OPINION
Plaintiffs initiated this action to challenge certain aspects of the final affirmative antidumping duty determination by the Department of Commerce (Commerce) in Certain Welded Carbon Steel Pipes and Tubes from Thailand. 1 In their complaint plaintiffs allege, inter alia, that impermissible political considerations influenced Commerce’s decision to calculate dumping margins based on the “best information available.” See 19 U.S.C. § 1677e(b) (1982). Plaintiffs contend that the data they submitted to Commerce was rejected in order to artificially increase the size of dumping margins. This course of action was followed, plaintiffs argue, in order to force Thai Steel exporters to sign voluntary restraint agreements (VRA) pursuant to the President’s steel import restraint and import monitoring program. 2
In order to gather further support for these claims, plaintiffs served defendant with numerous interrogatories requesting admissions or denials that political factors improperly influenced Commerce’s decision-making. Interrogatories 4-9, 34-35. Other interrogatories asked defendant to enumerate any contacts between Commerce officials and administrative or congressional figures who took an interest in the action. Interrogatories 1-3, 10-33, 36-39.
Defendant objects to this discovery request upon the ground that this action is confined to a review of the record made by the administering authority and filed with the court; and that, accordingly, discovery does not lie, no order permitting discovery having been entered and no predicate for such an order having been established. See 28 U.S.C. § 2640(b); 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b). See also BarBea Truck Leasing Co., Inc. v. United States,4 CIT 159 , 162 (1982); Atlantic Sugar, Ltd. v. United States,85 Cust.Ct. 131 , 80-16 (1980).
Plaintiffs responded to this objection by filing their Motion to Compel Discovery and for an Award of Expenses; defendant reciprocated by filing a Cross-Motion for a Protective Order.
Initially, the court must decide whether certain objections raised in defendant’s motion for a protective order have been waived. Defendant’s motion for a protective order argues that plaintiffs’ interrogatories are inappropriate because they seek to probe the mental processes of administrative decision-makers and to have Commerce officials clarify their position beyond the statements contained in the challenged determination. Defendant’s motion also alleges that plaintiffs have not made a sufficient showing of bad faith to proceed with discovery regarding improper political influence, and that plaintiffs have not shown a reasonable basis to believe that the administrative record is incomplete.
Plaintiffs argue that all of these objections have been waived because they were not included in defendant’s answer to the interrogatories. The federal courts have stated that objections to interrogatories must be specific and supported by a detailed explanation of why the interrogatories are objectionable.
See, e.g., United States v. NYSCO Laboratories, Inc.,
Although a more explicit response to plaintiffs’ interrogatories would have comported better with the elusive spirit of mutual cooperation implicit in the discovery rules, the court does not find that defendant is barred from raising its objections. The strict rules advocated by plaintiff turn on two basic policy considerations: first, that vague blanket objections are improper because they force opponents to rebut all conceivable objections in their responsive motions to compel discovery; and second, that the court should not be burdened with the task of sifting through endless interrogatories in order to ascertain which ones fall within a blanket objection.
See Shenker v. Sportelli,
Allegations of Impermissible Political Influence
In actions to challenge Commerce’s calculation of dumping margins, the scope of judicial review is normally confined to information contained in the administrative record.
Atlantic Sugar,
Plaintiffs contend that improper political influence can be inferred from the following facts. Commerce officials are responsible for determining dumping margins and for administering the VRA program. During and shortly after the investigation, Commerce officials publicly stated that the antidumping and countervailing duty laws might be used to stem the tide of imports from countries which had not signed VRA agreements with the U.S. government.. See “TASI/AISI/WCMI Meeting Addresses Import Steel Quotas,” Port of Houston Magazine, Apr. 5,1985, at 11. “Steel VRA Circumvention Stirs Commerce Department,” American Metal Market, Feb. 21, 1986, at 1, col. 2. Two weeks after the final determination contested here, the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import Administration sent a letter to the governments of VRA countries in which he warned:
If the [voluntary steel] arrangements’ objectives are threatened, the United States Government is prepared to take administrative measures including ... [the] unfair trade laws to ensure that their objectives are met. 6
Plaintiffs argue that these pronouncements are particularly meaningful when viewed from the standpoint of Thai steel producers. In a previous countervailing duty investigation involving Thai steel exports, Commerce found subsidies amounting to less than 2 percent
ad valorem. Certain Circular Welded Carbon Steel Pipes and Tubes from Thailand,
50 Fed. Reg. 32,751 (August 14, 1985). Plaintiffs contend that since the subsidy margins were relatively low in that case, the only way Commerce could effectively control Thai imports would be by artificially inflating dumping margins in the instant case.
