Mannesmannrohren-Werke AG v. United States , 1999 CIT 118 ( 1999 )


Menu:
  •                                     SLIP OP. 99 - 118
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    MANNESMANNROHREN-WERKE AG AND                      :
    MANNESMANN PIPE & STEEL CORP.,                     :
    :
    Plaintiffs,                   :
    :       BEFORE: Wallach, Judge
    v.                                   :       Court No.: 98-04-00886
    :
    THE UNITED STATES,                                 :       PUBLIC VERSION
    :
    Defendant,                    :
    :
    and                                  :
    :
    GULF STATE TUBE DIVISION OF                        :
    VISION METALS,                                     :
    :
    Defendant-Intervenor.         :
    :
    [Remanded in part]
    Decided: October 29, 1999
    Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP (Mark D. Herlach, Mary Patricia Michel and Christer L.
    Mossberg) for Plaintiffs.
    David Ogden, Acting Assistant Attorney General; David M. Cohen, Director; U.S. Department
    of Justice, Civil Division, Commercial Litigation Branch, (Velta A. Melnbrencis); Brian Peck,
    Office of the Chief Counsel for Import Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, Of
    Counsel, for Defendant.
    Schagrin Associates (Roger B. Schagrin) for Defendant-Intervenor.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                         Page 2
    OPINION
    I
    INTRODUCTION
    At issue in this case are various determinations made by the U.S. Department of
    Commerce, International Trade Administration ("Commerce") in Small Diameter Circular
    Seamless Carbon and Alloy Steel Standard, Line and Pressure Pipe From Germany: Final Results
    of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review ("Final Results"), 
    63 Fed. Reg. 13,217
     (1998).
    Plaintiffs, Mannesmannrohren-Werke AG And Mannesmann Pipe & Steel Corp. ("Mannesmann"),
    through a motion for judgment on the agency record and an accompanying memorandum
    (collectively, "Mannesmann's Motion"), argue that Commerce erred (a) in its interpretation of 19
    U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(2) and (3) (1994); (b) in its use of adverse facts available to value
    Mannesmann's purchases of steel billets from a related supplier; and (c) in its use of adverse facts
    available to value the customs duties Mannesmann paid on its U.S. sales.
    For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds that while Commerce reasonably
    interpreted 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(2) and (3) (1994), what Commerce has identified as substantial
    record evidence does not support its decisions to use adverse facts available. This determination
    is remanded to Commerce for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    II
    BACKGROUND
    On March 18, 1998, Commerce issued its first administrative review of antidumping duties
    on certain small diameter seamless carbon and alloy steel pipes from Germany. This review
    covered one manufacturer/exporter of the subject merchandise, Mannesmannrohren-Werke AG
    and Mannesmann Pipe & Steel Corporation, for the period January 27, 1995, through
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                       Page 3
    July 31, 1996. Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 13,217. Two aspects of this review are relevant for
    present purposes.
    Commerce's Affiliated Party Input Adjustment:
    As in any antidumping investigation, in this instance Commerce was required to compare
    the U.S. prices of the subject merchandise to the prices ("normal value") for the same or similar
    merchandise in the home market. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677a (1994) ("Export price and constructed
    export price") and 19 U.S.C. § 1677b (1994) ("Normal value"). In the course of calculating the
    normal value of the subject merchandise in this case, Gulf State Tube Division of Vision Metals, a
    domestic interested party and Defendant-Intervenor in the current action, alleged that
    Mannesmann was selling the foreign like product in its home market (Germany) at prices below
    Mannesmann's cost of production. Pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(b) (1994), such below cost
    sales, if shown to exist, may be disregarded by Commerce in its calculation of normal value. On
    January 31, 1997, Commerce determined that this allegation of below-cost sales was adequately
    supported, initiated a sales-below-cost investigation, and requested that Mannesmann respond to
    Section D of Commerce's Antidumping Duty Questionnaire, covering "Cost of Production and
    Constructed Value." See Letter from Linda Ludwig to Mark Herlach of 01/31/97, Appendix of
    Record Documents Accompanying The Memorandum In Support Of The Motion Of Plaintiffs
    [Mannesmann] For Judgment On The Agency Record "Mannesmann Appendix"), App. 3.
    Mannesmann does not contest initiation of the below-cost sales investigation.
    Although the Section D Questionnaire requested substantial information concerning
    Mannesmann's cost-of-production, the question here most pertinent was Question II.A.6.b. In
    relevant part, Question II.A.6. provided as follows:
    6.      List the major inputs received from affiliated parties and used to produce
    the merchandise under review during the cost calculation period. . . . For
    each major input identified, provide the following information:
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                       Page 4
    a.     the total volume and value of the input purchased from all sources
    by your company during the cost calculation period, and the total
    volume and value purchased from each affiliated party during the
    same period;
    b.     the per-unit transfer price charged for the input by the affiliated
    party (if the affiliated party sells the identical input to other,
    unaffiliated purchasers, provide documentation showing the price
    paid for the input by the unaffiliated purchaser; if your company
    purchases the identical input from unaffiliated suppliers, provide
    documentation showing the unaffiliated party's sales price for the
    input); and
    c.     if you are responding to this section of the questionnaire in
    connection with an investigation of sales below cost, provide the
    per-unit cost of production incurred by the affiliated party in
    producing the major input.
    In addition, specify the basis used by your company to value each major
    input for purposes of computing the submitted COP and CV amounts (e.g.
    transfer price, cost of production).
    Defendant's Memorandum In Opposition To Plaintiffs' Motion For Judgment On The Agency
    Record ("Defendant's Response"), Public Ex. 1, at 91-92.
    Mannesmann responded to subpart (a) of the question by stating, inter alia, that it had not
    "sourced billets used in producing subject merchandise from unrelated parties." Response Of
    [Mannesmann] To Section D Of The Antidumping Questionnaire, Mannesmann Appendix, App.
    4, at 8. This answer was not fully responsive, since the question asked for information on input
    purchases related to the "merchandise under review" and not "subject merchandise." As defined
    in a footnote to Section A of Commerce's Antidumping Questionnaire, "products under review"
    and "merchandise under investigation" referred generally to "all products within the scope of the
    order that your company sold during the period of review in any market," while "subject
    merchandise" referred only to "products sold to the United States." See Commerce's
    Antidumping Questionnaire, Defendant's Response, Public Ex. 1, at 15 n.6.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                            Page 5
    In response to subpart (b) of Question II.A.6., Mannesmann provided a substantial
    amount of information concerning its relationship with Huttenwerke Krupp Mannesmann GmbH
    ("HKM"), an affiliated party from whom it purchases the vast majority of the steel it uses to
    produce seamless and welded tubes. See Response Of [Mannesmann] To Section D Of The
    Antidumping Questionnaire, Mannesmann Appendix, App. 4, at 9-13. Mannesmann's response,
    however, did not provide any information in regard to the last part of subpart (b), which
    requested that "if your company purchases the identical input from unaffiliated suppliers, provide
    documentation showing the unaffiliated party's sales price for the input." Commerce's
    Antidumping Questionnaire, Defendant's Response, Public Ex. 1, at 91.
    Finally, responding to subpart (c) of Question 6, Mannesmann stated that it utilized
    transfer price from its affiliated supplier, HKM, to value steel billets, and that "this transfer price
    exceeded HKM's cost of production." Response Of [Mannesmann] To Section D Of The
    Antidumping Questionnaire, Mannesmann Appendix, App. 4, at 14. As discussed below, this
    statement was of considerable importance, since Commerce found that reliance on transfer price
    from an affiliated party makes 19 U.S.C. §1677b(f)(2) (1994) applicable to its analysis and
    findings.
    Subsequently, Commerce provided Mannesmann with a supplemental questionnaire
    ("Supplemental Section D Questionnaire"), which asked Mannesmann two further questions that
    are relevant here. First, Question 11 of the Supplemental Section D Questionnaire asked
    Mannesmann:
    As requested in the original Section D questionnaire, please provide a complete,
    translated listing of all inputs used to produce the merchandise under review. For
    each input received from an affiliated party, provide the name of the affiliated party
    and state the nature of the affiliation. Also, report the total volume and value of
    the purchases and the percentage of the COM of the subject merchandise
    represented by the value of the purchases.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                        Page 6
    Response Of [Mannesmann] To Supplemental Section D Of The Antidumping Questionnaire,
    Mannesmann Appendix, App. 5, at 7 (emphasis in original). Answering this question,
    Mannesmann provided the short response that "[s]teel billets are the only input from affiliated
    suppliers for the subject merchandise. All of the steel billets purchased for producing the subject
    merchandise were produced at HKM." Id. Once again, this response was limited to "subject
    merchandise," although the question asked for information on the broader category of
    "merchandise under review."
    Second, Question 12 of the Supplemental Section D Questionnaire asked that
    Mannesmann:
    Use the following headings to provide a chart which reports purchases of billets
    from unrelated suppliers, regardless of whether or not they are used in subject
    merchandise. (Unrelated supplier, month during [the period of review], billet
    grade, volume purchased, value of purchases. [sic]
    Id. (emphasis in original). Mannesmann responded to this question by providing an exhibit that
    listed billet purchases from unrelated suppliers. See id. at 8; Chart Regarding Purchases of Billets,
    id. at Ex. D-4. This exhibit, however, did not respond to Commerce's request for billet grade
    information.
    Seeking yet further information, Commerce thereafter requested that Mannesmann
    answer a third questionnaire (Commerce's "Second Supplemental Section D Questionnaire").
    Question 4 of that questionnaire stated as follows:
    In Exhibit D-4 of the Supplemental D questionnaire response, you provided a
    breakdown of billet purchases from unaffiliated parties. When compared to the
    billet prices provided in Exhibit E of the Section D response, it appears that the
    average POR cost of billets purchased from unaffiliated parties significantly
    exceeds the cost of billets purchased from HKM. Explain the reason for such
    difference.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                             Page 7
    Mannesmann Second Supplemental Section D Response, Mannesmann Appendix, App. 6, at 2.
    Explaining this cost differential between billets from affiliated and unaffiliated suppliers,
    Mannesmann responded, inter alia, that:
    MWR and MWS only purchase from other suppliers billets that HKM does not
    produce, such as billets comprised of special alloy grades or purities. The price of
    these specialized billets with higher alloy content or higher purity is quite naturally
    greater than the price for the standard grade billets manufactured by HKM.
    Id. at 3.
