OPINION
I
Introduction
At issuе in this case is the proper surrogate value for octanol-2, a subsidiary product of the sebacic acid production process, that is to be used by the International Trade Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce (“ITA” or “Commerce”) in its first administrative review of antidumping duties on sebacic acid from the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”).
See Sebacic Acid from the People’s Republic of China; Final Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review,
62 Fed. Reg. 10,530 (1997)
(“First Administrative Review”).
This case is before the Court for the second time, following the Court’s Memorandum and Order of March 27, 1998, (“Remand Memorandum” and “Remand Order”), directing Commerce,
inter alia,
to “value octanol-2 based on an appropriate cost (which may be the U.S. cost but which may not be based solely on similar molecular structure without any additional evidence) of crude octanol-2, and then recalculate the by-product/co-product determination with the correct value.”
Union Camp Corp. v. United States,
For the reasons stated herein, the Court agrees with Defendant-inter-venors and finds that its Remand Order was ambiguous, in so far as Commerce interpreted the Remand Order as preventing it from considering record evidence of market prices in valuing the octanol-2 that results from the sebacic acid production process. Accordingly, the Court grants Defendant-intervenors’ Motion To Reconsider arid remands this *265 case for further consideration consistent with this opinion. In doing so, however, the Court takes judicial notice of the fact that in its third administrative review of antidumping duties on sebacic acid from the PRC, Commerce, on the basis of a letter from the editor of the Chemical Weekly (India), reversed its previous position and found that the “octanol” quote from this publication did not refer to octanol-1. See Sebacic Acid From The People’s Republic of China; Final Results of Antidump-ing Duty Administrative Review, 63 Fed. Reg. 43,373, 43,374-75 (1998) (“Third Administrative Review”). Having taken judicial notice of this fact, the Court directs Commerce to consider the letter from the editor of the Chemical Weekly (India) in choosing an appropriate surrogate value on remand.
Finally, the Court further instructs Commerce that it is to consider whether it should accept new evidence concerning the comparability of 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2. Should Commerce come to the conclusion that it should accept such evidence, Commerce may do so and, if appropriate, use that evidence as a basis for justifying its use of the Chemical Weekly (India) value for “octanol” as a surrogate value.
II
Background
The relevant facts of this case are described in
Union Camp Corp. v. United States,
On March 7, 1997, Commerce issued its
First Administrative Review,
covering shipments of sebacic acid from the PRC to the United States during the period July 13, 1994, through June 30,1995.
First Administrative Review,
For the
First Administrative Review,
Commerce used surrogate values from India to construct the normal value of the sebacic acid.
See First Administrative Review,
Before this Court, Plaintiff challenged Commerce’s conclusion concerning the comparability of octanol-1 and octanol-2, arguing that the decision was not supported by substantial evidence on the record and not otherwise in accordance with law.
See
Brief In Support Of Union Camp Corporation’s Rule 56.2 Motion For Judgment Upon The Agency Record, dated September 5, 1997, at 19-21. On March 27, 1998, the Court agreed with Plaintiff and found that Commerce’s interpretation of the word “comparable” in 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4) (1994), to mean similar molecular structure, was not a reasonable interpretation of the statute.
Union Camp,
Commerce discussed its reason for selecting the Indian value of oc-tanol-2, i.e., the similar molecular formulae. It also discussed why it rejected Union Camp’s internal cost of octanol-2 based on Commerce’s preference for public, published information. Commerce failed to discuss, or apparently consider, however, the U.S. value of octanol-2 placed on the record by Dastech or Union Camp’s submission regarding an adjustment of that U.S. value to reflect that Dastech ‘s submission reflected the value of refined octanol-2. * * * Thus, Commerce’s failure here to consider the other surrogate values placed on the record results in its valuation of octanol-2 using the Indian value of octanol-1 being unsupported by substantial evidence on the record.
Id. at 850 (citation omitted).
In light of these findings, the Court remanded this case to Commerce with the following instructions:
[I]t is hereby * * * ORDERED ADJUDGED AND DECREED that this case is remanded to [Commerce] with instructions to value oc-tanol-2 based on an appropriate cost (which may be the U.S. cost but which may not be based solely on similar molecular structure without any additional evidence) of crude octanol-2, and then recalculate the by-product/co-product determination with the correct value * * *.
Id. at 853.