7
The court is sensitive to the problems parties face in gathering specific proof of unlawful political suasion. Such evidence, after all, is seldom highlighted on dog-earred pages of the administrative record. Nevertheless, the court concludes that plaintiffs have not made the
strong showing
of political influence required for additional discovery rights. Courts have uniformly recognized that in all administrative action, there is a presumption of good faith on the part of the government.
8
United States v. Roses, Inc.,
Plaintiffs’ proof draws its strength solely from speculation. The statements made by Commerce officials only suggest that the agency would utilize its legal remedies to counter unfair trade practices; they cannot reasonably be interpreted as a warning to exporters that Commerce would impose duties in excess of those permitted by law. The allegations made by plaintiffs could be offered in any investigation involving exporters not subject to the limits of a VRA. This is exactly the type of speculative inference that the presumption of good faith is designed to defeat. 9
In sum, plaintiffs simply have not offered the proof necessary to justify further discovery on the issue of improper government influence. 10 Accordingly, defendant’s motion for a protective order is granted with respect to Interrogatories 4-9 and 34-35, which requested admissions regarding improper political influence.
Completeness of the Administrative Record
Plaintiffs may also engage in discovery outside the administrative record if they demonstrate that there is a
reasonable basis
to believe the administrative record is incomplete.
Texas Steel Co. v. Donovan,
Plaintiffs’ argument depends upon the same facts presented in their previous allegations of improper political influence. Plaintiffs would not expect to find ex parte communications in the record unless they believed that some attempt to influence Commerce had been made. In effect, plaintiffs have transformed their “political influence” argument into an “incomplete record” argument in order to take advantage of a lower standard of proof.
Even under this lower standard of proof plaintiffs' motion must fail. Plaintiffs’ charges of
ex parte
communications remain purely speculative. No facts have been presented to show that such communications were made, or that actions on behalf of the President’s steel program influenced the documentation submitted to the court by Commerce. In cases where discovery has been allowed to supplement the record, courts have recognized that the “reasonable basis” test requires more than mere speculation.
See, e.g., Natural Resources Defense Council,
Because plaintiffs’ motion to compel discovery has been denied, their motion for an award of expenses is also denied. U.S.C. I.T. Rule 37(a)(3).
Notes
. This determination is published at 51 Fed.Reg. 3389 (January 27, 1986).
. See 49 Fed.Reg. 36813 (September 20, 1984) (Steel Import Relief Determination).
. Plaintiffs suffered no real hardship in preparing their motion to compel discovery. As plaintiffs themselves acknowledge, ”[i]t should have been obvious to any casual reader of plaintiffs’ interrogatories that objections of this type could have been made.” Plaintiffs’ Memorandum In Opposition To Defendant’s Cross-Motion at 9.
. For example, in the
Atlantic Sugar
case, the court granted defendant’s motion for a protective order, stating that plaintiffs’ interrogatories were "really an attempt to force the defendant to justify the administrative determination."
Atlantic Sugar,
. Although the court will consider arguments raised in defendant’s cross-motion, it must deny defendant’s motion for leave to file a reply to plaintiffs’ opposition to defendant’s motion for a protective order. Defendant has already had sufficient opportunity to respond to the legal issues raised by plaintiffs’ interrogatories. The court cannot allow the pre-trial discovery process to become needlessly protracted by endless sur-reply briefs.
. The text of this letter appears in Plaintiffs Brief at Exhibit 3. Although the letter is undated and unsigned, Commerce officials have indicated that it was sent during the week of February 10, 1986. See "Steel VRA Circumvention Stirs Commerce Department,” supra, at 1, col. 2.
. One could speculate as easily that if Commerce were truly "out to get” Thai producers by inflating margins here, it would have artificially constructed a subsidy margin larger than 2%.
. In
Roses,
the Court of Appeals drew a distinction between the "presumption of good faith” and the "presumption of regularity of government action.”
Roses,
. See supra, note 7.
. Plaintiffs also argue that their interrogatories are appropriate under
Accardi v. Shaughnessy,
