Bond Street, Ltd. v. United States ( 2011 )


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  •                                          Slip Op. 11-37
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    BOND STREET, LTD.,                                     :
    Plaintiff,                 :
    v.                                       :
    UNITED STATES,                                 :
    Court No. 08-00049
    Defendant,                 :
    and                                      :
    GLEASON INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS, INC.                      :
    and PRECISION PRODUCTS, INC.,
    :
    Defendant-Intervenors.
    [Sustaining U.S. Department of Commerce’s remand determination reaffirming agency ruling that
    subject hand cart is within scope of antidumping duty order on hand trucks from the People’s
    Republic of China]
    Dated: April 12, 2011
    James Caffentzis (James Caffentzis), for Plaintiff.
    Tony West, Assistant Attorney General; Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and Patricia M.
    McCarthy, Assistant Director, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of
    Justice (Stephen C. Tosini and Joshua E. Kurland); Thomas M. Beline, Office of the Chief Counsel
    for Import Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, Of Counsel; for Defendant.
    Crowell & Moring, LLP (Matthew P. Jaffe), for Defendant-Intervenors.
    OPINION
    RIDGWAY, Judge:
    Pending before the Court are the Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court
    Remand, filed by the U.S. Department of Commerce pursuant to the decision in Bond Street I. See
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                           Page 2
    generally Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand: Hand Trucks and Certain
    Parts Thereof from the People’s Republic of China (“Remand Results”); Bond Street, Ltd. v. United
    States, 33 CIT ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d 1343
     (2009) (“Bond Street I”).
    Bond Street I remanded to Commerce the agency’s determination that the Stebco Portable
    Slide-Flat Cart (style no. 390009 CHR) – imported by Plaintiff Bond Street, Ltd., a New York
    importer of business and travel products – falls within the scope of the antidumping duty order on
    hand trucks from the People’s Republic of China. See Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1351-52
    ; Hand Trucks and Certain Parts Thereof from the People’s Republic of China: Scope
    Ruling on Stebco Portable Slide-Flat Cart Inv. No. A-570-891 (May 30, 2007) (Administrative
    Record (“A.R.”) Doc. No. 12) (“Scope Ruling”);1 Notice of Antidumping Duty Order: Hand Trucks
    and Certain Parts Thereof From the People’s Republic of China, 
    69 Fed. Reg. 70,122
     (Dec. 2, 2004)
    (“Antidumping Order”). In particular, Bond Street I ruled that Commerce’s Scope Ruling could not
    be sustained because the agency had “failed to . . . make a determination as to whether the toe plate
    of the Stebco cart can ‘slide[] under a load for purposes of lifting and/or moving the load,’” an
    operational/functional requirement set forth in the Antidumping Order, and the central focus of this
    litigation. See Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1350
     (quoting, inter alia,
    Antidumping Order, 
    69 Fed. Reg. 70,122
    ).
    1
    The complete administrative record in this action includes the record compiled by
    Commerce during the initial scope proceeding, as well as the record that the agency compiled in the
    course of the remand proceeding. Citations to documents in the administrative record of the initial
    scope proceeding are noted as “A.R. Doc. No. ____,” while citations to documents in the record of
    the remand proceeding – the supplemental administrative record – are noted as “S.A.R. Doc. No.
    ____.”
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                             Page 3
    On remand, Commerce “found through testing [of ] Bond Street’s Stebco Cart that [the cart]
    is adept at sliding under a load for the purposes of lifting/moving that load. Additionally, once the
    projecting edge/toe plate is slid under a load, the projecting edge/toe plate remain[s] stable and there
    [is] no difficulty in lifting and moving the load.” See Remand Results at 4; see also 
    id. at 1, 3-4
    , 9-
    10, 12. Commerce thus concluded that – in addition to possessing the four specific physical
    characteristics required by the Antidumping Order – the Stebco cart also has “the operational and
    functional ability to slide under a load for the purposes of lifting and/or moving that load.” See 
    id. at 4
    ; see also 
    id. at 1-2, 10, 12
    . Commerce’s Remand Results therefore reaffirmed the agency’s
    earlier determination that the Stebco cart falls within the scope of the Antidumping Order. See
    Remand Results at 1-2, 9, 12.
    Bond Street contends that “the tests conducted by [Commerce] do not provide a basis for .
    . . find[ing] that the Stebco [cart] . . . slide[s] under a load” within the meaning of the Antidumping
    Order, and that the agency failed to properly consider certain tests conducted by Bond Street and
    the agency itself. See Plaintiff’s Comments on Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court
    Remand (“Pl.’s Brief”) at 2, 3. In addition, Bond Street critiques the adequacy of Commerce’s
    explanation of its remand determination, and raises various other procedural objections. See, e.g.,
    
    id. at 3-4
    . Bond Street concludes that the Remand Results are not supported by substantial evidence
    in the record, and are otherwise not in accordance with law. See generally id.; Plaintiff’s Reply to
    Defendant’s Response to Bond Street’s Comments Upon Commerce’s Remand Results (“Pl.’s Reply
    Brief”). Bond Street argues that the Court therefore should “reject Commerce’s remand results and
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 4
    either remand the matter once again . . . , or alternatively enter judgment for Bond Street based upon
    the facts of record.” See Pl.’s Reply Brief at 6.
    In contrast, the Government and the Defendant-Intervenors – Gleason Industrial Products,
    Inc. and Precision Products, Inc. (collectively, “Domestic Manufacturers”) – contend that the
    Remand Results comply fully with the instructions in Bond Street I, and are both supported by
    substantial evidence and otherwise in accordance with law. The Government and the Domestic
    Manufacturers therefore argue that Commerce’s remand determination should be sustained in all
    respects. See generally Comments on Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand
    (“Def.-Ints.’ Brief”); Defendant’s Response to Bond Street’s Comments Upon Commerce’s Remand
    Results (“Def.’s Brief”).
    Jurisdiction lies under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1581
    (c) (2000). For the reasons set forth below, the
    Remand Results, including Commerce’s remand determination concluding that the Stebco cart is
    within the scope of the Antidumping Order, must be sustained.
    I. Background
    In December 2004, the Department of Commerce published an antidumping duty order
    covering hand trucks and certain parts thereof from the People’s Republic of China. See Notice of
    Antidumping Duty Order: Hand Trucks and Certain Parts Thereof From the People’s Republic of
    China, 
    69 Fed. Reg. 70,122
     (Dec. 2, 2004) (“Antidumping Order”). The first section of the
    Antidumping Order (captioned “Scope of Order”) expressly defines the covered merchandise,
    identifying four specific required physical characteristics, in addition to the operational/functional
    requirement that is at issue in this action:
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 5
    A complete or fully assembled hand truck is a hand-propelled barrow consisting of
    [1] a vertically disposed frame having [2] a handle or more than one handle at or near
    the upper section of the vertical frame; [3] at least two wheels at or near the lower
    section of the vertical frame; and [4] a horizontal projecting edge or edges, or toe
    plate, perpendicular or angled to the vertical frame, at or near the lower section of
    the vertical frame. The projecting edge or edges, or toe plate, slides under a load for
    purposes of lifting and/or moving the load.
    . . . . That the vertical frame, handling area, wheels, projecting edges or other parts
    of the hand truck can be collapsed or folded is not a basis for exclusion of the hand
    truck from the scope of the [Antidumping Order]. . . . Finally, that the hand truck
    may exhibit physical characteristics in addition to the vertical frame, the handling
    area, the projecting edges or toe plate, and the two wheels at or near the lower
    section of the vertical frame, is not a basis for exclusion of the hand truck from the
    scope of the [Antidumping Order].
    Examples of names commonly used to reference hand trucks are hand truck,
    convertible hand truck, appliance hand truck, cylinder hand truck, bag truck, dolly,
    or hand trolley. . . .
    Excluded from the scope [of the Antidumping Order] are small two-wheel or four-
    wheel utility carts specifically designed for carrying loads like personal bags or
    luggage in which the frame is made from telescoping tubular material measuring less
    than e inch in diameter[.]
    Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (“Scope of Order” section) (emphasis added).
    A. Commerce’s Scope Ruling on the Stebco Cart
    After the Antidumping Order issued, Bond Street sought a ruling from Commerce that the
    Stebco cart is beyond the scope of the Order, and is therefore not subject to antidumping duties
    under that Order. See Bond Street Request for Scope Ruling (A.R. Doc. No. 1). Bond Street argued
    that the Stebco cart is not a “hand truck” within the meaning of the Antidumping Order, but – rather
    – a collapsible “portable luggage cart,” designed for “personal uses such as carrying luggage,
    carrying personal bags, or a salesman storing the cart in his car to carry in many samples[] or sample
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                               Page 6
    cases together at one time to avoid multiple trips.” See id. at 2, 4; see also id. at 3; A.R. Doc. No.
    4 at 3. According to Bond Street, several physical features of the Stebco cart – i.e., its collapsible
    toe plate, the placement of a bungee cord hook, and the absence of a kick plate – make it impossible
    for the cart to “slide[] under” a load for purposes of lifting and/or moving the load, as required by
    the express terms of the Antidumping Order. See A.R. Doc. No. 1 at 3. Bond Street asserted that
    those particular features of the Stebco cart mean that – as a practical matter – “items must be lifted
    onto the [toe] plate for purposes of lifting and/or moving [them].” Id. at 2 (emphasis added); see
    also id. at 4; A.R. Doc. No. 4 at 4; A.R. Doc. No. 11 at 2-3.
    Commerce analyzed Bond Street’s Request for Scope Ruling under the framework of 
    19 C.F.R. § 351.225
    (k)(1) (2006), finding “the descriptions of the merchandise” to be dispositive. See
    Hand Trucks and Certain Parts Thereof from the People’s Republic of China: Scope Ruling on
    Stebco Portable Slide-Flat Cart Inv. No. A-570-891 (May 30, 2007) (A.R. Doc. No. 12) at 8 (“Scope
    Ruling”).2 In its Scope Ruling, Commerce determined that the Stebco cart incorporates all four of
    2
    In determining whether merchandise falls within the scope of an antidumping order,
    Commerce first determines, pursuant to 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 351.225
    (d), whether it can make a
    determination based upon the request for a scope ruling and the factors listed in § 351.225(k)(1) –
    specifically, “[t]he descriptions of the merchandise contained in the petition, the initial investigation,
    and the determinations of [Commerce] (including prior scope determinations) and the [International
    Trade] Commission.” See 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 351.225
    (d), 351.225(k)(1) (2006); Walgreen Co. v. United
    States, 
    620 F.3d 1350
    , 1352 (Fed. Cir. 2010).
    However, “[the] predicate for the interpretive process is language in the order that is subject
    to interpretation.” Tak Fat Trading Co. v. United States, 
    396 F.3d 1378
    , 1383 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
    Absent “language . . . that is subject to interpretation,” there is no cause to look beyond the order.
    Further, “Commerce cannot ‘interpret’ an antidumping order so as to change the scope of that order,
    nor can Commerce interpret an order in a manner contrary to its terms.” Duferco Steel Inc. v.
    United States, 
    296 F.3d 1087
    , 1095 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (internal citations omitted) (quoted with
    approval in Walgreen Co., 
    620 F.3d at 1354
    ). Accordingly, in Commerce’s analysis, “[t]he primary
    source” is the antidumping order itself, which is the “cornerstone” of any scope determination. See
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                             Page 7
    the requisite physical characteristics of a hand truck specified in the scope language of the
    Antidumping Order – (1) a vertical frame, (2) at least one handle, (3) two or more wheels, and (4)
    a projecting edge or toe plate. Id. at 8. Commerce also reviewed each of the three physical features
    of the Stebco cart that Bond Street highlighted – i.e., the collapsible toe plate, the bungee cord hook,
    and the lack of a kick plate, and determined that none of them placed the Stebco cart beyond the
    scope of the Antidumping Order. See id. at 3, 8. In addition, Commerce found that – because the
    cart’s frame includes telescoping tubing with a diameter of greater than e inch – the Stebco cart
    does not fall within the Antidumping Order’s express exclusion of “small . . . utility carts
    specifically designed for carrying loads like personal bags or luggage in which the frame is made
    from telescoping tubular material measuring less than e inch in diameter.” See id. at 8-9;
    Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (express exclusion in “Scope of Order” section).
    In light of the findings summarized above, Commerce’s Scope Ruling concluded that the
    Stebco cart falls within the scope of the Antidumping Order. See A.R. Doc. No. 12 at 8-9.
    However, Commerce failed to test the Stebco cart. Nor did Commerce’s Scope Ruling make any
    finding on the ability of the cart’s toe plate to “slide[] under a load for purposes of lifting and/or
    moving the load.” See generally id., passim.
    Walgreen Co., 
    620 F.3d at 1356-57
     (quoting Duferco Steel, 
    296 F.3d at 1097
    ). Thus, it is “[t]he
    language of the [antidumping] order, not the petition” (or any other collateral source) which
    controls. See Tak Fat Trading Co., 
    396 F.3d at 1386
    .