On June 25, 1998, Commerce issued its Remand Determination, in which it used Union Camp’s internal cost for crude octanol-2 as a surrogate for the octanol-2 produced by Defendant-Intervenors. Remand Determination at 3, 9-10. Even though Commerce identified and discussed additional record evidence that supported its use of the Chemical Weekly (India) value of refined octanol — and commented that this value “is the *267 best available information to effectuate the Department’s goal of determining the most accurate margin possible,” Remand Determination at 6 — it nevertheless stated that it felt constrained by the Court’s Remand Order from using or considering other possible surrogate values that were on the record. Commerce stated that:
The Department is using the U.S. cost оf crude octanol-2 to recalculate the dumping margins because the court instructed us to value octanol-2 based on an appropriate “cost” of crude octanol-2 and the only value on the record for “cost” of crude octanol-2 is the petitioner’s U.S. cost of crude octanol-2. The Department’s use of such a value necessitates a recalculation of the dumping margins. However, the Department has also identified for the court additional record evidence that octanol-1 and octanol-2 are comparable in use. It remains the Department’s position, as reflected in the determination on remand, that using the petitioner’s U.S. cost of crude octanol-2 is inappropriate because it results in less accurate dumping margins.
Remand Determination at 10. See also Defendant’s Response To The Comments Filed By Union Camp And Dastech Regarding The Remand Determination Filed by The Department of Commerce (“Defendant’s Response”) at 3 (“Commerce did not utilize the data contained in Chemical Weekly (India) because this Court’s remand order specifically instructed the agency to ‘value octanol-2 based on an appropriate cost * * *.’”). In so finding, Commerce again did nоt consider the U.S. prices from the Chemical Marketing Reporter (U.S.) for octanol-2 that were placed on the record by Defendant-Intervenors. Presumably, Commerce concluded that, as the value reported in the Chemical Marketing Reporter (U.S.) reflects a market price for refined octanol-2, it was precluded from considering this figure by the Court’s Remand Order. See Remand Determination at 3, 8-10. 1 In addition, although Commerce reasserted its position that the Chemical Weekly (India) value for “octanol” is the “best available information,” it also did not identify any record evidence on remand to confirm exactly what product (octanol-1, octanol-2 or some other product) was being referenced by this figure. See Remand Determination at 6 (“[G]iven that the Chemical Weekly (India) does not specify a particular type of octanol, we believe that evidence on the record suggests that the refined octanol price listed in the Chemical Weekly (India) is a reasonable surrogate value for octanol-2.”)
Using Union Camp’s internal cost of crude octanol-2 (10.372 Indian rupees per kg/$0.15 per lb) as the surrogate, Commerce concluded that octanol-2 is a by-product of the sebacic acid production process, “because the overall value of octanol-2 is insignificant relative to the value
*268
of sebacic acid and the other subsidiary products.”
Remand Determination
at 4. In so finding, Commerce reversed its previous conclusion that, based on the
Chemical Weekly
(India) value for octanol-1 of 76 Indian rupees per kg, оctanol-2 should be treated as a co-product for cost accounting purposes.
See First Administrative Review,
Because Commerce claimed that the language of the Court’s Remand Order inappropriately constrained its consideration of appropriate surrogate values, on July 27, 1998, Defendant-Intervenors submitted a motion asking this Court to reconsider its Remand Order. According to Defendant-Intervenors, because either the Remand Order or Commerce’s reading of the Remand Order was “manifestly erroneous,” “[Commerce] has issued an unfair and inaccurate determination which is directly contrary to the statute, the legislative history, prior court cases and generally accepted accounting principles.” Defendant-Inter-venors’ Comments On The Commerce Department’s Remand Determination And Memorandum In Support Of Motion For Reconsideration (“Reconsideration Memorandum”) at 1, 33. In response, Plaintiff asserts that Defendant-Intervenors’ argument that a refined octanol value can be an appropriate surrogate is untimely, that Union Camp has not manipulated its price of сrude octanol-2, that Union Camp’s cost of crude octanol-2 is fair, that use of certain statements concerning the comparability of octanol-1 and octanol-2 are unreliable, and that deference to Commerce supports sustaining the Remand Determination. Plaintiff Union Camp Corporation’s Rebuttal Comments And Response In Opposition To Defendant-Intervenors’ Motion For Reconsideration (“Plaintiffs Response”) at 3-6. Plaintiff also argues that Defendant-In-tervenors’ Motion For Reconsideration is untimely under USCIT R.59 and that Defendant-Intervenors have failed to state any substantive grounds under USCIT Rs.59 and 60 that would justify granting the Motion For Reconsideration. Id. at 7-13.
For its part, Defendant says that, “[a]s is apparent from the Remand Determination, Commerce carefully examined this Court’s remand order, concluded that the Court’s use of the word ‘cost’ was deliberate, and, as a result, valued octanol-2 based upon the ‘cost’ of crude octanol-2.” Defendant’s Response at 2. Since Commerce complied with the *269 Court’s Remand Order, Defendant argues, “the Court should sustain the remand results, enter final judgment, and dismiss the action.” Id. Defendant also notes, however, that Commerce “would be willing to undergo another remand so that it may utilize the Chemical Weekly (India) price.” Id. at 4.