    On September 9, 1997, Commerce published the preliminary results of its administrative
    review in the Federal Register. See Small Diameter Circular Seamless Carbon and Alloy Steel
    Standard, Line and Pressure Pipe From Germany: Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty
    Administrative Review ("Preliminary Results"), 
    62 Fed. Reg. 47,446
     (1997). In the Preliminary
    Results, Commerce calculated Mannesmann's cost of production by disregarding those billet sales
    between Mannesmann and HKM that did not reflect market value for these inputs. See 
    id. at 47,451
    . In those instances where Commerce found that the billet sales between Mannesmann and
    HKM did not reflect market value, Commerce, pursuant to § 773(f)(2) and (3) of the Tariff Act
    of 1930 [19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(2) and (3) (1994)], used market prices to value the inputs
    purchased from HKM and, in turn, calculate Mannesmann's cost of production. See id.; see also
    Department of Commerce Preliminary Results Analysis Memorandum of 09/02/97, Mannesmann
    Appendix, App. 11 ("Preliminary Results Memo."), at 16.
    To determine market value, Commerce compared the relative prices of one grade of billets
    which Mannesmann had purchased from both affiliated and non-affiliated parties during the period
    of review. See Preliminary Results, 62 Fed. Reg. at 47,451. Finding the price paid to the non-
    affiliated party to be 30.9 % higher than the price paid to HKM, Commerce increased the transfer
    prices reported for all HKM billet sales to Mannesmann by 30.9% to approximate
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                            Page 8
    market value. See id.; Preliminary Results Memo. at 16. As 94.21% of Mannesmann's billet
    purchases was from HKM, this resulted in an aggregate cost of steel billets 29.11 % higher than
    originally reported by Mannesmann. See Preliminary Results Memo. at 16.1
    In response to this aspect of the Preliminary Results, Mannesmann argued, inter alia, that
    Commerce "improperly invoked the special rule for major inputs in section 773(f)(3) of the Act
    when it ignored Mannesmann's verified billet costs in calculating the company's cost of
    production." Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 13,218. Mannesmann also argued that Commerce
    "had no reasonable basis for applying an across-the-board percentage price increase on all billets
    based on one exceptional purchase of a steel grade that was not sold in the United States." Id. at
    13,219.
    In the Final Results, Commerce dismissed both these criticisms. After first reaffirming its
    position in the Preliminary Results, Commerce stated that "[w]e disagree with Mannesmann's
    assertion that the Department improperly invoked the special rule for major inputs." Id.
    According to Commerce, § 773(f)(2) and (3) of the Tariff Act of 1930 gave it the legal authority
    to use the highest of transfer price, cost of production, or market value to value the billets
    purchased from HKM. Id. at 13,219-20.
    Addressing Mannesmann's second complaint (that Commerce had no reasonable basis for
    applying the market value adjustment to all purchases from affiliated suppliers), Commerce stated
    that, because Mannesmann had not acted to the best of its ability to comply with its information
    requests, it was applying this market value adjustment in the Final Results as adverse
    1
    By increasing the price of a party's inputs, Commerce increases the party's cost of production
    for purposes of excluding below-cost sales. This, in term, leads the "normal value" of a party's
    home market sales to be higher, since a larger percentage of a party's home market sales will be
    excluded as having been made "below cost." See Raj Bhala, International Trade Law: Cases and
    Materials 654 (1996) ("It is an arithmetic fact that the exclusion raises the average and, therefore,
    increases the likelihood of finding, and size of, a dumping margin.")
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                           Page 9
    facts available. Id. This decision to apply adverse facts available appears to have been based on
    two events. First, Commerce observed that although it requested information on any purchases of
    the identical input from unaffiliated suppliers in Question II.A.6.b of the Section D Questionnaire,
    "Mannesmann did not respond to this portion of the questionnaire." Id.; see also Department of
    Commerce Final Results Analysis Memorandum of 03/09/98, Mannesmann Appendix, App. 8
    ("Final Results Memo."), at 14. Second, and in regard to Question 4 of the Second Supplemental
    Section D Questionnaire, Commerce pointed out that although Mannesmann stated that it "only
    purchase[d] from other suppliers billets that HKM does not produce, such as billets comprised of
    special alloy grades or purities," this assertion did not hold true at verification. See Final Results,
    63 Fed. Reg. at 13,220; Final Results Memo. at 14. Sampling Mannesmann's purchases for one
    month, Commerce discovered purchases by Mannesmann of the same grade of billets from both
    HKM and an unaffiliated party. Final Results Memo. at 14. Commerce viewed this as "an
    unexpected discovery, as Mannesmann had specifically denied that they purchase the same grade
    of billets from HKM and unaffiliated parties." Id.
    Mannesmann's Reported U.S. Duties:
    The second part of the Final Results at issue involves the customs duties that
    Mannesmann, in answering Section C of the Commerce's Antidumping Questionnaire, reported
    that it had paid on its U.S. sales.
    During verification, Commerce examined over half of Mannesmann’s total U.S. sales in its
    review of U.S. duty paid. See Mannesmann's Motion at 28 (noting that Commerce's observations
    covered 52% of the subject merchandise (in terms of tonnage) sold in the United States). In
    determining whether U.S. duty was properly reported, Commerce "summed total U.S. duty paid
    on the entry [Commerce was] examining and compared it to total U.S. duty reported in the
    applicable observations." Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 13,222. For several entries,
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                       Page 10
    Commerce found that Mannesmann had underreported the total U.S. duty paid -- a fact which it
    found "indicates that errors exist which are more pervasive than can be explained by rounding or
    allocation methodologies." Id. Further, at verification Mannesmann was unable to recreate or
    explain the allocation methodologies it used in its submission to Commerce. Id.
    In light of these findings, Commerce again determined that the use of adverse facts
    available was appropriate, since "[b]y not providing verifiable information for U.S. duties when
    such information was available to Mannesmann . . . Mannesmann failed to cooperate by not acting
    to the best of its ability to comply with a request for information." Id. at 13,222-23. Accordingly,
    for the Final Results, Commerce used the duty rates reported by Mannesmann in the three
    instances where it was able to confirm Mannesmann's figures. Id. at 13,222; Final Results Memo.
    at 12. For all other sales, however, including those where Commerce otherwise calculated the
    correct amount of duty paid, Commerce used the highest U.S. duty amounts reported by
    Mannesmann. Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 13,222.2 Generally, this resulted in duties
    significantly higher than either those reported by Mannesmann or, where applicable, those
    calculated by Commerce. See, e.g., Analysis of U.S. Duty Adjustment, Mannesmann's Motion,
    Ex. A.
    2
    Specifically, Commerce applied the highest reported duty amount for carbon products
    ($86.35/ton) to all sales of carbon products, and it applied the highest reported duty amount for
    alloy products ($119.07/ton) to all sales of alloy products. See Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at
    13,222; Final Results Memo. at 12.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                           Page 11
    III
    DISCUSSION
    A
    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) (1994). Substantial evidence is something more than a "mere
    scintilla," and must be enough evidence to reasonably support a conclusion. Primary Steel, Inc. v.
    United States, 
    17 CIT 1080
    , 1085, 
    834 F. Supp. 1374
    , 1380 (1993); Ceramica Regiomontana,
    S.A. v. United States, 
    10 CIT 399
    , 405, 
    636 F. Supp. 961
    , 966 (1986), aff'd, 
    810 F.2d 1137
     (Fed.
    Cir. 1987). "As long as the agency's methodology and procedures are reasonable means of
    effectuating the statutory purpose, and there is substantial evidence in the record supporting the
    agency's conclusions, the court will not impose its own views as to the sufficiency of the agency's
    investigation or question the agency's methodology." Ceramica Regiomontana, S.A., 10 CIT at
    404-5, 
    636 F. Supp. at 966
    .
    In reviewing an agency’s construction of a statute that it administers, the Court's initial
    inquiry is to determine “whether Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at issue."
    Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 842 (1984). "If
    Congress has explicitly left a gap for the agency to fill, there is an express delegation of authority
    to the agency to elucidate a specific provision of the statute by regulation." 
    Id. at 843-44
    .
    Consequently, “[t]he court will defer to the agency's construction of the statute as a permissible
    construction if it ‘reflects a plausible construction of the plain language of the statute[s] and does
    not otherwise conflict with Congress' express intent.’" Torrington Co. v. United States, 
    82 F.3d 1039
    , 1044 (Fed. Cir. 1996) (quoting Rust v. Sullivan, 
    500 U.S. 173
    , 184 (1991)).
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                         Page 12
    B
    Commerce Correctly Interpreted The Statutory Framework For
    Valuing Mannesmann's Billet Costs.
    As noted above, in the Final Results Commerce interpreted 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(2) and
    (3) (1994) as giving it the legal authority to use the highest of transfer price, cost of production,
    or market value to value the billets Mannesmann purchased from HKM. Pursuant to this
    interpretation, Commerce used constructed market values in valuing these billets, per §
    1677b(f)(2), since it found that this value exceeded both the transfer price reported by
    Mannesmann and HKM's cost of production. See Preliminary Results Memo. at 16.
    Mannesmann challenges this result as an improper application of the "major input rule," 19
    U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(3). Mannesmann argues that Commerce "should never have applied an
    alternative valuation under § 1677b(f)(2) as a substitute for actual billet transfer prices because
    the condition precedent contained in § 1677b(f)(3) (the use of a below cost input), which triggers
    the ability of the agency to resort to § 1677b(f)(2), was not met." Plaintiffs' Reply To Defendant's
    Memoranda In Opposition To Plaintiffs' Motion For Judgment On The Agency Record
    ("Mannesmann's Reply") at 2. According to Mannesmann, § 1677b(f)(3) would permit
    Commerce to disregard the transfer prices for billets supplied by HKM, and use § 1677b(f)(2) to
    value major inputs, only if the transfer prices were found to be below HKM's cost of production.
    See id. at 3 ("[W]hen major inputs are involved, resort to § 1677b(f)(2) is only permitted if the
    transfer price of the major input is below cost."). This condition precedent, Mannesmann asserts,
    was not met in this case, since Commerce fully examined HKM's cost data and verified that HKM
    sold billets to Mannesmann at prices above its cost of production. See Mannesmann's Motion at
    9-10.
