Opinion & Order
The United States has moved under US-CIT Rule 59 for reconsideration of the Court’s January 28, 2010 Opinion and Order and the accompanying Judgment for Defendant,
United States v. UPS Customhouse Brokerage, Inc.,
34 CIT -,
Parties’ Contentions I. The United States
Plaintiff asserts errors as follows, which it claims require reconsideration:
A.Argument 1: A New Controlling Legal Standard Required Remand or Reopening Trial
This argument consists of two propositions: that (a) the CAFC Decision announced a new controlling legal standard regarding the correct interpretation of 19 C.F.R. § 111.1 (“ § 111.1”), and (b) that this Court erred by not providing Plaintiff a chance to satisfy that new legal standard by either taking further trial evidence from Plaintiff, or by remanding for administrative proceedings consistent with the new standard. (PL’s Mot. for Reconsideration, Doc. No. 126 (“Motion”) at 4-7.)
B. Argument 2: The Court Improperly Construed Customs Regulations
The government claims that the Court exceeded its proper role in the Post-Appeal Decision when it interpreted various Customs regulations without the benefit of agency interpretation or briefing, and compounded this error by incorrectly concluding that Plaintiff could not prove its case absent evidence that the Fines, Penalties, and Forfeitures Officer (“FP & F Officer”) Bert Webster personally considered all ten § 111.1 factors. (Id. at 7-9.)
C. Argument 3: Customs’ Error Was Harmless and Correctable at Trial De Novo Absent Proof of Substantial Prejudice
This argument stems from Argument 1 — that the CAFC Decision merely announced the correct new legal standard governing the interpretation, of § 111.1. According to the United States, this Court erred in holding Customs’ prior misinterpretation of the regulation to be a procedural irregularity that nullified the agency’s penalty action against Defendant UPS Customhouse Brokerage, Inc. (“UPS”). (Motion at 9-10.) Plaintiff argues (without conceding) that if the agency’s failure to consider all of the § 111.1 factors was procedural, that error was harmless, and that the Court should therefore reopen .the
II. UPS
A. Argument 1
UPS claims that Plaintiffs Argument 1 improperly reiterates points already raised and rejected in the Post-Appeal Decision. (Brief of UPS Customhouse Brokerage, Inc. in Opp’n to Pl.’s Mot. for Reconsideration, Doc. No. 127 (“Def.’s Opp.”) at 4-5.) UPS attacks the idea that the CAFC Decision’s interpretation of § 111.1 is “new” with citations to two Customs Headquarters Rulings that long ago reached the same conclusion about § 111.1 as the CAFC Decision. (Id. at 5 (citing HQ 225010 (July 21, 1994), 1994 U.S. Custom HQ LEXIS 1645, at *7 and HQ 115005 (May 2, 2000), 2000 U.S. Custom HQ LEXIS 906, at *5).)
B. Argument 2
On Argument 2, UPS notes that Plaintiff only contests the Court’s method, not the conclusions of its regulatory analysis; and, regardless of the FP & F Officer’s proper role, Plaintiff failed to present evidence that anyone considered all of the § 111.1 factors. (Id. at 8-9.)
C.Argument 3
On Argument 3, UPS contends that Plaintiffs error was procedural since 19 U.S.C. § 1641(d)(2)(A) requires consideration of the § 111.1 factors and, as the CAFC Decision stated, “Customs did not consider all ten factors listed in 19 C.F.R. § 111.1.”
(Id.
at 10
(quoting CAFC Decision,
Standard of Review
Although the Court’s rules do not explicitly provide for a motion for “reconsideration,” such motions are ordinarily accepted and analyzed under USCIT R. 59.
See, e.g., Peerless Clothing Intern., Inc. v. United States,
33 CIT -,
Discussion
Plaintiffs claim in Argument 1 simply reiterates arguments already elaborated in prior briefs to the Court and rejected in the Post-Appeal Decision. Plaintiffs claim in Argument 2 that the Court erred by interpreting Customs regulations and basing its holding on the role of the FP & F Officer does not merit reconsideration because the Court’s analysis of the FP & F Officer’s role was not essential to the Post-Appeal Decision. Argument 2 is therefore irrelevant to the core reasoning upon which the Court issued its judgment. Plaintiffs claim in Argument 3 that the Court should have found Custom’s administrative error in applying § 111.1 to be harmless, and refused to enter judgment for Defendant absent a showing of substantial prejudice, is based on citations to inapposite case law. Argument 3 also ignores the fact that the Post-Appeal Decision was entirely driven by a careful analysis and application of the specific directives of the CAFC Decision issued in this particular case. Plaintiffs motion for reconsideration is therefore denied.