Independent from, and subsequent to, Commerce’s
First Administrative Review
and the
Remand Determination,
оn August 13, 1998, Commerce published the final results of its
Third Administrative Review,
covering the period July 1, 1996, through June 30, 1997.
Third Administrative Review,
Ill
DISCUSSION
A
Standard of Review
The Court “shall hold unlawful any determination, finding, or conclusion found * * * to be unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(l)(B)(i) (1994). Substantial evidence is something more than a “mere scintilla,” and must be enough evidence to reasonably support a conclusion.
Primary Steel, Inc. v. United States,
In reviewing an agency’s construction of the statute that the agency administers, the Court’s initial inquiry is to determine “whether Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at issue.”
Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
B
The Court Grants Defendant-Intervenors’ Motion For Reconsideration.
1
The Court Considers Defendant-Intervenors’ Motion For Reconsideration Under USCIT R. 59.
Although, on its face, USCIT R. 59 provides only for “[a] new trial or rehearing * * * in an action tried without a jury or in an action finally determined,” it has been well-recognized that the concept of a new trial under this Rule is broad enough to cover a rehearing of any matter decided by the Court.
Nat’l Corn Growers Ass’n v. Baker,
As this Court has previously noted, the grant of a motion for reconsideration is within the sound discretion of the Court.
Union Camp v. United States,
While a motion for reconsideration is to be considered under the standards of USCIT R.59, it is clear that, in this instance, the time limit set out in USCIT R. 59(b) does not prevent this Court from properly considering Defendant-Intervenors’ Motion For Reconsideration. Under US-CIT R. 59(b), “[a] motion for a new trial or rehearing shall be served and filed not later than 30 days after the entry of judgment or order.” Citing this Rule, Plaintiff argues that this Court lacks jurisdiction to hear De *271 fendant-Intervenors’ Motion For Reconsideration, since it was filed on July 27, 1998 — 121 days aftеr the Remand Order was entered and 91 days after the 30 day time limit expired. Plaintiffs Response at 6-7.
Contrary to Plaintiffs claim, however, the 30 day time limit of USCIT R. 59(b) does not render this Court without jurisdiction to hear the Motion For Reconsideration. As this Court and others have held, the time limit set out in USCIT R. 59(b) and the corresponding rule of federal civil procedure, Fed. R. Civ. P 59(b),
3
only apply to final judgments or orders.
See Timken,
The reason for a short time limit on motions for a new trial is to promote finality of judgments. That policy is not applicable to an interlocutory order, which by hypothesis is not final and is subject to modification by the court at any time before judgment is entered. Thus, it has been held that the time limits of Rule 59 do not apply to a motion seeking a new trial in connection with an interlocutory judgment.
Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller and Mary Kay Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2812 at 143 (2d ed. 1995)
There is no debate as to the interlocutory nature of the Court’s Remand Order. As the Federal Circuit has made clear, as a general rule “an order remanding a matter to an administrative agency for further findings and proceedings is not final.”
Cabot Corp. v. United States,
2
On Remand, Commerce May Use an Appropriate “Cost,” “Value” or “Price” for Octanol-2 in Making its By-Product/Co-Product Determination.
As noted earlier, in the initial Remand Order the Court instructed Commerce, “to value octanol-2 based on an appropriate
cost
* * * of crude octanol-2.”
Union Camp,
The Court grants Defendant-Intervenors’ Motion For Reconsideration. In its Remand Memorandum of March 27, 1998, the Court stated that one reason the
First Administrative Review
was unsupported by substantial evidence was the fact that Commerce “failed to discuss, or apparently consider,” the
Chemical Marketing Reporter
(U.S.) value for octanol-2 put on the record by Defendant-Intervenors.
Union Camp,
Despite the obvious implication of these findings, however, the Court’s actual Rеmand Order of March 27,1998, stated that Commerce “was to value octanol-2 based on an appropriate cost * * * of crude octanol-2.” Union Camp, 8 E Supp.2d at 853 (emphasis added). Simply put, this Order was ambiguous. As specifically provided by statute, in valu *273 ing the factors of production for constructing the “normal value” of merchandise in a non-market economy, Commerce “shall utilize, to the extent possible, the prices or costs of factors of production” in a comparable market economy. 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4) (1994) (emphasis added). In this case, two market prices for octanol were placed on record by the parties and, in accordance with 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4) (1994), should have been evaluated along with Union Camp’s internal “cost” of crude octanol-2 as possible surrogate values. Commerce, however, chose to view the Court’s use of the word “cost” in a restrictive manner, and concluded that the Court’s use of this term limited its ability to consider market prices on remand. In so doing, Commerce rendered the Remand Order legally erroneous, since its interpretation led the Remand Order to directly conflict with, and limit, Commerce’s statutory discretion to consider prices.