    In relevant part, 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(2) and (3) (1994) provide as follows:
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                          Page 13
     6TCPUCEVKQPU FKUTGICTFGF
    # VTCPUCEVKQP FKTGEVN[ QT KPFKTGEVN[ DGVYGGP CHHKNKCVGF RGTUQPU OC[ DG
    FKUTGICTFGF KH KP VJG ECUG QH CP[ GNGOGPV QH XCNWG TGSWKTGF VQ DG EQPUKFGTGF VJG
    COQWPV TGRTGUGPVKPI VJCV GNGOGPV FQGU PQV HCKTN[ TGHNGEV VJG COQWPV WUWCNN[
    TGHNGEVGF KP UCNGU QH OGTEJCPFKUG WPFGT EQPUKFGTCVKQP KP VJG OCTMGV WPFGT
    EQPUKFGTCVKQP +H C VTCPUCEVKQP KU FKUTGICTFGF WPFGT VJG RTGEGFKPI UGPVGPEG CPF
    PQ QVJGT VTCPUCEVKQPU CTG CXCKNCDNG HQT EQPUKFGTCVKQP VJG FGVGTOKPCVKQP QH VJG
    COQWPV UJCNN DG DCUGF QP VJG KPHQTOCVKQP CXCKNCDNG CU VQ YJCV VJG COQWPV YQWNF
    JCXG DGGP KH VJG VTCPUCEVKQP JCF QEEWTTGF DGVYGGP RGTUQPU YJQ CTG PQV
    CHHKNKCVGF
     /CLQT KPRWV TWNG
    If, in the case of a transaction between affiliated persons involving the production by
    one of such persons of a major input to the merchandise, the administering authority
    has reasonable grounds to believe or suspect that an amount represented as the value
    of such input is less than the cost of production of such input, then the administering
    authority may determine the value of the major input on the basis of the information
    available regarding such cost of production, if such cost is greater than the amount
    that would be determined for such input under paragraph (2).
    On its face, nothing in the language of these provisions supports Mannesmann's position
    that the "major input rule" serves as any sort of condition precedent to § 1677b(f)(2). First,
    nothing in § 1677b(f)(2) either makes reference to § 1677b(f)(3) or otherwise indicates that,
    before relying on market values in the case of a "major input," Commerce must show that the
    transfer prices at issue are below the affiliated party's cost of production. Rather, by its plain
    language, § 1677b(f)(2) simply sets forth a general rule for affiliated party transactions which
    provides that, for purposes of calculating cost of production and constructed value, Commerce
    may disregard such transactions when "VJG COQWPV TGRTGUGPVKPI =VJG VTCPUHGT RTKEG? FQGU PQV
    HCKTN[ TGHNGEV VJG COQWPV WUWCNN[ TGHNGEVGF KP UCNGU QH OGTEJCPFKUG WPFGT EQPUKFGTCVKQP KP VJG
    OCTMGV WPFGT EQPUKFGTCVKQP
    KG OCTMGV RTKEG. In such circumstances, this provision CNNQYU
    %QOOGTEG KP VJG CDUGPEG QH QVJGT VTCPUCEVKQPU DGVYGGP PQPCHHKNKCVGF RCTVKGU VQ WUG
    KPHQTOCVKQP CXCKNCDNG EQPEGTPKPI OCTMGV RTKEGU VQ XCNWG VJG EQUV QH CP CHHKNKCVGFRCTV[ KPRWV
    5KOKNCTN[ PQ NCPIWCIG KP VJG OCLQT KPRWV TWNG KPFKECVGU VJCV KV KU VQ UGTXG CU C
    EQPFKVKQP RTGEGFGPV VQ § 1677b(f)(2) 5GEVKQP 1677b(f)(3) RTQXKFGU KPVGT CNKC VJCV YJGTG C
    OCLQT KPRWV KU
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                         Page 14
    KPXQNXGF CPF YJGTG %QOOGTEG JCU TGCUQPCDNG ITQWPFU to believe or suspect that an amount
    represented as the value of such input is less than the cost of production of such input 
    %QOOGTEG OC[ XCNWG VJG KPRWV KPXQNXGF WUKPI KPHQTOCVKQP CXCKNCDNG CDQWV KVU EQUV QH
    RTQFWEVKQP $[ KVU RNCKP NCPIWCIG VJG TGSWKTGOGPV VJCV %QOOGTEG JCXG TGCUQPCDNG ITQWPFU
    VQ DGNKGXG QT UWURGEV C DGNQYEQUV UCNG UGTXGU CU C EQPFKVKQP RTGEGFGPV VQ %QOOGTEG	U WUG QH
    CP CHHKNKCVGF RCTV[	U EQUVQHRTQFWEVKQP 0QVJKPI KP VJG NCPIWCIG QH     § 1677b(f)(3) indicates that
    it is also to be a condition precedent to Commerce's use of market values under § 1677b(f)(2), as
    Mannesmann asserts    *CF %QPITGUU KPVGPFGF UWEJ C TGUWNV KV EQWNF JCXG OCFG VJKU EQPFKVKQP
    ENGCT KP VJG NCPIWCIG QH VJG UVCVWVG
    +P EQPVTCUV VQ /CPPGUOCPP	U CTIWOGPV JQYGXGT VJG )QXGTPOGPV	U RQUKVKQP CRRGCTU VQ
    DG C TGCUQPCDNG KPVGTRTGVCVKQP QH VJKU UVCVWVQT[ UEJGOG 6he plain language of § 1677b(f)(3)
    OCMGU ENGCT VJCV CNVJQWIJ %QOOGTEG OC[ WUG CP CHHKNKCVGF RCTV[	U EQUVQHRTQFWEVKQP VQ XCNWG
    C OCLQT KPRWV KV OC[ QPN[ FQ UQ YJGP
     %QOOGTEG JCU TGCUQPCDNG ITQWPFU VQ DGNKGXG QT
    UWURGEV VJCV VJG EQUVQHRTQFWEVKQP GZEGGFU VJG VTCPUCEVKQP XCNWG TGRQTVGF CPF
     VJG EQUVQH
    RTQFWEVKQP GZEGGFU VJG OCTMGV XCNWG QH VJG KPRWV CU FGVGTOKPGF WPFGT § 1677b(f)(2).
    Similarly, the plain language of § 1677b(f)(2) makes clear that Congress may substitute an arms-
    length, or market, value ("what the amount would have been if the transaction had occurred
    between persons who are not affiliated") for a reported transfer price when the transfer price
    "does not fairly reflect" market value. Read together, these provisions appear to create a
    statutory scheme in which Commerce is to use the highest of market price, actual transfer price,
    or cost-of-production in valuing a major input supplied by an affiliated party. This, of course, is
    exactly how Commerce interpreted these provisions and applied them to the case at bar.
    In addition to the statutory language, the legislative history of the major input rule further
    supports Commerce's interpretation. In support of its position, Mannesmann cites a House
    conference report for the proposition that "[c]learly, the conferees contemplated that the
    Department would use 'best information' only if the related seller 'does not provide reliable data
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                         Page 15
    on its cost [sic] of production.'" Mannesmann's Motion at 12 (quoting H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 100-
    576, at 595 (1988), reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1547, 1628). Since Mannesmann supplied,
    and Commerce verified, HKM's cost-of-production data, Mannesmann repeats its argument that
    "[t]here was no basis to reject the actual cost data in favor of a manifestly less accurate figure
    [arms-length values]." Id.
    Mannesmann errs in trying to pick a selected aspect of the major input rule, § 1677b(f)(3),
    and apply it to § 1677b(f)(2). In relevant part, Mannesmann cites to the following section of
    House Conference Report No. 100-576:
    The conferees expect that, if petitioner makes a bona fide allegation that the transfer
    price for the major input or the arms-length price is less than the related party's cost
    of production, then Commerce will investigate such claims and may request cost-of-
    production information from the related party seller of the input. If the related party
    seller does not provide reliable data on its costs of production, and Commerce has
    reasonable grounds to believe or suspect that the transfer price and also the arms-
    length price would be less than the cost of production, then Commerce should use
    best information to establish a reasonable estimate of the related party’s costs of
    production for such input.
    H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 100-576, at 595 (1988), reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1547, 1628
    (emphasis added). Contrary to what Mannesmann alleges, the "best information" referred to in
    this language does not refer to arms-length prices used in accordance with § 1677b(f)(2), but
    refers only to estimates of a related party's cost-of-production for purposes of § 1677b(f)(3).
    Commerce, however, did not rely on the major input rule as a basis for disregarding the transfer
    prices reported by Mannesmann. Rather, after verifying that HKM's billets costs did not exceed
    the transfer prices reported by Mannesmann, Commerce relied on § 1677b(f)(2) in using market
    values to value the billet inputs. Accordingly, the legislative history concerning "best information"
    for purposes of the major input rule simply had no relevance to Commerce's analysis.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                            Page 16
    Beyond simply not supporting Mannesmann's argument concerning "best information,"
    however, the legislative history of the major import rule actually supports Commerce's
    interpretation of § 1677b(f)(2) and (3). As stated in the quotation above, the conferees made
    clear in H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 100-576 that Commerce should use best information to estimate a
    related party’s cost of production only when it has "reasonable grounds to believe or suspect that
    the transfer price and also the arms length price would be less than the cost of production." Id.
    (emphasis added). Similarly, in making reference to the relationship of the "new" major input rule
    to §773 of the Trade Act, the conference report explicitly says that valuation under this rule
    would only take place "when such costs are greater than the price that would be used as a result
    of the application of paragraph (2) ('arms-length price')." Id. Finally, a summary for the major
    input rule provided in the conference report states:
    The Senate recedes with a substitute amendment which provides . . . (2) authority
    for the Commerce Department, when foreign market value is based on constructed
    value, to base the value of a major input which has been provided by a related
    party on its costs of production, rather than the price authorized under section
    773(e)(2), when certain conditions exist.
    Id. at 594, reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1547, 1627 (emphasis added).