I. Argument 1: Plaintiff Attempts to Relitigate Issues Already Decided
Plaintiffs contentions in Argument 1 are identical to arguments Plaintiff already made in briefing to the Court before the Court issued the Post-Appeal Decision, and are therefore rejected as improper attempts to relitigate under the guise of a motion for reconsideration.
A. The Court Already Rejected the Argument that the CAFC Decision Announced a Surprising New Interpretation of § 111.1
The Court has already considered and squarely rejected Plaintiffs main contention — that the CAFC Decision constituted a new legal standard controlling § 111.1, which Plaintiff could not have anticipated before trial.
Postr-Appeal Decision,
B. The Court Already Rejected Plaintiffs Request for Evidentiary Proceedings or Remand to Satisfy the “New” Interpretation of § 111.1
The second part of Argument 1 is that the Court erred in refusing to take further evidence from Supervisory Import Specialist and Trade Enforcement Coordinator Lydia Goldsmith relating to the alleged “new” legal standard governing
The Court has already rejected in detail and at length Plaintiffs contention that it had no opportunity to present evidence satisfying the correct legal standard.
Post-Appeal Decision,
Plaintiff knew well in advance of trial that the success of its case could depend upon establishing evidence to satisfy either of the two potential outcomes on the applicability of the § 111.1 factors [i.e. whether or not demonstrating each factor was mandatory]. No flaw in the trial prevented Plaintiff from doing then what it seeks to do now: putting on a witness to testify regarding the consideration given to the ten factors of § 111.1.
Id. at 1354.
Plaintiff conjures an overblown nightmare scenario to support its insistence that it was entitled to rely upon the interpretation of § 111.1 that was rejected in the CAFC Decision: “the Court has ruled that the Government was required to present multiple cases-in-chief to satisfy all possible interpretations of the agency’s own regulations, no matter how unreasonable those interpretations may have been.” (Motion at 5.) This is not at all accurate. The debate between the parties here was specific and related to one central issue: whether Customs was required to consider all ten § 111.1 factors. The Posb-Appeal Decision only indicated that Plaintiff had no excuse for failing to present evidence — which it now claims to have had all along, and offers through one of the witnesses it called at trial — regarding those ten factors.
Post-Appeal Decision,
Plaintiff contends that the Post-Appeal Decision ruled that Plaintiff must adduce proof going to interpretations “no matter how unreasonable.” But the CAFC Decision ultimately determined that the government’s preferred interpretation — that the § 111.1 phrase “will consider” should not be read as mandatory — was the unreasonable interpretation.
See
The second part of Argument 1 also ignores that a finding of fact based on the trial record has already been made on the issue of whether Customs considered all of the § 111.1 factors' — by
this Court.
The Post-Appeal Decision stated the finding “that Plaintiff did not establish at trial that the appropriate Customs officer considered the § 111.1 factors when deciding whether- to impose penalties upon UPS.”
Plaintiff asked, in the alternative, for remand “to allow [Customs] to apply the newly announced standard at the administrative level in the first instance.” (Reply at 9.) The Court already considered extensive case law in addressing Plaintiffs alternative request for remand- — -which was argued even more forcefully by UPS in briefing prior to the Post-Appeal Decision — and squarely rejected that relief.
Post-Appeal Decision,
II. Argument 2: The Post-Appeal Decision Did Not Hinge on Improper Construal of Regulations Regarding the FP & F Officer’s Role
The government misreads the Post-Appeal Decision when it argues that the Court committed manifest error by relying on interpretations of Customs regulations without agency input and improperly determining that evidence was required that the FP & F Officer, Bert Webster, personally considered all of the § 111.1 factors.
The Court did not base its interpretation of the role of the FP & F Officer solely upon regulatory analysis. The Court also reached its conclusions based on a close examination of the testimony of Ms. Goldsmith regarding the FP & F Officer’s role.
Post-Appeal Decision,
The Court does not believe that it acted incorrectly in examining the statutory and regulatory scheme, or that it was mistaken as to the correct role of the FP & F Officer in penalty proceedings. Even if the Court erred in either of these ways, however, the outcome of the case would remain the same. As the post-trial finder of fact, the Court has found that Plaintiff, without adequate excuse, failed to prove at trial that Customs (by its FP & F Officer, Supervisory Import Specialist and Trade Enforcement Coordinator, or any other officer, for that matter) considered all ten § 111.1 factors, and thus failed to demonstrate that it was entitled to recover penalties against UPS.
