Shenyang Yuanda Aluminum Industry Engineering Co. v. United States ( 2016 )


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  •                            Slip Op. 16 -
    UNITED STATES COURT OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    SHENYANG YUANDA ALUMINUM
    INDUSTRY ENGINEERING CO.,          Before: Donald C. Pogue,
    Senior Judge
    Plaintiff,
    Consol. Court No. 14-001061
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant.
    OPINION and ORDER
    [Redetermination remanded for further consideration in
    accordance with this opinion.]
    Dated: February 9, 2016
    James R. Cannon, Jr., John D. Greenwald, and Thomas M.
    Beline, Cassidy Levy Kent, LLP, of Washington, DC, for Plaintiff
    Yuanda.
    Kristen Smith, Arthur K. Purcell, and Michelle L.
    Mejia, Sandler, Travis, & Rosenberg, P.A., of Washington, DC,
    for Consolidated Plaintiff Jangho.
    William E. Perry, Emily Lawson, and Kate Kennedy,
    Dorsey & Whitney LLP, of Seattle, WA, for Consolidated Plaintiff
    Permasteelisa.
    Douglas G. Edelschick, Trial Attorney, Commercial
    Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice,
    of Washington, DC, for the Defendant. With him on the brief were
    Benjamin C. Mizer, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General,
    Jeanne E. Davidson, Director, and Reginald T. Blades, Jr.,
    Assistant Director. Of counsel was Scott D. McBride, Senior
    1 This action is consolidated with court numbers 14-00107 and
    14-00108. Order, July 16, 2014, ECF No. 28.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                    Page 2
    Attorney, Office of the Chief Counsel for Trade Enforcement and
    Compliance, U.S. Department of Commerce, of Washington, DC.
    David M. Spooner and Christine J. Sohar Henter,
    Barnes & Thornburg, LLP, of Washington, DC, for Defendant-
    Intervenor, the Curtain Wall Coalition.
    Pogue, Senior Judge: In this action, Plaintiffs
    Shenyang Yuanda Aluminum Industry Engineering Co., Ltd. and
    Yuanda USA Corporation (collectively “Yuanda”); Jango Curtain
    Wall Americas Co. (“Jangho”); and Permasteelisa North America
    Corp., Permasteelisa South China Factory, and Permasteelisa Hong
    Kong Ltd. (collectively “Permasteelisa”), challenge the
    decision,2 made by Defendant, the U.S. Department of Commerce
    (“Commerce”), that Yuanda’s unitized curtain wall, i.e., a
    complete curtain wall, unitized and imported in phases pursuant
    to a sales contract, is within the scope of the antidumping and
    countervailing duty orders (the “AD&CVD Orders” or the “Orders”)
    on aluminum extrusions from the People’s Republic of China
    (“PRC”).3
    
    2 Compl., ECF No. 9 (Yuanda’s complaint); Compl., Ct. No. 14-
    00107, ECF No. 8 (Jangho’s complaint); Compl., Ct. No. 14-00108,
    ECF No. 8 (Permasteelisa’s complaint).
    3 Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968
    (Dep’t of Commerce March 27, 2014) (final scope ruling on
    curtain wall units that are produced and imported pursuant to a
    contract to supply curtain wall), ECF No. 34-1 (“Yuanda Scope
    Ruling”); Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Ct.
    Remand, ECF No. 68-1 (“Redetermination”); see Aluminum
    Extrusions from the [PRC], 76 Fed. Reg. 30,650 (Dep’t Commerce
    May 26, 2011) (antidumping duty order) (“AD Order”); Aluminum
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                       Page 3
    Currently before the court are Plaintiffs’ renewed
    motions for judgment on the agency record pursuant to USCIT Rule
    56.2, arguing that Commerce’s affirmative scope ruling is not in
    accordance with law, unsupported by substantial evidence, and
    arbitrary and capricious.4                                                 Defendant opposes Plaintiffs’
    motions.5                    Defendant-Intervenors, Walters & Wolf, Architectural
    Glass & Aluminum Company, and Bagatelos Architectural Glass
    Systems, Inc. (collectively the “Curtain Wall Coalition” or
    “CWC”) join in opposition to the motions.6
    The court has jurisdiction pursuant to
    § 516A(a)(2)(B)(vi) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended,
    
    Extrusions from the [PRC], 76 Fed. Reg. 30,653 (Dep’t Commerce
    May 26, 2011) (countervailing duty order) (“CVD Order”).
    Yuanda USA Corp is an importer and Shenyang Yuanda Aluminum
    Industry Engineering Co., Ltd. is a foreign producer and
    exporter of curtain wall units. Jangho is a foreign producer of
    subject merchandise. Permasteelisa North America Corp. is an
    importer and Permasteelisa Hong Kong Ltd. is a foreign producer
    of subject merchandise. Yuanda Scope Ruling, ECF No. 34-1, at 1-
    2.
    4 Mem. of P. & A. in Supp. of Yuanda’s Am. Mot. for J. on the
    Agency R., ECF Nos. 79 (conf. ver.) & 80 (pub. ver.) (“Yuanda’s
    Br.”); Am. Mem. in Supp. of Pl. Jangho’s Mot. for J. on the
    Agency R., ECF No. 78 (“Jangho Br.”); Mem. of P. & A. in Supp.
    of [Permasteelisa’s] Rule 56.2 Mot. for J. on the Agency R., ECF
    No. 39 (as amended by Notice of Withdrawal, ECF No. 84)
    (“Permasteelisa’s Br.”).
    5 Def.’s Resp. to Pl.’s & Consol. Pl.’s Rule 56.2 Mots. for J. on
    the Agency R., ECF No. 85 (“Def.’s Resp.”).
    6 Def.-Intervenors’ Opp’n to Pls.’ Mots. & Am. Brs. For J. on the
    Agency R., ECF No. 87 (“CWC’s Resp.”).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                    Page 4
    19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(vi) and 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2012).7
    Because Commerce’s scope ruling redefines key terms
    contrary to the plain language of the AD&CVD Orders, it is not
    in accordance with law; because it does not reasonably consider
    the characteristics of Plaintiffs’ merchandise and the evidence
    that weighs against the agency’s determination, it is
    unsupported by substantial evidence; because it offers
    insufficient reasons for treating similar products differently,
    it is arbitrary and capricious.   Accordingly, the court remands
    to Commerce for further consideration in accordance with this
    opinion.
    BACKGROUND
    I.   The Antidumping and Countervailing Duty Orders on Aluminum
    Extrusions
    The issues presented here arise from Commerce’s AD&CVD
    Orders on aluminum extrusions from the PRC.8    The AD&CVD Orders
    followed a March 31, 2010, petition by the Aluminum Extrusions
    Fair Trade Committee and the United Steel, Paper and Forestry,
    Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and Service
    Workers International Union (collectively, “Petitioners”),
    
    7    All further citations to the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended,
    are to Title 19 of the U. S. Code, 2012 edition.
    8 See AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg.
    30,653.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                    Page 5
    alleging that “[certain] aluminum extrusions imported from the
    [PRC] are being subsidized and sold at less than normal value.”9
    Commerce made final affirmative determinations of subsidization
    and sales at less than fair value10; the International Trade
    Commission similarly made a final affirmative determination of
    material injury to U.S. industry.11    Commerce then issued the
    AD&CVD Orders.12
    II. The Language of the Order
    The AD&CVD Orders on aluminum extrusions were “written
    in general terms,”13 to cover “aluminum extrusions,” which are
    defined as “shapes and forms,14 produced by an extrusion process,
    
    9    Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968
    (Dep’t of Commerce March 31, 2010) (petition for the imposition
    of antidumping and countervailing duties) at 1, reproduced in
    Pub. App. to [Yuanda’s Br.], ECF No. 83-3 at Tab 10
    (“Petition”).
    10Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], 76 Fed. Reg. 18,524 (Dep’t
    Commerce Apr. 4, 2011) (final determination of sales at less
    than fair value) and accompanying Issues & Decision Mem., A-570-
    967, POI July 1, 2009 – Dec. 31, 2009 (Apr. 4, 2011) (“Final AD
    I&D Mem.”); Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], 76 Fed. Reg.
    18,521 (Dep’t Commerce Apr. 4, 2011) (final affirmative
    countervailing duty determination).
    11Certain Aluminum Extrusions from China, USITC Pub. 4229, Inv.
    Nos. 701-TA-475 & 731-TA-1177 (May 2011) (“ITC Final
    Determination”).
    12AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,653.
    13   See 19 C.F.R. § 351.225(a).
    14Aluminum extrusions “are produced and imported in a wide
    variety of shapes and forms, including, but not limited to,
    hollow profiles, other solid profiles, pipes, tubes, bars, and
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                       Page 6
    made from [certain] aluminum alloys.”15                                                                       They may have a variety
    of finishes, “both coatings and surface treatments,”16 and may be
    “fabricated, i.e., prepared for assembly.”17
    Aluminum extrusions “described at the time of
    importation as parts for final finished products” such as
    “window frames, door frames, solar panels, curtain walls, or
    furniture,” to be “assembled after importation,” are subject to
    the order if such parts “otherwise meet the definition of
    aluminum extrusions,”18 that is, they are shapes or forms made
    from the covered aluminum alloys and made by an extrusion
    
    rods.” AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg.
    at 30,654. Drawn aluminum (aluminum extrusions that are “drawn
    subsequent to extrusion”) also fall within the AD&CVD Orders.
    
