Opinion
Plaintiffs seek an injunction pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(c)(e) (1982) preventing liquidation according to the agency’s original determination and, thus, liquidation in accordance with the court’s decision of all entries which might have been, but
*859
were not, covered by the International Trade Administration’s (ITA’s) first annual administrative review. The court has granted such injunctive relief in certain cases, notably
Oki Elec. Indus. Co.
v.
United States,
The court will not attempt to harmonize these cases today as they appear to represent a conflict over the meaning of several interlocking provisions of a comprehensive statutory scheme which the court is charged to interpret. On the other hand, more sophisticated arguments are being presented to the court while others are being abandoned with regard to the various statutes involved, so that some degree of harmony may eventually arise. 2 As far as the court can determine there is a degree of harmony in the court’s opinions in that none have treated the issue directly as one involving jurisdiction. Nonetheless, defendant continues to treat this as a jurisdictional issue. The court adheres to its previously expressed views. The court has jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter. The statute by its plain language allows the court to issue injunctions in cases involving, inter alia, reviews of final affirmative determinations. 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(i) and § 1516a(c)(2) (1982 & Supp. V 1987).
The case of
British Steel Corp.
v.
United States,
Defendants appear to argue that in
Ipsco
the court misconstrued legislative history.
See
The statute provides only one clear avenue for obtaining liquidation of past entries in accordance with the court’s determination. That avenue is through injunction of liquidation under 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(c). In this case injunction of liquidation has been obtained at the behest of the domestic industry. Unlike the plaintiff in
British Steel,
Floral Trade Council (FTC), which represents various U.S. flower growers, filed a new action challenging ITA’s refusal to institute a review of its order as to the entries of certain exporters and producers for the first annual period. This court upheld ITA’s determination to conduct a limited review and that case is now on appeal.
Floral Trade Counsel of Davis, Calif.
v.
United States,
In terms of the standard four-part test for injunctive relief, some requirements are clearly met while others present debatable issues.
See Matsushita Elect. Indus. Co.
v.
United States,
*861 This appears to be a case in which success on the merits, in terms of plaintiffs’ challenge to the original determination, is not an issue. The court has issued a final judgment sustaining an ITA remand determination reflecting lower duty rates than originally ordered. Although plaintiffs did not upset the entire antidumping order, their litigation did succeed in part and they wish effectuation of the results of the litigation to a greater degree than merely future alteration of deposit rates, which may never occur. 5
The balance of hardships tips toward plaintiffs. An injunction at this point would cause no disturbance of the
status quo
in terms of derailing ongoing administrative processes. No entries are being liquidated. Disruption of ongoing agency operations was of concern to the court in
Algoma Steel Corp.
v.
United States,
The public interest is a bit difficult to analyze here, except that a result which aids the goals of the statute may be said to be in the public interest. The court is not convinced that it should abandon the Oki-Ipsco-Sonco, supra, lines of cases which hold that the fullest appropriate effectuation of judicially determined results and avoidance of baseless requests for administrative review is the result preferred by the statutory scheme.
The court is concerned, however, that injunction may not be appropriate in this case because of plaintiffs’ change in position, which is relevant to the irreparable harm factor. While the court believes plaintiffs cannot simply change positions on whether in-junctive relief should be granted depending on how they see the judicial winds blowing, they do have an independent reason for their change of position here. At first plaintiffs sought immediate liquidation in order to regularize their accounts. Upon FTC’s successful *862 motion for injunction of liquidation plaintiffs could not promptly normalize their financial arrangements and reports, e.g., by releasing contingent liability funds, and they now seek the effectuation of the court’s opinion. This, in and of itself, does not bar plaintiffs’ latest request. It does, however, make a point raised by defendants. Perhaps plaintiffs can change positions so easily because they would not be irreparably harmed by any failure to order liquidation in accordance with the ITA determination approved by the final decison of the court.
The court believes that it is appropriate to apply a sliding scale to this analysis.
See National Customs Brokers and Forwarders Assn. of America
v.
United States,
Slip Op. 89-140 at 13 (CIT, October 10, 1989);
Algoma Steel Corp., Ltd.
v.
United States,
As discussed in the Oki-Ipsco-Sonco line of cases, Congress never envisioned the situations existing in those cases, let alone this peculiar set of circumstances. In this unusual situation the court finds ITA’s view of the law unreasonable in its application. Even ITA admits certain errors in its original determination. The court sees no reason to perpetuate such errors where all administrative action has already been halted.