Further, and again based on Commerce’s restrictive interpretation, it appears that the Court’s use of the word “cost” may have prevented Commerce from using the “best available information” in determining normal value for the sebacic acid. As required by 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(l) (1994), in determining normal value in a non-market economy, “the valuation of the factors of production shall he based on the best available information regarding the values of such factors in a market economy * * *.“ The purpose of such a requirement, of course, is to achieve the most accurate dumping margins possible.
See Tianjin Mach. Import & Export Corp. v. United States,
The Department believes that a more accurate margin results if subsidiary products, such as octanol-2, are valued using publicly available information reflecting actual market prices rather than the petitioner’s internal cost. Thus, the Department uses publicly available market prices whenever possible, because they are mоre predictable and reliable. Publicly available values reflect actual transactions between buyers and sellers and therefore are a more accurate reflection of the market value of a subsidiary product. Internal cost values, particularly those of a party in the current segment of a proceeding may be less reliable and subject to manipulation. Moreover, in the present case, the petitioner’s internal cost information for crude octanol-2 is unverified.
Remand Determination at 4; see also id. at 6 (“[T]he Department maintains that the value for refined octanol from The Chemical Weekly (India) is the best available information to effectuate the Department’s goal of determining the most accurate margin possible.”)
*274
Finally, Commerce’s interpretation appears to place the Remand Order in conflict with
Asociacion Colombiana de Exportadores de Flores v. United States,
In short, the Court’s limiting use of the word “cost” in its initial Remand Order was ambiguous and, accordingly, subject to an interpretation that would constitute an error of law preventing Commerce from considering potentially appropriate price data in determining Defendant-Intervenors’ dumping margins. Rather than seeking to clarify the apparent ambiguity, however, Commerce chose to interpret it in a fashion designed to render its decision erroneous. For this reason, the Court remands this case to Commerce with instructions that it value the octanol-2 that results from the sebacic acid production process based on an appropriate surrogate
value
for this product, and then recalculate the by-product/co-product determination with this correct value. This surrogate value may be an appropriate foreign or U.S.
cost
or
price
for comparable merchandise. As noted in the Court’s Remand Memorandum and Remand Order, however, Commerce may not determine that a particular product is “comparable merchandise” for purposes 19 U.S.C. § 1677b (1994) based solely on a finding of similar molecular structure.
See Union Camp,
*275
On this point, it should be stressed that no value Commerce chooses as a surrogate will be deemed supported by substantial evidence until Commerce considers the
Chemical Marketing Reporter
(U.S.) value for octanol-2 put on the record by Defendant-Intervenors and either (a) adopts it as a surrogate value, or (b) explains why it is rejecting it for these purposes. As the Court specifically noted in its Remand Memorandum, in regard to Commerce’s initial failure to consider this value, “Commerce’s failure here to consider the other surrogate values placed on the record results in its valuation of octanol-2 using the Indian value of octanol-1 being unsupported by substantial evidence on the record.”
Id.
at 450;
see also Olympia Industrial, Inc. v. United States,
3
If Appropriate, on Remand Commerce May Use an Unadjusted Value for “Refined” Octanol as a Surrogate for the Octanol-2 Produced by Defendant-Intervenors.
An additional issue raised by the Remand Determination is whether Commerce may use a value for refined octanol, without adjustment, as a surrogate for the octanol-2 produced by Defendant-Intervenors. In its Remand Determination, Commerce stated:
The sebacic acid factors of production used to calculate normаl value (“NV”) already incorporate the relatively few factors of production (labor and energy) necessary to refine crude octanol-2. Production of sebacic acid results in the production of crude octanol-2 as a subsidiary product. Given that the sebacic acid factors of production already include the factors used to refine octanol-2, a more accurate by-product/co-product analysis results by using the refined value of octanol-2. There is no need to take a refined value of octanol-2 and then adjust it to derive a value for crude octanol-2. Moreover, there is a publicly published sales price on which we can base a value for refined octanol-2.
Remand Determination at 5.
*276 On the basis of this logic, Defendant-Intervenors argue extensively that Commerce erred in its Remand Determination in using Union Camp’s internal cost for crude octanol-2, since “[t]he actual production experience of the Chinese producers is that the Chinese produce refined octanol, not crude octanol, in their production process.” Reconsideration Memorandum at 11. Defendant-Intervenors essentially argue that since refined octanol is the actual product sold by the Chinese producers, it is a surrogate value for this product, and not crude octanol-2, that Commerce should use in determining whether a subsidiary product is a by-product or a co-product. See id. at 7-18. Defendant-Intervenors observe that using such a value would be consistent with both Commerce’s prior practice and recognized accounting principles, which provide that whether a product is by-product or a co-product is determined by the products’ sales value relative to that of the principal product or products produced (in this case, sebacic acid). Id. at 12-18. In fact, Defendant-In-tervenors even take exception to Commerce’s general characterization that the “[production of sebacic acid results in the production of crude octanol-2 as a subsidiary product.” See id. at 9 (quotingRemand Determination at 5).