    All three of these quotations demonstrate that, far from creating an independent rule to
    govern affiliated party transactions involving "major inputs," Congress actually intended the major
    input rule to be an exception to the general rule set out in § 773(e)(2) of the Trade Act [19
    U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(2) (1994)]. Like the language of the major input rule itself, the conference
    report makes clear that this exception only has relevance when Commerce has "reasonable
    grounds to believe or suspect" that both the transfer price and the arms-length price would be less
    than the affiliated party's cost of production. Consistent with this explanation, in this case
    Commerce did not rely on the major input rule, since it found that HKM's cost-of-production did
    not exceed either of these two prices. Accordingly, given the facts at hand, the legislative history
    cited above indicates that Commerce acted reasonably in interpreting the provisions of §
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                         Page 17
    1677b(f)(2), and not those of the major input rule, as applying to the valuation of Mannesmann's
    billet purchases.3
    In short, both the plain language of § 1677b(f)(2) and (3), as well as the legislative history
    of the major input rule, support Commerce's decision to use the highest of transfer price, cost of
    production, or market value to value the billets Mannesmann purchased from HKM. Contrary to
    Mannesmann's claims, Commerce reasonably interpreted § 1677b(f)(2) and (3) in finding that §
    1677b(f)(3) did not limit its ability to use market value information, notwithstanding the fact that
    HKM's billet costs of production were verified as being below the transfer prices reported by
    Mannesmann. Accordingly, the Court rejects Mannesmann's claims on this point.
    C
    Commerce's Use Of Adverse Facts Otherwise Available To Value
    Mannesmann's Billet Purchases Was Neither In Accordance With Law
    Nor Supported By Substantial Record Evidence.
    Pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a) (1994), Commerce is required to use facts otherwise
    available4 if necessary information is not available on the record, or:
    (2) an interested party or any other person -
    (A) withholds information that has been requested by [Commerce]
    . . . under this subtitle,
    3
    Mannesmann also cites SKF USA Inc. and SKF GmbH v. United States, 
    19 CIT 625
    , 
    888 F. Supp. 152
     (1995), as supporting its position that the major input rule cannot be applied to the
    case at bar. See Mannesmann's Motion at 10; Mannesmann's Reply at 4-5. While SKF is
    distinguishable from this case in many ways, it is sufficient to say that nothing in SKF undermines
    the reasonableness of Commerce's interpretation of § 1677b(f)(2) and (3). In fact, because of the
    factual difference between the two cases, the Court's analysis in SKF is irrelevant to the question
    at hand.
    4
    Formerly referred to as “best information available” or “BIA” under 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(c)
    (1988).
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                         Page 18
    (B) fails to provide such information by the deadlines for
    submission of the information or in the form and manner
    requested, subject to subsections (c)(1) and (e) of section 1677m of
    this title,
    (C) significantly impedes a proceeding under this subtitle, or
    (D) provides such information but the information cannot be
    verified as provided in section 1677m(i) of this title.
    Section 1677e(a) provides, however, that the use of facts available shall be subject to the
    limitations set forth in 19 U.S.C. § 1677m(d) (1994). Section 1677m, which were enacted as
    part of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act ("URAA"), Pub. L. 103-465 § 231, is "designed to
    prevent the unrestrained use of facts available as to a firm which makes its best effort to
    cooperate with [Commerce]." Borden, Inc. v. United States, 
    4 F. Supp.2d 1221
    , 1245 (CIT
    1998). Section 1677m(d), entitled "[de]ficient submissions," provides that:
    If [Commerce] . . . determines that a response to a request for information under
    this subtitle 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 in light of the time limits established for the completion
    of investigations or reviews under this subtitle. If that person submits further
    information in response to such deficiency and either -
    (1) [Commerce] finds that such response is not satisfactory, or
    (2) such response is not submitted within the applicable time
    limits,
    then [Commerce] . . . may, subject to subsection (e) of this section, disregard all
    or part of the original and subsequent responses.
    Subsection (e), in turn, provides that:
    In reaching a determination . . . [Commerce] . . . shall not decline to consider
    information that is submitted by an interested party and is necessary to the
    determination but does not meet all the applicable requirements established by
    [Commerce] . . . if -
    (1) the information is submitted by the deadline established for its
    submission,
    (2) the information can be verified,
    (3) the information is not so incomplete that it cannot serve as a reliable
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                           Page 19
    basis for reaching the applicable determination,
    (4) the interested party has demonstrated that it acted to the best of its
    ability in providing the information and meeting the requirements
    established by [Commerce] . . . with respect to the information, and
    (5) the information can be used without undue difficulties.
    19 U.S.C. § 1677m(e) (1994).
    In short, before Commerce may use facts available, 19 U.S.C. § 1677m(d) (1994)
    requires that Commerce give a party an opportunity to remedy or explain deficiencies in its
    submission. If the remedy or explanation provided by the party is found to be "not satisfactory"
    or untimely, the information may be disregarded in favor of facts available, subject to the five
    part test in Subsection (e). See Borden, 
    4 F. Supp.2d at 1245
     ("Subsection (e) may require use
    of the respondent's information notwithstanding that a remedy or explanation is unsatisfactory.").
    Once Commerce determines that use of facts available is warranted, 19 U.S.C. §
    1677e(b) (1994) further permits Commerce to apply an adverse inference if it makes the
    additional finding that "an interested party has failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its
    ability to comply with a request for information." As this Court has recently made clear, in
    order to find that a party "has failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability," it is not
    sufficient for Commerce to simply assert this legal standard as its conclusion or repeat its finding
    concerning the need for facts available. See Borden, 
    4 F. Supp.2d at 1246
     ("Here, the
    Department did not make the required additional finding that De Cecco had failed to act to the
    best of its ability. In essence, it simply repeated its 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a)(2)(B) finding, using
    slightly different words . . . .") (citation omitted); Ferro Union, Inc. v. United States, 
    44 F. Supp.2d 1310
    , 1329 (CIT 1999) ("Once Commerce has determined under 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a)
    that it may resort to facts available, it must make additional findings prior to applying 19 U.S.C. §
    1677e(b) and drawing an adverse inference.").
    Rather, to be supported by substantial evidence, Commerce needs to articulate why it
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                         Page 20
    concluded that a party failed to act to the best of its ability, and explain why the absence of this
    information is of significance to the progress of its investigation. See Ferro Union, 
    44 F. Supp.2d at 1332
     ("If overall the failure to identify these companies was of no significance to the progress
    of the investigation, then Commerce cannot apply total adverse facts on the basis of the non-
    identification of these companies."). As recently noted, "[u]nder the URAA, Commerce is now
    required to make more subtle judgments than under the previous best information available ('BIA')
    standard." 
    Id. at 1329
    .
    Applying these standards to the facts at hand, the Court finds that Commerce's decision to
    use adverse facts available in this instance is neither in accordance with law nor supported by
    substantial record evidence.
    1
    Commerce Has Not Adequately Identified How Mannesmann
    "Failed to Cooperate by Not Acting to the Best of its Ability."
    In support of its Motion For Judgment On The Agency Record, Mannesmann essentially
    argues that Commerce's use of adverse facts available to value its billet purchases from HKM was
    inappropriate, since Mannesmann fully and timely complied with Commerce's requests for
    information. See Mannesmann's Motion at 22-27; Mannesmann's Reply at 6-12. According to
    Mannesmann, this Court's case law makes clear that Commerce's use of adverse information is
    limited to circumstances where a party has ignored Commerce's requests, "failed to provide
    information key to a substantive determination, or otherwise behaved in ways that render the
    Department's regulatory duties impossible to perform." Mannesmann's Motion at 24. At most,
    Mannesmann argues, it reported information "with arguably minor errors," and that this "is not
    the same as deliberately withholding information or deliberately misleading ITA with respect to
    key information." Mannesmann's Reply at 8. In support of these points, Mannesmann also
    alleges that Commerce misrepresents as inadequate, inconsistent and misleading its responses to
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                          Page 21
    Commerce's questions concerning input purchases from unaffiliated suppliers. See Mannesmann's
    Motion at 14-21.
    In response, Defendant argues that the fact that Mannesmann may have responded fully to
    requests for other information is irrelevant to the issue of whether it was justified in using adverse
    facts available. See Defendant's Response at 23. According to Defendant, Commerce clearly did
    not fully reply to Question II.A.6.b of the first Section D Questionnaire, since Mannesmann, in
    limiting its response to "subject merchandise," did not provide the market price information
    requested concerning any purchases of the identical input from unaffiliated suppliers. See id. at
    21-22. As Defendant notes, "question 6.b did not refer to 'subject merchandise' and the
    introductory paragraph of question 6 clearly referred to major inputs used to produce [the broader
    category] 'the merchandise under review.'" Id. at 22. In addition, Defendant also reiterates
    Commerce's finding from the Final Results that Mannesmann's response to Question 4 of the
    Second Supplemental Section D Questionnaire was "misleading information because, as
    Commerce discovered at verification, Mannesmann had purchased during one sampled month the
    same grade of steel billets from the affiliated as well as the unaffiliated supplier." Id. at 22-23.
    Adding these two instances together, Defendant argues, "Commerce properly found that
    Mannesmann had failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability . . . and drew an
    inference adverse to Mannesmann." Id. at 23.
    For its part, Defendant-Intervenor adds that, in addition to the failings identified by
    Commerce, Mannesmann inappropriately limited its responses to Question 11 of the
    Supplemental Section D Questionnaire and Question 4 of Second Supplemental Questionnaire to
    "subject merchandise," and omitted important grade information requested by Commerce in the
    Supplemental Section D Questionnaire. Memorandum of Gulf States Tube Division Of Vision
    Metals In Opposition To Plaintiff's Motion For Judgment On The Agency Record ("Defendant-
    Intervenor's Response") at 20-22.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                      Page 22
    As discussed previously, in the Final Results and the Final Results Memorandum
    Commerce identified two errors in support of its conclusion that Mannesmann failed to cooperate
    by not acting to the best of its ability to comply with Commerce's information requests: (1)
    Mannesmann's failure to fully respond to Question II.A.6.b of the first Section D Questionnaire;
    and (2) Mannesmann's inaccurate response to Question 4 of the Second Supplemental Section D
    Questionnaire. See Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 13,220; Final Results Memo. at 14-15. In
    discussing the first of these errors in the Final Results, Commerce stated simply that "[m]arket
    price information was requested in the Section D questionnaire for any purchases of the identical
    input from unaffiliated suppliers, but Mannesmann did not respond to this portion of the
    questionnaire." Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 13,220. In its Final Results Memorandum,
    Commerce remarked on the significance of this omission, stating that Mannesmann "failed to
    respond to the Department's request to an issue that has great importance and relevance to the
    verification." Final Results Memo. at 14.
    In regard to the second alleged error, Mannesmann's statement that "MWR and MWS
    only purchase from other suppliers billets that HKM does not produce," Commerce noted that:
    At verification the Department attempted to verify this claim by examining
    Mannesmann's purchases of billets in one sample month. We discovered one such
    purchase in this month, and utilized this purchase price as market value.
    Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 13,220. According to Commerce, "[i]t was reasonable to assume
    that because Mannesmann's assertion was found to be untrue in one sample month, that there may
    have been other instances in which Mannesmann's claim proved untrue and the same grade of
    billets was purchased from both HKM and un unaffiliated party." Final Results Memo. at 14-15.
    Through these statements and its decision to use adverse facts available, Commerce
    appears to suggest that Mannesmann had evidence concerning its purchases of billets from
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                       Page 23
    unaffiliated suppliers that were of the same grade as those purchased from HKM, but willfully
    tried to keep such information from Commerce. Commerce, however, does not explicitly state
    such a conclusion, nor does it identify why these two errors were anything more than inadvertent
    omissions. For instance, while Commerce observes that Mannesmann "failed to respond" to
    Commerce's information request in Question II.A.6.b of the first Section D Questionnaire, Final
    Results Memo. at 14, failure to respond is only a basis for using "facts available." See 19 U.S.C.
    § 1677e(a)(2)(A) (1994) (withholding requested information) and 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a)(2)(B)
    (1994) (failure to provide requested information by the appropriate deadlines or in the form and
    manner requested). Without an additional finding that this failure to respond was because
    Mannesmann "failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability," however, 19 U.S.C. §
    1677e(b) (1994) prohibits Commerce from applying an adverse inference.
    +P VJKU TGICTF VJG HCEVU QH VJKU ECUG CTG UKOKNCT VQ VJQUG CFFTGUUGF KP (GTTQ 7PKQP X
    7PKVGF 5VCVGU    ( 5WRRF 1310 (CIT 1999). +P VJCV ECUG CNVJQWIJ %QOOGTEG UVCVGF VJCV
    VJG TGURQPFGPV JCF UKIPKHKECPVN[ KORGFGF VJG TGXKGY VJG %QWTV HQWPF VJCV UKIPKHKECPVN[
    KORGFKPI C TGXKGY YKVJQWV OQTG KU PQV C DCUKU HQT FTCYKPI CP CFXGTUG KPHGTGPEG #U VJG
    %QWTV PQVGF
    5KIPKHKECPVN[ KORGFKPI VJG TGXKGY KU QPN[ UWHHKEKGPV ITQWPFU VQ YCTTCPV CP
    CRRNKECVKQP QH HCEVU CXCKNCDNG RWTUWCPV VQ  75% h G
    C
    
    % 6JG
    CFFKVKQPCN HKPFKPI VJCV C RCTV[ HCKNGF VQ EQORN[ VQ VJG DGUV QH KVU CDKNKV[ OWUV
    DG OCFG VQ YCTTCPV CP CRRNKECVKQP QH CFXGTUG HCEVU CXCKNCDNG WPFGT  75% h
    G
    D
    (GTTQ 7PKQP  ( 5WRRF CV 
    HQQVPQVG QOKVVGF +P C HQQVPQVG VJG %QWTV HWTVJGT
    GZRNCKPGF
    #NVJQWIJ VJGUG VYQ UVCPFCTFU UKIPKHKECPVN[ KORGFKPI CPF HCKNKPI VQ
    EQQRGTCVG VQ VJG DGUV QH KVU CDKNKV[ CRRGCT SWKVG UKOKNCT VJGTG KU C UVCVWVQT[
    FKUVKPEVKQP CPF QPN[ VJG NCVVGT NGCFU VQ VJG CRRNKECVKQP QH CFXGTUG HCEVU
    +ORGFKPI VJG TGXKGY FQGU PQV JCXG VQ DG TGCF PGICVKXGN[ # TGURQPFGPV EQWNF
    KORGFG C TGXKGY YKVJQWV KPVGPFKPI VQ FQ UQ HQT GZCORNG DGECWUG KV FKF PQV
    WPFGTUVCPF VJG SWGUVKQPU CUMGF 6JG UVCVWVG TGSWKTGU CP CFFKVKQPCN HKPFKPI WPFGT
    5GEVKQP G
    D VJCV C TGURQPFGPV EQWNF JCXG EQORNKGF CPF HCKNGF VQ FQ UQ
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                       Page 24
    +F CV  P
    This explanation is equally applicable to Mannesmann's failure to fully respond to
    Question II.A.6.b. Although failing to respond to an information request is a basis for using
    "facts available," once the requirements of 19 U.S.C. § 1677m(d) and (e) (1994) have been met,
    failing to respond does not have to be read negatively. A respondent can fail to respond because
    it was not able to obtain the requested information, did not properly understand the question
    asked, or simply overlooked a particular request. Thus, without further explanation by
    Commerce, the Court will not infer that a respondent's failure to respond constitutes substantial
    evidence that it HCKNGF VQ EQQRGTCVG VQ VJG DGUV QH KVU CDKNKV[ 6JKU KU GURGEKCNN[ VTWG YJGTG CU
    JGTG C TGURQPFGPV UQWIJV VQ EQTTGEV KVU FGHKEKGPEKGU KP TGURQPFKPI VQ C UWRRNGOGPVCN
    SWGUVKQPPCKTG
    Concerning the second basis asserted by Commerce for using adverse facts available,
    Mannesmann's alleged misrepresentation in response to Question 4 of the Second Supplemental
    Section D Questionnaire, Commerce similarly fails to explain why it believes this
    misrepresentation constitutes anything more than an inadvertent error. As noted above, in its
    Final Results Memorandum, Commerce explains that Mannesmann's answer "was found to be
    untrue during the course of sampling at verification," Final Results Memo. at 14, and that "[i]t
    was reasonable to assume that because Mannesmann's assertion was found to be untrue in one
    sample month, that there may have been other instances in which Mannesmann's claim proved
    untrue and the same grade of billets was purchased from both HKM and an unaffiliated party," id.
    at 14-15.
    Even taking Commerce's assumption concerning "other instances" to be true, nothing in
    this conclusion addresses the issue of whether Mannesmann cooperated to the best of its ability.
    As Mannesmann points out in its Reply, the 80-ton billet purchase that Commerce discovered at
    verification constituted only ".08 percent of Mannesmann's monthly purchase of tube rounds
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                        Page 25
    from its affiliated supplier." Mannesmann's Reply at 8 n.4. Omission of one or more purchases of
    such a relatively small quantity could just as easily have been an oversight by Mannesmann as a
    deliberate evasion. As such, the Court will not uphold, without a more substantial showing,
    Commerce's conclusion that Mannesmann's failure to mention this purchase was willful --
    especially in the face of Mannesmann's firm assertion to the contrary. See id. at 8 ("At the time it
    responded to ITA's questionnaire, the responsible company officials were not aware of any
    purchases of the same grade of input billets that were purchased from both affiliated and
    unaffiliated suppliers."); cf. Helmerich & Payne, Inc. v. United States, 
    24 F. Supp.2d 304
    , 309
    n.16 (CIT 1998) ("Plaintiff here does not claim that it was providing information to the best of
    its ability and that therefore Commerce erred in adopting adverse inferences. . . . Here, neither
    Plaintiff nor NKK claimed that they could not submit the information. NKK simply did not
    complete the questionnaire.").
    In short, Commerce failed to identify any basis for its determination that Mannesmann
    purposely failed to cooperate in this aspect of its investigation, as 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b) (1994)
    now requires. See Borden, 
    4 F. Supp.2d at 1247
     ("Commerce has articulated no reason for
    finding De Cecco's failure was an unwillingness, rather than simply an inability, to cooperate,
    other than vague hints that De Cecco was 'cooking the books.'"); Ferro Union, 
    44 F. Supp.2d at 1331
     ("Commerce is obliged to explain why it concluded that a party failed to comply to the best
    of its ability prior to applying adverse facts, and it did not do so here."). Accordingly, this case
    is remanded so that Commerce may make specific findings as to whether Mannesmann acted to
    the best of its ability in providing information about input purchases from both affiliated and
    non-affiliated parties. See Ferro Union, 
    44 F. Supp.2d at 1331
     ("In order to apply adverse facts
    available, Commerce must be explicit in its reasoning . . . ."). If Commerce cannot identify
    substantial record evidence in support of such a conclusion, it may not continue to use adverse
    facts available in valuing Mannesmann's billet purchases from HKM.
    In remanding this determination, the Court is not holding that Commerce may not use
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                          Page 26
    Mannesmann's initial failure to provide information and its later, arguably misleading, assertion as
    evidence of Mannesmann's failure to cooperate to the best of its ability. Rather, the Court simply
    finds that, as it now stands, the evidence cited by Commerce in the Final Results, and the
    explanations it provides in relation to this evidence in the Final Results and its Final Results
    Memorandum, do not meet the substantial evidence requirement laid out in 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b)
    (1994). Accordingly, Commerce may use this evidence, as well as any other evidence it can
    identify in the record, should it continue to believe that the use of adverse facts available is
    warranted. See Borden, Inc. v. United States, 
    1998 WL 895890
     (CIT 1998), at 1 (noting that, in
    determining whether a party has cooperated to the best of its ability, "Commerce must necessarily
    draw some inferences from a pattern of behavior"). Further, and if appropriate, Commerce may
    (but need not) request further information from Mannesmann to determine whether the billet
    purchase from the non-affiliated supplier, Vallourec, is evidence of an isolated oversight or a
    deliberate effort to keep information on related party purchases from Commerce.
    2
    The Court May Not Consider Other Alleged Misstatements and
    Omissions by Mannesmann in Determining Whether
    Commerce's Use of Adverse Facts Available Is Justified.
    As noted above, in its memorandum opposing Mannesmann's Motion For Summary
    Judgment, Defendant-Intervenor cites three instances where it alleges that Mannesmann, in
    response to Commerce questions seeking information on the "merchandise under review,"
    deliberately tried to mislead Commerce by limiting its responses to "subject merchandise." See
    Defendant-Intervenor's Response at 18-22 (discussing Mannesmann's responses to Question
    II.A.6.b of the first Section D Questionnaire, Question 11 of the Supplemental Section D
    Questionnaire, and Question 4 of Second Supplemental Questionnaire). In addition, Defendant-
    Intervenor notes that, although Mannesmann did provide Commerce with an exhibit that
    contained some of the information on billet purchases from unaffiliated parties that Commerce
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                    Page 27
    requested in Question 12 of the Supplemental Section D Questionnaire, "Mannesmann's
    submission (Exhibit D-4) omitted the grade information requested by Commerce, which might
    have permitted Commerce to discover that the purchases from unaffiliated parties were of the
    same grade as those also produced by Mannesmann's affiliated party." 