    Id. 15AD Order,
    76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,653.
    16See AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg.
    at 30,654 (“The types of coatings and treatments applied to
    subject aluminum extrusions include, but are not limited to,
    extrusions that are mill finished (i.e., without any coating or
    further finishing), brushed, buffed, polished, anodized
    (including bright-dip anodized), liquid painted, or powder
    coated.”).
    17AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,654; see 
    id. (“Such operations
    would include, but are not
    limited to, extrusions that are cut-to-length, machined,
    drilled, punched, notched, bent, stretched, knurled, swedged,
    mitered, chamfered, threaded, and spun.”).
    18AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650-51; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg.
    at 30,654,
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                     Page 7
    process.19    The AD&CVD Orders also cover “aluminum extrusion
    components that are attached (e.g., by welding or fasteners) to
    form subassemblies, i.e., partially assembled merchandise.”20
    The AD&CVD Orders exclude “finished merchandise
    containing aluminum extrusions as parts” so long as such
    merchandise is “fully and permanently assembled and completed at
    the time of entry, such as finished windows with glass, doors
    with glass or vinyl, picture frames with glass pane and backing
    material, and solar panels.”21    The AD&CVD Orders also exclude
    “finished goods containing aluminum extrusions that are entered
    unassembled in a ‘finished goods kit.’”22    A finished goods kit
    is “a packaged combination of parts that contains, at the time
    of importation, all of the necessary parts to fully assemble a
    final finished good and requires no further finishing or
    fabrication, such as cutting or punching, and is assembled ‘as
    
    19    AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,653.
    20AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,654.
    21Id. Aluminum extrusion “identified with reference to their
    end use, such as fence posts, electrical conduits, door
    thresholds, carpet trim, or [certain] heat sinks . . . are
    subject merchandise if they otherwise meet the scope definition,
    regardless of whether they are ready for use at the time of
    importation.” 
    Id. 22 Id.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                            Page 8
    is’ into a finished product.”23       Subassemblies may be excluded as
    well, provided that they enter the United States as part of or
    as “finished goods” or “finished goods kits.”24
    III. Interpreting the Scope of an Order
    Where, as here, there is a question as to “whether a
    particular product is included within the scope of an
    antidumping or countervailing duty order,” Commerce follows an
    interpretive framework, provided in the agency’s regulations, to
    determine the answer.25      First, relying on the description of the
    product contained in the scope-ruling request, Commerce looks to
    the plain language of the underlying order.26          If the terms of
    the order are dispositive, then the order governs.27
    
    23 
    Id. However, “[a]n
    imported product will not be considered a
    ‘finished goods kit’ and therefore excluded from the scope of
    the investigation merely by including fasteners such as screws,
    bolts, etc. in the packaging with an aluminum extrusion
    product.” 
    Id. 24Id.; see
    Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-
    570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Sept. 24, 2012) (preliminary side
    mount valve controls scope Ruling) at 7 (“SMVC Scope Ruling”)
    (adopted unchanged in Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-
    967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Oct. 26, 2012) (final side
    mount valve controls scope ruling)), reproduced in Def.’s App.
    Accompanying [Def.’s Resp.], ECF No. 86 at Tabs 3 & 4.
    25   19 C.F.R. § 351.225(a).
    26Duferco Steel, Inc. v. United States, 
    296 F.3d 1087
    , 1097
    (Fed. Cir. 2002).
    27Tak Fat Trading Co. v. United States, 
    396 F.3d 1378
    , 1383
    (Fed. Cir. 2005) (“[A] predicate for the interpretive process is
    language in the order that is subject to interpretation.”
    (quoting Duferco 
    Steel, 296 F.3d at 1097
    ); ArcelorMittal
    Stainless Belgium N.V. v. United States, 
    694 F.3d 82
    , 84 (Fed.
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                       Page 9
    Second, if the order is ambiguous, Commerce
    “consider[s] the regulatory history, as contained in the so-
    called ‘(k)(1) materials’” — named for the regulatory subsection
    in which they appear.28                                           Specifically, Commerce considers “[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.”29                                        If the (k)(1) materials disambiguate the
    language of the order, then Commerce will issue its scope
    ruling.30
    Third, if the (k)(1) materials “are not dispositive,”
    Commerce will initiate a scope inquiry.31                                                                          Specifically, Commerce
    “will further consider: (i) [t]he physical characteristics of
    the product; (ii) [t]he expectations of the ultimate purchasers;
    (iii) [t]he ultimate use of the product; (iv) [t]he channels of
    
    Cir. 2012) (“If Commerce determines that the language at issue
    is not ambiguous, it states what it understands to be the plain
    meaning of the language, and the proceedings terminate. On the
    other hand, if Commerce finds that the scope language is
    ambiguous, it then looks to two sets of factors spelled out in
    [19 C.F.R. § 351.225(k)] to determine the intended scope of the
    order.”).
    28Mid Continent Nail Corp. v. United States, 
    725 F.3d 1295
    , 1302
    (Fed. Cir. 2013).
    29    19 C.F.R. § 351.225(k)(1).
    30    
    Id. at §
    351.225(d).
    31
    Id. at §
    § 351.225(e), (k)(2); see also Walgreen Co. of
    Deerfield, IL v. United States, 
    620 F.3d 1350
    , 1352 (Fed. Cir.
    2010).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                               Page 10
    trade in which the product is sold; and (v) [t]he manner in
    which the product is advertised and displayed.”32
    Commerce’s interpretations of its own scope rulings
    are given “significant deference,”33 however, “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.”34
    IV.      The Scope Ruling on Curtain Wall Units and Other Parts of a
    Curtain Wall System from the PRC
    The Yuanda Scope Ruling challenged in this case is the
    second scope ruling Commerce has issued relevant to unitized
    curtain wall.35                 Prior to the Yuanda Scope Ruling, on October 11,
    2012, Defendant-Intervenors, the CWC, applied for a ruling from
    Commerce, pursuant 19 C.F.R. § 351.225, to confirm that “parts
    of curtain wall[s],”36 defined as “curtain wall sections, falling
    
    32    19 C.F.R. § 351.225(k)(2).
    33   Duferco 
    Steel, 296 F.3d at 1094-95
    .
    34Eckstrom Indus., Inc. v. United States, 
    254 F.3d 1068
    , 1072
    (Fed. Cir. 2001).
    35Commerce has also issued a third scope ruling on curtain wall
    units with non-PRC aluminum extrusions. See Aluminum Extrusions
    from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce March
    14, 2013) (final scope ruling on Tesla curtain walls with non-
    PRC extrusions). However, this determination is not relevant
    here because, unlike there, the country of origin of Yuanda’s
    aluminum extrusions is not at issue.
    36Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968
    (Dep’t of Commerce Oct. 11, 2012) (amended scope request
    regarding curtain wall units and other parts of a curtain wall
    system) at 1-2, reproduced in Pub. App. to [Yuanda’s Br.], ECF
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 11
    short of the final finished curtain wall that envelopes an
    entire building structure,” including, but not limited to
    individual curtain wall units (i.e., “unitized . . . modules
    that are designed to be interlocked with each other, like pieces
    of a puzzle”).37                               Both Yuanda and Jangho submitted comments in
    opposition.38
    In the CWC Scope Ruling, Commerce determined, based on
    the description of the product in CWC’s application,39 that the
    
    No. 83-1, at Tab 2 at Ex. B (“CWC Am. Scope Request”).
    Originally, the Northern California Glass Management Association
    (“NCGMA”) submitted the scope ruling request for “curtain wall
    units and parts for curtain walls.” Aluminum Extrusions from the
    [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Oct. 11, 2012)
    (letter re amended scope request regarding curtain wall units
    and other parts of a curtain wall system) at 2, reproduced in
    Pub. App. to [Yuanda’s Br.], ECF No. 83-1, at Tab 2 at Ex. B.
    However, because Commerce found that the “NCGMA [did] not
    adequately demonstrate[] how it qualifies as an interested party
    under [19 U.S.C. § 1677(9)(E)],” three members of the NCGMA,
    Walters & Wolf, Architectural Glass & Aluminum Company, and
    Bagatelos Architectural Glass Systems, Inc., filed an amended
    scope request on NCGMA’s behalf, as the Curtain Wall Coalition.
    
    Id. at 3.
    Commerce subsequently found that the CWC had standing
    as an interested party. Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-
    570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Nov. 30, 2012) (final
    scope ruling on curtain wall units and other parts of a curtain
    wall system) (“CWC Scope Ruling”) at 9-10.
    37    CWC Am. Scope Request, ECF No. 83-1 at Tab 2 at Ex 2, at 8-9.
    38CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 2. Overgaard Ltd, a
    foreign producer of curtain wall units, and Bucher Glass Inc.,
    an importer, also submitted comments in support of Yuanda’s
    opposition. 
    Id. 39The CWC
    defined curtain wall system as “an aluminum extrusion
    framed non-weight bearing exterior wall, secured to and
    supported by the structural frame of a building,” which
    functions as the “outer cover of typically multi-level buildings
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 12
    language of the AD&CVD Orders and the “descriptions of the
    merchandise in the investigation” are “dispositive”: curtain
    wall parts, as defined in the CWC’s Scope Request, fell within
    the scope of the Orders.40                                                While Yuanda and Jangho argued that
    “a complete curtain wall unit” could be excluded from the scope
    of the AD&CVD Orders under the “finished goods kit” exclusion,
    Commerce declined to rule on the application of this exclusion
    because the CWC’s scope request “[did] not seek a scope ruling
    on complete curtain walls units, but rather ‘parts of curtain
    walls,’ and [its] scope ruling [was] limited to the products
    discussed in the CWC’s Amended Scope Request.”41
    Yuanda and Jango challenged the CWC Scope Ruling
    before the Court of International Trade (“CIT”), but the CIT
    
    uniquely designed to envelope an entire building and provide
    architectural and functional goals.” CWC Am. Scope Request, ECF
    No. 83-1 at Tab 2 at Ex 2, at 7. “A curtain wall includes
    numerous parts and components including curtain wall units that
    are pieces which comprise a curtain wall system. 
    Id. at 2.
    40CWCScope Ruling, supra note 36, at 10 (“[T]he products
    described in CWC’s Amended Scope Request are within the scope of
    the [AD&CVD] Orders.”); see also CWC Am. Scope Request, ECF No.
    83-1 at Tab 2 at Ex 2, at 2 (“This request covers curtain wall
    units and other parts of a curtain wall system, which are
    assembled to create a complete curtain wall that covers the
    outside of a building.”); 
    id. at 8-9
    (“The merchandise covered
    by this scope request is curtain wall sections, falling short of
    the final finished curtain wall that envelopes an entire
    building structure. Certain curtain wall parts are unitized into
    modules that are designed to be interlocked with each other,
    like pieces of a puzzle. The units are assembled at a production
    facility and shipped to site for installation.”).
    41    CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 9.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                   Page 13
    affirmed Commerce’s finding that “curtain wall units and other
    parts of curtain wall systems fall within the scope of the
    [AD&CVD] Orders.”42    The plaintiffs appealed this decision to the
    Federal Circuit, but the Federal Circuit affirmed.43
    V.     The Scope Ruling on Curtain Wall Units that are Produced
    and Imported Pursuant to a Contract to Supply Curtain Wall
    On March 26, 2013, while Yuanda I was still pending
    before the CIT, Yuanda filed its own scope ruling request,
    pursuant to 19 C.F.R. § 351.225, to confirm that complete
    curtain wall units sold “pursuant to [a] contract[] to supply
    [a] complete curtain wall [system]” were excluded from the scope
    of the AD&CVD Orders.44     Jangho and Permasteelisa submitted
    comments in support of Yuanda’s application; the CWC submitted
    comments in opposition.45     Commerce found that “the description
    of the products [in Yuanda’s application] and the scope
    language, as well as the descriptions of the merchandise in
    prior scope rulings and determinations of [Commerce] and the
    