For its part, Plaintiff argues that both Commerce and Defendant-In-tervenors should be estopped from arguing for the use of a surrogate value for refined octanol, since this Court has already determined that the product produced by the Chinese producers was crude octanol-2. Plaintiffs Response at 3-4. To support its point, Plaintiff observes that neither Commerce nor Defendаnt-Intervenors had earlier contested its argument to use a surrogate value for crude, rather than refined, octanol-2. Id. at 3.
In light of these various comments, two separate issues confront the Court. The first is whether Commerce may use an unadjusted value for “refined” octanol in valuing the octanol-2 that results from the sebacic acid production process. Because this case is being remanded to Commerce for further consideration, it would be premature for this Court to examine whether Commerce’s preference for using an unadjusted, refined value for octanol is appropriate. This is especially true in light of Section III (C) of this memorandum, which may preclude Commerce from using the
Chemical Weekly
(India) price as a surrogate upon remand. That said, however, it should be noted that nothing in either the initial Remand Memorandum or the Remand Order should be interpreted as either requiring or prohibiting the use of an unadjusted, refined value as a surrogate. Rather, the Court’s Remand Memorandum simply indicates that, in order to be affirmed by the Court, Commerce’s choice of a surrogate value must be supported by substantial evidence on the record and be based on a reasonable interpretation of the term “comparable merchandise.”
See Union Camp,
The second issue that appears to have been raised is whether the subsidiary product produced by Defendant-Intervenors should be referred to as “refined” or “crude” octanol-2. In regard to Commerce’s First Administrative Review and the parties’ respective motions for judgment on the agency record, the Court notes that there was virtually no discussion of whether the octanol-2 at issue should be characterized as “crude” or “refined” in nature. While it is true that Plaintiff argued in its September 25,1997, brief that the (presumably) large price difference between refined octanol-1 and crude octanol-2 demonstrates the inappropriateness of using octanol-1 to value octanol-2, Plaintiff simply assumed, without specifically arguing, that the subsidiary product was “crude” octanol-2. See Brief In Support Of Union Camp Corporation’s Rule 56.2 Motion For Judgment Upon The Agency Record, dated September 5, 1997, at 18. Further, since the characterizatiоn of the octanol-2 did not appear to be a point of contention among the parties, the Court never specifically addressed the “crude” versus “refined” octanol-2 issue in its Remand Memorandum and Remand Order. Rather, the Court simply characterized the product produced as “crude” octanol.
In light of the foregoing, it would be incorrect to say either that this “refined” versus “crude” issue was previously litigated, or that the Court decided this issue in its initial Remand Memorandum and Remand Order. At this point in the litigation, it appears that the characterization of the subsidiary product produced by Defendant-Intervenors is a non-issue. Whether characterized as “crude” or “refined” octanol-2, the main issue that Commerce needs to decide is what record evidence constitutes the most appropriate surrogate value for this product. Even assuming, without deciding, that the product produced by Defendant-Intervenors is best described as “crude” octanol-2, there is no particular reason why Commerce could not use a refined price or cost in valuing this product, subject to any necessary adjustments. The appropriateness of such action, again, would depend on whеther Commerce’s choice of a surrogate value can be supported by substantial evidence on the record and based on a reasonable interpretation of the term “comparable merchandise.”
C
Use of the Chemical Weekly (India) Value for Octanol-2 Is Still Not Supported by Substantial Evidence on the Record.
As noted previously, on remand Commerce identified new evidence on common uses between octanol-1 and octanol-2 to support its position that, notwithstanding the Court’s Remand Order, the Chemical Weekly (India) value for refined octanol was “the best available information to effectuate [Commerce’s] goal of determining the most accurate margins possible.” Remand Determination at 6. In doing so, however, Commerce continued to assume, without verifying, that the “octanol” value from *278 the Chemical Weekly (India) was for octanol-1. Standing alone, such an assumption undermines Commerce’s use of this figure, since “octanol” is a generic phrase which covers a full range of products. In this case, however, not only does the lack of verification call Commerce’s use of this figure into question, but evidence of which this Court may take judicial notice seems to show that Commerce’s assumption is, in fact, incorrect.
As discussed in Section II, in its
Third Administrative Review,
Commerce relied on a letter from the editor of the
Chemical Weekly
(India) in finding that the “octanol” price from this publication was not for octanol-1 or octanol-2, but was for a third product, 2-ethylhexanol.