    If Commerce’s analysis under 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 351.225
    (d) is not dispositive, the review
    proceeds to § 351.225(e), and Commerce applies the five Diversified Products criteria codified in
    the agency’s regulations. See 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 351.225
    (e), 351.225(k)(2) (2006); Diversified Products
    Corp. v. United States, 
    6 CIT 155
    , 
    572 F. Supp. 883
     (1983).
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 8
    B. The Ruling in Bond Street I
    Bond Street commenced the instant action challenging Commerce’s Scope Ruling. As
    detailed in Bond Street I, Bond Street’s Motion for Judgment on the Agency Record emphasized that
    the Antidumping Order requires that the projecting edge or toe plate of subject merchandise “slide[]
    under a load for purposes of lifting and/or moving the load.” See Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg.
    at 70,122 (“Scope of Order” section). Bond Street argued that the Stebco cart is not capable of
    sliding under a load in such a manner, and that Commerce therefore should have reached a negative
    scope determination. See generally Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1344
    .
    The Government and the Domestic Manufacturers maintained that the Scope Ruling should
    be sustained, because the Scope Ruling expressly addressed each of the physical features of the
    Stebco cart that Bond Street cited in arguing that the cart’s toe plate cannot “slide[] under a load.”
    See generally Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1350
     (discussing Scope Ruling’s
    analysis of Stebco cart’s collapsible toe plate and cart’s bungee cord hook, as well as cart’s lack of
    kick plate).
    As Bond Street I explained, however, Commerce’s Scope Ruling simply missed the point:
    Contrary to the claims of the Government and the Domestic Manufacturers, . . . it is
    not enough that Commerce analyzed each of the referenced physical characteristics
    [ – i.e., the Stebco cart’s collapsible toe plate, its bungee cord hook, and its lack of
    a kick plate – ] in isolation. Bond Street has never claimed that the existence of
    those physical characteristics, in and of themselves, places the Stebco cart beyond
    the scope of the Antidumping Order. To the contrary, the gravamen of Bond Street’s
    argument is that those physical characteristics prevent the Stebco cart from having
    the functional or operational characteristic set forth in the Antidumping Order – that
    is, that “[t]he projecting edge or edges, or toe plate, slide[] under a load.”
    Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1350-51
     (quoting Antidumping Order, 69 Fed.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                          Page 9
    Reg. at 70,122). Bond Street I underscored that:
    [N]owhere in its Scope Ruling . . . did Commerce make a determination as to
    whether the toe plate of the Stebco cart can ‘slide[] under a load for purposes of
    lifting and/or moving’ that load. Nowhere in the Scope Ruling did Commerce
    address Bond Street’s claim that the collapsible toe plate, the location of the bungee
    cord hook, and the absence of a kick plate prevent the toe plate of the Stebco cart
    from ‘slid[ing] under’ a load.
    Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1351
    . This matter was therefore remanded to
    Commerce for further action, to permit the agency “to make a finding as to whether the Stebco cart’s
    toe plate ‘slides under a load for purposes of lifting and/or moving the load,’” as required by the
    scope language in the Antidumping Order. See 
    id.,
     33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1351-52
    (quoting Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (“Scope of Order” section)).
    C. Commerce’s Determination on Remand
    In the course of the remand proceeding before the agency, Commerce officials conducted
    a series of three tests using loads of varying weights and dimensions to evaluate the ability of the
    Stebco cart to “slide[] under” a load – the operational/functional requirement set forth in the
    language of the Antidumping Order defining the scope of the Order’s coverage. See generally Final
    Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand Hand Trucks and Certain Parts Thereof from
    the People’s Republic of China at 1, 3-7, 12 (“Remand Results”).3 First, Commerce tested the
    Stebco cart’s ability to slide under a box of files measuring 10 x 16 x 13 inches and weighing 15
    3
    A sample of the Stebco cart is included in the administrative record. See Bond Street I, 33
    CIT at ____ n.5, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at
    1347 n.5 (citations omitted); see also Audio Recording of Oral
    Argument on Remand Results (“Audio Recording”) at 10:04-10:15. Photos of the Stebco cart are
    also available in the record. See, e.g., A.R. Doc. No. 1 at Attachment (item C on “proof page” from
    2006 S.P. Richards Co. General Line Catalog, marked as 380A); S.A.R. Doc. No. 2 at Attachments
    1, 1A, & 1B.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                              Page 10
    pounds. See id. at 3-4. In addition, Commerce tested the cart’s ability to slide under a box of files
    measuring 9 x 18 x 11.5 inches and weighing 30 pounds. See id. And, finally, Commerce tested
    the cart’s ability to slide under an empty two-drawer metal file cabinet measuring 25 x 19.5 x 14.5
    inches and weighing 50 pounds. See id. at 4. In conducting its tests, the agency specifically
    addressed Bond Street’s assertions that the Stebco cart’s collapsible toe plate, its bungee cord hook,
    and its lack of a kick plate prevent the cart from “slid[ing] under” a load. See id. at 2, 3; see also
    id. at 4-7.
    The Remand Results explain that, in each of Commerce’s three tests, the Stebco cart was
    able to “slide[] under” the load:
    For the lighter [15-pound] box, [Commerce] officials merely rolled the Stebco Cart
    up to the box and the toe plate slid under the box. With the heavier [30-pound] box,
    [Commerce] officials leveraged the Stebco Cart with their feet. For the two-drawer
    metal filing cabinet, [Commerce] officials were able to slide the Stebco Cart’s
    projecting edge/toe plate under the filing cabinet by slightly tilting the cabinet.
    Remand Results at 4; see also id. at 11. Based on its testing, Commerce concluded that the Stebco
    cart “is adept at sliding under a load for the purposes of lifting/moving that load.” Id. at 4. The
    testing further demonstrated that “once the [Stebco cart’s] projecting edge/toe plate is slid under a
    load, the projecting edge/toe plate remained stable and there was no difficulty in lifting and moving
    the load.” Id. And Commerce specifically determined, through testing, that – contrary to Bond
    Street’s claims – none of the three physical features highlighted by Bond Street prevents the Stebco
    cart from “slid[ing] under” a load, as specified in the scope language of the Antidumping Order. See
    id. at 4-5 (addressing the collapsible toe plate); id. at 5-6 (addressing lack of kick plate); id. at 6-7
    (addressing location of bungee cord hook); see generally id. at 3, 7.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 11
    In several rounds of comments on Commerce’s draft Remand Results, Bond Street attacked
    both the methodology and the results of Commerce’s testing. Bond Street argued, among other
    things, that Commerce’s “leveraging” of the Stebco cart in the test involving the 30-pound box was
    not consistent with the manner of the cart’s intended use, and that the Antidumping Order did not
    permit Commerce to “tip” or “tilt” the 50-pound file cabinet in order to slide the Stebco cart under
    it. See generally Remand Results at 4, 6, 8, 9.
    Apart from attacking two of Commerce’s three tests on the Stebco cart, Bond Street also
    criticized the agency for not conducting two additional tests. Specifically, Bond Street argued that
    Commerce should have tested the cart’s ability to “slide[] under” three stacked boxes, weighing 20
    pounds each. See Remand Results at 7, 10. Bond Street further urged Commerce to replicate a test
    that Bond Street itself had conducted. As the Remand Results explained:
    Bond Street . . . argues that it . . . attempted, to no avail, to slide the Stebco Cart
    under a box measuring 18 x 12 x 10 inches and weighing 50 pounds. Bond Street
    attached three color photographs [to its comments on the draft Remand Results]
    purporting to depict the Stebco Cart’s wheels lifting off the ground as the cart’s [toe]
    plate makes contact with the box and the cart beginning to collapse on a second
    attempt.
    Id. at 7. Bond Street emphasized the design of the Stebco cart’s toe plate, contrasting it with that
    of a so-called “typical hand truck” and arguing that the thickness of the Stebco cart’s toe plate
    “makes sliding [it] under [the] loads of many boxes extremely difficult, if not impossible.” See id.
    at 8 (quoting Bond Street comments on draft Remand Results (S.A.R. Doc. No. 2) at 3); see also id.
    at 7. Similarly, Bond Street emphasized that the Stebco cart has a relatively low load capacity,
    which Bond Street sought to contrast with the load capacities of “typical” hand trucks contemplated
    by the Antidumping Order. See id. at 10; see also Bond Street I, 33 CIT at _____ n.5, 637 F. Supp.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 12
    2d at 1347 n.5 (noting that maximum load capacity of Stebco cart is 275 pounds).
    Apparently rejecting Commerce’s test using the 30-pound box (due to “leveraging”) as well
    as the agency’s test using the 50-pound file cabinet (due to “tilting”), Bond Street insisted that
    Commerce’s “success at sliding the Stebco Cart under one load” – i.e., the 15-pound box – could
    not justify Commerce’s determination that the Stebco cart falls within the scope of the Antidumping
    Order. See Remand Results at 8; see also id. at 9 (noting Bond Street’s argument that Commerce’s
    “limited testing . . . cannot support its proposed finding that the subject cart is designed to slide
    under a load”).
    In its final Remand Results, Commerce individually addressed each of Bond Street’s
    objections. Commerce explained that – contrary to Bond Street’s assumption – the agency’s use of
    “leveraging” in its test using the 30-pound box did not involve “lifting [the Stebco cart’s] wheels
    off the ground [in order] to slide [the] load onto the toe plate.” See Remand Results at 8, 10-11.
    Instead, “[Commerce] officials press[ed] against a portion of the Stebco Cart with their feet to give
    support to the cart.” Id. at 10. The Remand Results further noted that “[t]he Order’s scope language
    is silent with respect to the operation of [a] hand truck,” except to require that “the projecting
    edge/toe plate . . . slide under a load for purposes of lifting and/or moving the load.” Id. at 10-11.
    As to Bond Street’s objection to Commerce’s file cabinet test, Commerce rejected Bond
    Street’s argument that “the Order’s language is not inclusive of carts with projecting edges or toe
    plates capable of sliding under a load only when the load is tilted.” See Remand Results at 11.
    Commerce noted that “the Order is silent with respect to the tilting of the items that are to be moved
    and/or lifted by the hand truck,” and stated that the agency has consistently ruled in the past that
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                                Page 13
    hand carts are not excluded from the scope of the Antidumping Order merely because they are
    capable of “slid[ing] under” a load only if that load is tipped or tilted. Id.
    Commerce also addressed Bond Street’s efforts to contrast the design of the Stebco cart with
    that of so-called “typical hand trucks.” In particular, Commerce pointed out that the Antidumping
    Order is silent on the issue of load capacity. See Remand Results at 10 (noting that “the language
    of the Order does not require an analysis of weight limitations”). In addition, Commerce
    characterized as “misplaced” Bond Street’s emphasis on “the 2.41 mm width difference between the
    Stebco Cart’s projecting edge or . . . toe plate” and that of a hypothetical “typical hand truck[].” Id.
    As the Remand Results explained, the Antidumping Order requires only that a hand cart be able to
    “slide[] under” a load; the relative “efficiency and ease of . . . use” in sliding any particular hand cart
    under a load “speaks to end-user satisfaction rather than scope inclusion/exclusion.” Id. (footnote
    omitted); see also id. at 5.
    Finally, the Remand Results rejected Bond Street’s contention that “sliding the Stebco Cart
    under one load does not warrant finding the cart to be within the scope of the Order.” See Remand
    Results at 8; see also id. at 9. Commerce disputed Bond Street’s math, and, more fundamentally,
    dismissed Bond Street’s claim that – to fall within the scope of the Antidumping Order – a hand cart
    must be able to perform “hand truck tasks” on all items (or at least “all items it was designed or
    intended to move”). See id. at 8, 9, 11. The Remand Results stated:
    [C]ontrary to Bond Street’s assertion, it is not the case that [Commerce] was
    successful at sliding the Stebco Cart under only a single load. . . . [W]e tested [the]
    Stebco Cart on two boxes of different weights, and on a two-drawer filing cabinet
    demonstrating the Stebco Cart’s ability to slide under and move different loads of
    different sizes. We further disagree with Bond Street in its contention that the Order
    requires that the hand truck in question must perform “the tasks of a hand truck on
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 14
    all of the items it was designed or intended to move.” . . . [T]he Order does not
    exclude hand trucks designed with a primary use. We find neither a literal
    requirement in the Order’s scope language nor a suggestion to this effect. The
    Order’s scope language is additionally silent on the hand truck’s item-specific
    limitations.
    Id. at 11; see also id. at 9 (acknowledging the Domestic Manufacturers’ point that – even if a hand
    cart cannot slide under some loads, the cart nevertheless falls within the scope of the Order if the
    cart can slide under other loads). Because there is no requirement that a hand cart be able to perform
    “hand truck tasks” on “all items it was designed or intended to move,” and the Antidumping Order
    requires only that a hand cart within the scope of the Order be capable of “slid[ing] under” an
    unspecified load, Commerce concluded that – in light of the results of the agency’s three tests – the
    additional tests advocated by Bond Street were not necessary. See id. at 10 (explaining that Bond
    Street’s proposed test involving stack of three boxes weighing 20 pounds each was not necessary,
    because Commerce’s testing was sufficient to “confirm[] that the Stebco Cart possesses the
    fundamental functional and operative capability to slide under a load”); see also id. at 9, 11.