    42    Shenyang Yuanda Aluminum Indus. Eng’g Co. v. United States, __
    CIT __, 
    961 F. Supp. 2d 1291
    , 1294 (2014) (“Yuanda I”).
    43Shenyang Yuanda Aluminum Indus. Eng’g Co. v. United States,
    
    776 F.3d 1351
    , 1353 (Fed. Cir. 2015)(affirming) (“Yuanda II”).
    44Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968
    (Dep’t of Commerce March 26, 2013) (scope ruling request
    regarding complete and finished curtain wall units that are
    produced and imported pursuant to a contract to supply a
    complete curtain wall) at 1-2, reproduced in Pub. Appx. To
    [Yuanda’s Br.], ECF No. 83 at Tab 1 (“Yuanda Scope Request”).
    45   Yuanda Scope Ruling, supra note 3, at 2.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                 Page 14
    [International Trade Commission (“ITC”)] [were] dispositive.”46
    Relying on these sources, Commerce determined that Yuanda’s
    products are subject to the AD&CVD Orders.47
    Yuanda, Jangho, and Permasteelisa appealed the ruling
    to this Court.                              In their initial motions for summary judgment in
    this action, Plaintiffs brought attention to the fact that
    Commerce had not considered the “description of the merchandise
    contained in the [P]etition,”48 in particular, an exhibit from
    that Petition that listed “unassembled unitized curtain walls”
    as non-subject merchandise under the “finished goods kit”
    exclusion.49                        Commerce requested a remand to consider this
    evidence and argument.50                                   The court granted the Defendant’s
    motion for voluntary remand.51
    
    46 
    Id. at 20.
    47    
    Id. 48 See
    19 C.F.R. § 351.225(k)(1).
    49Petition, ECF No. 83-3 at Tab 10, at Exhibit I-5; see Mem. of
    P. & A. in Supp. of Yuanda’s Mot. for J. on the Agency R., ECF
    No. 38-1, at 4, 14; Mem. in Supp. of Pl. Jangho’s Mot. for J. on
    the Agency R., ECF No. 37-1, at 14; [Permasteelisa’s] Rule 56.2
    Mot. for J. on the Agency R., ECF No. 39, at 4, 24; see also
    Mot. to Supp. the Admin. Record, ECF No. 33 (requesting that the
    administrative record be amended to include the Petition);
    Order, Sept. 18, 2014, ECF No. 36 (granting the motion to
    supplement the administrative record to include the Petition).
    50    Def.’s Consent Mot. for Voluntary Remand, ECF No. 49.
    51    Order, Dec. 9, 2014, ECF No. 50.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                              Page 15
    In the resulting redetermination, Commerce found that
    Yuanda’s unassembled curtain wall units were within the scope of
    the AD&CVD Orders unless all necessary parts for an entire
    curtain wall were present “at the time of importation,” i.e., in
    the same entry, on a single Customs and Border Protection
    (“CBP”) 7501 Entry Summary form.52                Plaintiffs’ renewed motions
    for judgment on the agency record are now before the court.53                   On
    December 10, 2015 the court heard oral argument on Plaintiffs’
    motions.54
    VI.    The Product at Issue as Described in Yuanda’s Scope Ruling
    Request
    Yuanda requested a scope ruling to confirm that
    “complete, finished unitized curtain wall units . . . sold to
    building developers, general contractors and/or glazing
    companies pursuant to contracts to supply them with curtain wall
    systems,” were excluded from the scope of the AD&CVD Orders.55
    This product is also referred to as “complete curtain wall
    units”56 to be assembled into a curtain wall (curtain wall and
    
    52    Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 16.
    53See Yuanda’s Br., ECF Nos. 79 & 80; Jangho Br., ECF No. 78;
    Permasteelisa’s Br., ECF No. 39 (as amended by Notice of
    Withdrawal, ECF No. 84).
    54Oral Arg., Dec. 10, 2015, ECF No. 99; see Tr. of Oral Arg.,
    ECF No. 100.
    55   Yuanda Scope Request, ECF No. 83 at Tab 1, at 1-2.
    56This term appears to have been adopted to describe the
    merchandise at issue here to be in keeping with the CWC Scope
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 16
    curtain wall system being used interchangeably) and “unassembled
    unitized curtain walls.”57
    A curtain wall, according to Yuanda, is a set of
    interlocking “curtain wall units that form a non-load bearing
    wall on a floor or part of a building.”58                                                                          Each curtain wall unit
    is “produced to the exacting architectural specifications of the
    building on which it is to be installed.”59                                                                              A “‘complete and
    finished’ unitized curtain wall unit is produced by fabricating
    a frame (generally from extruded aluminum), adding to it thermal
    insulation, filling it (generally with glass), sealing the
    infill, drilling holes, attaching additional metal or plastics,
    and shipping to the job site for installation.”60
    
    Ruling, where Commerce declined to consider whether a “complete
    curtain wall unit” could be excluded as a finished goods kit.
    See CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 9; Yuanda Scope Request,
    ECF No. 83 at Tab 1, at 7.
    57See Yuanda Scope Request, ECF No. 83 at Tab 1, at 7;
    Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 34.
    58Yuanda Scope Request, ECF No. 83 at Tab 1, at 7; see also 
    id. at 8
    (“Because curtain wall units form a wall of a building or
    part of a building when they are joined together, they are
    designed to meet thermal expansion and contraction, building
    sway and movement, water diversion, thermal efficiency, and
    structural integrity.” (citation omitted)).
    59    
    Id. at 7.
    60Id. at 8; see Ex. 1 to Yuanda Scope Request, ECF No. 83 at Tab
    1 (providing diagrams and photos illustrating the fabrication,
    finishing, and installation process of Yuanda’s unitized curtain
    wall).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                      Page 17
    Because “complete curtain wall units form part of a
    larger curtain wall system specifically designed for a
    building,” unassembled curtain wall units “are sold and
    delivered to the job site in segments pursuant to the schedule
    stipulated in the contract to supply the larger system.”61        If
    that system is “for a multi-story skyscraper,” then it may
    require shipments of curtain wall units and installation
    hardware “over a period of months,” with “[e]ach entry
    dovetail[ing] with the contractor’s construction schedule so
    that complete curtain wall units can be immediately installed
    onto the building when the container arrives at the job site.”62
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The court will sustain Commerce's determinations
    unless they are “unsupported by substantial evidence on the
    record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.”63        The court
    will set aside agency actions found to be arbitrary and
    capricious.64
    
    61 Yuanda Scope Request, ECF No. 83 at Tab 1, at 8-9.
    62   
    Id. at 9.
    63   19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i).
    64Changzhou Wujin Fine Chem. Factory Co., Ltd. v. United
    States, 
    701 F.3d 1367
    , 1377 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (citing Bowman
    Transp., Inc. v. Arkansas–Best Freight Sys., Inc., 
    419 U.S. 281
    ,
    284 (1974)).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                    Page 18
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Individual Curtain Wall Units Are Within the Scope of the
    AD&CVD Orders as “Parts of . . . Curtain Walls”
    The AD&CVD Orders on aluminum extrusions cover, as the
    name indicates, “aluminum extrusions,” that is, “shapes and
    forms, produced by an extrusion process, made from [certain]
    aluminum alloys.”65    Aluminum extrusions “described at the time
    of importation as parts for final finished products” such as
    “curtain walls,” to be “assembled after importation,” are
    subject to the AD&CVD Orders as long as they “otherwise meet the
    definition of aluminum extrusions.”66      “A single [curtain wall]
    unit” is not a whole “curtain wall,” and as such, is a “part” or
    “subassembly” of a curtain wall.67
    At issue here is whether “curtain wall units . . .
    produced and imported pursuant to a contract to supply a
    complete curtain wall,”68 – may be properly excluded from the
    scope of the AD&CVD Orders under one of the pertinent
    
    65    AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,653; see also Meridian Products, LLC v. United States, Ct No.
    13-00246, ECF No. __, at 4-5, 10 (CIT 2015) (explaining that the
    AD&CVD Orders are meant to cover aluminum extrusions).
    66AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650-51; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg.
    at 30,653-54.
    67Yuanda 
    II, 776 F.3d at 1357-58
    (citing Yuanda I, __ CIT __,
    
    961 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1298-99)).
    68   See Yuanda Scope Ruling, supra note 3, at 1.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                     Page 19
    exclusions, that is, either as a “finished good” or as a
    “finished goods kit.”69
    II.    Finished Goods Exclusion
    The finished goods exclusion provides that “finished
    merchandise containing aluminum extrusions as parts that are
    fully and permanently assembled and completed at the time of
    entry” are excluded from the scope of the AD&CVD Orders.70
    Following the Federal Circuit’s statement that a
    single curtain wall unit is a part for a final finished good (a
    curtain wall), and therefore not a finished good in and of
    itself,71 Plaintiffs here withdrew their arguments that a
    complete, unitized curtain wall imported pursuant to a sales
    