Third Administrative Review,
Having taken judicial notice of that fact, the Court orders Commerce, on remand, to open the administrative record and consider the letter from the editor of the
Chemical Weekly
(India) in its choice of an appropriate surrogate value. While the Court notes that it is not ruling on the accuracy or significance of this new evidence,
see Borlem,
In arriving at this result, the Court is mindful of the considerable deference that Commerce enjoys in its administration of the antidumping
*279
laws. Such deference, however, is not owed when credible evidence from outside the record indicates a significant error in Commerce’s determination.
See, e.g., id.
(upholding remand to ITC for reconsideration of its injury determination in light of its reliance on an ITA dumping margin that was later corrected);
D&L Supply Co. v. United States,
In this regard, the Court is guided by the Federal Circuit’s opinion in
Borlem S.A.—Empreedimentos
Indust
riais v. United States,
Of course, unlike the situation in
Borlem,
in its
Remand Determination
Commerce did not actually rely on potentially erroneous data in its
Remand Determination.
It appears not to have done so, however, only because of ambiguity in the Court’s Remand Order. As made clear by both its use of the
Chemical Weekly
(India) value in the
First Administrative Review
and its statements in the
Remand Determination,
Commerce’s clear preference is to use this price in determining the Chinese
*280
manufacturers’ dumping margins, and to justify doing so on the basis of comparability between octanol-1 and octanol-2. Given that background, it would be inappropriate for the Court to wait until Commerce actually used the
Chemical Weekly
(India) value for octanol before instructing it to consider the new evidence from the
Third Administrative Review.
Such a result would needlessly put off until a later day, and another remand, the question of whether the Court should take judicial notice of Commerce’s conclusions in the
Third Administrative Review
and order Commerce to consider the letter from the editor of the
Chemical Weekly
(India) in this proceeding. Where possible and proper, the Court can, should and prefers to avoid such a waste of administrative and judicial resources.
See, e.g., Timken Co. v. United States,
D
Commerce May Reopen The Administrative Record and Consider New Evidence Concerning the Comparability of 2-Ethylhexanol and Octanol-2.
Ironically, although the letter from the editor of the
Chemical Weekly
(India) aрpears to undermine Commerce’s proffered rationale for using the
Chemical Weekly
(India) value for “octanol,” this and other evidence from the
Third Administrative Review
may provide alternative grounds for using this figure as a surrogate. Specifically, and as discussed previously, in the
Third Administrative Review
Commerce identified evidence concerning similar physical characteristics and uses between 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2 to support its conclusion that these two products are “comparable merchandise.”
See Third Administrative Review,
Recognizing the existence of such evidence and the conclusions that might be drawn from it, this Court is confronted with the issue of whether Commerce should be allowed, or even ordered, to consider evidence concerning the comparability of 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2 on remand. Such a result would seem a natural corollary to the fact that this Court is already ordering Commerce to consider the letter from the edi
*281
tor of the
Chemical Weekly
(India), and it would give Commerce an opportunity to use a preferred form of evidence, publically available information from a сomparable, developing economy, in its final determination.
See
19 CFR 353.52(b) (1997) (establishing a hierarchy of surrogates that is to be used in determining a constructed value for the “normal price” of a product). Further, ordering Commerce to consider this evidence would not constitute a waste of governmental resources, since this case is already being remanded on other grounds, and much of the evidence that will need to be evaluated by Commerce was the subject of its
Third Administrative Review. Cf. Tehnoimportexport,
Set against these reasons for allowing Commerce to consider new evidence on the comparability of 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2, however, are various considerations concerning the timely submission of evidence. By ordering Commerce to open the administrative record and consider the letter from the editor of the Chemical Weekly (India), the Court seeks to prevent Commerce from relying on what appears to be an erroneous factual assumption. In contrast, directing Commerce to consider new evidence concerning similar uses between 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2 would allow it to proffer a new explanation, based on evidence outside the original record, as to why the Chemical Weekly (India) value for “octanol” is an appropriate surrogate. Neither the letter from the editor of the Chemical Weekly (India), nor evidence of overlapping uses between 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2 were put on the record of this proceeding by Defendant-Intervenors. Accordingly, should Commerce consider such evidence, Defendant-Intervenors would stand to benefit from evidence that it did not submit during the relevant time period of the First Administrative Review.
In light of these conflicting policy considerations, the Court, under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction, finds it appropriate to let Commerce determine whether it should consider evidence concerning the comparability of 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2 on remand. Under the primary jurisdiction doctrine, a court may refer certain matters involving agency expertise back to the agency so that it may, in the first instance, apply its specialized knowledge and expеrience to the question at hand.