    Id. at 20
    .
    While these criticisms may be valid, in the Final Results Commerce did not cite these
    alleged deficiencies as grounds for applying an adverse inference to Mannesmann.5 Thus, they
    constitute post hoc rationalizations of Commerce's actions, which this Court may not consider in
    this review. See Hoogovens Staal BV v. United States, 
    4 F. Supp. 2d 1213
    , 1219 (CIT 1998);
    Al Tech Specialty Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    947 F. Supp. 510
    , 514 (CIT 1996); Shieldalloy
    Metallurgical Corp. v. United States, 
    947 F. Supp. 525
    , 531 (CIT 1996). As this Court stated in
    Shieldalloy Metallurgical, "[t]he grounds upon which an administrative order must be judged are
    those upon which the record discloses that its action was based." Shieldalloy Metallurgical, 947
    F. Supp. at 531.
    Because these reasons were not identified by Commerce in the Final Results, the Court
    will not evaluate whether they support Commerce's use of adverse facts available at this time.
    Upon remand, however, Commerce may consider this record evidence.
    5
    As noted previously, in the Final Results Commerce cited two bases for its use of adverse facts
    available: (1) Mannesmann's failure to fully respond to Question II.A.6.b of the first Section D
    Questionnaire, and (2) Mannesmann's inaccurate response to Question 4 of the Second
    Supplemental Section D Questionnaire. See Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 13,220. Commerce
    did not specifically criticize the fact that Mannesmann limited its response to "subject
    merchandise" in regard to Question II.A.6.b or Question 4 of the Second Supplemental Section D
    Questionnaire, and it did not mention any (alleged) errors made by Mannesmann in answering
    Questions 11 or 12 of the Supplemental Section D Questionnaire.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                             Page 28
    3
    Use of One Mannesmann Billet Purchase from an Unrelated
    Supplier Is Rationally Related to Establishing an Arm's-Length
    Value for All of Mannesmann's Billet Purchases from HKM.
    In addition to arguing that Commerce's use of adverse information available was
    inappropriate, Mannesmann also argues that "it would be unreasonable to permit the Department
    to apply punitive information to the cost of all billets based on the price of a single transaction
    that is not representative of Mannesmann's normal course of business." Mannesmann's Motion
    at 14; see also id. at 21-22; Mannesmann's Reply at 7. According to Mannesmann, the billet
    purchase that Commerce used to determine market prices was a small, exceptional purchase of a
    grade of billets that was not used in producing seamless pipe for the U.S. market. See
    Mannesmann's Motion at 22. Thus, Mannesmann claims, "it is inappropriate to use this grade of
    steel from this single sale to value all of Mannesmann's billet costs." Id. According to
    Mannesmann, if Commerce is permitted to adjust billet costs at all, this exceptional purchase
    should only be used to adjust the price for the same grade of billet (SPEC2H 61 and 62), since
    "[t]he price differential calculated by the Department for this steel grade is not reliable nor
    appropriate evidence for a calculated price differential for any other grade." Id.
    In response, Defendant-Intervenor argues that Mannesmann "misses the point of the
    adjustment" when it argues that the price differential between the affiliated and non-affiliated
    party transactions should not be used to adjust purchases of other steel grades from HKM. See
    Defendant-Intervenor's Response at 31. Defendant-Intervenor argues:
    0QVJKPI KP VJG TGEQTF KPFKECVGU VJCV VJG RTKEG FKHHGTGPVKCN HQT CPQVJGT ITCFG
    YQWNF DG NGUU VJCP VJCV CEVWCNN[ WUGF D[ VJG &GRCTVOGPV /QTG KORQTVCPV
    HCKNKPI VQ CFLWUV VJG CHHKNKCVGF RCTV[ VTCPUCEVKQPU CU UWIIGUVGF D[ /CPPGUOCPP
    YQWNF XKQNCVG VJG &GRCTVOGPV	U UVCVWVQT[ QDNKICVKQPU       #//    75%
    hD
    H
     6JCV /CPPGUOCPP ENCKOU VQ JCXG RTQXKFGF KVU CEVWCN EQUVU KU
    KTTGNGXCPV VQ C FGVGTOKPCVKQP QH YJCV YQWNF DG CP CTO	UNGPIVJ OCTMGV RTKEG
    HTQO CP WPCHHKNKCVGF UWRRNKGT 6JG UVCVWVG TGSWKTGU C FGVGTOKPCVKQP QH OCTMGV
    XCNWG PQV CHHKNKCVGF RCTV[
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                       Page 29
    EQUV QH RTQFWEVKQP  75% hD
    H
     /QTGQXGT VJG OCLQT KPRWV TWNG CNNQYU VJG
    &GRCTVOGPV VQ WUG VJG RTQFWEGTUN CEVWCN EQUV QPN[ YJGTG UWEJ EQUV KU ITGCVGT VJCP VJG COQWPV
    VJCV YQWNF DG FGVGTOKPGF HQT UWEJ KPRWV WPFGT  75% hD
    H
      75%
    hD
    H
     7UG QH OCTMGV XCNWG YJGP JKIJGT VJCP RTQFWEVKQP EQUVU EQPHQTOU VQ VJG
    UVCVWVQT[ HTCOGYQTM
    Id.
    For its part, Defendant briefly adds that Commerce has broad discretion in choosing
    adverse facts available and that, in this case, its choice of facts was reasonable because it was
    based on actual market data for a sale to Mannesmann during the period of review. Defendant's
    Response at 16-17.
    On its face, it is clear that Mannesmann argues that there is not a rational relationship
    between the data chosen (one, small-quantity billet purchase from an unrelated supplier) and the
    valuation of its purchases from HKM. As this Court has repeatedly stated, even when the use of
    facts available is appropriate, a rational relationship must exist between the data chosen and the
    matter to which they are to apply. Cultivos Miramonte S.A. v. United States, 
    7 F. Supp.2d 989
    ,
    996 (CIT 1998); National Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    18 CIT 1126
    , 1132, 
    870 F. Supp. 1130
    ,
    1136 (CIT 1994); Manifattura Emmepi S.p.A. v. United States, 
    16 CIT 619
    , 623-24, 
    799 F. Supp. 110
    , 115-16 (1992).
    In this case, substantial evidence shows that such a relationship does exist, at least for
    purposes of using "adverse" facts available. As discussed in Section III.B., Commerce correctly
    interpreted 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(2) and (3) as giving it the authority to use the highest of transfer
    6
    As discussed below in Section III.C.4, should Commerce determine that its use of adverse facts
    available cannot be justified, the likelihood exists that Commerce may use data other than
    Mannesmann's (SPEC2H 61 and 62) billet purchase from Vallourec as "facts available." Given
    this reality, the Court does not currently address the issue of whether, outside the context of
    using "adverse" facts available, Commerce's use of one billet purchase from Vallourec is
    rationally related to the establishment of an arm's-length value for Mannesmann's billet
    purchases from HKM.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                       Page 30
    price, cost of production, or market value in valuing Mannesmann's billet purchases from HKM.
    Because it determined that the major input rule (19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(3) (1994)) was not
    applicable, since HKM's cost of production was below the transfer price reported by
    Mannesmann, Commerce relied on § 1677b(f)(2) to value the inputs. Section 1677b(f)(2)
    requires Commerce to determine whether the prices HKM charged Mannesmann for billets fairly
    TGHNGEVGF OCTMGV XCNWGU CPF KH VJG[ FKF PQV WUG KPHQTOCVKQP CXCKNCDNG EQPEGTPKPI OCTMGV
    RTKEGU VQ XCNWG VJG VTCPUCEVKQPU +P NKPG YKVJ VJKU OCPFCVG HQT VJG (KPCN 4GUWNVU %QOOGTEG
    WUGF VJG UQNG KPUVCPEG YJGTG KV HQWPF VJCV /CPPGUOCPP JCF RWTEJCUGF VJG UCOG ITCFG QH UVGGN
    HTQO DQVJ *-/ CPF C PQPCHHKNKCVGF RCTV[ CU VJG DCUKU HQT CFLWUVKPI CNN QH *-/	U DKNNGV
    RWTEJCUGU
    9JKNG UWEJ CP CFLWUVOGPV OC[ NGCF VQ OCTMGV RTKEGU HQT /CPPGUOCPP	U TGNCVGF RCTV[
    VTCPUCEVKQPU VJCV KP TGCNKV[ CTG VQQ JKIJ VJG %QWTV FQGU PQV HKPF UWEJ C OGCPU QH GUVKOCVKPI
    OCTMGV XCNWG NCEMKPI KP TCVKQPCNKV[ 4CVJGT    a close nexus exists between the data chosen and
    the matter to which it applies since, GUUGPVKCNN[   %QOOGTEG FKF PQ OQTG VJCP WUG CXCKNCDNG
    
    TGEQTF GXKFGPEG QH C OCTMGV RTKEG VQ JGNR KV CRRTQZKOCVG QVJGT OCTMGV RTKEGU
    +P NKIJV QH VJKU EQPENWUKQP UJQWNF %QOOGTEG FGOQPUVTCVG QP TGOCPF VJCV VJG WUG QH
    CFXGTUG DGUV KPHQTOCVKQP CXCKNCDNG KU UVKNN CRRTQRTKCVG VJG %QWTV YKNN UWUVCKP   as supported by
    substantial record evidence VJG TCVKQPCNKV[ QH WUKPI the billet purchase (SPEC2H 61 and 62)
    from Vallourec as a means of determining market values for all of Mannesmann's billet
    purchases from HKM.
    7
    The Court also notes that use of this value would be consistent with the purpose of adverse
    facts available, which is to ensure that an uncooperative party "does not obtain a more favorable
    result by failing to cooperate than if it had cooperated fully." Statement of Administrative Action
    Accompanying the URAA ("SAA"), H.R. Doc. No. 103-316, at 870 (1994), reprinted in 1994
    U.S.C.C.A.N. 4040, 4199.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                          Page 31
    4
    The Court Will Not Consider Whether Commerce's Calculation
    of Market Value Is Sustainable as a Facts Available, As
    Opposed to an Adverse Facts Available, Determination.