    The Remand Results concluded that, “notwithstanding the collapsible and angled design of
    the toe plate, the location of the bungee cord hook, and the absence of a kick plate,” Bond Street’s
    Stebco cart “is adept at sliding under a load for the purposes of lifting/moving that load”; that “once
    the projecting edge/toe plate is slid under a load, the projecting edge/toe plate remained stable and
    there was no difficulty in lifting and moving the load”; and that the Stebco cart thus “has the
    operational and functional ability to slide under a load for the purposes of lifting and/or moving that
    load,” and therefore falls “within the scope of the Order.” See Remand Results at 3-4, 12; see also
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                           Page 15
    id. at 1-2, 5, 6-7, 9-11. Commerce therefore reaffirmed the determination in its Scope Ruling. See
    id. at 1-2, 3, 9 & n.2, 12.
    II. Standard of Review
    In reviewing a challenge to a ruling by Commerce on the scope of an antidumping order (i.e.,
    a determination as to “whether a particular type of merchandise is within the class or kind of
    merchandise described in an existing . . . antidumping . . . duty order”), the agency’s determination
    must be upheld unless it is found to be “unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or
    otherwise not in accordance with law.” 19 U.S.C. §§ 1516a(a)(2)(B)(vi), 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i) (2000);
    see Walgreen Co. v. United States, 
    620 F.3d 1350
    , 1354 (Fed. Cir. 2010); see also Diamond
    Sawblades Mfrs. Coalition v. United States, 33 CIT ____, ____, 
    650 F. Supp. 2d 1331
    , 1352 (2009),
    aff’d, 
    626 F.3d 1374
     (Fed. Cir. 2010) (explaining that “[judicial] review of agency determinations
    issued pursuant to a court-ordered remand is governed by the same standard of review used in
    reviewing the [agency’s] original determination”).
    “[S]ubstantial evidence is more than a mere scintilla. It means such relevant evidence as a
    reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Universal Camera Corp. v.
    NLRB, 
    340 U.S. 474
    , 477 (1951) (quoting Consol. Edison Co. v. NLRB, 
    305 U.S. 197
    , 229 (1938)).
    Moreover, any determination as to the substantiality of evidence “must take into account whatever
    in the record fairly detracts from its weight,” including “contradictory evidence or evidence from
    which conflicting inferences could be drawn.” Suramerica de Aleaciones Laminadas, C.A. v. United
    States, 
    44 F.3d 978
    , 985 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (quoting Universal Camera, 
    340 U.S. at 487-88
    ). On the
    other hand, the mere fact that “it [may be] possible to draw two inconsistent conclusions from
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                          Page 16
    evidence in the record . . . does not prevent Commerce’s determination from being supported by
    substantial evidence.” Am. Silicon Techs. v. United States, 
    261 F.3d 1371
    , 1376 (Fed. Cir. 2001);
    see also Consolo v. Federal Maritime Commission, 
    383 U.S. 607
    , 620 (1966) (same). Finally, while
    Commerce must explain the bases for its decisions, “its explanations do not have to be perfect.”
    NMB Singapore Ltd. v. United States, 
    557 F.3d 1316
    , 1319 (Fed. Cir. 2009). However, “the path
    of Commerce’s decision must be reasonably discernable,” to support judicial review. 
    Id.
    In the case at bar, Bond Street maintains that Commerce’s remand determination is not
    supported by “substantial evidence on the record,” and that it is also “otherwise not in accordance
    with law.”
    III. Analysis
    Bond Street challenges the Remand Results on both substantive and procedural grounds.
    On the merits, Bond Street contests the validity of the tests on which Commerce relies to
    establish that – in the words of the Antidumping Order – the Stebco cart will “slide[] under a load
    for purposes of lifting and/or moving the load.” See generally sections III.A-III.C, infra; see also
    Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (“Scope of Order” section).
    As a matter of procedure, Bond Street argues that Commerce should have consulted with the
    parties in determining the agency’s test methodology. See section III.D.1, infra. In addition, Bond
    Street disputes the adequacy of the rationale provided in the Remand Results on issues including
    Commerce’s choice of test procedures, Commerce’s treatment of various tests, and Commerce’s
    decision not to conduct some additional testing that Bond Street proposed. See sections III.D.2-
    III.D.3, infra. Bond Street further contends that Commerce failed to properly address certain
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                             Page 17
    specific physical features of the Stebco cart. See section III.D.4, infra. Ultimately, Bond Street
    concludes that the Remand Results are not supported by substantial evidence in the record. See
    section III.E, infra.4
    As discussed in greater detail below, however, Bond Street’s arguments are far wide of the
    mark.5 Bond Street’s challenge to the Remand Results must therefore fail, and Commerce’s remand
    determination that the Stebco cart will “slide[ ] under a load for purposes of lifting and/or moving
    4
    In Commerce’s initial scope proceeding, and in the remand proceeding before the agency,
    Bond Street raised a number of claims, arguments, and objections that Bond Street did not include
    in either of its post-remand briefs filed with the Court.
    For example, in the initial scope proceeding and in the remand proceeding, Bond Street
    argued that “the angled design of [the] toe plate” makes it “virtually impossible” to slide the Stebco
    cart under a load. See Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1346
     (citation omitted);
    Remand Results at 4-5, 7. Similarly, Bond Street claimed in both fora that “tipping” or “tilting” a
    load in order to slide a cart under it “would necessarily result in damage” to the load, and “over time,
    would also damage the frame of the cart itself.” See Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1348-49
     (citation omitted); Remand Results at 5. In the initial scope proceeding, Bond Street
    argued that the “size and composition” of the Stebco cart’s wheels limit the cart’s load capacity, and
    that the cart “would be damaged if pushed from the rear.” See Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____ & n.5,
    
    637 F. Supp. 2d at
    1347 & n.5 (citation omitted). And, in the remand proceeding before the agency,
    Bond Street argued that the Stebco cart’s toe plate is thicker than that of the “typical hand truck,”
    making it “extremely difficult, if not impossible” to slide the cart “under [the] load of many boxes.”
    See Remand Results at 8, 10. Bond Street similarly objected to Commerce’s use of “leveraging”
    to slide the Stebco cart under the file cabinet. See id. at 8, 10-11; see also n.13, infra (discussing
    Bond Street’s objection to “leveraging”). Of course, all claims, arguments, and objections that Bond
    Street elected not to address in its post-remand briefs must be deemed waived.
    5
    As a threshold matter, the Government correctly notes that Bond Street’s claims generally
    misapply the proper standard of review. See generally Def.’s Brief at 3, 8. In particular, Bond
    Street fails to demonstrate that the tests conducted by Commerce are unreasonable. Absent such a
    showing, “even if Bond Street . . . proposed a different test that happened to be reasonable,
    Commerce’s determination would still govern.” See id. at 8 (citing United States v. Eurodif S.A.,
    555 U.S. ____, ____, 
    129 S. Ct. 878
    , 886 (2009) (explaining that the issue is not whether plaintiff
    presents “the better view,” but whether agency’s determination is reasonable)); see also id. at 3
    (noting that “even if Bond Street’s proposed testing methodology . . . were reasonable, . . . so long
    as Commerce’s methodology is reasonable, then the agency’s determination should be sustained”).
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                           Page 18
    the load” – and thus falls within the scope of the Antidumping Order – must be sustained. See
    Remand Results at 1-2, 3-4, 9-10, 12; Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122.
    A. Bond Street’s Challenge to Commerce’s File Cabinet Test
    Bond Street’s principal challenge to Commerce’s remand determination is Bond Street’s
    claim that the agency’s “testing methodology” contravened “the plain meaning of the language” of
    the Antidumping Order. Pl.’s Reply Brief at 4; see also Pl.’s Brief at 8. Focusing on the phrase
    “slide[] under” as that phrase is used in the Order, Bond Street argues that Commerce erred by
    “tipping” or “tilting” the load in the course of testing whether the Stebco cart could “slide[] under”
    a two-drawer metal filing cabinet. In particular, Bond Street contends that the dictionary definition
    of “slide [under]” does not permit “tipping” or “tilting” a load, and that Commerce has
    “impermissibly change[d] the scope” of the Antidumping Order. See generally Pl.’s Brief at 4, 7-9;
    Pl.’s Reply Brief at 4, 5 n.7; Audio Recording of Oral Argument on Remand Results (“Audio
    Recording”) at 19:40-20:33, 27:06-28:53, 29:13-30:29, 31:13-32:14, 32:56-33:09, 42:11-43:16,
    45:25-46:04, 1:02:41-1:04:03, 1:05:47-1:06:10.
    Bond Street’s argument is predicated on a fundamental misreading and misapplication of the
    phrase “slide[] under.” Bond Street points to nothing in the dictionary definition of “slide [under]”
    which (either explicitly or implicitly) precludes the “tipping” or “tilting” at issue here.6 Nor can
    6
    According to Bond Street, “[t]he term ‘slide under’” is defined as “to move or pass smoothly
    or easily.” See Pl.’s Reply Brief at 4 (quoting “Merriam-Webster dictionary” definition 4a for the
    word “slide”), 5 n.7 (referring to “go[ing]with a smooth continuous motion under a load”); see also
    Audio Recording at 27:12-27:30 (stating that “slide under” means to “go under with a smooth
    motion”); id. at 1:02:41-1:03:05; id. at 34:06-34:30 (referring to “continuous, smooth motion”).
    But, as explained herein, nothing in the dictionary definition of “slide” is in any way
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                               Page 19
    Bond Street do so. It is not the Stebco cart that was “tipped” or “tilted” in this case, it was the load;7
    and it is the cart that must “slide[] under.” As a matter of pure logic, the “tipping” or “tilting” of a
    load says nothing about the motion or movement of a hand cart, which – to fall within the scope of
    the Antidumping Order – must “slide[] under” the load (whether the load is first “tipped”/“tilted,”
    or not). See generally, e.g., Audio Recording at 1:43:53-1:45:10 (counsel for the Government
    explains that the Stebco cart “slid under the load in a smooth motion” when the file cabinet was
    tipped or tilted “in a common sense way”); id. at 1:59:51-l:59:56, 2:00:11-2:00:29 (same).8 Here,
    inconsistent with “tipping” or “tilting” a load under the circumstances here. Or, to put it differently,
    “tipping” or “tilting” a load before sliding a cart under it is entirely consonant with the dictionary
    definition of “slide [under].” Contrary to Bond Street’s claim, “tipping” or “tilting” a load is not at
    odds with either “the plain meaning of the language of the order” or the “common meaning and
    understanding” of the phrase “slides under.” See Pl.’s Reply Brief at 4; Pl.’s Brief at 8.
    Further, there can be no claim that allowing “tipping” or “tilting” of a load renders the
    “slide[] under” language in the Antidumping Order a nullity. For example, the “stabilizing plate”
    on the garden cart at issue in Vertex lacked a beveled edge, and instead featured “a round steel wire
    . . . not conducive to sliding under a load,” whether the load was tipped or not. The garden cart was
    therefore ruled to be beyond the scope of the Antidumping Order. See Vertex Int’l, Inc. v. United
    States, 
    30 CIT 73
    , 80 (2006); see also Audio Recording at 1:45:45-1:46:58, 1:58:33-2:00:28 (inter
    alia, contrasting Vertex and case at bar); 
    id.
     at 2:00:37-2:00:59 (suggesting that, if it is necessary
    to manually lift and place a load onto a hand cart, it cannot be said that the cart will “slide[] under”
    the load).
    7
    In the course of oral argument, counsel for Bond Street repeatedly referred interchangeably
    to the “tipping”/“tilting” of the file cabinet and “slid[ing] the load [i.e., the file cabinet] onto” the
    Stebco cart. See, e.g., Audio Recording at 20:01-20:31. However, “tipping”/“tilting” is quite
    different from “sliding.” When an object is “tipped” or “tilted,” part of the object is lifted, but the
    object otherwise maintains the same “footprint” on the surface on which it is located; the object does
    not move forward or backward. In contrast, when an object is “slid,” the object’s “footprint”
    changes; the object moves forward or backward on the surface on which it is located. In the instant
    case, contrary to the assertions of Bond Street’s counsel, there is no evidence that Commerce did
    anything other than “tip” or “tilt” the file cabinet in testing the Stebco cart.
    8
    In briefing, Bond Street argued categorically that the need to “tip” or “tilt” a load would
    place a hand cart squarely beyond the scope of the Antidumping Order. See Pl.’s Brief at 4, 7-9;
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 20
    there is no dispute that the Stebco cart “move[d] or pass[ed] smoothly or easily” under the file
    cabinet, with the cabinet “slightly tilt[ed].” See Remand Results at 4; see also 
    id. at 11
    ; Def.-Ints.’