See Borlem S.A.- Empreedimentos Industriais v. United States,
Uniformity and consistency in the regulation of business entrusted to a particular agency are secured, and the limited functions of review by the judiciary are more rationally exercised, by preliminary resort for ascertaining and interpreting the circumstances underlying legal issues to agencies that are better equipped than courts by specialization, by insight gained through experience, and by more flexible procedure.
Id.
at 64 (quoting
Far East Conference v. United States,
In
Borlem,
this Court further clarified that “it would be inappropriate to invoke the doctrine of primary jurisdiction were the question before the Court entirely one of statutory interpretation.”
Borlem,
[T]he first question presented is whether effectuation of the statutory purposes of the Interstate Commerce Act requires that the Interstate Commerce Commission should first pass on the construction of the tariff in dispute here; this, in turn, depends on whether the question raises issues of transportation policy which ought to be considered by the Commission in the interests of a uniform and expert administration of the regulatory scheme laid down by the Act.
Applying these principles to the question at hand, the Court finds that it is Commerce, and not this Court, whiсh is in the best position to initially decide whether it should consider new evidence concerning the comparability of 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2. It is a well-established principle of administrative law that an agency is afforded broad discretion to fashion its own administrative procedure, including the authority to establish and enforce time limits concerning the submission of written information and data.
Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
The regulations further provide an exception to these time limits, however, for instances where the Secretary requests or solicits factual information. 19 CFR § 353.31(b) (1997) states, in part, that:
(1) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this section, the Secretary may request any person to submit factual information at any time during a proceeding.
(2) In the Secretary’s written request to an interested party for a response to a questionnaire or for other factual information, the Secretary will specify the time limit for response.
In applying these regulations to the investigations before it, Commerce regularly balances its interest in conducting an efficient, uniform and expeditious administrative investigation against its equally compelling interest in conducting accurate factfinding. Such a weighing of competing interests involves choices of administrative practice and procedure which Commerce, in its specialized role as administrator of anti-dumping investigations, is uniquely qualified to make. 8 For this reason, the Court finds the question of whether to accept new evidence concerning the comparability of 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2 to be an issue relating to the administration of antidumping investigations which, in the interest of a uniform and expert administration of such investigations, ought to be considered by Commerce in the first instance.
Accordingly, upon remand, Commerce is instructed to consider, and express its views on, whether it should accept new evidence concerning the comparability of 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2. Should Commerce come to the conclusion that it should accept such evidence, Commerce may do so on remand and, if appropriate, use this evidence as a basis for justifying its use of the Chemical Weekly (India) value for “octanol.” In so doing, Commerce may, but need not, limit its search for information to that submitted during the Third Administrative Review. Similarly, Commerce, in its discretion, may also seek or request further information (in addition to the letter from the editor of the Chemical Weekly (In *284 dia) submitted for the Third Administrative Review) concerning the true nature of the “octanol” quote from the Chemical Weekly (India). 9
IV
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants Defendant-Intervenors’ Motion For Reconsideration. Accordingly, the Court further remands this case to Commerce with instructions that Commerce:
vi. value the octanol-2 that results from the sebacic acid production process based on an appropriate surrogate value for this product, and then recalculatе the by-product/co-product determination in light of this surrogate value. This surrogate value may be an appropriate foreign or U.S. price or cost for comparable merchandise. In seeking the best available information to use as a surrogate, Commerce is to specifically consider and address all alternative surrogate values that have been placed on the record by the parties;
vii. open the administrative record and consider the letter from the editor of the Chemical Weekly (India). Unless Commerce is able to identify substantial record evidence on remand which demonstrates that, notwithstanding the letter from the editor of the Chemical Weekly (India), the “octanol” quote from the Chemical Weekly (India) is actually a quote for octanol-1, Commerce may not continue to argue for the use of this figure on the grounds that octanol-1 and octanol-2 are “comparable merchandise;” and
viii. consider, and express its views on, whether it should accept new evidence concerning the comparability of 2-ethylhexanol and octanol-2. Should Commerce come to the conclusion that it should accept such evidence, Commerce may do so on remand and, if appropriate, use this evidence as a basis for justifying its use of the Chemical Weekly (India) value for “octanol.”
In addition, the Court observes that nothing in its Remand Memorandum or Remand Order of March 27, 1998, should be interpreted as either requiring or prohibiting the use of an unadjusted, refined value as a surrogate for octanol-2. Rather, if, upon remand, Commerce continues to adhere to its position that an unadjusted, refined value is the best available information to use as a surrogate, the Court will uphold this determination so long as its choice of a surrogate is supported by substantial evidence on the record and is otherwise in accordance with law. This will be true regardless of whether the octanol-2 produced by Defendant-Intervenors is characterized as “crude” or “refined” in nature.