    In its memorandum opposing Mannesmann's Motion For Summary Judgment,
    Defendant-Intervenor argues that:
    Contrary to Mannesmann's claim, Commerce's valuation of the billets at issue
    here not [sic] a punitive application of adverse facts available. Indeed,
    Commerce's valuation finding need not have been characterized as adverse and is
    sustainable as a facts available determination.
    Defendant-Intervenor's Response at 18.
    Regardless of the merit of this position, this Court should not, and will not, consider it at
    this point in the litigation. For the Final Results, Commerce made clear that it was using data
    from one purchase of billets from an unaffiliated supplier as "adverse facts available" in making
    a 30.9% price adjustment to Mannesmann's purchases from HKM. See Final Results, 63 Fed.
    Reg. at 13,220; Final Results Memo. at 15. Nowhere did Commerce indicate that it was also, or
    alternatively, using this data on the basis of "facts available." For this reason, the Court
    recognizes that, should Commerce conclude upon remand that it cannot continue to apply
    adverse facts available, Commerce will not necessarily continue to apply the same data. Rather,
    the likelihood exists that Commerce will choose other figures, or request further information,
    that it may use as "facts available." In light of these possibilities, it would be inappropriate for
    the Court to currently consider the issue of whether Commerce's reliance on one purchase of
    billets from an unaffiliated supplier is sustainable on a "facts available," as opposed to an
    "adverse facts available," basis.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                       Page 32
    D
    Commerce's Use Of Adverse Facts Otherwise Available To Value Mannesmann's
    U.S. Duty Amounts Is Not Supported By Substantial Record Evidence.
    The final point of contention between the parties concerns the customs duties that
    Mannesmann, in response to Section C of Commerce's Antidumping Questionnaire, reported as
    having paid on its U.S. sales. As discussed above, at verification Commerce discovered that
    Mannesmann had underreported its U.S. duties paid on a number of entries, and that Mannesmann
    could not recreate the allocation methodologies it used to derive its figures. See Final Results, 63
    Fed. Reg. at 13,222. In light of these problems, Commerce used the highest U.S. duty amounts
    reported by Mannesmann for those instances where it was unable to exactly verify Mannesmann's
    figures. Id.
    Though not specifically presented as such, Plaintiffs appear to challenge three aspects of
    Commerce's calculation of Mannesmann's U.S. duty amounts: (1) Commerce's initial decision to
    reject the U.S. duty amounts reported by Mannesmann in favor of facts available; (2) Commerce's
    decision to use "adverse" facts available; and (3) Commerce's use of impermissibly punitive
    figures as adverse facts available. For the reasons below, the Court remands this case to
    Commerce on the grounds that its use of "adverse" facts available is not supported by substantial
    record evidence.
    1
    Commerce's Use of Facts Available to Value Mannesmann's U.S. Duty
    Amounts Is Supported by Substantial Evidence.
    Mannesmann first challenges Commerce's use of its highest reported U.S. duty amounts
    on the grounds that "the discrepancies between reported and verified data were minimal and did
    not justify rejection of actual information." Mannesmann's Motion at 27. According to
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                        Page 33
    Mannesmann, because subject and non-subject merchandise were generally present in the same
    customs entry, it had to allocate duties paid for purposes of Commerce's investigation. Id. Also,
    allocations had to be made for harbor maintenance and merchandise processing fees. Id.
    Accordingly, Mannesmann argues, "[i]n performing these allocations, percentages had to be
    calculated and applied, and rounding decisions had to be made. It is not surprising, therefore, that
    minor discrepancies arose in Mannesmann's duty calculations compared with the Department's
    calculations at verification." Id.
    In addition to explaining why it was reasonable that the figures it reported as U.S. duties
    paid differed from those Commerce calculated, Mannesmann further argues that the discrepancies
    identified by Commerce were de minimis. According to Mannesmann, for the 52 percent of
    subject merchandise examined by Commerce, Commerce found discrepancies ranging from $.07
    to $.98 cents per ton. Id. at 28. On a percentage basis, this underreporting ranged from a high of
    1.6 % of duties paid (per ton) to a low of 0.1 % of duties paid, and the weighted average
    discrepancy equaled only 0.22 % of duties paid. Analysis of U.S. Duty Adjustment, id., Ex. A.
    Because these errors were so minor, and because Commerce was able to tie Mannesmann's
    reported data to its "financials," Mannesmann argues that "the Department's total rejection of the
    reported duty due to minor discrepancies with the verified duty paid is unwarranted." Id. at 29.
    In response, Defendant briefly asserts that Commerce was justified in using adverse facts
    available pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a) because it was unable to verify the amounts of U.S.
    duty reported by Mannesmann. According to Defendant, Commerce's finding that Mannesmann
    failed to cooperate to the best of its ability "is clearly supported by the record because
    Mannesmann possessed the source documentation, such as Customs entry forms and payment
    records. It simply failed to report the accurate amounts of U.S. duty." Defendant's Response at
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                         Page 34
    28.8 Defendant also argues, in its supplemental brief, that as "[n]o statute or regulation authorizes
    or requires Commerce to disregard de minimis errors . . . or specifies what constitutes de minimis
    errors for determining whether a party has complied with an information request. . . . Commerce
    . . . will make its determination of whether to apply facts available on a fact- and case- specific
    basis." Defendant's Brief On The Issue Of What Constitutes A De Minimis Error For
    Determining Whether A Party Has Complied With An Information Request From Commerce at 3.
    Pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(a)(2)(D) and § 1677m(e)(2) (1994), Commerce may
    disregard information submitted by a party that cannot be verified and substitute facts available.
    In this case, Commerce found that it was unable to exactly verify the U.S. duty amounts reported
    by Mannesmann and, consequently, resorted to facts available. Although Commerce has
    considerable discretion in deciding whether a party has sufficiently replied to an information
    request, Helmerich, 
    24 F. Supp.2d at 308
    , this discretion is not unfettered. For instance, this
    Court has found Commerce's use of best information available (now "facts otherwise available")
    to be arbitrary and an abuse of discretion where a respondent failed to give information that did
    not exist, or where Commerce did not adequately request the information at issue. See
    Outokumpu Copper Rolled Products AB v. United States, 
    17 CIT 848
    , 867-68, 
    829 F. Supp. 1371
    , 1386-87 (1993).
    Against this background, the fact that Commerce, on the basis of what are essentially
    minimal, non-consequential deviations, found that it was unable to verify Mannesmann's reported
    duty rates -- and, on this grounds, disregarded them -- gives the Court pause. Such a rigid
    verification process appears to be in conflict with Commerce's normal practice of ignoring de
    minimis errors, see, e.g., Notice of Final Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value:
    8
    Defendant's comments on this part of the Final Results, like those of Defendant-Intervenor, deal
    almost exclusively with the issue of why the use of "adverse" facts available was appropriate.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                           Page 35
    Small Diameter Circular Seamless Carbon and Alloy Steel, Standard, Line and Pressure Pipe
    From Italy, 
    60 Fed. Reg. 31,981
    , 31987 (1995) (minor discrepancies between the respondent's
    actual freight expenses and the reported freight expenses did not warrant the use of best
    information available), and, without more, might constitute an abuse of discretion. Cf. NTN
    Bearing Corp. v. United States, 
    74 F.3d 1204
    , 1208-09 (Fed. Cir. 1995) (noting, in regard to
    Commerce's refusal to consider a request for correction of clerical errors, that "[w]hile the parties
    must exercise care in their submissions, it is unreasonable to require perfection").
    In this instance, however, not only did Mannesmann's figures slightly vary from those
    calculated by Commerce, but Mannesmann was unable to recreate or explain at verification the
    method by which it arrived at its results. As such, Commerce was unable to examine
    Mannesmann's methodology, compare it to its own, and determine why Mannesmann's reported
    duties were slightly lower than those calculated by Commerce in most instances. In light of this
    inability to verify Mannesmann's calculation methods, the Court finds Commerce's decision to use
    appropriate facts available to be supported by substantial record evidence, despite the relative
    insignificance of the errors involved.
    2
    Commerce's Use of "Adverse" Facts Available Is Not
    Supported by Substantial Evidence.
    While the discrepancies Commerce identified at verification are sufficient to support its
    use of appropriate facts available, these errors do not provide substantial evidence to support
    Commerce's use of "adverse" facts available.
    As discussed previously, once Commerce finds that it may resort to facts available, it may
    apply an adverse interest in choosing among facts available if it can show that "an interested party
    has failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its ability to comply with a request for
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                          Page 36
    information." 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b) (1994). In this instance, and in contrast to its finding
    concerning the valuation of Mannesmann's billet purchases, Commerce appears to have
    adequately laid out its reasons for concluding that Mannesmann failed to act to the best of its
    ability. Commerce found that Mannesmann had repeatedly underreported its U.S. duties paid,
    and that such a pattern of underreporting "indicates that errors exist which are more pervasive
    than can be explained by rounding or allocation methodologies." Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at
    13,222. In addition, Commerce noted that "the company could not recreate or explain the
    allocation methodologies used in its submission." Id. While it could have been stated more
    directly, it seems clear from these statements that, in Commerce's view, the discrepancies it
    identified at verification were evidence that Mannesmann had willfully not reported correct
    figures. See AK Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    988 F. Supp. 594
    , 607 (CIT 1997), aff'd 
    1999 WL 504236
     (Fed. Cir. 1999) (quoting Bowman Transp., Inc. v. Arkansas-Best Freight System, Inc.,
    
    419 U.S. 281
     (1974)) ("The Court will 'uphold a decision of less than ideal clarity if the agency's
    path may reasonably be discerned.'").