    Brief at 2, 4; Def.’s Brief at 2-4, 9; Audio Recording at 1:43:53-1:44:33, 2:00:11-2:00:29. Compare,
    e.g., Final Scope Ruling: Expeditors Tradewin, LLC, on behalf of Ameristep Corporation Inc. at 7
    (May 18, 2007) (ruling that carts are beyond scope of Order, because they cannot “slide[] under”
    load, even “by tipping the load slightly”).9
    Further, as the Government notes, the Remand Results explained that the Antidumping Order
    is silent on the “tipping”/“tilting” of loads, and, moreover, that Commerce’s determination in this
    case is consonant with a line of other cases that have ruled that various hand carts are within the
    scope of the Antidumping Order even though they “slide[] under” a load only if the load is “tipped”
    or “tilted” first. See Def.’s Brief at 9-10; see also Remand Results at 11 & n.6.
    In Gleason Products, for example, the court ruled that the Antidumping Order covers a
    “welding cart” (model 93851), because that cart is “capable of sliding under a load if the load is
    slightly tipped.” Gleason Indus. Prods., Inc. v. United States, 32 CIT ____, ____, 556 F. Supp. 2d
    Pl.’s Reply Brief at 3-4, 5 n.7. However, in the course of oral argument, Bond Street moderated its
    position. At oral argument, counsel for Bond Street candidly (albeit begrudgingly) acknowledged
    that – even as to some hand carts which are indisputably hand trucks within the scope of the
    Antidumping Order – “tipping” or “tilting” of the load might be required, at least as to some loads,
    on some surfaces. See, e.g., Audio Recording at 40:16-40:29, 41:44-42:05, 51:49-52:01, 1:07:00-
    1:07:10, 1:09:26-1:09:37, 1:25:07-1:25:34, 1:26:19-1:26:57.
    9
    Copies of Commerce’s ruling in Expeditors Tradewin and other relevant scope rulings are
    included in an addendum to the Government’s brief. See Def.’s Brief at Appendix, A20-A28
    (Expeditors Tradewin, supra); id. at A43-A49 (Conair, n.10, infra); id. at A50-A58 (E&B Giftware,
    n.10, infra).
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                             Page 21
    1344, 1348-49 (2008) (emphasis added).10 Indeed, there are certain types of hand trucks that are
    indisputably within the scope of the Antidumping Order even though it is necessary to “tip” or “tilt”
    the very loads that the hand trucks are specifically designed to carry. See, e.g., Audio Recording at
    25:59-26:27, 2:08:42-2:09:28 (discussing “cylinder hand truck” at issue in Gleason); see also
    Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (listing “cylinder hand truck” among the “names
    commonly used to reference hand trucks”).
    In short, contrary to Bond Street’s assertions, there is nothing “unauthorized” about
    “tipping”/“tilting” a load in order to slide a cart under it. See Pl.’s Brief at 4.11 Bond Street’s
    10
    See also, e.g., Final Scope Ruling: Expeditors Tradewin at 7 (ruling that carts are beyond
    scope of Order, because “an individual cannot easily position the horizontal frame of the Non-
    Typical Cart and Grizzly Cart beneath a load by tipping the load slightly due to the size of the Non-
    Typical Cart’s and Grizzly Cart’s wheel” (emphasis added)); Scope Ruling on Conair Corporation’s
    “LadderKart” at 6 (Oct. 20, 2008) (ruling that LadderKart is within scope of Order, because, inter
    alia, “the LadderKart’s projecting edge or toe plate in fact can slide under a load if that load is
    slightly tipped” (emphasis added)); Scope Ruling on E&B Giftware, LLC’s ML6275C Personal
    Luggage Cart at 7 (Feb. 3, 2010) (ruling that luggage cart is within scope of Order, even though
    “minimal tilting of the load” is required (emphasis added)).
    11
    As a procedural matter, Bond Street contends that Commerce’s file cabinet test should be
    disregarded because – according to Bond Street – the agency’s initial Scope Ruling in this matter
    “did not consider the question of whether ‘tilting’ or ‘tipping’ a load [is] within the meaning of the
    scope language” of the Antidumping Order. See Pl.’s Brief at 7. According to Bond Street, the
    “tipping”/“tilting” of the file cabinet thus “raises new matter and is beyond the administrative
    record” compiled by the agency in the initial scope proceeding. See id. Pointing to a footnote in
    Bond Street I referring to the “tipping” or “tilting” of a load, Bond Street further argues that
    Commerce’s reliance on the file cabinet test also “[goes] beyond the Court’s [decision in Bond
    Street I] by interjecting a new issue regarding the interpretation of the Order into this case.” See id.
    at 7-8 (referring to Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____ n.13, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at
    1352 n.13). But Bond
    Street’s objections are not well taken.
    Bond Street either misreads or misrepresents the footnote that it cites from Bond Street I.
    Bond Street’s intimations notwithstanding, Bond Street I ruled only that it was at that time
    premature for the Court to “address the merits of the . . . claim that a cart falls within the scope of
    the Antidumping Order even if the cart’s toe plate slides under a load only if that load has been
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                             Page 22
    reliance on the dictionary definition of “slide [under]” is misplaced. And, as Commerce noted in
    the Remand Results, the Antidumping Order itself “is silent with respect to the tilting of the items
    that are to be moved and/or lifted.” See Remand Results at 11; see also Def.’s Brief at 9. Moreover,
    Commerce’s consistent and longstanding practice has been to include within the scope of the
    Antidumping Order hand carts that are capable of “slid[ing] under” a load, even if only when the
    loads are “tipped”/“tilted.” See Remand Results at 11; Def.’s Brief at 9 (and rulings cited there).
    Indeed, the “tipping”/“tilting” of loads has received the judicial imprimatur. See Def.’s Brief at 9
    (citing Gleason Prods., 32 CIT at ____, 556 F. Supp. 2d at 1348-49). Bond Street has pointed to
    nothing to distinguish this case from the numerous other cases where Commerce and the courts have
    permitted “tipping”/“tilting.” Bond Street’s objections to Commerce’s “tipping”/“tilting” of the load
    – and, in particular, Bond Street’s objections to the agency’s file cabinet test – must therefore be
    rejected.
    B. Bond Street’s Challenge to Commerce’s 15-Pound and 30-Pound Box Tests
    Although Bond Street cannot claim that Commerce’s tests using 15- and 30-pound boxes
    involved “tipping” or “tilting” of those loads,12 Bond Street nevertheless contests their validity based
    ‘tilted’ or ‘tipped.’” See Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____ n.13, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at
    1352 n.13. Nothing
    in Bond Street I precluded Commerce from “tipping”/“tilting” a load in testing the Stebco cart; Bond
    Street I merely reserved the legal issue of the permissibility of “tipping”/“tilting” until now, when
    the issue is ripe. More generally, Bond Street has waived any procedural objections to consideration
    of that legal issue by failing to raise them in a timely fashion, at the administrative level.
    12
    As discussed immediately above, if a hand cart has the four requisite physical
    characteristics, and if the hand cart is not expressly excluded from the Antidumping Order’s
    coverage, the hand cart falls within the scope of the Order, provided that “[t]he projecting edge or
    edges, or toe plate, slides under a load for purposes of lifting and/or moving the load,” whether the
    load is first tipped or tilted, or not. See section III.A, supra; Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 23
    on what Bond Street dismisses as the “extremely light loads.” See Pl.’s Brief at 3; see also id. at 5
    (referring to Commerce’s “choice of very light loads”). Arguing that “the two boxes of files
    weigh[ed] a mere 15 and 30 pounds, respectively,” Bond Street asserts that “hand trucks covered
    by the Order generally have a carrying capacity within the 200 to 1,000 pound range.” See id. at 4;
    Pl.’s Reply Brief at 5; Audio Recording at 51:32-51:42; see generally Pl.’s Brief at 4-5, 7; Pl.’s
    Reply Brief at 5-6.
    Bond Street’s attempt to read the Antidumping Order to include a minimum load capacity
    rests on a false premise, however, and its arguments as a whole are not persuasive. See generally
    Remand Results at 8, 10; Def.’s Brief at 4, 5-8; Audio Recording at 1:36:14-1:36:25, 1:37:30-
    1:37:49, 1:52:32-1:53:10.13
    70,122. As the Government points out, however, Commerce’s determination in this matter could
    be sustained even without reaching the “tipping”/“tilting” issue. See generally Audio Recording at
    1:42:58-1:43:29, 2:01:31-2:01:36.
    Commerce “slightly tilted” the load only in its file cabinet test. See Remand Results at 4,
    11; see also Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 4; Def.’s Brief at 4, 9; Audio Recording at 1:31:22-1:31:58, 1:42:58-
    1:43:29. There was no need to “tip” or “tilt” the load in two of the three tests that the agency
    conducted on remand; the Stebco card was able to “slide[] under” the 15-pound box of files and the
    30-pound box of files, without “tipping” or “tilting” either load. See Remand Results at 4, 11; see
    also Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 4; Def.’s Brief at 4; Audio Recording at 1:11:25-1:11:34, 1:31:22-1:31:58,
    1:42:58-1:43:29. Accordingly, Commerce’s remand determination in this matter could be sustained
    on the strength of those two tests, without regard to the file cabinet test (and, thus, even if the
    Antidumping Order precluded the “tipping”/“tilting” of a load).
    13
    In addition to criticizing the weight of the load, Bond Street’s comments on the draft
    Remand Results also took issue with one other aspect of the methodology that Commerce used in
    the test involving the 30-pound box of files. Specifically, Bond Street’s comments on the draft
    Remand Results asserted that – in order to slide the Stebco cart under the 30-pound box – Commerce
    had “leveraged” the cart such that the cart’s wheels were lifted off the ground. According to Bond
    Street, any such “manipulation” of the cart would be inconsistent with its intended use. See Remand
    Results at 8; see also id. at 4, 6.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 24
    As an aside, while Bond Street represents that “hand trucks covered by the Order generally
    have a carrying capacity within the 200 to 1,000 pound range” (see Pl.’s Reply Brief at 5 (emphasis
    added)), the administrative record is devoid of evidence to support that assertion. It is true that the
    original 2003 petition initiating the antidumping duty proceeding that ultimately resulted in the
    Antidumping Order at issue here generally described hand trucks in terms of, inter alia, the specified
    However, in the final Remand Results, Commerce explained that Bond Street’s argument
    was based on a simple but fundamental mistake concerning the agency’s use of the term
    “leveraged”:
    Bond Street misunderstands the term “leveraging” as used in the draft remand
    redetermination. Our description of “leveraging” the Stebco Cart . . . refers to
    Department officials pressing against a portion of the Stebco Cart with their feet to
    give support to the cart rather than lifting the Stebco Cart’s wheels off the ground.
    Remand Results at 10-11; see also id. at 6; Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 3.
    Neither of Bond Street’s post-remand briefs makes mention of any concern about
    Commerce’s “leveraging” of the Stebco cart in testing the cart’s ability to “slide[] under” the 30-
    pound box. Nevertheless, Bond Street made a number of allusions to the issue during the course of
    oral argument. See, e.g., Audio Recording at 56:22-56:30, 56:52-57:05, 57:39-57:44, 58:08-58:38,
    1:00:32-1:00:59, 1:16:50-1:17:17, 1:18:41-1:19:29. As a threshold matter, Bond Street waived its
    right to further pursue any such objections by failing even to mention them in its briefs. See, e.g.,
    Novosteel SA v. United States, 
    284 F.3d 1261
    , 1273-74 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (holding that party waived
    argument which was not presented to Court of International Trade “until after [the party] had filed
    its principal summary judgment brief,” reasoning that “parties must give a trial court a fair
    opportunity to rule on an issue other than by raising that issue for the first time in a reply brief”).
    On the scant existing record (particularly given the absence of any briefing), it is impossible
    to discern the exact nature of Bond Street’s concerns. But, even if Bond Street had briefed (and thus
    properly preserved) its arguments, Bond Street still could not prevail. As the Remand Results aptly
    note, “[t]he Order’s scope is silent with respect to the operation of [a] hand truck.” See Remand
    Results at 10; see also Audio Recording at 2:04:29-2:05:10 (Domestic Manufacturers noting that
    “leveraging” is routine in use of hand trucks, referring to S.A.R. Doc. No. 2 at Attachment 2 (photo
    submitted by Bond Street), showing foot being used to “leverage” so-called “typical” hand truck,
    just as Commerce official used foot to “leverage” Stebco cart in file cabinet test); 
    id.
     at 2:11:48-
    2:12:00 (Government echoing Domestic Manufacturers’ observations).
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                           Page 25
    load capacity. See Vertex Int’l, Inc. v. United States, 
    30 CIT 73
    , 81 n.11 (2006) (referring to
    language in 2003 petition generally describing load capacity of hand trucks). Significantly,
    however, the load capacity language in the 2003 petition specifically was not carried over into the
    Antidumping Order itself. See Antidumping Order, 
    69 Fed. Reg. 70,122
     et seq. (expressly defining
    “Scope of Order” in detail, with no mention whatsoever of any sort of minimum (or maximum) load
    capacity); see also Remand Results at 10 (explaining that “the language of the Order does not
    require an analysis of weight limitations”); Def.’s Brief at 5; Audio Recording at 1:36:14-1:36:25,
    1:52:32-1:53:10. Because the scope of the Antidumping Order is not defined in terms of load
    capacity, it simply cannot be said – as a factual matter – that “hand trucks covered by the Order
    generally have a carrying capacity” of any particular weight (much less “the 200 to 1,000 pound
    range” that Bond Street alleges).