The scope of the injunction, however, is also of concern to defendants. Related thereto is defendant-intervenor Floral Trade Council’s claim that plaintiff Asociación Colombiana de Exportadores de Flores (Asocolflores) has no statutory standing to seek injunctive relief. 7
Standing to bring suit is controlled by 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(A) (1982), which provides in relevant part that "an interested party who is a party to the proceeding in connection with which the matter arises” may bring suit to challenge the agency determination. Interested party under 19 U.S.C. § 1677(9)(A) (1982) includes "a foreign manufacturer, producer, or exporter, * * * of merchandise which is the subject of an investigation.” Because the statute does not mention producer/exporter trade associations, while it does mention importer trade associations, it has been held that a produc
*863
er/exporter trade association must be composed entirely of members producing or exporting the relevant merchandise in order to have standing.
See RSI (India) Pvt., Ltd.
v.
United States,
Floral Trade Council alleges that a few of Asocolflores’ members export only roses, which is an uninvestigated product. See Public Record Doc. 28. 9 The court is not entirely sure what is signified by Doc. 28. Furthermore, if this were a problem and the matter had been timely raised, could not Asocolflores have reorganized its membership or the composition of the plaintiff group to meet the statute? The court declines to rule at this point, based on less than full briefing and on one isolated document, that Asocolflores should be dismissed as a plaintiff herein because of lack of standing, particularly because it appears unnecessary to resolve this issue to decide the pending motion. Furthermore, the suit as a whole is not in jeopardy because individual exporters and importers and an association of importers have also joined as plaintiffs. Their standing does not appear in dispute.
It appears to the court that any affected importing interest may seek injunctive relief if it will suffer the direct financial harm sought to be prevented by the relief sought. It is the importers who pay the duties assessed. The litigation in this case involved the rates of several individual growers or exporters, as well as the "all other rate.” It seems beyond belief that the importing interests represented here are all unaffected by the rate changes at issue, particularly because the "all other rate” is involved. In fact, Floral Trade does not allege that this is the case.
After consulting with the parties, it has become apparent that any injunctive relief should be drawn in terms of the exporters or producers of concern to the plaintiff importing interests. ITA’s investigations are geared to producers and exporters, not to importers. Customs’ administrative handling of Commerce’s orders also seems to operate in this fashion. Accordingly, the injunction issued here will apply to those producers or exporters (and entries related thereto) which could have been, but were not, the subject of the first annual review; which have been found to have rates different from those specified in the pre-remand final determination; and whose goods subject to the antidumping order were exported during the relevant period to any of the importers represented here or to any *864 of the members of the importer trade association represented here. 10
Plaintiffs shall provide defendant with a list of such exporters/ producers accompanied by an affidavit of counsel that such list has been compiled in accordance with the court’s direction. Entries from such listed exporters and producers for the period November 3, 1986 through February 29, 1988 shall not be liquidated in accordance with the pre-remand determination reviewed here, but shall be liquidated as provided in 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(e). This injunction is effective only upon the latter of 10 days after (1) receipt of the list by ITA and (2) affirmance of the judgment in the related litigation as to scope of the first annual review and dissolution of the injunction pending appeal issued therein.
Notes
Defendant-intervenor is incorrect in likening this matter to
Fabricas El Carmen, S.A., De C.V.
v.
United States,
There is no indication, however, that the certainty needed by litigants will be achieved without an appellate court decision on this issue. See Cambridge Lee, supra, at 5.
Although the substance of the action has been disposed of through a final judgment, the court reserved jurisdiction over the issue now before the court. See Judgment entered herein August 7,1989.
Defendants indicate that success by FTC in obtaining an administrative review will moot the instant motion because liquidation would then be in accordance with the rates established by the administrative review. That is true as far as the entries which are the subject of appeal are concerned. It is very unclear to the court as to whether all non-reviewed entries are at issue in the appellate case. In any case, until reversal occurs this motion is not moot but, rather, presents a live controversy. Many disputes may be mooted by future events. Such a fact does not compel the court to cease consideration of claims. The court chooses to proceed now to avoid being faced with emergency motions if the court’s decision is upheld on appeal and the stay pending appeal is dissolved.
The court sees some potential for the type of mootness or lack of effective judicial review discussed in
Zenith Radio Corp.
v.
United States,
It is grasping at straws for FTC now to argue that it should be able to renew its request for administrative review if this injunction is granted. The range of possible outcomes were apparent when FTC had the opportunity to request a first administrative review.
Although a challenge to standing may be made at anytime, the timing here causes the court to be somewhat skeptical. Defendant, United States, does not raise the standing issue.
In demonstrating standing on other than a statutory basis, an association may rely on the harm done to some of its members by the challenged act. The harm need not extend to every member.
National Customs Brokers and Forwarders Assn. of America
v.
United States,
It seems irrelevant to this discussion that some of Asocolflores’ members produce investigated flowers which were not the subject of the final dumping order. No matter the outcome, such flowers were investigated in the ‘ administrative proceedings. This is the thrust of the relevant statutes.
There has been insufficient demonstration that purely exporting interests, as plaintiffs herein, are entitled to have injunctive relief drawn without reference to the injured party importing interests. The relationship of the exporters/producers to the harm which would be suffered has not been demonstrated sufficiently.
