The government appeals from a decision of the Court of International Trade ordering the reliquidation of certain imported entries by plaintiff Agro Dutch Industries, Ltd. At issue is whether liquidation of the entries by Customs and Border Protection after the court issued an injunction against liquidation but before the injunction took effect rendered the case moot. The trial court held that the case was not moot, and we affirm.
I
On July 12, 2002, the Department of Commerce published the final results of its second administrative review of an anti-dumping duty order imposing duties on preserved mushrooms from India. 67 Fed.Reg. 46,172. Commerce assigned Agro Dutch, a foreign producer and exporter, an antidumping duty of 27.80 percent.
Agro Dutch sought review of Commerce’s determination by filing an action in the Court of International Trade on July 19, 2002. On September 26, 2002, Agro Dutch moved for a preliminary injunction, pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(c), to prevent liquidation of its covered entries during the pendency of the action. Although Agro Dutch’s request occurred after the expiration of the 30-day deadline under Rule 56.2 of the Rules of the United States Court of International Trade, which provides that a party may file a motion to enjoin liquidation “within 30 days after service of the complaint, or at such later time, for good cause shown,” the government nevertheless consented to Agro Dutch’s request for an injunction.
On October 1, 2002, the trial court granted Agro Dutch’s consent motion and issued an order enjoining liquidation. By its terms, the injunction was to become effective five days after service on particular Commerce and Customs officials.
According to the government, which requested the five-day delay in the effective date of the injunction, the purpose of the delay was to avoid “an inadvertent violation” of the injunction by “ensuring that the appropriate Government officials receive notice” and by “providing the Government with the time needed to keep the entries from being ... liquidated.” Agro Dutch served the injunction on the pertinent government officials three days after it was issued.
Meanwhile, on August 23, 2002, Commerce had issued liquidation instructions to Customs based on the July 12 Final Results. On October 4, 2002, the same day on which Agro Dutch served the injunction on the appropriate government officials, Customs acted on those instructions and liquidated nearly all of Agro Dutch’s entries.
After extensive additional proceedings that are not relevant here, the trial court remanded the matter to Commerce for a redetermination of Agro Dutch’s anti-dumping duty margin. Commerce then issued a redetermination that lowered Agro’s antidumping duty rate from 27.80 percent to 1.54 percent. The trial court sustained that duty rate. Agro Dutch then moved to amend the judgment, requesting reliquidation of the previously liquidated entries at the reduced rate of 1.54 percent.
The trial court noted that, unlike in SKF, the court entered its injunction before the subject entries were liquidated. Moreover, the court observed that the liquidation of Agro Dutch’s entries occurred as a result of “what might best be charitably described as ‘inadvertence’ ” and that the parties had intended that liquidation would be enjoined during the pendency of the court action. The court therefore reasoned that backdating the injunction would “comport with the parties’ intention.” The court added that not granting relief would result in “manifest injustice” to the non-party importer of record, which was likely to be rendered insolvent unless the entries were reliquidated at the proper, lower duty rate.
II
On appeal, the government argues that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to entertain Agro Dutch’s challenge regarding the entries that were liquidated prior to the effective date of the injunction. Relying principally on the Zenith case, the government argues that the October 4 liquidations rendered Agro Dutch’s claims moot, and that the trial court was powerless to order reliquidation or to amend the injunction nunc pro tunc.
In
Zenith,
the trial court refused to issue a preliminary injunction to prevent liquidation, on the ground that the movant had not established a likelihood of irreparable injury. We reversed. Under the statutory scheme that governs judicial review of Commerce’s annual review determinations, we held that challenged entries must be liquidated at the disputed duty rate unless liquidation is enjoined.
Subsequent case law has interpreted
Zenith
to establish a general rule that, at least in the context of judicial review under 19 U.S.C. § 1516a, liquidation moots a party’s claims pertaining to the liquidated entries.
See, e.g., SKF,
In
SKF,
we vacated a judgment affirming a redetermination of antidumping duties, where the covered entries had been deemed liquidated by operation of law pri- or to the redetermination.
The government relies on SKF to argue that the trial court violated the rule of Zenith when it backdated Agro Dutch’s injunction to eliminate the five-day period before the injunction went into effect. In SKF, however, we emphasized the complete absence of an issued injunction, as the trial court had failed to “decide whether it [would] exercise its equitable power to grant relief’ before the liquidation occurred. Id. In the present case, the trial court considered Agro Dutch’s motion, determined that relief should be granted, and issued a valid injunction — all before liquidation occurred. Moreover, unlike the deemed liquidation in SKF, Customs affirmatively liquidated Agro Dutch’s entries, despite the government’s awareness of the injunction.