    Even more to the point, as a matter of law, the language concerning load capacity that
    appeared in the 2003 antidumping petition cannot override the Antidumping Order, and accordingly
    is of little relevance at best. The Court of Appeals has emphasized that it is “[t]he language of the
    order, not the petition” which controls. See Tak Fat Trading Co. v. United States, 
    396 F.3d 1378
    ,
    1386 (Fed. Cir. 2005). “The scope of [an] order can be clarified but it cannot be changed by the
    interpretive process.” 
    Id.,
     
    396 F.3d at 1383
    . Thus, although “the petition and the investigation may
    provide valuable guidance as to the interpretation of [a] final order,” they “cannot substitute for
    language in the order itself.” Duferco Steel, Inc. v. United States, 
    296 F.3d 1087
    , 1097 (Fed. Cir.
    2002); see also Walgreen Co., 
    620 F.3d at 1357
     (same); Def.’s Brief at 6. Moreover, “a predicate
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                              Page 26
    for the interpretive process is language in the order that is subject to interpretation.” Tak Fat
    Trading Co., 
    396 F.3d at 1383
    .
    Here, Bond Street has identified no language dealing with load capacity in the Antidumping
    Order – much less language that requires “clarification” or “interpretation.” Instead, Bond Street
    seeks a wholesale re-write of the Order, to include a load capacity limitation that the drafters of the
    Order specifically elected not to include. This Bond Street may not do.14
    In light of this focus on the language of the Antidumping Order itself as the “cornerstone”
    of any analysis (see Walgreen Co., 
    620 F.3d at 1357
     (citation omitted)), Commerce’s longstanding
    and consistent practice in the application and administration of the Antidumping Order – from the
    initial drafting of the Order, up to the present day – has excluded any and all consideration of load
    capacity. See generally Def.’s Brief at 6-7; Audio Recording at 1:37:30-1:37:49. For example, in
    drafting the language defining the scope of the Antidumping Order during the original antidumping
    14
    In any event, as the discussion above makes clear, even if the analysis were to go beyond
    the four corners of the Antidumping Order, the more salient fact would be not that the 2003
    antidumping duty petition included a load capacity range in its general description of hand trucks,
    but – rather – that the drafters of the Order declined to include a load capacity limitation in the
    language of the final Order.
    Bond Street points to certain language in Vertex discussing the 2003 antidumping petition’s
    reference to load capacity. See Pl.’s Brief at 5 (discussing Vertex, 30 CIT at 81 & n.11). However,
    as the Government correctly observes, the language on which Bond Street relies was not central to
    the outcome in that case. See Def.’s Brief at 6; Vertex, 30 CIT at 80 (holding that – due to, inter
    alia, the fact that, instead of “the projecting edge of a hand truck,” the garden cart there at issue has
    “a round steel wire that is not conducive to sliding under a load” – that cart “cannot . . . slide under
    a load” and therefore is not within the scope of the Antidumping Order). And, more importantly,
    as discussed above, the load capacity language in the 2003 petition was not included in the language
    of the final Antidumping Order itself, which is binding and definitive. See Antidumping Order, 
    69 Fed. Reg. 70,122
     et seq.; see also Remand Results at 10; Def.’s Brief at 6; see generally Audio
    Recording at 1:52:32-1:53:10.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                           Page 27
    duty investigation, Commerce evaluated various scope exclusion requests.15 In addressing one such
    request (which sought the exclusion of a certain portable, collapsible “luggage cart”), Commerce
    explained that the language concerning load capacity which appeared in the 2003 antidumping
    petition did not constitute a request for an exclusion from the scope of the Antidumping Order,
    underscoring that:
    [L]oad capacity is not a factor in the scope of the investigation. The reference to
    load capacity (i.e., “loads generally not exceeding 1000 pounds”) in the petition
    appears in a general description of the subject merchandise, not in the petitioners’
    recommended scope language, or elsewhere in the current scope of this investigation.
    Scope Exclusion/Clarification Requests: Alton Industries, Inc.; Safco Products Company; A.J.
    Wholesale Distributors, Inc.; and Wilmar Corporation at 5 (Oct. 6, 2004); see also 
    id.
     at 3 et seq.
    (rejecting, inter alia, argument that “although the scope of the investigation makes no reference to
    load capacity, the petitioners were only concerned about heavy-duty hand trucks with 600 lbs. or
    larger load capacities”); Def.’s Brief at 6-7; Audio Recording at 1:37:30-1:37:49.
    And, over the years, Commerce has steadfastly maintained its position on the irrelevance of
    load capacity in its scope rulings (such as that in the case at bar), throughout the agency’s
    administration of the Antidumping Order. For example, in one such scope ruling, Commerce
    rejected arguments that a particular “trolley” was not within the scope of the Order because the
    15
    Scope exclusion requests are similar to scope determinations (such as the determination that
    Bond Street challenges here). In the course of drafting the Antidumping Order, Commerce
    considered various scope exclusion requests urging the agency to incorporate specific language into
    the Antidumping Order which would exclude from the scope of the Order some types of hand trucks
    that did not meet certain specifications. See, e.g., Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122
    (stating that “Excluded from the scope [of the Order] are small two-wheel or four-wheel utility carts
    specifically designed for carrying loads like personal bags or luggage in which the frame is made
    from telescoping tubular material measuring less than e inch in diameter.”); see also Def.’s Brief
    at 6.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 28
    trolley “can be used to move luggage” and has a “vertical weight capacity of . . . only 150 lbs.” See
    Final Scope Ruling: Total Trolley, LLC at 4, 8-9 (Jan. 10, 2005). Commerce there stated:
    [H]and truck load capacity was not a factor in the scope of the [original antidumping
    duty] investigation. The reference to load capacity (i.e., “loads generally not
    exceeding 1000 pounds”) in the [2003 antidumping] petition appears in a general
    description of the subject merchandise, not in the petitioners’ recommended scope
    language, or elsewhere in the current scope of the Order.
    Id. at 8-9; see also Audio Recording at 1:37:30-1:37:49.           Commerce determined that the
    merchandise at issue in Total Trolley was within the scope of the Antidumping Order. See Total
    Trolley at 1, 10; see also Def.’s Brief at 7.16
    As the Government properly concludes, for the reasons outlined above, “Commerce’s
    selection of items to test on the Stebco Cart was not limited by considerations of weight, but rather,
    was simply designed to determine whether the Stebco Cart could ‘slide[] under a load for the
    purposes of lifting and/or moving the load.’” Def.’s Brief at 7 (quoting Antidumping Order, 69 Fed.
    Reg. at 70,122). It is nevertheless worth noting that, while Bond Street essentially contends that –
    to fall within the scope of the Antidumping Order – hand trucks should have a load capacity “within
    the 200 to 1,000 pound range” (see Pl.’s Reply Brief at 5; see also Audio Recording at 51:32-51:42)
    – Bond Street has conceded that the Stebco cart itself is actually “designed to carry/move load(s)
    up to a maximum weight of 275 pounds” (with an “ideal” load of 150 pounds). See Pl.’s Reply Brief
    at 5; see also Def.’s Brief at 6 (citing A.R. Doc. No. 4); Audio Recording at 1:38:18-1:38:28; Bond
    Street I, 33 CIT at ____ n.5, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at
    1347 n.5 (citation omitted). In other words, even
    16
    As note 9 above explains, various relevant rulings by Commerce – including the rulings
    in Alton Industries and Total Trolley – are included in an addendum to the Government’s brief. See
    Def.’s Brief at Appendix, A29-42 (Alton Industries, supra); A59-A68 (Total Trolley, supra).
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                              Page 29
    if the scope of the Antidumping Order were limited to hand trucks with a load capacity “within the
    200 to 1,000 pound range” (which it clearly is not), such a criterion would not serve to exclude the
    Stebco cart from the scope of the Order.
    The loads used by Commerce in the two tests at issue – a 15-pound box and a 30-pound box,
    of different dimensions – were selected not because they were particularly light, but rather because
    they were representative of the types of loads that Bond Street has stated the Stebco cart is generally
    intended to carry. See Audio Recording at 1:31:59-1:33:41 (discussing A.R. Doc. No. 4); id. at
    1:35:16-1:35:47 (discussing A.R. Doc. No. 1); id. at 1:55:37-1:56:00; see also Def.’s Brief at 7.17
    Because load capacity is not “germane” to determining whether a particular hand cart is within the
    17
    In the course of oral argument, counsel for Bond Street posed a rhetorical question as to
    why anyone would bother to use a hand cart to move boxes such as those that Commerce used to
    test the Stebco cart. See Audio Recording at 51:00-51:08. As counsel for the Government pointed
    out, however, documents submitted in the instant proceeding by Bond Street itself establish that the
    Stebco cart is for use in transporting boxes, among other things. See Audio Recording at 1:32:15-
    1:33:41, 1:35:16-1:35:47. It is thus difficult to know what to make of Bond Street’s claim that
    Commerce’s tests were not representative of the types of loads that the Stebco cart is used to carry.
    See Audio Recording at 15:55-16:15.
    During the initial scope proceeding, for example, Bond Street advised Commerce that, “in
    addition to its primary purpose of a luggage carrier, [the Stebco cart] can also be used to move boxes
    or other items of a personal nature. It would not be unusual to use the subject cart for moving boxes
    of family photos, old dishes, clothes, etc.” See A.R. Doc. No. 4 at 3 (emphases added); Audio
    Recording at 1:31:59-1:33:41. Further, together with its Request for Scope Ruling, Bond Street
    submitted a page from a catalog featuring the Stebco cart, among other items. That advertisement
    touts the Stebco cart as “ideal for transporting suitcases, boxes, equipment and presentation
    materials.” See A.R. Doc. No. 1 at Attachment (item C on “proof page” from 2006 S.P. Richards
    Co. General Line Catalog, marked as 380A (emphasis added)); Audio Recording at 1:35:16-1:35:47.
    It is also worth noting that the testing that Bond Street itself conducted, and other testing that
    Bond Street proposed, involved loads weighing 50 to 60 pounds. Bond Street neither conducted nor
    proposed tests using heavier loads. See generally section III.D.3, infra (discussing test conducted
    by Bond Street, as well as additional testing that Bond Street proposed).
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                             Page 30
    scope of the Antidumping Order (see Def.’s Brief at 7), Commerce reasonably conducted its tests
    using loads such as those that the Stebco cart is used to carry. The purpose of the agency’s tests was
    to determine whether the Stebco cart would “slide[] under” such loads – and it did. See Remand
    Results at 1, 3-7, 9-12; Pl.’s Brief at 4 (conceding that Commerce “was able to slide the cart under
    two boxes of files”); Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 1-2; Def.’s Brief at 2-5, 7-8; Audio Recording at 50:53-
    51:25, 1:17:48-1:17:57, 1:27:19-1:27:41, 1:31:15-1:31:58. Boxes filled with files weighing 15
    pounds and 30 pounds may be relatively light loads, but they are loads nonetheless. See Audio
    Recording at 1:31:15-1:31:22, 1:34:46-1:35:10. Moreover, a cart may be needed to carry a load that
    is cumbersome due to its dimensions, even if the load is relatively light.
    Simply stated, Bond Street’s attempt to read into the Antidumping Order a load capacity
    limitation must fail. Bond Street’s broad assertions that the hypothetical “typical” hand truck has
    a load capacity “within the 200 to 1,000 pound range” lacks any evidentiary basis in the record.
    More importantly, the drafters of the Antidumping Order expressly declined to include in the Order
    the load capacity language that appeared in the 2003 antidumping duty petition, on which Bond
    Street relies; and it is the language of the Order itself that controls. Moreover, in its administration
    of the Antidumping Order over the years, Commerce has consistently declined to consider load
    capacity in determining whether any particular hand cart falls within the scope of the Order. Like
    Bond Street’s objections to Commerce’s “tipping”/“tilting” of a load in testing the Stebco cart
    (discussed in section III.A, above), Bond Street’s claims challenging the weight of the loads used
    in Commerce’s tests must also be rejected.18
    18
    Commerce correctly rejected Bond Street’s claim that the Antidumping Order requires that
    a hand truck within the scope of the Order be able to “perform ‘hand truck tasks’ on all items” (or
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 31
    C. Bond Street’s Reliance on the Design of the Stebco Cart
    Distilled to its essence, Bond Street’s challenge to the weight of the two boxes that
    Commerce used to test the Stebco cart is little more than the “flip side” of Bond Street’s objection
    to the “tipping”/“tilting” of the file cabinet in Commerce’s third test. Bond Street objects to the 15-
    pound and 30-pound boxes (which did not require “tipping” or “tilting”) as too light, while – at the
    same time – Bond Street objects to the file cabinet test because the heavier weight of the file cabinet
    required Commerce to “tip” or “tilt” that load in order to slide the Stebco cart under it.