    69    Plaintiffs argue that “the subject curtain wall units and
    curtain walls were not part of the underlying injury
    determination by the [ITC].” Jangho’s Br., ECF No. 78, at 17;
    see Yuanda’s Br., ECF Nos. 79 & 80, at 31; Permasteelisa’s Br.,
    ECF No. 39, at 22-27. However, this question has already been
    decided. Yuanda I and Yuanda II concluded that the ITC injury
    determination was broad enough to include curtain wall products.
    Yuanda 
    I, 961 F. Supp. 2d at 1299
    (finding curtain wall products
    within the scope of the ITC’s injury determination in the
    absence of “any statute or regulation that makes an individual
    product’s inclusion within the scope of an order contingent upon
    the initiation by Commerce or the ITC of a specific
    investigation regarding that product”); Yuanda 
    II, 776 F.3d at 1358
    (finding that the ITC’s injury determination supported
    Commerce’s scope ruling for curtain wall parts because the
    injury determination discussed “high-rise curtain wall products”
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)).
    70AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,654.
    71   Yuanda 
    II, 776 F.3d at 1358
    -59.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                Page 20
    contract was a finished good,72 even though the Federal Circuit’s
    holding was for a different product (i.e., curtain wall parts
    and individual curtain wall units) than that at issue here,73 and
    arguably outside the jurisdiction conferred for review of the
    underlying CWC Scope Ruling.74
    
    72 Compare Yuanda’s Br., ECF No. 79 (not arguing the finished
    goods exclusion); Jangho’s Br., ECF No. 78 (same) with Yuanda’s
    Br., ECF No. 38-1 at 24-25 (arguing that the finished goods
    exclusion was appropriate); Jangho’s Br., ECF No. 37-1, at 13-14
    (same); Notice of Withdrawal, ECF No. 84, at 2 (amending
    Permasteelisa’s brief to withdraw “[a]ll argument regarding
    whether the ‘finished goods’ exclusion” applies).
    73Yuanda 
    II, 776 F.3d at 1358
    (“A single unit does not a curtain
    wall make, nor is it a finished product. . . . A part or
    subassembly, here a curtain wall unit, cannot be a finished
    product.); see also Yuanda I, __ CIT at __, 
    961 F. Supp. 2d
    at
    1298-99 (“An individual curtain wall unit, on its own, has no
    consumptive or practical use because multiple units are required
    to form the wall of a building. Therefore, a curtain wall unit’s
    sole function is to serve as a part for a much larger, more
    comprehensive system: a curtain wall. All of this being the
    case, it is clear that curtain wall units are not finished
    merchandise but, rather, are parts for curtain walls.”); CWC
    Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 1 (considering “curtain wall
    units and other parts of curtain wall systems”), 9 (declining to
    consider “complete curtain wall[] units”); CWC Am. Scope
    Request, ECF No. 83-1 at Tab 2 at Ex 2,, at 1-2, 8-9 (defining
    the product at issue in the CWC Scope Ruling as “parts of
    curtain walls,” namely “curtain wall sections, falling short of
    the final finished curtain wall that envelopes an entire
    building structure,” including, but not limited to individual
    curtain wall units, i.e., “unitized . . . modules that are
    designed to be interlocked with each other, like pieces of a
    puzzle”).
    74See CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36 at 8-10 (providing, in a
    discussion section that is a model of opacity, no mention, let
    alone analysis, of the finished goods exclusion, despite the
    issue having been raised before the agency, 
    id. at 6-7).
    This
    Court (and by extension the Federal Circuit) requires that
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 21
    III. Finished Goods Kit Exclusion
    The AD&CVD Orders provide that “finished goods” that
    contain aluminum extrusions and are entered “unassembled in a
    ‘finished goods kit’” are excluded from the scope of the order.75
    A product may be excluded as a finished goods kit if it is “[1]
    a packaged combination of parts that [2] contains, at the time
    of importation, all of the necessary parts to fully assemble a
    final finished good and [3] requires no further finishing or
    fabrication, such as cutting or punching, and [4] is assembled
    ‘as is’ into a finished product.”76
    Initially, Commerce’s analysis of the “finished goods
    kit” exclusion focused on whether all the parts to assemble a
    complete downstream product were present “at the time of
    
    administrative remedies be exhausted. 28 U.S.C. § 2637(d);
    Sandvik Steel Co. v. United States, 
    164 F.3d 596
    , 599 (Fed. Cir.
    1998) (citing McKart v. United States, 
    395 U.S. 185
    , 193
    (1969)). Where administrative remedies have not been exhausted,
    “judicial review of administrative action is inappropriate,”
    Sharp Corp. v. United States, 
    837 F.2d 1058
    , 1062 (Fed. Cir.
    1988), since it is “a general rule that courts should not topple
    over administrative decisions unless the administrative body not
    only has erred but has erred against objection made at the time
    appropriate under its practice.” United States v. L.A. Tucker
    Truck Lines, Inc., 
    344 U.S. 33
    , 37 (1952).
    75AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,654.
    76AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,654.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                   Page 22
    importation.”77     Commerce subsequently “identified a concern with
    this analysis.”78     Namely, if a product was “designed to work
    with other parts to form a larger structure,”79 or “system,”80
    then requiring all of the necessary parts for a final finished
    good at the time of importation could “lead to unreasonable” or
    even “absurd results” that unduly “expand the scope of the
    [AD&CVD Orders]” outside the “intended . . . aluminum
    extrusions.”81
    
    77 See Final AD I&D Mem., supra note 10, at Cmt. 3H at 28
    (finding that because “a baluster kit” was “a packaged
    collection of individual parts, which comprise a single element
    of a railing or deck system,” it could not “represent a finished
    product”); Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-
    570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Oct. 31, 2011) (final scope ruling on
    certain modular aluminum railing systems) at 14 (finding that
    “[b]ecause these individual component products at issue [modular
    aluminum railing systems] do not contain all of the parts
    required to assemble a final finished railing system, the
    products do not constitute complete and finished products”)
    (“Modular Railing Scope Ruling”).
    78   SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note 24, at 7.
    79   Final AD I&D Mem., supra note 10, at Cmt. 3H at 28
    80   Modular Railing Scope Ruling, supra note 77, at 14.
    81SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note 24, at 7 (quoting AD Order, 76
    Fed. Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,653 (“The
    merchandise covered by this order is aluminum extrusions which
    are shapes and forms, produced by an extrusion process, made
    from aluminum alloys having metallic elements . . . .”)).
    Commerce explained that “[a]n interpretation of ‘finished goods
    kit’ which requires all parts to assemble the ultimate
    downstream product [at the time of importation] may lead to
    absurd results, particularly where the ultimate downstream
    product is, for example, a fire truck,” or indeed a “larger
    structure, such as a house.” SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note 24,
    at 7.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                           Page 23
    “[U]pon further reflection of the language in the
    scope of the [AD&CVD Orders],” Commerce “revis[ed] the manner in
    which it determines whether a given product is a ‘finished good’
    or ‘finished goods kit.’”82         Specifically, the AD&CVD Orders
    expressly exclude “subassemblies, i.e., partially assembled
    merchandise” when “imported as part of [a] finished goods kit.”83
    Reliance on whether all the parts for complete downstream
    product are present at the time of importation84 “fails to
    account” for this language “allow[ing] for the exclusion of
    ‘subassemblies,’ i.e., merchandise that is ‘partially assembled’
    and inherently part of a larger whole.”85             Instead, this language
    indicates that, when a product is a subassembly, it “may be
    excluded from the scope”86 provided that“[1] [it] require[s] no
    further ‘finishing’ or ‘fabrication’ prior to assembly, [2]
    contain[s] all the necessary hardware and components for
    
    82    SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note 24, at 6-7.
    83With a finished good kit defined as “a packaged combination of
    parts that contains, at the time of importation, all of the
    necessary parts [to fully assemble a final finished good] and
    requires no further finishing or fabrication, such as cutting or
    punching, and is assembled ‘as is’ into a finished product.” 
    Id. (emphasis omitted)
    (quoting AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651;
    CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,654).
    84Commerce phrases this in terms of “simply examining whether [a
    product] is part of a larger structure or system,” not present
    at the time of importation. See 
    id. at 7.
    85   
    Id. at 7.
    86   
    Id. Consol. Court
    No. 14-00106                                  Page 24
    assembly, and [3] [is] ready for installation at the time of
    entry.”87
    Thus, while Commerce’s initial test for the finished
    goods kit exclusion remains the general rule,88 when
    
    87    [Valeo] Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Ct.
    Remand, Ct. No. 12-00381, ECF No. 20-1 (“Valeo
    Redetermination”), at 8 (citing SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note
    24, at 7). Further, subassemblies made entirely from aluminum
    extrusions cannot be so excluded. AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,651; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,654; see Aluminum
    Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of
    Commerce Nov. 19, 2012) (final scope ruling on motor cases,
    assembled and housing stators) at 14.
    88See, e.g., Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-
    570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Dec. 2, 2013) (final scope ruling on
    Traffic Brick Network, LLC’s event decor parts and kits)
    (“Traffic Brick Scope Ruling”) at 10 (“[W]e find Traffic Brick's
    Pipe Kits and Pipe and Drape Kits to be excluded from the scope
    of the [AD&CVD Orders] because they are finished goods kits that
    contain at the time of importation all parts necessary to fully
    assemble a complete display structure.”); Aluminum Extrusions
    from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Sept.
    12, 2013) (final scope ruling on Law St. Enterprises, LLC’s
    disappearing door screens) (“Law St. Scope Ruling”) at 9 (“The
    disappearing screens do not constitute finished good kits
    because, at the time of importation, like parts are packaged
    together for shipment, meaning that all of the pieces necessary
    to assemble a final finished product (i.e., a disappearing
    screen) are not packaged together at the time of importation.”
    Further, “Side Mount Valve Controls are . . . distinguishable
    from disappearing screens because they are ‘subassemblies’
    (merchandise that is partially assembled and inherently part of
    a larger whole) that entered the United States as finished goods
    kits).”); Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-
    968 (Dep’t of Commerce Apr. 19, 2013) (final scope ruling on 5
    Diamond Promotions, Inc.’s aluminum flag pole sets) (Diamond
    Scope Ruling”) at 9 (“Although the flag pole sets require no
    further fabrication once imported, the flag pole sets do not
    constitute finished good kits because at the time of
    importation, similarly-sized unassembled flag pole sections are
    bundled together for shipment, meaning that all of the sections
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 25
    subassemblies are at issue, Commerce’s “finished goods” and
    “finished goods kit” analysis no longer focuses on whether all
    the parts for the ultimate downstream product (e.g., the fire
    truck, the building) are present “at the time of importation”;
    rather the emphasis is on how finished and ready for
    installation in the ultimate downstream product the subassembly
    is.89
    Here, Commerce has determined that, based on the plain
    language of the AD&CVD Orders and the (k)(1) materials, “a
    unitized curtain wall shipped as curtain wall units can be
    excluded as a ‘finished goods kit,’ but only if all of the
    necessary curtain wall units are imported at the same time in a
    manner that they can be assembled into a finished curtain wall
    
