the Commission appears to have adequately refuted the plaintiffs’ claims
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                             Page 26
    that data for these periods established that there was no causal link between subject imports and the
    material injury to the domestic industry.
    The court further disagrees that the Commission has confused the demand analysis.
    The Commission used U.S. consumption as a statistical proxy for demand, as it routinely does, see,
    e.g., Shandong TTCA Biochemistry Co., Ltd. v. United States, 35 CIT ___, ___, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d 1317
    , 1323-24 (2011), and the statute specifically instructs the Commission to consider whether the
    volume of subject imports relative to “consumption in the United States” is significant. 
    19 U.S.C. §1677
    (7)(C)(i). Given the consistency of the data therefor with other indicators, reliance thereon
    was not unreasonable. Further, an increase in supply does not “result in” an increase in demand, and
    the court declines to interfere with what the Commission regards as the relevant indicia for properly
    determining what drives demand for MLWF, and when it is driven.
    Furthermore, the hypothetical the plaintiffs propose as “but for” causation analysis
    is not dispositive on that issue -- of what the domestic MLWF industry would have experienced in
    the absence of imports of subject merchandise. The court previously disagreed “that the statute in
    conjunction with our appellate precedent requires . . . [ ]strict application of the ‘but-for’ causation
    standard to a particular factual scenario”. And the court’s function here does not involve reweighing
    the facts. See, e.g., Nippon Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    458 F.3d 1345
     (Fed. Cir. 2006). If it did,
    the process would necessarily as well involve consideration of the defendant-intervenor’s proposed
    quantified analysis of “what the world would look like without subject imports’ continual gains in
    market share”, which it submitted in the underlying investigation and in its comments for the remand
    proceedings, in which the defendant-intervenor concluded as follows:
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                            Page 27
    . . . [O]ne can observe the injurious impact of the growth in subject import
    market share incremental to the injurious impact of the recession by assuming that
    the domestic industry held its pre-housing market crisis market share throughout the
    remainder of the POI. Any injurious impact of the recession would be shown by the
    decline in profitability associated with the adverse changes in the MLWF market
    overall. The difference between domestic producers’ profitability when holding a
    constant market share and as actually observed is attributable to the injurious volume
    effects of subject imports.
    We note that the income statement analysis model considers only the market
    share lost to subject imports, and takes no account of the price effects caused by
    subject imports. That is, if domestic industry were able to hold its prices, and its
    average net sales value did not decline over the POI, its profitability would have been
    even stronger. Thus, the incremental injury caused by subject imports was almost
    certainly greater than the substantial figures shown in the scenarios above.
    E.g., PDoc 304R (July 22, 2013). And it is well-established that the possibility of drawing two
    inconsistent conclusions from the evidence does not preclude the Commission’s remand
    determinations from being supported by substantial evidence in any event. See, e.g., Thai Pineapple
    Public Co. v. United States, 
    187 F.3d 1362
    , 1365 (Fed. Cir. 1999).
    The plaintiffs’ broad attack is that the Commission has not articulated a rational basis
    to find the subject imports had a material impact on the domestic industry, that the Commission’s
    causation analysis remains unsupported, and that in fact that there is no causal connection between
    subject imports and the domestic industry’s condition for the latter portion of the POI. They contend
    that what the Commission has done in its Remand Views cannot be assessed, because nowhere do
    those views purport to describe the condition of the industry absent “unfair” competition by subject
    imports, or describe how the Commission has analyzed record evidence to reach conclusions about
    the “but for” condition of the industry, at least as contended by the plaintiffs.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                              Page 28
    The court must again disagree. The Commission need not state for the record the
    precise contours of the hypothetical counterfactual “but for” state, so long as its ultimate conclusions,
    on causation “by reason of” subject imports from the evidence of record, are discernable and
    reasonable. Cf. NSK Corp. v. U.S. Intern. Trade Comm’n, 
    716 F.3d 1352
    , 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (the
    fact that numerous facts of record detract from the Commission’s conclusion, including the fact that
    non-subject imports “had a significant presence in the domestic market” and were sold at lower
    prices than domestic like product, did not detract to such an extent that the court may conclude the
    Commission’s determinations unsupported by substantial evidence). As indicated above, following
    a rather thorough analysis of the issue to identify and isolate the effects of subject imports, the
    Commission on remand concluded that “but for the unfairly traded subject MLWF imports from [the
    PRC] in the U.S. market during the POI, the domestic industry would have been materially better
    off both during the housing market collapse and during the developing recovery that followed.”
    CDoc 555R at 47. The Commission therefore reaffirmed its conclusion that subject imports of
    MLWF from the PRC had a significant adverse impact on the domestic industry during the POI. The
    Commission found the domestic industry disproportionally suffered not only during the market
    collapse but also in the period that followed as the direct result of unfairly priced subject imports.
    The plaintiffs complain that “increased sales of subject imports are not responsible
    for the industry’s decision to improve its structure through cost rationalization efforts”, but that in
    turn does not take into account what would have been the “counterfactual state” of how the domestic
    industry would have fared in the absence of unfairly priced subject imports, i.e., the plaintiffs
    contentions in general also do not take into account the Commission’s finding of widespread
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                           Page 29
    underselling throughout the POI that enabled subject imports to capture market share from the
    domestic industry. CDoc 555R at 34-35. Despite their emphasis on demand “stabiliz[ation]” and
    domestic industry performance “improvement” from 2009 onward, Pls’ Comments at 26, the fact
    that the plaintiffs offer an alternate explanation of the record evidence does not undermine the
    Commission’s reasoned analysis. See NSK Corp., supra; Matsushita Elec. Ind. Co., Ltd. v. United
    States, 
    750 F.2d 927
    , 936 (Fed. Cir. 1984). The Commission found that the domestic industry lost
    a significant percentage of market share from 2009 to 2010 and also continued to suffer
    disproportionately between interim 2010 and interim 2011 as subject imports’ U.S. shipment
    volumes significantly outpaced growth in demand during these periods. Remand Views at 35 & n.34,
    referencing CDoc 555R at 45-46 & n.204, CDoc 525 at 46-54l, CDoc 554R. And the plaintiffs
    conceded that it is “conceivable that the U.S. industry would have performed even better but-for the
    increase in subject import shipment volume”. CDoc 548 at 15.
    Even accepting the plaintiffs’ broader economic argument, it is difficult to envision
    what further “cost rationalization” measures, in order to “compete” against “significant underselling”
    of subject imports from 2009 onward even after the collapse of the housing market, could reasonably
    be compelled from the domestic MLWF industry before the Commission, having identified the harm
    summarized above, may reasonably reach the determination that material injury to the domestic
    industry has occurred “by reason of” those imports. A cause-in-fact analysis from the Commission
    exacted to that extent would either be superfluous or antithetical to the purposes of the antidumping
    law and the function of judicial review of administrative determinations made pursuant thereto. See
    NSK Corp., supra.
    Court No. 12-00010                                                                           Page 30
    In passing, the court here declines to give more than cursory comment on the
    plaintiffs’ June 6, 2014 letter, docketed as “notice of supplemental authority” to apprise of Baroque
    Timber Industries (Zhongshan) Co. v. United States, 38 CIT ___, 
    971 F. Supp. 2d 1333
     (2014). The
    status quo for the time being is apparently an affirmative determination of less-than-fair-value sales
    notwithstanding that the three mandatory respondents of that antidumping duty case now apparently
    have administratively-determined margins of zero, and it is also apparently affirmative in the
    countervailing duty determination before Commerce where one of three mandatory respondents was
    determined to have received a 1.5% subsidy. As the Commission rightly objects, this does not
    present the kind of Borlem circumstance that would compel the Commission to reconsider the
    present disposition of     this matter as reflected in its Remand Views.           See Borlem SA-
    Empreendimentos Industriais v. United States, 
    913 F.2d 933
     (Fed. Cir. 1990); see also Essar Steel
    Ltd. v. United States, 
    678 F.3d 1268
    , 1277-78 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (noting “small number of exceptions”
    for agency record supplementation).
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the Remand Views will be sustained. Judgment will enter
    accordingly.
    So ordered.
    /s/ R. Kenton Musgrave
    R. Kenton Musgrave, Senior Judge
    Dated: July 16, 2014
    New York, New York
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Slip Op. 14-82. Court 12-00010