    Notwithstanding the adequacy of this explanation, however, the evidence identified by
    Commerce does not provide substantial evidence that Mannesmann "failed to cooperate by not
    acting to the best of its ability to comply with a request for information." See 19 U.S.C. §
    1677e(b) (1994). In determining whether a party has acted to the best of its ability for purposes
    of 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b) (1994), Commerce, like this Court, must interpret this provision in light
    of the principle that the law does not care for, or concern itself with, small or trifling errors. As
    the Supreme Court made clear in Wisconsin Dep't of Revenue v. William Wrigley, Jr., Co., 
    505 U.S. 214
    , 231 (1992), "the venerable maxim de minimis non curat lex ('the law cares not for
    trifles') is part of the established background of legal principles against which all enactments are
    adopted, and which all enactments (absent contrary indication) are deemed to accept." This
    maxim of statutory construction applies with equal force to the interpretation of customs and
    trade laws. See Alcan Aluminum Corp. v. United States, 
    165 F.3d 898
     (Fed. Cir. 1999) (applying
    Wrigley to country-of-origin determination); Washington Red Raspberries Comm'n v.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                               Page 37
    United States, 
    859 F.2d 898
     (Fed. Cir. 1988) (finding dumping margins of less than 0.5% to be de
    minimis); Industria de Fundicao Tupy v. United States, 
    20 CIT 870
    , 882-83, 
    936 F. Supp. 1009
    ,
    1019-20 (1996) (recognizing the doctrine of de minimis non curat lex in holding that "[b]ased on
    Plaintiffs' assertion that its transactions are 'insignificant' . . . the Court also dismisses [Plaintiffs']
    Complaint pursuant to the long stated proposition that it should not bother with trifles").
    Unless a statute sets out specific guidelines,9 the question of whether an activity is a de
    minimis derivation from a prescribed standard must be determined in reference to the purpose of
    the standard. Wrigley, 
    505 U.S. at 232
    . As stated in the Statement of Administrative Action that
    accompanied the Uruguay Round Agreements Act, "Commerce's potential use of [facts available]
    provides the only incentive to foreign exporters and producers to respond to Commerce
    questionnaires." SAA, H.R. Doc. No.103-316, at 868, reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4198.10
    Consistent with this goal of ensuring compliance, the SAA states that, where a party has been
    uncooperative, Commerce "may employ adverse inferences about the missing information to
    ensure that the party does not obtain a more favorable result by failing to cooperate than if it had
    cooperated fully." Id. at 870, reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4199. The SAA further
    provides that "[i]n employing adverse inferences, one factor the agencies will consider is the
    extent to which a party may benefit from its own lack of cooperation." Id.
    Viewing Mannesmann's errors in light of this "purpose" for applying adverse facts
    available, the Court finds Mannesmann's errors to be de minimis. While it is true that the U.S.
    9
    No specific statute or regulation defines what constitutes a de minimis error for purposes of
    determining whether a party has complied with an information request or acted to the best of its
    ability.
    10
    
    19 U.S.C. § 3512
    (d) (1994) provides that the SAA "shall be regarded as an authoritative
    expression by the United States concerning the interpretation and application of the Uruguay
    Round Agreements and [the URAA] in any judicial proceeding in which a question arises
    concerning such interpretation or application."
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                      Page 38
    duties reported by Mannesmann were lower than those calculated by Commerce in most
    instances, the degree of these variances was generally trifling. As Mannesmann makes clear in its
    brief, the weighted average discrepancy found by Commerce equaled only 0.22 % of duties paid.
    Analysis of U.S. Duty Adjustment, Mannesmann's Motion, Ex. A. Further, in 89% of those
    instances where Commerce found that Mannesmann had underreported its duties paid, the
    discrepancy from the numbers calculated by Commerce equaled 0.1% of the duty paid. See id.11
    Only 11% of the discrepancies found equaled more than 1% of the duty paid, see id.,12 and in
    three instances Commerce found no discrepancies, see Final Results, 63 Fed. Reg. at 13,222;
    Final Results Memo. at 12.
    Given the limited nature of these errors, the Court does not find substantial evidence to
    support Commerce's conclusion that "errors exist which are more pervasive than can be explained
    by rounding or allocation methodologies" and its related decision to use adverse facts available.
    As noted above, the purpose of using an adverse inference is to "ensure that the party does not
    obtain a more favorable result by failing to cooperate than if it had cooperated fully." SAA, H.R.
    Doc. No.103-316, at 870, reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4199. In this case, the limited
    amounts by which Commerce found that Mannesmann had underreported its U.S. duties
    presumably would not have had any substantive effects upon the calculation of the U.S. price for
    Mannesmann's products, and Defendant has not identified any record evidence to indicate
    otherwise. Accordingly, errors in the figures Mannesmann provided would have given it almost
    11
    According to Mannesmann's exhibit ("Analysis of U.S. Duty Adjustment"), sales observations
    1,5,6, and 8-11 were underreported by 0.1%. These observations accounted for [confidential #]
    of the [confidential #] tons of product that Commerce found to have been underreported, or
    approximately 89%. The Court notes, however, that because Commerce was able to verify
    Mannesmann's reported duties for three sales, Final Results Memo. at 12, the frequency with
    which the duties reported by Mannesmann either equaled, or were within 0.1%, of the figures
    calculated by Commerce was likely at or above 90%.
    12
    Sales observations 45, 46, 49-51, 53 and 54 (accounting for [confidential #] tons of product)
    were underreported by 1.1%, while sales observations 84-91 ([confidential #] tons) were
    underreported by 1.6%. These observations accounted for [confidential #] of the [confidential
    #] tons of product that Commerce found to have been underreported, or approximately 11%.
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                      Page 39
    no advantage compared to the "correct" figures calculated by Commerce.
    Further, although Commerce noted that Mannesmann could not recreate or explain the
    allocation methodologies it used for its submission during verification, the record does not show
    that Mannesmann kept any of the information underlying its conclusions from Commerce.
    Rather, Mannesmann provided Commerce with the relevant source documentation, and
    Commerce was able to compute its own, nearly identical, figures for the U.S. duties paid by
    Mannesmann. See U.S. Sales Verification Report, dated 09/02/97, Conf. AR-57, Mannesmann
    Appendix, App. 10, at 21-26. Given Mannesmann's willingness to provide this information (and
    given how close the figures provided by Mannesmann were to those calculated by Commerce),
    this does not appear to be a situation where Mannesmann tried to obtain a more favorable result
    by not providing relevant information. In fact, substantial record evidence supports an opposite
    conclusion.
    In light of the foregoing, the Court finds that Commerce's decision to apply an adverse
    inference in this case is not supported by substantial record evidence. While the figures reported
    by Mannesmann were generally lower than those calculated by Commerce, the differences
    between the figures were so small that they could not reasonably be viewed as evidence of non-
    cooperation by Mannesmann. See 0QVKEG QH (KPCN &GVGTOKPCVKQP QH 5CNGU CV .GUU 6JCP (CKT
    8CNWG 5VCKPNGUU 5VGGN 2NCVG KP %QKNU (TQO 5QWVJ #HTKEC  (GF 4GI  
    
    HKPFKPI VJCV CNVJQWIJ VJG TGURQPFGPV EQOOKVVGF C PWODGT QH GTTQTU CPF KP EGTVCKP ECUGU
    HCKNGF VQ HQNNQY VJG KPUVTWEVKQPU RTQXKFGF %QOOGTEG IGPGTCNN[ EQPVKPWGF VQ TGN[ WRQP
    =TGURQPFGPV	U? UWDOKVVGF UCNGU CPF EQUV FCVC CFLWUVGF CRRTQRTKCVGN[ HQT CP[ GTTQTU QT QOKUUKQPU
    QP =TGURQPFGPV	U? RCTV Mannesmann also appears to have supplied Commerce with all its
    relevant source data; a fact which undermines any idea that Mannesmann was purposefully
    withholding data in order to obtain a more favorable outcome.
    Accordingly, this aspect of the Final Results is remanded so that Commerce may identify
    Court No. 98-04-00886                                                                         Page 40
    other record evidence to support its use of "adverse" facts available. In order to do this,
    Commerce may, at its discretion, calculate the duties paid on the entries that it did not review at
    verification and compare its figures to the duty amounts reported by Mannesmann. Should
    Commerce be unable to, or choose not to, identify such substantial evidence, it may only use
    reasonable, non-adverse facts available13 to value the U.S. duties paid by Mannesmann.14
    IV
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that although Commerce correctly interpreted
    19 U.S.C. § 1677b(f)(2) and (3) (1994), its use of adverse facts available to value Mannesmann's
    billet purchases from HKM was neither in accordance with law nor supported by substantial
    record evidence. The evidence cited by Commerce in the Final Results, and the explanation it
    provides in relation to this evidence, do not demonstrate that Mannesmann failed to cooperate to
    the best of its ability in this aspect of the investigation, as required by 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b)
    (1994). Accordingly, this aspect of the Final Results is remanded so that Commerce may
    13
    A reasonable choice of facts available may include use of the figures provided by Mannesmann
    (subject to necessary adjustments), use of the figures calculated by Commerce (where available),
    or the use of any other record evidence which bears a rational relationship to the calculations of
    the U.S. duties paid by Mannesmann, see Koenig & Bauer-Albert AG v. United States, 
    15 F. Supp.2d 834
    , 846 (CIT 1998), and is otherwise in accordance with law and supported by
    substantial evidence. Similarly, Commerce may use record evidence to calculate U.S. duties for
    those Mannesmann sales that it did not attempt to review at verification, if appropriate. That said,
    however, the Court notes that these possible alternatives are only suggestions; the ultimate choice
    of facts available is a matter largely reserved to Commerce's discretion. See Allied-Signal
    Aerospace Co. v. United States, 
    996 F.2d 1185
    , 1191 (Fed. Cir. 1993) (recognizing that, as
    Congress did not explicitly define what constitutes BIA (now facts otherwise available),
    Commerce's "construction of the [BIA] statute must be accorded considerable deference").
    14
    Because substantial record evidence does not support Commerce's decision to apply adverse
    facts available, the Court need not reach the question, raised by Plaintiffs, of whether the adverse
    information chosen by Commerce was impermissibly punitive.
    reconsider its conclusion, or more specifically articulate why it concluded, that Mannesmann
    failed to act to the best of its ability in providing information about input purchases from both
    affiliated and non-affiliated parties. See Ferro Union, 
    44 F. Supp.2d at 1331
     ("In order to apply
    adverse facts available, Commerce must be explicit in its reasoning . . . .").
    Similarly, and in light of the de minimis nature of the errors at issue, the Court also finds
    that the record evidence identified by Commerce does not adequately support its conclusion that
    Mannesmann failed to cooperate to the best of its ability (and, in turn, that the use of adverse facts
    available was appropriate). Thus, this aspect of the Final Results is also remanded for further
    consideration by Commerce. Upon remand, Commerce may seek to identify other record
    evidence to support its use of "adverse" facts available, or, should it choose (or be unable) to do
    so, it may use non-adverse record evidence to value the U.S. duties paid by Mannesmann.
    __________________________
    Evan J. Wallach, Judge
    Date: October 29, 1999
    New York, New York