As a final note, the Court wishes to express its concern with the manner in which the Department of Commerce conducted the Remand Determination. As discussed above, the Court erred in its Remand Order of March 27, 1998, in stating that Commerce was to “value octanol-2 based on an appropriate cost.” While not technically incorrect, the *285 Court’s failure to say “cost or price,” or use the more generic term “value,” could, if read in isolation, be interpreted as limiting Commerce to consider only record evidence of “costs” upon remand. To arrive at such a narrow result, however, Commerce would have had to ignore the obvious implications of the Court’s findings in the Remand Memorandum, and it would have had to interpret the Court’s Remand Order as directly conflicting with its statutory obligations. That is exactly what Commerce did. See infra, Section III (B)(2).
In so interpreting the Court’s Remand Order, Commerce displayed what can best be described as a lack of common sense. While Commerce certainly should pay great attention to the particular language used in a court order, it is not to interpret the Court’s language in a vacuum. Rather, if a slip opinion has been issued along with an order or judgment, Commerce should use that document in resolving any questions that may arise. Similarly, Commerce should avoid interpreting a court order in a way that creates a conflict with the discretion conveyed to it by statute. A proper role of courts is to clarify the scope or meaning of any order they issue, upon appropriate request. Had Commerce here sought such a clarification before issuing its Remand Determination, much of the time and cost associated with the current litigation, as well as the further remand, could have been avoided. All attоrneys, especially those employed by the government, are obliged to their clients, the judicial system, and society in general, to maximize scarce resources and minimize waste. This Court should not have to again remind Commerce and its attorneys of that obligation.
Notes
The only direct discussion of the Chemical Marketing Reporter (U.S.) values occurs on pages 8 and 9 of the Remand Determination, where Commerce discussed Defendant-Intervenors’ contention that the 36 percent price difference between the octanol-1 and octanol-2 values in the Chemical Marketing Reporter (U.S.) would reflect a similar price difference in the Indian market. In response to this observation, Commerce simply reiterated that although it believed the Chemical Weekly (India) value to be the most appropriate surrogate, it was nevertheless using Union Camp’s cost information to value octanol-2 “in accordance with the Court’s instructions,” Remand Determination at 9.
To determine the correct accounting treatment of a subsidiary product, Commerce examines, in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), whether the value of a subsidiary product is significant or insignificant relative to the other products that result from a particular production process. See
Remand Determination
at 3-4;
Preliminary Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value and Postpоnement of Final Determination: Sebacic Acid From the People’s Republic of China,
59 Fed. Reg. 565,569 (1994) (“By-products are identified by their relatively insignificant sales value, whereas [co-products]
*
* * generally have significant sales value relative to the product under investigation.”);
Elemental Sulphur From Canada; Final Results of Antidumping Finding Administrative Review,
61 Fed. Reg. 8,239,8,241-42 (1996) (identifying several factors Commerce examines to determine the relative significance of a particular subsidiary product). For calculating normal value, Commerce subtracts the sales revenues of by-products from the production costs of the main product.
See Preliminary Results,
USCIT R. 59(b) provides for a 30-day period within which to move for a new trial or rehearing. In contrast, Fed. R. Civ. E 59(b) provides only for a 10-day period. The lengthier period is required by 28 TJ.S.C. § 2646 (1994), a statute only applicable to the Court of International Trade.
In footnote 2 of its Response, Plaintiff notes that, “[w]hether the Order is a ‘final judgment’ or not is irrelevant to application of USCIT R.59. The rule is not restricted to
final
judgments or orders but apрlies to any judgments or orders.” Plaintiffs Response at 7 n.2 (citation omitted). As the discussion above makes clear, this assertion is simply incorrect. Because the authority cited by Plaintiff
(Belfont Sales Corp. v. United States,
Ipsco, Inc. v. United States,
This does not mean that Commerce may not use Union Camp’s internal cost in valuing octanol-2. As indicated in the Remand Memorandum, Commerce must consider and address the appropriateness of using this value, as well as the
Chemical Marketing Reporter
(U.S.) value for octanol-2, in order to have its determination supported by substantial evidence on the record.
Union Camp,
The Court takes judicial notice pursuant to Fed. E.. Evid. 201(c), which provides, in relevant part, that “[a] court may take judicial notice, whether requested or not.” See
Borlem S.A —Empreedimentos Industriais v. United States,
Of course, reflecting the significant deference and flexibility given to Commerce in its conduct of antidumping investigations, this Court does not review Commerce’s administrative decisions de novo. Rather, 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(l)(B) (1994) provides that the Court “shall hold unlawful any determination, finding, or conclusion found * * * to be unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.”
It should be noted that, by invoking the doctrine of primary jurisdiction, the Court is not abdicating its jurisdiction over these questions. Rather, “[u]pon completion of the remand proceedings, this Court will review all the [agency’s] actions to determine if they are based upon substantial evidence and are in accordance with law.” Borlem,