Citation Numbers: 2014 CIT 82, 999 F. Supp. 2d 1334, 36 I.T.R.D. (BNA) 736, 2014 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 82, 2014 WL 3512886

Judges: Musgrave

Filed Date: 7/16/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/7/2024

Authorities (21)

altx-inc-dmv-stainless-usa-inc-salem-tube-inc-sandvik-steel-co , 370 F.3d 1108 ( 2004 )

Mid Continent Nail Corporation v. United States , 34 Ct. Int'l Trade 498 ( 2010 )

grupo-industrial-camesa-camercial-camesa-cables-camesa-and-camesa-inc , 85 F.3d 1577 ( 1996 )

Nippon Steel Corporation, Nkk Corporation, Kawasaki Steel ... , 458 F.3d 1345 ( 2006 )

Hynix Semiconductor, Inc. v. United States , 424 F.3d 1363 ( 2005 )

The Schooner Adeline & Cargo , 3 L. Ed. 719 ( 1815 )

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

Shandong Ttca Biochemistry Co. v. United States , 774 F. Supp. 2d 1317 ( 2011 )

June v. Union Carbide Corp. , 577 F.3d 1234 ( 2009 )

Altx, Inc. v. United States , 25 Ct. Int'l Trade 1100 ( 2001 )

Mittal Steel Point Lisas Ltd. v. United States , 542 F.3d 867 ( 2008 )

united-states-steel-group-a-unit-of-usx-corporation-ak-steel-corporation , 96 F.3d 1352 ( 1996 )

Universal Camera Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board , 71 S. Ct. 456 ( 1951 )

Federal Power Commission v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line ... , 96 S. Ct. 579 ( 1976 )

Ceramica Regiomontanam, S.A. v. United States , 10 Ct. Int'l Trade 399 ( 1986 )

Essar Steel Ltd. v. United States , 678 F.3d 1268 ( 2012 )

bratsk-aluminium-smelter-rual-trade-limited-and-general-electric , 444 F.3d 1369 ( 2006 )

nippon-steel-corporation-nkk-corporation-kawasaki-steel-corporation-and , 345 F.3d 1379 ( 2003 )

borlem-sa-empreedimentos-industriais-and-fnv-veiculos-e-equipamentos , 913 F.2d 933 ( 1990 )

Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins , 109 S. Ct. 1775 ( 1989 )

View All Authorities »