While the
Zenith
rule ordinarily renders moot court actions in which liquidation has already occurred, we have acknowledged that there are exceptions to that general rule.
1
For example, mootness does not occur when steps are required to enforce a valid injunction.
See Yancheng,
The
Zenith
rule would also not apply if liquidation occurred because of a clerical or typographical error in the in-junctive order that was contrary to the purpose of the injunction and the parties’ intent. Courts enjoy broad discretion to correct clerical errors in previously issued orders in order to conform the record to the intentions of the court and the parties.
See
R. Ct. Int’I Trade 60(a); Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(a) (“The court may correct a clerical mistake or a mistake arising from oversight or omission whenever one is found in a judgment, order, or other part of the record ... on motion or on its own, with or without notice.”);
see also Robert Lewis Rosen Assocs., Ltd. v. Webb,
As a general matter, a court of equity may exercise its sound discretion to modify an injunctive order when modification is necessary to achieve the order’s intended purpose and does not otherwise result in prejudice to a party.
See United States v. United Shoe Mach. Corp.,
As the trial court found, it was the purpose of the injunction and the understanding and intent of all the parties to suspend liquidation pending a decision on the merits of Agro Dutch’s challenge. As issued by the trial court on October 1, 2002, the injunction contained a grace period delay
Pointing to Agro Dutch’s delay of more than 30 days after service of the complaint before seeking an injunction, the government argues that if Agro Dutch had acted more promptly, it could have prevented the case from becoming moot. 3 That assertion is belied, however, by the fact that the government consented to the injunction even though Agro Dutch had delayed in seeking it. Moreover, counsel for the government maintained at oral argument that liquidation during the five-day window would have deprived the trial court of jurisdiction even if Agro Dutch had filed its request for an injunction within the 30-day period after serving the complaint. Thus, the government is not relying upon Agro Dutch’s lack of timeliness as a basis for its legal position that liquidation prior to the effective date of the injunction renders moot any challenge with respect to the liquidated entries.
We agree with the trial court that there is no reason to upset the court’s and the parties’ clear intentions by applying the rule of Zenith to this case. By amending the effective date of the injunction and ordering reliquidation, the trial court gave full effect to the purposes underlying both the injunction and the five-day window provision. Under the court’s final order, Agro Dutch’s claim would proceed on the merits, and no contempt proceedings would be instituted against government officials for the inadvertent liquidation.
The government argues that upholding the trial court’s decision would create uncertainty regarding the finality of anti-dumping duties imposed by the government. We have observed that the rule of
Zenith
is designed to promote finality for antidumping duties and related liquidations. As noted by this court in
SKF,
liquidation is “designed to close the books on an importer’s entries” and reflects a “decision that an importer’s liability has been finalized.”
While finality is an important goal, the interest in finality must give way in the face of a more compelling interest in this case: namely, effecting the intent of the parties and the court to prevent a premature liquidation while judicial review is on
While the government argues that affirming the trial court’s decision will “turn[ ] what generally is a relatively cooperative endeavor into an adversarial one,” we think the opposite is the case. The endeavor would be more likely to become adversarial if we were to allow liquidation during the five-day notice period to render moot a challenge to the antidumping duty determination, in contravention of the parties’ express intent. Foreign importers are far more likely to trust and cooperate with the government if they can be confident that grace periods in issued injunctions cannot be exploited. Under the result urged by the government, in which liquidation occurring during the period after issuance and before the effective date of an injunction would be unchallengeable, it seems unlikely that any party challenging an antidumping duty in the future would agree to the government’s request for a postponement of the effective date of the injunction.
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in amending the judgment to effect the parties’ intent to prevent liquidation and allow adjudication of the merits of this dispute.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We have recognized several situations in which the
Zenith
rule does not deprive the trial court of jurisdiction to address the merits of an antidumping duty determination.
See Shinyei Corp. of Am. v. United States,
. Even if the appropriate government officials had been served on October 1, the injunction would not have taken effect until October 8, after the liquidation of Agro Dutch’s entries took place on October 4. Therefore, the fact that it took Agro Dutch three days to serve the injunction is irrelevant to our reasoning, which focuses upon the effect of Customs’ act of liquidating the entries during the five-day period between the injunction's issuance and its effective date.
. The government asserts that if Agro Dutch had not waited past the 30-day deadline Commerce would not have issued the liquidation instructions that were ultimately implemented during the window prior to the injunction's effective date. However, this argument is undermined by the government’s acknowledgement, in oral argument, that Commerce is not required to delay issuing liquidation instructions upon the filing of a timely motion for a preliminary injunction.