    Specifically, Bond Street contrasts the file cabinet test with the tests using the 15-pound and
    30-pound boxes of files, arguing that the Stebco cart was able to “slide[] under” the boxes due to
    “the light weight of the load,” and not “the design of the toe plate.” See Pl.’s Reply Brief at 5; see
    also Pl.’s Brief at 3, 4, 5; Audio Recording at 48:24-48:32, 50:53-51:25, 1:17:44-1:18:00.
    According to Bond Street, Commerce needed to “tip”/“tilt” the Stebco cart in the file cabinet test
    even “on all items it was designed or intended to move”). See Remand Results at 9, 11; see also
    Pl.’s Brief at 6.
    By its terms, the Antidumping Order requires that – to fall within its scope – a hand cart that
    features the four requisite physical characteristics (and that does not fall within the Order’s express
    exclusion) must be capable of “slid[ing] under” a load – but, contrary to Bond Street’s implication,
    the Order conspicuously does not specify any particular load. See Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg.
    at 70,122 (“Scope of Order” section) (requiring only that hand cart within scope of Order be capable
    of “slid[ing] under a load for purposes of lifting and/or moving the load” (emphasis added)); see
    also id. (specifying that hand carts covered by Order may be “suitable for any use”); Remand
    Results at 11; Def.’s Brief at 7.
    The results of any one of Commerce’s three tests would have sufficed to prove that the
    Stebco cart is capable of “slid[ing] under a load.” As discussed above, however, the Stebco cart was
    able to “slide[] under” the load in all three of the tests that Commerce conducted. See generally
    section III.A, supra (discussing Commerce’s test using a two-drawer file cabinet weighing 50
    pounds, and rejecting Bond Street’s challenge thereto); section III.B, supra (discussing Commerce’s
    tests using 15-pound and 30-pound boxes of files, and rejecting Bond Street’s challenge thereto).
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                               Page 32
    because, otherwise, “the toe plate collapses when [a] user pushes the card towards a [heavier] load.”
    See Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2-4; see also Pl.’s Brief at 7-8 (asserting that, without “tipping”/“tilting” the
    file cabinet, “the Stebco cart was unable to slide under the load because the toe plate began to
    collapse when pushed against the [file] cabinet,” and that – when Bond Street tested Stebco cart
    using a 50-pound box of copy paper, without “tipping”/“tilting” the load – “Bond Street’s test . . .
    showed the collapse of the toe plate”); id. at 4, 5-6; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2, 3-4, 5 & n.7; Audio
    Recording at 19:50-20:33, 1:21:13-1:21:30.19
    19
    Bond Street’s post-remand briefs filed with the Court refer only to the collapsible design
    of the Stebco cart’s toe plate, and make no mention of the thickness of the toe plate’s edge. See Pl.’s
    Brief at 4, 5-6, 7-8, 9; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2, 3-4, 5. However, Bond Street apparently focused on
    that issue before Commerce on remand. The Remand Results thus note:
    Bond Street highlights the “typical hand truck’s” thinner projecting edge/toe plate
    of 1.55 mm versus the Stebco Cart’s 3.96 mm. Bond Street asserts that the Stebco
    Cart’s projecting edge/toe plate width, in comparison, “makes sliding under . . .
    many boxes extremely difficult, if not impossible.”
    Remand Results at 8; see also id. at 8, 9.
    As discussed above (see n.4, supra), Bond Street’s failure to raise the thickness of the toe
    plate in either of its post-remand briefs filed with the Court bars Bond Street, as a matter of both
    fundamental fairness and law, from continuing to press that point in oral argument. But see, e.g.,
    Audio Recording at 23:31-23:45, 32:15-32:27, 53:19-54:05 (Bond Street argues thickness of Stebco
    cart’s toe plate relative to toe plate of hypothetical “typical” hand truck). However, even had Bond
    Street properly raised and preserved the point, Bond Street’s argument would have found no favor.
    The Remand Results correctly rejected as “misplaced” Bond Street’s emphasis on “the 2.41
    mm width difference between the Stebco Cart’s projecting edge or toe plate and a ‘typical hand
    truck’s’ projecting edge/toe plate.” See Remand Results at 10. As the Remand Results suggest,
    Bond Street’s claim that the thickness of the toe plate makes sliding the Stebco cart under a load
    “extremely difficult” is not material. “[R]eference to the efficiency and ease of the [cart’s] use . .
    . as a hand truck . . . speaks to end-user satisfaction rather than scope inclusion/exclusion.” See id.
    Accordingly, for purposes of determining whether a hand cart falls within the scope of the
    Antidumping Order, either a toe plate “slides under” a load, or it does not. In the instant case,
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 33
    Bond Street thus seeks to make much of the design of the Stebco cart, and attempts to
    distinguish that design from the design of hand trucks within the scope of the Antidumping Order
    (in terms of intended use, weight/load-bearing capacity, and such). See, e.g., Pl.’s Brief at 4, 5, 6,
    7 n.7, 9; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2, 5.20 However, aside from the physical and functional characteristics
    specifically set forth in the Antidumping Order, the design of any particular hand cart has no bearing
    on whether or not the hand cart falls within the scope of the Order.
    If a hand cart has the requisite four physical characteristics (including a “projecting edge or
    edges, or toe plate”), and if the hand cart is not expressly excluded from the Antidumping Order’s
    coverage, the hand cart falls within the scope of the Order, whatever its design, provided that “[t]he
    projecting edge or edges, or toe plate, slides under a load for purposes of lifting and/or moving the
    load.” Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (emphasis added); see also Remand Results at
    11-12; Def.’s Brief at 7-8; Audio Recording at 1:34:31-1:34:44, 1:35:57-1:36:14, 1:47:48-1:48:12,
    1:51:42-1:52:12.
    Commerce’s testing plainly demonstrates that – without regard to the thickness of the Stebco cart’s
    toe plate – the Stebco cart “can in fact slide under a load.” See Remand Results at 10; see also id.
    at 9 (noting the Domestic Manufacturers’ observation that “even if the Stebco Cart’s projecting
    edge/toe plate cannot be slid under certain items” without “tipping”/“tilting” the loads, “the Stebco
    Cart is able to slide under other loads and is thus within the scope of the Order”). In any event,
    however, it is worth noting that the projecting edge of a welding cart that Gleason Products
    determined to be within the scope of the Antidumping Order has a projecting edge that is
    approximately eight times thicker than the toe plate of the Stebco cart. See Audio Recording at
    2:05:20-2:06:54; Gleason Prods., 32 CIT at ____, 556 F. Supp. 2d at 1349 (holding that
    Antidumping Order covers welding cart with projecting edge that is 1 1/4 inches (i.e., 31.75 mm)
    thick).
    20
    See also, e.g., Audio Recording at 15:55-16:15, 18:14-18:29, 28:06-28:32, 37:27-37:48,
    40:16-40:29, 43:23-43:36, 46:47-47:06, 51:32-51:41, 52:44-53:49, 57:03-57:05, 1:03:12-1:03:19,
    1:04:09-1:04:11, 1:04:59-1:05:05, 1:06:50-1:07:18, 1:08:25-1:08:33, 1:18:57-1:19:05, 1:23:01-
    1:23:06, 1:24:10-1:24:42, 1:26:19-1:26:57.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 34
    Thus, the fact that the Stebco cart may be “designed to move relatively light items such as
    luggage and sample cases” is of no moment. See Pl.’s Brief at 4 (emphasis added); see also, e.g.,
    Pl.’s Reply Brief at 5. The Antidumping Order expressly states that merchandise within the scope
    of the Order may be “suitable for any use.” Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122; see also
    Remand Results at 9, 11 (explaining that “the Order does not exclude hand trucks designed with a
    primary use”); Def.’s Brief at 7-8; Audio Recording at 1:34:31-1:34:44 (stating that Order covers
    both “heavy-duty hand trucks and light-weight hand trucks”); id. at 1:35:57-1:36:26; id. at 1:47:48-
    1:48:12 (explaining that design and intended use of cart are not determinative of inclusion in or
    exclusion from scope of Order; salient issue is whether cart is capable of “slid[ing] under” a load);
    id. at 1:51:42-1:52:12. The load-bearing capacity of the Stebco cart is likewise irrelevant. See
    section III.B, supra.
    Similarly, contrary to Bond Street’s assertions, the Antidumping Order includes no
    requirement – much less a “clear requirement” – restricting the Order’s coverage to only those hand
    carts that feature toe plates specifically “designed to slide under a load.” Compare Pl.’s Brief at 8-9
    (emphasis added) with Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (expressly defining “Scope of
    Order”). Indeed, the word “design” does not appear anywhere in the text of the Antidumping Order,
    except in the language of the express exclusion (which all agree has no application here). See
    Antidumping Order, 
    69 Fed. Reg. 70,122
    .21 Moreover, Bond Street conspicuously cites no authority
    21
    The Antidumping Order’s express exclusion states:
    Excluded from the scope [of the Antidumping Order] are small two-wheel or four-
    wheel utility carts specifically designed for carrying loads like personal bags or
    luggage in which the frame is made from telescoping tubular material measuring less
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 35
    for the proposition that a hand cart’s inclusion within the scope of the Antidumping Order is
    dependent upon whether the toe plate is “designed” to “slide[] under” a load.
    To fall within the scope of the Antidumping Order, it is necessary only that the toe plate of
    a hand cart be capable of “slid[ing] under a load,” as is the toe plate of the Stebco cart here. See
    69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122; see also, e.g., Bond Street I, 33 CIT at ____, 
    637 F. Supp. 2d at 1350
    (declining to sustain Commerce’s initial scope ruling because agency “failed to make a
    determination as to whether the toe plate of the Stebco cart can ‘slide[] under a load’” (emphasis
    added)); Gleason Indus. Prods., Inc. v. United States, 
    31 CIT 393
    , 398 (2007) (explaining that, to
    fall within scope of Order, “a hand truck must be able to slide under a load” (emphasis added));
    Gleason Prods., 32 CIT at ____, ____, 556 F. Supp. 2d at 1347, 1349 (explaining that coverage
    under Order “hinges on whether . . . [the subject] carts possess projecting edges capable of sliding
    under a load,” and remanding as to one model for agency determination whether that model “is
    capable of sliding under a load” (emphases added)); Gleason Indus. Prods., Inc. v. United States,
    32 CIT ____, ____, 
    2008 WL 4649652
     * 3 (2008), aff’d, 
    335 Fed. Appx. 49
     (Fed. Cir. 2009)
    (holding that scope language of Order requires “that the hand cart’s projecting edge must be capable
    of sliding under a load” (emphasis added)); Vertex Int’l, Inc. v. United States, 
    30 CIT 73
    , 81 (2006)
    than 5/8 inch in diameter; hand trucks that use motorized operations either to move
    the hand truck from one location to the next or to assist in the lifting of items placed
    on the hand truck; vertical carriers designed specifically to transport golf bags; and
    wheels and tires used in the manufacture of hand trucks.
    Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (“Scope of Order” section) (emphasis added). As
    explained in section I.A above, the Stebco cart is not expressly excluded from the scope of the
    Antidumping Order, because some of the “telescoping tubular material” in the cart’s frame has a
    diameter of greater than e inch. See, e.g., Pl.’s Brief at 4 (acknowledging that Stebco cart does not
    fall within Order’s express exclusion).
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                                Page 36
    (reversing Commerce’s determination that garden cart was within scope of Order, explaining that
    agency determination was contrary to the sole record evidence “regarding the garden cart’s ability
    to slide under a load to lift or carry it” (emphasis added)).
    In sum, Bond Street’s emphasis on the specific design of the Stebco cart lies at the very heart
    of its challenge to Commerce’s Remand Results. But Bond Street’s focus on design is misplaced.
    Aside from the physical and functional characteristics specifically set forth in the Antidumping
    Order (and assuming that the express exclusion set forth in the Order does not apply), the design of
    any particular hand cart has no bearing whatsoever on whether or not the hand cart falls within the
    scope of the Antidumping Order. Bond Street’s contentions to the contrary have no merit.
    D. Bond Street’s Procedural Objections
    Apart from its substantive challenges to the tests that Commerce conducted, Bond Street also
    raises a laundry list of procedural objections. As discussed below, however, Bond Street’s
    procedural arguments – like its substantive arguments – cannot carry the day.