    necessary to assemble a final finished product (i.e., the flag
    pole) are not packaged together as a complete set in one
    package.”).
    89See, e.g., Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-
    570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Nov. 21, 2013) (final scope ruling on
    Kam Kiu’s subparts for metal bushings) at 9 (“Kam Kiu’s subparts
    [are not excluded as subassemblies because they] are incomplete
    and unfinished, resembling standard extrusions that require
    additional finishing before being installed.”); Aluminum
    Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of
    Commerce Nov. 19, 2012) (final scope ruling on motor cases,
    assembled and housing stators) at 14 (“We find that the
    assembled motor cases housing stators at issue meets the
    criteria for exclusion as outlined in the SMVC Scope Ruling. As
    noted above, the assembled motor cases housing stators at issue
    do not consist entirely of extruded aluminum. Further, we find
    that the assembled motor cases housing stators require no
    further finishing or fabrication upon importation.”).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                   Page 26
    upon importation.”90          Commerce makes this determination on the
    basis that a finished goods kit must include “all of the
    necessary parts” to assemble a final finished good at the time
    of importation, i.e. “at the same time, as part of the same
    entry,” listed on the same CBP 7501 form.91                     Because “[t]he
    evidence on the record indicate[d] that many curtain walls are
    constructed in stages,” and Yuanda “in particular does not
    import all the necessary curtain wall units to assemble a
    curtain wall at one time,” Commerce reasoned that the finished
    goods kit exclusion could not apply.92                     Commerce declined to
    consider the subassemblies test because it believes curtain wall
    units are not, by definition, subassemblies.93
    Commerce’s determination is unreasonable because
    (1) it is contrary to the terms of the AD&CVD Orders, having
    defined “subassembly” contrary to the plain language of the
    Orders; (2) it fails to adequately consider or address the
    description of the merchandise at issue and the (k)(1)
    materials, making the determination unsupported by substantial
    evidence; and (3) it draws distinctions between small and large
    unitized curtain wall systems, and between unitized curtain wall
    
    90    Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 16.
    91   
    Id. at 15
    (citations omitted).
    92   
    Id. at 17.
    93   
    Id. at 35-36.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                   Page 27
    systems and similar products in a way that is arbitrary and
    capricious.
    A. Commerce Has Interpreted the AD&CVD Orders Contrary to
    Their Terms
    “[A] scope determination is not in accordance with the
    law if it changes the scope of an order or interprets an order
    in a manner contrary to the order’s terms.”94
    The AD&CVD Orders define “subassembl[y]” as “partially
    assembled merchandise.”95    This definition is important because a
    subassembly may be excluded from the scope of the AD&CVD Orders
    “provided that they enter the United States as ‘finished goods’
    or ‘finished goods kits.’”96    Subassemblies may be finished goods
    or a finished goods kit (and therefore excluded) if they satisfy
    the subassemblies test: “[1] they require no further ‘finishing’
    or ‘fabrication’ prior to assembly,97 [2] contain all the
    
    94    Allegheny Bradford Corp. v. United States, 
    28 CIT 830
    , 842,
    
    342 F. Supp. 2d 1172
    , 1183 (2004) (citing Duferco 
    Steel, 296 F.3d at 1094
    —95); Eckstrom 
    Indus., 254 F.3d at 1072
    .
    95AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,654; see also Valeo Redetermination, Ct. No. 12-00381, ECF
    No. 20-1, at 8 (sustained, unchallenged, in Order, June 20,
    2013, Ct. No. 12-00381, ECF No. 23) (defining subassembly as
    “merchandise that is ‘partially assembled’ and inherently part
    of a larger whole.”) (quoting SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note 24,
    at 7).
    96SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note 24, at 7 (quoting AD Order, 76
    Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,654).
    97Defendant-Intervenor argues that the unitized curtain wall at
    issue here cannot be excluded under the finished goods kit
    exclusion because it requires “further fabrication and assembly
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 28
    necessary hardware and components for assembly, and [3] are
    ready for installation at the time of entry.”98
    Here, Commerce defines subassembly, without reference
    to the language of the AD&CVD Orders, as a “unique subsidiary
    component of a larger finished product,”99 and determines that,
    based on this definition, unitized curtain wall cannot be a
    subassembly because curtain wall units “ha[ve] no identity of
    [their] own other than as a part of a curtain wall.”100                                                                                                  But
    Commerce’s analysis is contrary to the plain language of the
    AD&CVD Orders. There is nothing in the language of the Orders
    
    after importation.” CWC Reply, ECF No. 87, at 30-32. Because
    Commerce did not reach this question, see Redetermination, ECF
    No. 68-1, at 41-42, the court also does not reach this question.
    98Valeo Redetermination, Ct. No. 12-00381, ECF No. 20-1, at 8
    (citing SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note 24, at 7). Further,
    subassemblies made entirely from aluminum extrusions cannot be
    so excluded. AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD Order, 76
    Fed. Reg. at 30,654; see Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC],
    Final Scope Ruling, A-570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce
    Nov. 19, 2012) (final scope ruling on motor cases, assembled and
    housing stators) at 14. This prohibition is not at issue here
    because unitized curtain wall is made from a variety of
    materials, including aluminum extrusions. See Yuanda Scope
    Request, ECF No. 83 at Tab 1, at 8 (Yuanda’s unitized curtain
    wall “is produced by fabricating a frame (generally from
    extruded aluminum), adding to it thermal insulation, filling it
    (generally with glass), sealing the infill, drilling holes,
    [and] attaching additional metal or plastics.”); Ex. 1 to Yuanda
    Scope Request, ECF No. 83 at Tab 1 (providing diagrams and
    photos explaining fabrication, finishing, and installation
    process of Yuanda unitized curtain wall).
    99Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 35 (citing SMVC Scope
    Ruling, supra note 24, at 7).
    100     
    Id. at 36
    (quoting Yuanda Scope Ruling, ECF No. 34-1, at 25).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                     Page 29
    that requires “uniqueness” or “individual identity” from a
    subassembly.   A subassembly is defined as “partially assembled
    merchandise.”101   Indeed, Commerce’s own application of the
    subassemblies test contradicts this “uniqueness” requirement.102
    Commerce also asserts that the subassemblies test need
    not be considered here because “there is specific scope language
    identifying parts for curtain walls as subject to the [AD&CVD
    Orders]” and “both the CIT and [Federal Circuit] have affirmed
    [Commerce’s] conclusion that curtain wall units are ‘parts of
    curtain walls.’”103
    
    101 AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,654.
    102See, e.g., Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-
    570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce July 25, 2014) (final scope ruling on
    fan blade assemblies) at 16 (finding that fan blades, to be
    installed in a cooling system, although not unique, were
    subassemblies and finished goods, and therefore excluded); 
    id. at 17
    (explaining that the Yuanda Scope Ruling, ECF No. 34-1,
    does not stand for the proposition that “a final finished good
    must have a consumptive use on its own in order to be excluded
    from the scope of the [AD&CVD] Orders.”); Aluminum Extrusions
    from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Nov.
    23, 2015) (final scope ruling on Dometic Corp.’s lateral arm
    assemblies) at 11 (finding the lateral arm assemblies excluded
    as “subassemblies that qualify for the finished merchandise
    exclusion” because they “entered the United States as finished
    merchandise and subsequently were integrated into a larger
    system,” and “require no further assembly or fabrication after
    importation; they are ready for immediate use,” without mention
    of any uniqueness or individual identity requirement).
    103Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 36 (citing Yuanda I, __ CIT
    at __, 
    961 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1297-98; Yuanda 
    II, 776 F.3d at 1356
    -
    59).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                    Page 30
    “[P]arts for . . . curtain walls,” however, are
    included within the scope of the AD&CVD Orders only insofar as
    they “otherwise meet the definition of aluminum extrusions.”104
    The exclusions are part of the definition of aluminum
    extrusions, i.e, in the same way that parts for curtain walls
    made with non-PRC aluminum are excluded, parts for curtain walls
    that are a finished good kit or a subassembly finished good kit
    are excluded.105   That parts for curtain walls are within the
    scope does not prevent Yuanda’s unitized curtain wall from being
    excluded.106   “Words are not pebbles in alien juxtaposition; they
    
    104     AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,654.
    105To suggest, as Commerce has done here, that excluding
    Yuanda’s unitized curtain wall would render the provision for
    “parts for . . . curtain walls” a nullity, is a false
    contrapositive. See Yuanda Scope Ruling, ECF No. 34-1, at 23
    (“Because the scope language expressly includes parts of curtain
    walls, and because a curtain wall unit is part of a curtain
    wall, we would read out of the scope the inclusion of parts of
    curtain walls were we to find that a curtain wall unit is
    finished merchandise that is not covered by the scope.”). As
    the CWC pointed out in their scope ruling request, “[a] curtain
    wall includes numerous parts and components including curtain
    wall units.” CWC Am. Scope Request, ECF No. 83-1 at Tab 2 at Ex.
    2, at 2; see also American Architectural Manufacturers Assoc.,
    Curtain Wall Design Guide Manual (2005), Ex. 2 to Yuanda Scope
    Request, reproduced in Pub. App. to [Yuanda’s Br.], ECF No. 83
    at Tab 1 (“AAMA Manual”), at 3-9 (explaining that there are five
    main types of curtain wall systems, including stick systems,
    unit systems, and unit and mullion systems, all having different
    parts of various degrees of preassembly).
    106See Petition, ECF No. 83-3 at Tab 10, at Ex. I-5 (listing
    “unassembled unitized curtain walls” as excluded from the scope
    under the finished goods kit exclusion).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                    Page 31
    have only a communal existence; and not only does the meaning of
    each interpenetrate the other, but all in their aggregate take
    their purport from the setting in which they are used[. . .].”107
    Further, the decisions to which Commerce cites do not,
    as Commerce suggests, support the proposition that the inclusion
    of “parts for . . . curtain walls” precludes consideration of
    any exclusion.108    In the CWC Scope Ruling, Commerce found that
    “the products described in CWC’s Amended Scope Request are
    within the scope of the Orders.”109    The CWC’s Amended Scope
    Request covered “parts of curtain walls,”110 defined as “curtain
    wall sections, falling short of the final finished curtain
    wall,” including, but not limited to, curtain wall units, i.e.,
    “modules that are designed to be interlocked with each other,
    like pieces of a puzzle.”111    The CIT and Federal Circuit
    
    
    107 N.L.R.B. v
    . Federbush Co., 
    121 F.2d 954
    , 957 (2d Cir. 1941) (L.
    Hand, J.).
    108Cf. Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 9-17 (finding that
    curtain wall units may be excluded from the scope of the AD&CVD
    Orders as a finished goods kit if all parts to assemble a final,
    finished curtain wall were present at the time of importation).
    109   CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 10.
    110   CWC Am. Scope Request, ECF No. 83-1 at Tab 2 at Ex 2, at 2.
    111Id. at 8-9; see also CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 3
    (“The CWC states that curtain wall parts fall short of the final
    finished curtain wall that envelopes an entire building
    structure. Certain curtain wall parts are assembled into
    modules that are designed to be interlocked with either curtain
    wall parts, like pieces of a puzzle.”). But cf. 
    id. at 9
    (“[W]e
    note that CWC’s Amended Scope Request does not seek a scope
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 32
    affirmed this ruling.112                                            However, because the “scope ruling was
    limited to the products discussed” in the CWC’s scope request,
    Commerce did not consider, indeed expressly declined to
    consider, whether the specific products of any interested party
    could be properly excluded under any of the AD & CVD Orders’
    enumerated exclusions.113                                              This Court sustained that decision.114
    
    ruling on complete curtain wall units, but rather ‘parts of
    curtain walls,’ and this scope ruling is limited to the products
    discussed in the CWC’s Amended Scope Request.”).
    112Yuanda 
    I, 961 F. Supp. 2d at 1294
    (“Because curtain wall
    units are ‘parts for’ a finished curtain wall, the court’s
    primary holding is that curtain wall units and other parts of
    curtain wall systems fall within the scope of the [AD&CVD
    Orders].”); Yuanda 
    II, 776 F.3d at 1359
    (“The scope language
    explicitly includes “parts for ... curtain walls” and curtain
    wall units are parts of a finished curtain wall.”).
    113     CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 9.
    114Yuanda 
    I, 961 F. Supp. 2d at 1301
    (“The court finds that
    Commerce properly confined its inquiries to the request made by
    the CWC . . . . That is, an inquiry as to whether a particular
    entry, or even product, would qualify for an exception to the
    scope language simply goes far beyond the CWC's request.”); see
    also Yuanda II, 
    776 F.3d 1351
    (providing no discussion of the
    finished goods kit exclusion nor the subassemblies test). The
    court in Yuanda II appears to have misstated when it says that
    “Commerce explicitly considered whether Yuanda’s merchandise
    fell into one of the enumerated 
    exclusions.” 776 F.3d at 1358
    .
    Further any such misstatement would also be mere dicta because
    Yuanda’s merchandise was never at issue before Commerce, CWC
    Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 9 (“[T]his scope ruling is
    limited to the products discussed in the CWC’s Amended Scope
    Request.”), and Commerce explicitly declined to consider
    Yuanda’s merchandise and the applicability of the AD&CVD Order
    exclusions thereto, 
    id. at 9
    (“[W]e note that the CWC’s Amended
    Scope Request does not seek a scope ruling on [the product
    described by Yuanda,] complete curtain wall units, but rather
    ‘parts for curtain walls,’ and this scope ruling is limited to
    the products discussed in the CWC’s Amended Scope Request.”).
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 33
    At no point did Commerce consider the products at issue here,115
    nor the applicability of any scope exclusions thereto.116                                                                                                     The
    CWC Scope Ruling, and the cases affirming it, cannot be cited
    for an interpretation and finding that was not considered or
    discussed.
    If anything, Yuanda I and Yuanda II may be cited for
    the opposite proposition, as both found that individual curtain
    
    See 28 U.S.C. § 2637(d) (requiring exhaustion of administrative
    remedies for jurisdiction).
    115Yuanda II refers to the product at issue in the CWC Scope
    Ruling as “Yuanda’s curtain wall units.” See, e.g., Yuanda 
    II, 776 F.3d at 1354
    (“Commerce initiated a scope investigation of
    the [AD&CVD Orders] and determined Yuanda's curtain wall units
    were within the scope.”). However, this is a misnomer, as
    Yuanda’s merchandise, curtain wall units or otherwise, were not
    at issue before Commerce. CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 9
    (“[T]his scope ruling is limited to the products discussed in
    the CWC’s [] Scope Request.”); 
    id. at 1
    (considering “curtain
    wall units and other parts of curtain wall[s]” as described in
    the CWC Am. Scope Request); Yuanda I, __ CIT at __, 
    961 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1300 (“Commerce properly confined its inquiries to the
    request made by the CWC . . . . That is, an inquiry as to
    whether a particular entry, or even product, would qualify for
    an exception to the scope language simply goes far beyond the
    CWC's request.”). “Yuanda’s curtain wall units” could not have
    been at issue before the Federal Circuit if they were not at
    issue already before Commerce. See 28 U.S.C. § 2637(d)
    (requiring exhaustion of administrative remedies for
    jurisdiction); see also Sandvik 
    Steel, 164 F.3d at 599
    (Fed.
    Cir. 1998) (citing 
    McKart, 395 U.S. at 193
    ).
    116CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 9; Yuanda I, __ CIT at
    __, 
    961 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1300-01; Yuanda 
    II, 776 F.3d at 1353
    (“[The CWC Amended Scope Request] asked Commerce to issue a
    scope ruling confirming that curtain wall units and other parts
    of curtain wall systems are subject to the scope of the [AD&CVD
    Orders].” (internal quotation marks, emphasis, and citation
    omitted)).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                   Page 34
    wall units were subject merchandise at least in part because
    curtain wall units were subassemblies of curtain walls,117 and
    declined, expressly or impliedly, to consider the subassembly
    exclusion as applied to any specific product, including
    Plaintiff’s, because that would go “far beyond the [underlying]
    CWC’s [Scope Ruling] Request,” and therefore the scope of
    Commerce’s determination and the courts’ jurisdiction.118    That
    
    117     Specifically, the court in Yuanda I notes that “‘[t]he scope
    includes the aluminum extrusion components that are attached
    (e.g., by welding or fasteners) to form subassemblies, i.e.,
    partially assembled merchandise,’” __ CIT at __, 
    961 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1296 (quoting AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651), that
    “[c]urtain wall units are assembled into completed curtain walls
    by, among other things, fasteners,” 
    id. at 1
    297 (internal
    citations omitted), and that “[p]laintiffs necessarily concede
    that absolutely no one purchases for consumption a single
    curtain wall piece or unit” because “a number of curtain wall
    units are attached to form the completed curtain wall, the final
    finished product,” 
    id. at 1
    278 (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted). On this basis the court concluded that
    “[c]urtain wall units are therefore undeniably components that
    are fastened together to form a completed curtain wall,”
    tracking the subassembly language from the AD&CVD Orders, and
    are thus “‘parts for,’ and ‘subassemblies’ for, completed
    curtain walls” and “fall within the scope of the [AD&CVD]
    Orders. 
    Id. at 1278;
    see AD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD
    Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,654. Yuanda II affirms this analysis.
    Yuanda 
    II, 776 F.3d at 1358
    .
    118Yuanda I, __ CIT at __, 
    961 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1301; see CWC
    Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 9; Yuanda I, 
    961 F. Supp. 2d
    at
    1300-01 (“The court finds that Commerce properly confined its
    inquiries to the request made by the CWC . . . . That is, an
    inquiry as to whether a particular entry, or even product, would
    qualify for an exception to the scope language simply goes far
    beyond the CWC's request.”); Yuanda II, 
    776 F.3d 1351
    (providing
    no discussion of the finished goods kit exclusion nor the
    subassemblies test); see also 28 U.S.C. § 2637(d) (requiring
    exhaustion of administrative remedies for jurisdiction).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                    Page 35
    is, the courts affirmatively answered the threshold question as
    to whether a curtain wall unit was a subassembly,119 but left to
    Commerce the question of how the subassembly exclusion affected
    the status of any specific unitized curtain wall product.      The
    court in Yuanda I indicated that “[i]f [P]laintiffs wished
    treatment for their specific products under the ‘finished goods
    kit’ exception,” whether general or subassembly-specific, “their
    route was to file a petition of their own seeking the benefit of
    the exclusion” for their specific product, making the finished
    good kit exclusion a question “for another day.”   120   This is that
    day.
    