    1. Whether Commerce Was Obligated to Seek Comments on Test Methodology
    Bond Street argues that, as a general principle, it “would not have been unreasonable to
    expect [Commerce] to have requested comments from all interested parties on how to test the Stebco
    cart.” See Pl.’s Brief at 3. But it is telling that Bond Street cites no authority for its implication that
    Commerce was required to “seek . . . input from the parties.” See id. at 3; see also Def.’s Brief at
    5.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 37
    The bottom line is that, whether or not it would have been “reasonable” for Commerce to
    solicit the parties’ views on potential testing methodologies, the agency here was under no
    obligation to do so. Bond Street’s suggestion to the contrary lacks any foundation in the law.22
    2. The Adequacy of Commerce’s Rationale for Selection of Test Procedures
    Bond Street further faults Commerce for assertedly “offer[ing] no explanation or reason” as
    to how the agency decided to test the Stebco cart. See Pl.’s Brief at 3. Bond Street specifically
    targets Commerce’s tests using the 15-pound and 30-pound boxes of files, arguing that the agency
    “should [have] offer[ed] a plausible explanation or reason” for what Bond Street characterizes as
    the “extremely light loads employed” in those tests. See id.; see also Pl.’s Reply Brief at 5-6. Bond
    Street contends that greater explanation is particularly warranted in the case at bar, because
    Commerce conducted tests using a standard 10-ream box of copy paper weighing 50 pounds in E&B
    Giftware, a similar case which involved a “personal luggage cart.” See Pl.’s Reply Brief at 3 n.3
    (referring to Scope Ruling on E&B Giftware, LLC’s ML6275C Personal Luggage Cart at 7); see
    also id. at 5; Audio Recording at 55:29-56:03 (noting that load used in Commerce’s test in E&B
    Giftware case was same as load used by Bond Street in the instant case); Remand Results at 7
    (noting that Bond Street’s test in the instant case involved box weighing 50 pounds).23
    22
    The Government identifies and succinctly summarizes a key conceptual flaw that permeates
    and taints much of Bond Street’s case. The Government notes: “Bond Street’s logic . . . presupposes
    that the ability to construct a test that hand truck ‘A’ passes and hand truck ‘B’ fails would exclude
    hand truck ‘B’” from the scope of the Antidumping Order. See Def.’s Brief at 5. As the
    Government emphasizes, however, “[t]hat simply is not the case.” Id.
    23
    As explained in note 9 above, a copy of Commerce’s ruling in the E&B Giftware case is
    included in an addendum to the Government’s brief. See Def.’s Brief at Appendix, A50-A58.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                           Page 38
    Bond Street’s assertions notwithstanding, the Remand Results spoke directly to the notion
    that the loads used in Commerce’s tests were “extremely light.” In particular, the Remand Results
    rebutted the unspoken premise of Bond Street’s argument, explaining – as detailed in section III.B,
    above – that the scope of the Antidumping Order is not defined in terms of any minimum load
    capacity. See Remand Results at 10 (explaining that “the language of the Order does not require an
    analysis of [the] weight limitations” of a hand cart in determining whether or not the cart is within
    the scope of the Order); see also Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (defining “Scope of
    Order” with no reference to a hand cart’s load capacity); Def.’s Brief at 5-7; section III.B & n.17,
    supra (explaining that loads used in testing Stebco cart were selected to be representative of types
    of loads that Stebco cart is generally intended to carry).
    To the extent that Bond Street faults the Remand Results for not directly addressing the test
    that Commerce conducted in the E&B Giftware case, it is enough to note that Bond Street failed to
    raise that argument in the course of the remand proceeding before Commerce. Commerce can
    hardly be faulted for not anticipating in its Remand Results an argument that Bond Street did not
    make until some three months after the Remand Results issued, when Bond Street filed its Reply
    Brief with the Court. See Pl.’s Reply Brief at 3 n.3.
    In any event, as discussed in section III.D.3.a (immediately below), the Remand Results
    expressly addressed the test that Bond Street itself conducted using a 50-pound box of copy paper
    – the exact same load that Commerce used in testing the hand cart that was at issue in the E&B
    Giftware case. See Remand Results at 7; Audio Recording at 55:29-56:03. In addition, the Remand
    Results further explained that Commerce tested the Stebco cart using an empty two-drawer file
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 39
    cabinet weighing 50 pounds – again, the exact same weight as the 10-ream box of copy paper that
    Commerce used to test the hand cart at issue in E&B Giftware. See Remand Results at 4 (stating
    that file cabinet weighed 50 pounds); see also id. at 7 (stating that box used in Bond Street’s test
    weighed 50 pounds); Audio Recording at 55:29-56:03.
    In short, it is entirely unclear what more Commerce could reasonably be expected to have
    said. Under the circumstances presented here, Commerce’s justification of its test procedures in the
    Remand Results was more than adequate, not only explaining that the scope of the Antidumping
    Order is not defined in terms of load capacity, but – in addition – also addressing the test that Bond
    Street conducted on the Stebco cart, which involved the same 50-pound load used in the E&B
    Giftware case (as well as a second test involving another 50-pound load).
    3. The Adequacy of Commerce’s Treatment of Certain Tests
    Bond Street similarly contends that the Remand Results failed to adequately address both
    the results of the test conducted by Bond Street and the results of Commerce’s own test on the 50-
    pound file cabinet, and, further, that Commerce should have “offer[ed] a reasonable explanation or
    justification for ignoring or rejecting the tests proposed by Bond Street.” See Pl.’s Brief at 3; see
    also id. at 4, 6; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2 & n.2, 3-4, 5-6. None of these claims are persuasive.
    a. The Test Conducted by Bond Street
    In the course of the remand proceeding, Bond Street submitted to Commerce evidence
    concerning a test conducted by Bond Street, in which Bond Street asserts that it attempted
    unsuccessfully to slide the Stebco cart under an unopened box – measuring 18 x 12 x 10 inches,
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                               Page 40
    weighing 50 pounds, and containing ten reams of copy paper – without “tipping”/“tilting” the load.
    See Remand Results at 7; see generally Pl.’s Brief at 2, 5 & n.5, 6, 8; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2 & n.2,
    5 & n.7. To document that test, Bond Street provided Commerce with “three color photographs
    purporting to depict the Stebco [c]art’s wheels lifting off the ground as the cart’s [toe] plate makes
    contact with the box[,] and the cart beginning to collapse on a second attempt.” See Remand Results
    at 7; see also Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2; S.A.R. Doc. No. 2 at Attachments 1, 1A, & 1B (photos of Bond
    Street’s test); id. at 2-3 (describing Bond Street’s test and photos thereof).
    Rather incredibly, Bond Street states that the Remand Results “make[] no mention of Bond
    Street’s test.” See Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2; see also Pl.’s Brief at 3 (charging Commerce with
    “ignoring or rejecting” Bond Street’s test); id. at 6 (asserting that the Remand Results do not
    “discuss or comment on Bond Street’s new test”). Quite to the contrary, the Remand Results include
    a more detailed explanation of Bond Street’s test than do Bond Street’s own briefs filed with the
    Court. Compare Remand Results at 7 (describing methodology and results of Bond Street’s test,
    with specificity) with Pl.’s Brief at 3 (referring generally to a test “conducted on the Stebco cart by
    . . . Bond Street”); id. at 4 (referring to “Bond Street’s testing of the cart”); id. at 5 (asserting that
    Stebco cart “was not able to slide under . . . a 50-pound box of copy paper”); id. at 5 n.5 (alluding
    to “Bond Street’s test”); id. at 6 (referring broadly to “Bond Street’s new test”); id. at 8 (stating that
    “Bond Street’s test” demonstrated “the collapse of the toe plate when pushed against the box of copy
    paper”); and Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2 (stating only that Bond Street submitted to Commerce “a series
    of photographs depicting the unintended collapse of the [Stebco cart’s] vertical frame when the user
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                             Page 41
    attempted to slide the toe plate under an unopened box of copy paper containing ten reams of
    paper”); id. at 5 & n.7 (referring to test “made by Bond Street utilizing the Stebco cart”).
    In sum, there is simply no truth to Bond Street’s claim that Commerce “ignored” or
    “rejected” the test that Bond Street conducted. See Pl.’s Brief at 3. The Remand Results themselves
    demonstrate that Commerce was plainly cognizant of the details of Bond Street’s test, including the
    test methodology and the test results. See Remand Results at 7. Moreover, the Remand Results
    clearly explain why there was no need for Commerce to replicate Bond Street’s test and why the
    results of that test do not justify excluding the Stebco cart from the scope of the Antidumping Order.
    The Remand Results explained, for example, that the Antidumping Order includes no
    specification as to the load that a hand truck must bear to fall within the scope of the Order. See
    Remand Results at 10; see also Def.’s Brief at 5-7. Thus, the fact that a hand cart can “slide[]
    under” some loads but not others is no basis for excluding that cart from the reach of the Order. See
    Remand Results at 9; Def.’s Brief at 8 (noting that “even if a hand truck were unable to move certain
    loads, this would not be reason for exclusion [from the scope of the Order] if it could meet
    functional and operational requirements with regard to other loads”). The Remand Results further
    explained that – contrary to Bond Street’s contention – the Antidumping Order does not require
    “that the hand truck in question must perform ‘the tasks of a hand truck on all of the items it was
    designed or intended to move.’” See Remand Results at 11 (emphasis added); see also id. at 8, 9;
    Def.’s Brief at 7. In addition, the Remand Results noted that “the Order does not exclude hand
    trucks designed with a primary use,” as evidenced by the scope language of the Antidumping Order
    (which includes neither a “literal requirement” nor even a “suggestion”on point). See Remand
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 42
    Results at 11; see also id. at 9; Def.’s Brief at 7. And, as the Remand Results explained, the
    Antidumping Order is also “silent” as to a “hand truck’s item-specific limitations.” See Remand
    Results at 11; see also Def.’s Brief at 7.
    Bond Street’s assertion that the Remand Results “ignor[ed] or reject[ed]” the results of Bond
    Street’s test is patently at odds with the facts, and cannot be credited.
    b. Commerce’s File Cabinet Test
    Commerce’s explanations in the Remand Results summarized immediately above largely
    dispose of Bond Street’s related claim that Commerce ignored or rejected the test that the agency
    itself conducted using an empty two-drawer file cabinet weighing 50 pounds. See Pl.’s Brief at 3,
    5; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 5; see generally Remand Results at 4 (describing Commerce’s file cabinet
    test). As the Remand Results note, Commerce succeeded in sliding the Stebco cart under the file
    cabinet, after first “tipping”/“tilting” the load. See Remand Results at 4.
    The gravamen of Bond Street’s argument seems to be that – had Commerce properly
    considered the results of its file cabinet test – Commerce would have concluded that the Stebco cart
    was beyond the scope of the Antidumping Order, because the agency found it necessary to
    “tip”/“tilt” the load. See Remand Results at 9 (noting Bond Street’s argument that “carts whose
    projecting edge/toe plate slides under a load only when the load is tilted” are not within the scope
    of the Order). But the Remand Results explicitly address this notion as well. In particular, the
    Remand Results explain that the Antidumping Order does not preclude “tipping”/“tilting” a load,24
    24
    Bond Street criticizes “[Commerce’s] position that ‘tilting’ is permissible because the Order
    is silent” on the issue, arguing that, in effect, Commerce “substitutes a user’s ability to maneuver
    a load [o]nto the toe plate [of a cart] for the clear requirement in the Order that the toe plate be
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                                Page 43
    and, moreover, that Commerce’s “longstanding, consistent, and Court-approved” administration of
    the Antidumping Order has included within the scope of the Order hand carts that can “slide[]
    under” a load only if that load is tilted. See Def.’s Brief at 9-10; Remand Results at 11.
    Given these facts, it simply cannot be said that the Remand Results “ignor[ed] or reject[ed]”
    the results of Commerce’s file cabinet test. Bond Street’s claims to the contrary must be dismissed.
    c. Additional Testing Proposed by Bond Street
    Equally unavailing is Bond Street’s assertion that Commerce failed to “offer a reasonable
    explanation or justification for ignoring or rejecting the tests proposed by Bond Street.” See Pl.’s
    Brief at 3; see also id. at 4, 6; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2 n.2, 2-4, 5-6. As an initial matter, the reference
    to “tests proposed by Bond Street” is opaque, to say the least. Bond Street is apparently referring
    to its suggestion (advanced in the initial scope proceeding) that Commerce test the Stebco cart’s
    ability to “slide[] under” a stack of three boxes, each weighing 20 pounds. See Pl.’s Brief at 6; Pl.’s
    Reply Brief at 2 n.2; Remand Results at 10; A.R. Doc. No. 4 at 2-3. It is possible that Bond Street
    may also be referring to the test that Commerce conducted in the E&B Giftware case (discussed in
    section III.D.2, above), using a 50-pound box containing 10 reams of copy paper. See Pl.’s Reply
    Brief at 2-3 & n.3, 5; Audio Recording at 55:29-56:03 (noting that load used in Commerce’s test in
    designed to slide under a load.” See Pl.’s Brief at 8-9 (emphasis added). As explained above,
    however, the Antidumping Order includes no requirement – “clear” or otherwise – limiting the
    Order’s scope of coverage to hand carts specifically “designed to slide under a load.” See section
    III.C, supra. Assuming that a hand cart features the four requisite physical characteristics, and
    assuming that the cart is not expressly excluded from the scope of the Order, the cart is within the
    scope of the Order if it is capable of “slid[ing] under” a load, even if it is not specifically “designed”
    to do so. See id.; Antidumping Order, 69 Fed. Reg. at 70,122 (“Scope of Order” section).
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                         Page 44
    E&B Giftware case was same as load used by Bond Street in its test in case at bar); Remand Results
    at 7 (noting that Bond Street’s test in instant case involved box weighing 50 pounds).
    Again, with respect to the test that Commerce conducted in the E&B Giftware case, Bond
    Street cannot be heard to complain that the Remand Results failed to adequately explain why the
    agency did not conduct such a test in this case.25 As discussed above, it would be unfair to expect
    Commerce to have addressed E&B Giftware in the Remand Results, since Bond Street raised the
    E&B case for the first time some three months after the Remand Results issued. See Pl.’s Reply
    Brief at 3 n.3.