    119     Indeed, as the Yuanda I and II analysis implies, a curtain
    wall unit must be considered a subassembly rather than a “part”
    on the plain language of the AD&CVD Orders: “[P]arts” of final
    finished merchandise are “included in the scope” if they
    “otherwise meet the definition of aluminum extrusions,” AD
    Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,651; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at
    30,654, i.e., are shapes and forms made of the covered aluminum
    alloys and produced by an extrusion process, AD Order, 76 Fed.
    Reg. at 30,650; CVD Order, 76 Fed. Reg. at 30,654.
    Subassemblies are “partially assembled merchandise” including
    both “aluminum extrusion component[s] attached [together] (e.g.,
    by welding or fasteners)” and “non-aluminum extrusion
    components.” 
    Id. A curtain
    wall unit is more than extruded
    aluminum shapes and forms; they include “non-aluminum extrusion
    components” – glass, plastics, and other metals. Yuanda Scope
    Request, supra note 3, at 8; see Ex. 1 to Yuanda Scope Request,
    ECF No. 83 at Tab 1 (providing diagrams and photos explaining
    fabrication, finishing, and installation process of Yuanda
    unitized curtain wall).
    120   Yuanda I, __ CIT at __, 
    961 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1301.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                     Page 36
    While Commerce “enjoys substantial freedom to
    interpret and clarify its antidumping duty orders, it can
    neither change them, nor interpret them in a way contrary to
    their terms.”121    Here, Commerce has changed and expanded the
    terms of the AD&CVD Orders by redefining “subassembly” and
    ignoring the scope language that limits products covered.
    Accordingly, Commerce’s Redetermination is not in accordance
    with law.
    B. Commerce’s Ruling is Unsupported by Substantial
    Evidence
    “[T]he substantial evidence standard requires review
    of the entire administrative record” and asks, in light of that
    evidence, whether that determination was reasonable.122      “The
    substantiality of evidence must take into account whatever in
    the record fairly detracts from its weight.”123
    In the scope ruling at issue here, the administrative
    record includes the (k)(1) materials – “[t]he descriptions of
    the merchandise contained in the petition, [Commerce's] initial
    investigation, and the [prior] determinations of [Commerce]
    (including prior scope determinations) and the [International
    
    121     Wheatland Tube Co. v. United States, 
    161 F.3d 1365
    , 1370
    (Fed. Cir. 1998) (internal citations, and quotation and
    alteration marks, omitted).
    122Nippon Steel Corp. v. United States, 
    458 F.3d 1345
    , 1351
    (Fed. Cir. 2006).
    123   Universal Camera Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    340 U.S. 474
    , 488 (1951).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                       Page 37
    Trade] Commission,”124 – which provide the regulatory history, to
    aid in the interpretation of the language of the AD&CVD
    Orders.125
    Here, Commerce was confronted with the fact that a
    (k)(1) material, the previously neglected Petition, expressly
    lists “unassembled unitized curtain walls” as excluded
    merchandise under the “finished goods kit” exclusion.126
    Commerce tries to construe this statement as evidence
    for its conclusion that “a unitized curtain wall shipped as
    curtain wall units can be excluded as a ‘finished goods kit,’
    . . . only if all of the necessary curtain wall units” to make a
    complete curtain wall are “imported at the same time,” i.e.,
    entered on the same 7501 form.127    However, as Commerce points
    out, the Petition “provides no further clarification on what
    
    124     Mid Continent Nail 
    Corp., 725 F.3d at 1302
    (quoting 19
    C.F.R. § 351.225(k)(1)) (alterations original).
    125Smith Corona Corp. v. United States, 
    915 F.2d 683
    , 685 (Fed.
    Cir. 1990) (“The class or kind of merchandise encompassed by a
    final antidumping order is determined by the order, which is
    interpreted with the aid of the antidumping petition, the
    factual findings and legal conclusions adduced from the
    administrative investigations, and the preliminary order.”).
    126   Petition, ECF No. 83-3 at Tab 10, at Ex. I-5.
    127Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 16; 
    id. at 1
    0 (“[I]t
    appears . . . that Petitioner intended that curtain walls which
    are composed of curtain wall units which enter the United States
    unassembled, and meet the requirements of the ‘finished goods
    kit’ exclusion language of the scope, could be considered a
    ‘finished goods kit’ and be excluded from the scope . . . .”).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                         Page 38
    [‘at the time of importation’] [means] in relation to
    ‘unassembled unitized curtain walls’ or any other product.”128
    Commerce looks to other documents of varying relevance
    and reliability for confirmation of its interpretation.                           First,
    Commerce relies on another (k)(1) material, a preliminary scope
    memorandum from the investigation, in which Commerce found that
    “unitized curtain wall and its assorted parts” (i.e., “the
    separately packaged assorted component parts (an aluminum frame
    and aluminum bracket)”) were within the scope of the AD&CVD
    Orders as parts for curtain walls.129                           This determination is of
    limited relevance because it was made before the final
    determination in which Commerce amended the scope of the AD&CVD
    Orders to clarify that subassemblies could fall within the
    finished goods kit exclusion.130                           Further, the product described
    
    128     
    Id. at 11-12.
    129Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968
    (Oct. 27, 2010) (preliminary determination comments on the scope
    of the investigations) at 11, reproduced in Redetermination, ECF
    No. 68-2, at Attach. 2. Specifically, Commerce “preliminarily
    determined that curtain wall components exported by [Yuanda] are
    covered by the scope because [Yuanda] has not established that
    it imports its merchandise in a kit that contains at the time of
    importation all of the necessary parts to fully assemble a
    finished good.” 
    Id. at 11-12.
    Commerce notes that the
    Petitioner supported the agency’s position. 
    Id. at 11;
    Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 13.
    130See Final AD I&D Mem., supra note 10, at 18 (amending, at
    Petitioner’s request, to add the phrase “‘unless imported as
    part of the “kit” defined further below’ at the end of the last
    sentence in the fourth paragraph so that the resulting sentence
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 39
    in this preliminary determination (“separately packaged assorted
    parts” of curtain walls) is parallel to that discussed in the
    CWC Scope Ruling (curtain wall units and parts),131 in contrast
    to the complete curtain wall units imported pursuant to a sales
    contract.132                       Commerce does not account for these differences in
    its evaluation of the determination.
    Second, Commerce argues that its finding that complete
    curtain wall units imported pursuant to a sales contract are not
    excluded as a finished goods kit unless “all of the necessary
    parts to assemble the finished good . . . [are] imported at the
    same time, as part of the same entry,”133 is in keeping with its
    prior scope determinations.134                                                      Commerce cites to three final
    scope rulings discussing the finished goods kit exclusion.135
    
    reads: ‘The scope includes aluminum extrusions that are attached
    (e.g., by welding or fasteners) to form subassemblies, i.e.,
    partially assembled merchandise unless imported as part of a
    “kit” defined further below.’”).
    131     CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 1.
    132     Yuanda Scope Ruling, supra note 3, at 1.
    133     Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 15.
    134These are also (k)(1) materials. See Mid Continent Nail
    
    Corp., 725 F.3d at 1302
    (quoting 19 C.F.R. § 351.225(k)(1)).
    135Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 15 (citing Aluminum
    Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of
    Commerce Aug. 17, 2012) (final scope ruling on Solarmotion
    controllable sunshades) (“Solarmotion Scope Ruling”) at 11;
    Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t
    of Commerce Dec. 13, 2011) (final scope ruling on Ameristar
    Fence Products’ aluminum fence and post parts) (“Ameristar Scope
    Ruling”) at 6; Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 &
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 40
    While all three rulings do emphasize the “at the time of
    importation” requirement,136 all three were decided before
    Commerce revised its interpretation of the AD&CVD Orders to
    provide for situations where it was unreasonable to require all
    necessary parts “at the time of importation,” i.e., the
    subassemblies exclusion.137                                                 What is perhaps more telling is that
    Commerce does not address the other prior scope rulings that go
    against its determination here, i.e., that did not require all
    parts for the complete downstream product “at the time of
    importation” because the products at issue were subassemblies.138
    Third, Commerce offers a letter, written by
    Petitioners specifically for this scope proceeding, supporting
    
    C-570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce Dec. 9, 2011) (final scope ruling
    on window kits) (“Window Kits Scope Ruling”) at 5).
    136Solarmotion Scope Ruling, supra note 135, at 11; Ameristar
    Scope Ruling, supra note 135, at 6; Window Kits Scope Ruling,
    supra note 135, at 5.
    137In fact, none of these cases even provide discussion of
    whether the products at issue there were subassemblies, much
    less whether they could be excluded as such. See Solarmotion
    Scope Ruling, supra note 135; Ameristar Scope Ruling, supra note
    135; Window Kits Scope Ruling, supra note 135.
    138See, e.g., Valeo Redetermination, Ct. No. 12-00381, ECF No.
    20-1, at 8-9; SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note 24, at 6-7 (however
    this ruling is discussed at Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at
    35-36, where Commerce declines to apply the subassembly
    exclusion); Traffic Brick Scope Ruling, supra note 88, at 10;
    Law St. Scope Ruling, supra note 88, at 9; Diamond Scope Ruling,
    supra note 88, at 9.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                   Page 41
    Commerce’s position,139 and a news article quoting Petitioner’s
    counsel as having said that a curtain wall system would have to
    “contain all of the window glass at the time of entry to be
    excluded.”140    Neither of these documents is appropriate support,
    as they are not (k)(1) materials.141    The former is a post hoc
    rationalization made for the purposes of litigation; the latter
    Commerce itself has previously dismissed as irrelevant.142
    In contrast, Commerce does not consider the ample
    evidence on the administrative record defining and explaining
    the product at issue here.    Commerce does not consider whether a
    single-entry, unitized curtain wall is a real product, outside
    the realm of its own ungainly semantic gymnastics, that is
    imported with any regularity into the United States.143    This
    
    139     Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-968
    (June 7, 2013) (rebuttal comments in response to Yuanda’s
    Comments regarding Commerce’s Initiation of a formal scope
    inquiry), reproduced in Redetermination, ECF No 68-2, at Attach.
    4.
    140Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 14 (quoting “Petitioner’s
    counsel in National Glass Magazine).
    141   See 19 C.F.R. § 351.225(k)(1).
    142See Yuanda Scope Ruling, supra note 3, at 26 (“[W]e do not
    find that this quote, which was not on the record of the
    investigation, can be considered to embody the intent of the
    petitioner.”).
    143See CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 6 (“Petitioners
    reiterate CW[C]’s contention that it is simply not possible for
    a complete curtain wall to enter as a ‘kit’ because the entire
    installation process is designed to work with other parts to
    form a larger structure and represent a collection of individual
    (footnote continued)
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                                                                                                                    Page 42
    makes Commerce’s interpretation unreasonable.144                                                                                      Indeed,
    Petitioners themselves provided in other (k)(1) materials that
    “it is simply not possible for a complete curtain wall to enter
    as a ‘kit’” – i.e., all at once.145                                                               Petitioners could not have
    intended to use a product as an example in their petition that,
    by Petitioners’ own admission, does not exist.                                                                                     “An exclusion
    from a scope determination must . . . encompass merchandise
    which is or may be imported into the United States in order to
    act as a meaningful exclusion; anything less renders the
    
    parts that comprise a single element as opposed to complete
    system.” (footnotes omitted)); Yuanda Scope Request, ECF No. 83
    at Tab 1, at 8-9 (indicating that Yuanda’s practice is to
    deliver unitized curtain wall, given its size and complexity, to
    job sites in phases); Ex. 1 to Yuanda Scope Request, ECF No. 83
    at Tab 1 (providing illustration of curtain wall units shipped
    to building sites in sets to assembled into curtain wall
    systems); Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], A-570-967 & C-570-
    968 (Apr. 26, 2013) (comments in opposition to the scope request
    regarding complete curtain wall units) at 20, reproduced in
    Yuanda’s App., ECF No. 83-1 at Tab 2 (“[C]urtain wall units are
    imported with many entries in a multitude of containers and
    numerous shipments to construct a complete curtain wall for a
    particular project.”).
    144Cf. Polites v. United States, __ CIT __, 
    755 F. Supp. 2d 1352
    , 1357 (2011) (finding that Commerce’s interpretation of an
    order was “unreasonable” because “nothing in the record
    demonstrates merchandise matching this definition is imported
    into the United States or is even possibly imported into the
    United States”).
    145CWC Scope Ruling, supra note 36, at 6 (“Petitioners reiterate
    CW[C]’s contention that it is simply not possible for a complete
    curtain wall to enter as a ‘kit’ because the entire installation
    process is designed to work with other parts to form a larger
    structure and represent a collection of individual parts that
    comprise a single element as opposed to complete system.”
    (footnotes omitted)).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                   Page 43
    exclusion hollow and improperly changes the meaning of the
    exclusion.”146   Even if such a product existed but was rarely
    imported, insisting upon such an interpretation would render the
    exclusion “insignificant, if not wholly superfluous.”147
    
    146 Polites, __ CIT at __, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 1357.
    147See TRW Inc. v. Andrews, 
    534 U.S. 19
    , 31 (2001) (citation
    omitted). Commerce expresses concern that, if the exclusion
    were made to cover “numerous imports over an unspecified period
    of time,” of curtain wall units imported pursuant to a contract
    to supply a curtain wall, “it would appear to be very difficult
    if not impossible, for CBP to administer, monitor, and enforce
    an exclusion to the [AD&CVD Orders] which would be contingent on
    piecemeal imports over a period of time.” Redetermination, ECF
    No. 68-1, at 17.   Plaintiffs point out that such monitoring
    could be as simple as referencing the entry documents: Yuanda
    produces and exports curtain wall units pursuant to a contract
    to supply a curtain wall. Each commercial invoice accompanying
    Yuanda’s 7501 forms is coded to a specific contract. “Hence, to
    determine whether the complete curtain wall was delivered, it is
    only a matter of tying the commercial invoices to the contract
    terms.” Yuanda Br., ECF Nos. 79 & 80, at 24 (citing Ex. 3 to
    Yuanda Scope Request, ECF No. 83 at Tab 1 (providing example
    contract for unitized curtain wall to be delivered in phases);
    see also Jangho Br., ECF No. 78, at 12-17.
    As Commerce states elsewhere, ease or difficulty of
    administration is not a valid basis for scope rulings.
    Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 37 (Commerce’s scope
    determination must be based “on the language of the scope of the
    [AD&CVD Orders], the language of the Petition, the underlying
    investigation, the Department’s interpretation of the scope in
    other scope rulings, and the factual information on the record
    of this proceeding.”). It is not a question of policy, as
    Defendant suggests, see Def.’s Br., ECF No. 85, at 33, but
    rather a list of factors prescribed by regulation, see 19 C.F.R.
    § 351.225(k) – and expressio unius est exclusio alterius.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                      Page 44
    Commerce has therefore “entirely failed to consider an
    important aspect of the problem,”148 i.e., the actual nature of
    the products it is considering. “The substantiality of evidence
    must take into account whatever in the record fairly detracts
    from its weight.”149    Commerce has not done so here, leaving its
    ruling unreasonable.
    C. Commerce Has Made Arbitrary Distinctions Between
    Subject and Non-Subject Products
    An agency determination is arbitrary and capricious if
    the agency has treated similarly situated parties or products
    differently “without reasonable explanation.”150
    Here, in finding that only unitized curtain walls
    entered with all parts on a single 7501 form are excluded from
    the scope of the AD&CVD Orders, Commerce makes several
    distinctions between similar products without reasonable
    explanation.    First, Commerce has drawn a distinction between
    
    148     Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut.
    Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983). Although the Court
    in State Farm was discussing the “arbitrary or capricious”
    (rather than the “substantial evidence”) standard of review,
    this reasoning is also relevant here because an agency
    determination that is arbitrary is ipso facto unreasonable. See,
    e.g., Ward v. Sternes, 
    334 F.3d 696
    , 704 (7th Cir. 2003) (noting
    that “a decision [that] is so inadequately supported by the
    record as to be arbitrary [is] therefore objectively
    unreasonable”) (quotation marks and citations omitted).
    149   Universal 
    Camera, 340 U.S. at 488
    .
    150Consol. Bearings Co. v. United States, 
    348 F.3d 997
    , 1007
    (Fed. Cir. 2003) (citation omitted).
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                     Page 45
    (hypothetical) small (i.e., capable of being entered on a single
    7501 form) and all other curtain wall systems.    This distinction
    is not based on any quality or aspect of the constituent units,
    indeed the units could be identical in all but number, and
    thereby treats products that are effectively the same
    differently under the AD&CVD Orders.
    Similarly, Commerce’s ruling draws an arbitrary
    distinction between window walls and curtain walls.    Window
    walls are excluded from the scope of the AD&CVD Orders under the
    finished goods kit exclusion.151 Under Commerce’s interpretation,
    unitized curtain walls, largely, if not entirely, are not.152
    While Commerce acknowledges that the Plaintiffs allege
    similarities between window walls and curtain walls, Commerce
    considers these similarities irrelevant, finding the differences
    dispositive.153
    Commerce finds two differences: First, “unlike parts
    for curtain walls, such as curtain wall units, window walls are
    not specifically identified as subject merchandise in the scope
    
    151     Aluminum Extrusions from the [PRC], Final Scope Ruling, A-
    570-967 & C-570-968 (Dep’t of Commerce June 19, 2014) (final
    scope ruling on finished window [wall] kits) (“Window Wall Scope
    Ruling”), at 1.
    152   Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 16.
    153   
    Id. at 32.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                            Page 46
    of the [AD&CVD Orders].”154            However, this distinction has no
    real meaning.       That parts for curtain walls are within the scope
    does not prevent unassembled unitized curtain wall from being
    excluded.155      Moreover, industry publications on the record show
    that window walls are a type of curtain wall156 – such that
    “parts for . . . curtain walls” means parts for window walls as
    well, making both listed as subject merchandise.            Second,
    Commerce finds that curtain walls and window walls “are not
    comparable for purposes of [Commerce’s] analysis,” because
    “[w]indow walls, once assembled, are each a finished good”
    whereas curtain wall units “which attach to other curtain wall
    
    154     Redetermination, ECF No. 68-1, at 33.
    155See Petition, ECF No. 83-3 at Tab 10, at Ex. I-5 (listing
    “unassembled unitized curtain walls” as excluded from the scope
    under the finished goods kit exclusion). Cf. Eckstrom Indus.,
    Inc. v. United States, 
    254 F.3d 1068
    , 1073 (Fed. Cir. 2001)
    (“The Government’s argument essentially reduces to an
    interpretation of the Order as covering any stainless steel
    butt-weld pipe fittings under fourteen inches in diameter. This
    construction is belied by the terms of the Order itself, which
    indicate that it applies only to ‘certain stainless steel butt-
    weld pipe fittings, whether finished or unfinished, under 14” in
    diameter.’” (emphasis original)).
    156 A window wall is “[a] type of metal curtain wall installed
    between floors or between floor and roof and typically composed
    of vertical and horizontal framing members, containing operable
    sash or ventilators, fixed lights or opaque panels or any
    combination thereof.” AAMA Manual, ECF No. 83 at Tab 1, at 2.
    Further, the terms window wall and curtain wall “still mean
    different things to different people. Often they are used
    interchangeably with no clear distinction being made between
    them.” 
    Id. Their meanings
    are “interrelated and overlapping.”
    
    Id. Consol. Court
    No. 14-00106                                          Page 47
    units, are parts for the finished good, the curtain wall
    itself.”157     This is again, a meaningless distinction that does
    not consider the definition of the product at issue here and
    belies the similarities between the two products, namely, that
    both are interlocking, aluminum-framed, widow-like products
    shipped in phases and installed in sections.158            Indeed, Commerce
    makes no effort to account for the evidence on the record
    indicating that window walls and curtain walls are substantially
    similar products.
    Accordingly, Commerce has treated similarly situated
    products differently without reasonable explanation.
    CONCLUSION
    As Commerce anticipated elsewhere, an interpretation
    of “finished goods kit” that requires “all parts to assemble the
    ultimate downstream product” to enter at the same time, on the
    same 7501 Form, “where the ultimate downstream product” is “a
    fire truck” or “a larger structure, such as a house” or an
    entire building façade, has led to an “unreasonable,” if not
    
    157     Redetermination, ECF No. 67, at 33-34.
    158Window Wall Scope Ruling, supra note 151, at 5 (“A window
    wall must be installed in sections and [is] imported as
    completed sections in phases with each phase comprising of
    approximately 30 or more cartons.”); Yuanda Scope Request, ECF
    No. 83 at Tab 1, at 8; AAMA Manual, ECF No. 83 at Tab 1, at 2,
    5.
    Consol. Court No. 14-00106                                           Page 48
    “absurd” result.159
    Accordingly, the court remands to Commerce for further
    consideration in accordance with this opinion.             Commerce shall
    have until March 22, 2016 to complete and file its remand
    redetermination.     Plaintiffs shall have until April 5, 2016 to
    file comments.     Defendant and Defendant-Intervenor shall have
    until April 15, 2016 to file any reply.160
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    /s/Donald C. Pogue
    Donald C. Pogue, Senior Judge
    Dated: February 9, 2016
    New York, NY
    
    159     See SMVC Scope Ruling, supra note 24, at 7.
    160Because the court remands, it does not reach the issue of
    whether Commerce must clarify or amend the instructions issued
    to CBP regarding the suspension date of the entries at issue to
    include Plaintiffs Jangho and Permasteelisa. See Jangho’s Br.,
    ECF No. 78, at 23; Permasteelisa’s Br., ECF No. 39, at 38.