    Similarly unfounded is Bond Street’s claim that the Remand Results simply ignored the test
    that Bond Street suggested in the initial scope proceeding. As the Remand Results themselves
    indicate, that proposed test was squarely on Commerce’s radar screen. Indeed, the Remand Results
    referred specifically to “Bond Street’s suggested test consisting of sliding the Stebco Cart under
    three boxes, each weighing 20 pounds.” See Remand Results at 10 (footnote omitted). Moreover,
    the Remand Results explained why there was no need for Commerce to conduct such a test. As the
    Remand Results noted, the three tests that the agency conducted were more than sufficient to
    “confirm[] that the Stebco Cart possesses the fundamental functional and operative capability to
    slide under a load.” Id.; see also id. at 1-2, 3-4, 9-11, 12.
    25
    Given that Commerce tested the Stebco cart using a two-drawer file cabinet weighing 50
    pounds, it is not clear – as a practical matter – why Bond Street feels that it was necessary for
    Commerce to test the Stebco cart using a box of the same weight. See Remand Results at 4 (noting
    weight of file cabinet used in Commerce’s test). Certainly Bond Street has never shed any light on
    the matter.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 45
    In any event, as the Remand Results note (and as discussed elsewhere herein), the fact that
    a hand cart can “slide[] under” some loads but not others is not sufficient to exclude that cart from
    the reach of the Antidumping Order. See Remand Results at 9; see also id. at 11 (explaining, inter
    alia, that a hand truck falls within the scope of the Order even if it does not perform “the tasks of
    a hand truck on all . . . items”); Def.’s Brief at 8. Thus, even if Commerce had performed Bond
    Street’s proposed tests, and even if the Stebco cart were capable of “slid[ing] under” the loads
    proposed by Bond Street only if those loads were tipped (or even if the Stebco cart was not able to
    “slide[] under” the loads at all), Commerce’s remand determination would have been unchanged.
    As such, the Remand Results clearly illuminate the bases for Commerce’s decision not to
    pursue the additional testing that Bond Street proposed. The law entitles Bond Street to no more.
    4. Commerce’s Consideration of Specific Physical Features of the Stebco Cart
    Bond Street inexplicably asserts that the Remand Results do not address “Bond Street’s
    claim that [1] the collapsible toe plate, [2] the location of the bungee cord hook, and [3] the absence
    of a kick plate” prevent the Stebco cart from “slid[ing] under” a load. See Pl.’s Brief at 4. Contrary
    to Bond Street’s claims, however, the Remand Results in fact do focus – quite specifically, and at
    some length – on each of the three features of the Stebco cart that Bond Street highlights. See
    Remand Results at 2-7; see also Def.’s Brief at 2-4; Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 2-3.
    For example, Commerce stated in the Remand Results that it “continues to determine that
    Bond Street’s Stebco Cart is capable of sliding under a load for the purpose of lifting and/or moving
    the load notwithstanding [1] the collapsible and angled design of the toe plate, [2] the location of
    the bungee cord hook, and [3] the absence of a kick plate.” See Remand Results at 3 (emphasis
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                              Page 46
    added); see also id. at 7. In addition, the Remand Results separately and individually discuss each
    of the three physical features – i.e., the collapsible toe plate, the location of the bungee cord hook,
    and the absence of a kick plate. See id. at 4-5 (explaining, inter alia, that collapsibility of toe plate
    does not prevent cart from “sliding under” a load); id. at 5-6 (explaining that absence of kick plate
    does not prevent cart from “sliding under” a load); id. at 6-7 (explaining that location of bungee cord
    hook does not prevent cart from “sliding under” a load).
    In short, there is no truth to the allegation that the Remand Results fail to address Bond
    Street’s claim that “the collapsible toe plate, the location of the bungee cord hook, and the absence
    of a kick plate” prevent the Stebco cart from “slid[ing] under” a load. No truth whatsoever.
    E. Bond Street’s Challenge to the Substantiality of the Evidence
    Bond Street’s case culminates in its claim that Commerce’s remand determination is not
    supported by substantial evidence in the record. See generally Pl.’s Brief at 2, 3-7, 9; Pl.’s Reply
    Brief at 5-6. According to Bond Street, Commerce “fail[ed] to look at and consider the whole
    record, including evidence to the contrary, when making its determination.” Pl.’s Brief at 6-7; see
    also id. at 4-5, 6, 7, 9; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 6.
    Referring to the agency’s tests using 15-pound and 30-pound boxes, Bond Street maintains
    that Commerce’s remand determination is “based upon two tests, to the exclusion of all others.” See
    Pl.’s Brief at 6. Bond Street contends that Commerce failed to adequately consider the results of
    both the agency’s own test using a 50-pound file cabinet and the test conducted by Bond Street using
    a 50-pound box of copy paper. See Pl.’s Brief at 5; see also id. at 3, 7; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 2, 5.
    Bond Street points to those tests as “credible evidence” that “should have been considered as
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                            Page 47
    persuasive evidence, to be weighed against [Commerce’s] other tests” (i.e., the tests using 15-pound
    and 30-pound boxes) in reaching the agency’s remand determination. See Pl.’s Brief at 5; see also
    id. at 3, 7-8; Pl.’s Reply Brief at 5.
    As Bond Street correctly observes, the “substantial evidence” test requires Commerce to
    consider not only that evidence which supports its determination, but also “whatever in the record
    fairly detracts from its weight,” including “contradictory evidence or evidence from which
    conflicting inferences could be drawn.” Suramerica, 44 F.3d at 985 (citation omitted); see Pl.’s
    Reply Brief at 6 (quoting Huaiyin Foreign Trade Corp. v. United States, 
    322 F.3d 1369
    , 1374 (Fed.
    Cir. 2003)); Pl.’s Brief at 3, 7. Applying that standard to the administrative record in this action
    (including, in particular, the Supplemental Administrative Record compiled on remand), it is clear
    beyond cavil that, contrary to Bond Street’s assertions, Commerce’s remand determination is
    supported by substantial evidence.
    As discussed at some length above, Commerce in fact did not ignore or reject the results of
    the test that the agency conducted to determine whether the Stebco cart will “slide[] under” a two-
    drawer file cabinet. See Remand Results at 4 (describing agency’s file cabinet test); see also id. at
    11. To the contrary, Commerce concluded that the Stebco cart will “slide[] under” such a load, with
    the load “tipped”/“tilted” (see id. at 4); and Commerce relied upon that finding, in part, in reaching
    its remand determination. See id.; see generally section III.A, supra (discussing Commerce’s file
    cabinet test).26
    26
    Bond Street’s real quarrel is with Commerce’s finding that the Stebco cart “slid[] under”
    the file cabinet. In essence, Bond Street contends that – if the load must be “tipped”/“tilted” – the
    cart should not be considered to have “slid[] under” the load. See, e.g., Pl.’s Brief at 4, 7-9; Pl.’s
    Reply Brief at 3-4, 5 n.7. As the Remand Results explain, however, nothing in the Antidumping
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                             Page 48
    Commerce likewise did not ignore or reject the test that Bond Street conducted using a 50-
    pound box of copy paper. See Remand Results at 7 (describing Bond Street’s test). As section
    III.D.3.a (above) explains, the Remand Results themselves discuss Bond Street’s test, making it
    clear that Commerce was fully aware of all details of that test, including the test results. See
    Remand Results at 7; see also section III.D.3.a (discussing Bond Street’s test). Bond Street’s
    implicit argument seems to break down into two parts – first, a claim that the Stebco cart “failed”
    Bond Street’s test, and, second, a claim that such a “failed” test precludes the Stebco cart from
    falling within the scope of the Antidumping Order. Both claims are fatally flawed.
    First, although Bond Street apparently contends that the Stebco cart “failed” Bond Street’s
    test (i.e., the cart did not “slide[] under” the 50-pound box of copy paper), the record is clear that
    – in conducting its test – Bond Street did not “tip”/“tilt” the load. See Pl.’s Reply Brief at 5 & n.7.
    Moreover, there is nothing in the record to suggest that the Stebco cart would not have “slid[] under”
    that box if Bond Street had “tipped”/“tilted” the load.27 And, contrary to Bond Street’s repeated
    assertions, the “tipping”/“tilting” of a load is not precluded by the Antidumping Order. See, e.g.,
    Remand Results at 11. But, second, and even more importantly, there is no requirement that, to fall
    Order precludes “tipping”/“tilting” a load before slid[ing] a cart under it. See Remand Results at
    11; see generally section III.A, supra. Moreover, as discussed elsewhere herein, there is no
    requirement that, to fall within the scope of the Antidumping Order, a hand cart must “slide[] under”
    every load. See Remand Results at 9, 11; see also n.18, supra. Thus, even if the Antidumping Order
    did not permit the “tipping”/“tilting” of a load (and, thus, the Stebco cart did not “slide[] under” the
    file cabinet in Commerce’s test), Commerce’s remand determination would not be undermined and
    still could be sustained based on the other two tests that Commerce conducted. See n.12, supra.
    27
    Indeed, there is record evidence that affirmatively supports the notion that the Stebco cart
    would have “slid[] under” the 50-pound box of copy paper in Bond Street’s test, if Bond Street had
    “tipped”/“tilted” the load. Specifically, in Commerce’s testing, the Stebco cart “slid[] under” a 50-
    pound file cabinet with that load “tipped”/“tilted.” See Remand Results at 4.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                              Page 49
    within the scope of the Antidumping Order, a hand cart must be able to “slide[] under” any and all
    loads (or even all loads for which the cart was designed). See Remand Results at 9, 11.
    In short, because there is no requirement that a hand cart covered by the Antidumping Order
    be capable of “slid[ing] under” all loads, neither the results of Commerce’s file cabinet test nor the
    results of Bond Street’s test “fairly detracts from [the] weight” of other record evidence, including
    the results of Commerce’s tests using 15-pound and 30-pound boxes. See Suramerica, 44 F.3d at
    985. But even if Commerce’s file cabinet test and/or Bond Street’s test could be characterized as
    detracting from other record evidence, the record as a whole demonstrates that both tests were
    properly considered by Commerce in reaching its remand determination.
    In sum, the administrative record reflects that Commerce carefully considered all tests before
    it – including Bond Street’s test, as well as the three tests that Commerce conducted – and
    determined on remand, based on the entirety of the record, that, “notwithstanding the collapsible .
    . . design of the toe plate, the location of the bungee cord hook, and the absence of a kick plate,”
    Bond Street’s Stebco cart “is adept at sliding under a load for the purposes of lifting/moving that
    load”; that “once the projecting edge/toe plate is slid under a load, the projecting edge/toe plate
    remained stable and there [is] no difficulty in lifting and moving the load”; and that the Stebco cart
    thus “has the operational and functional ability to slide under a load for the purposes of lifting and/or
    moving that load” and therefore falls “within the scope of the Order.” See Remand Results at 3-4,
    12; see also id. at 1-2, 5, 6-7, 9-11.
    As such, Commerce’s remand determination is supported by substantial evidence in the
    record. Bond Street’s assertions to the contrary must be rejected.
    Court No. 08-00049                                                                      Page 50
    IV. Conclusion
    For all the reasons set forth above, Commerce’s Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant
    to Court Remand: Hand Trucks and Certain Parts Thereof from the People’s Republic of China
    must be sustained.
    Judgment will enter accordingly.
    /s/ Delissa A. Ridgway
    ___________________________
    Delissa A. Ridgway
    Judge
    Decided: April 12, 2011
    New York, New York
    ERRATA
    Bond Street, Ltd. v. The United States, Court No. 08-00049, Slip Op. 11-37, dated April 12, 2011.
    Page 9:          In line five of the first full paragraph, replace “Court Remand Hand Trucks” with
    “Court Remand: Hand Trucks”.
    Page 17:         In the third line from the bottom in the second paragraph of footnote 4, replace
    “under the file cabinet.” with “under the 30-pound box.”.
    Page 19:         In line seven of the third paragraph of footnote 6, delete “id. at” and insert “Gleason
    Indus. Prods., Inc. v. United States, 32 CIT ____, ____, 
    2008 WL 4649652
     * 2
    (2008), aff’d, 
    335 Fed. Appx. 49
     (Fed. Cir. 2009) (ruling that specific welding cart
    (model 43615) is beyond scope of Order, because, if one attempted to slide cart’s
    projecting edge under a load, “the four-sided 1 1/4 inch [raised lip] on the [projecting
    edge] would force the load to drop”); Audio Recording at”.
    Page 23:         In line four of the second paragraph of footnote 12, replace “Stebco card” with
    “Stebco cart”.
    Page 24:         In the penultimate line of the last paragraph of footnote 13, replace “file cabinet test”
    with “30-pound box test”.
    Page 28:         In line three of the first full paragraph, replace “was simply designed to determine”
    with “[was simply designed to determine]”.
    Page 32:         In line one, replace “pushes the card” with “pushes the cart”.
    April 21, 2011