III. Argument 3: Customs’ Procedural Error Was Not Harmless, Customs Failed to Correct It at Trial De Novo, and Substantial Prejudice Need Not Be Shown
Plaintiff contends in Argument 3 that the Court should have held Custom’s failure to consider all ten § 111.1 factors to be harmless error, and as a consequence should have taken further testimony in order to fulfill its obligation to make find
The Court cannot do what Plaintiff urges. This Court’s Posh-Trial Decision initially embraced a harmless error analysis, but the CAFC Decision, reversing-in-part, rejected that very approach. Plaintiff cites inapposite case law from the CAFC and urges the Court to follow those cases, ignoring the specific directives regarding this case given to this Court in the CAFC Decision. Finally, Plaintiff urges a substantial prejudice analysis that is neither required nor consistent with the CAFC’s mandate. Argument 3 therefore establishes no basis for reconsideration.
A. Errors Regarding § 111.1 Were Dispositive, Not Harmless
Plaintiff contends that Customs committed no error in applying § 111.1, but even if it did, the error could not determine the outcome of the trial. Plaintiff cites
Empire Energy Mgmt. Sys., Inc. v. Roche,
Empire Energy
is inapposite.
Empire Energy
reviewed a contract to construct a power facility for the military, which the military administratively terminated; the plaintiff appealed in part on the basis that “the contracting officer did not conduct an analysis or form a subjective belief that the conditions for default termination were satisfied.”
Empire Energy,
Empire Energy thus bears no direct relevance to the case at hand, in which both this Court and the CAFC have been obliged to examine the 19 U.S.C. § 1641(d)(2)(A) procedure for imposing monetary penalties upon customs brokers, and associated regulation 19 C.F.R. § 111.1, which lists ten specific factors that Customs “will consider” when imposing such monetary penalties. The relevance of the subjective beliefs of the Customs decision maker are not at issue here, and neither is the termination of military contracts.
Plaintiff, nonetheless, urges the Court to extend
Empire Energy
to this case, arguing that
Empire Energy
stands for the
The analysis advocated by Plaintiff is, in fact, essentially a paraphrase of the approach adopted by this Court in its initial Post-Trial Decision. The Post-Trial Decision, although couching its discussion in the language of deference to Customs’ interpretation of § 111.1, held that Customs’ failure to consider all ten factors did not preclude recovery and directly analyzed what the Court saw as the relevant § 111.1 factors on the basis of the trial record.
See
In issuing the Posb-Appeal Decision and Judgment, concluding that the failure of the United States to prove that Customs considered each § 111.1 factor was fatal to recovery, this Court closely examined and hewed to the specific language of the CAFC Decision. For example, the Post-Appeal Decision quoted the CAFC Decision at length and examined the precise nature of the errors identified there — committed by both Customs and by this Court.
B. Substantial Prejudice to Defendant Not Required Here
Plaintiffs final claim is that Customs’ failure to consider all of the § 111.1 factors was, if error at all, a “procedural” error, and that the penalty action thus cannot be set aside absent a showing that UPS was substantially prejudiced by the error. (Motion at 12)
(citing, inter alia, Intercargo Insurance Co. v. United States,
The first response to this argument is, again, that Plaintiffs desired result conflicts with the language of the CAFC De
An examination of the cases cited by Plaintiff suggests why. All of the cases cited by Plaintiff involved notice or service requirements. Violation of “timing requirements” that were “merely procedural aids” was judged harmless.
Dixon,
The regulation here, § 111.1, in contrast to the regulations at issue in the above-cited cases, is not a notice or service requirement. It is also not a regulation benefitting the agency, “relaxed” in this case for reasons of urgency. Section 111.1, to the contrary, cuts to the core of Customs’ penalty case against UPS by partially defining the manner in which Customs may decide whether UPS is liable. The government cites no precedent that violation of such a regulation is presumptively harmless absent a showing of substantial prejudice; the Court will instead continue to follow the only precedent relevant to the decision of
this
case: the CAFC Decision,
United States v. UPS Customhouse Brokerage, Inc.,
Conclusion
The Court has not committed “multiple and manifest errors” as alleged by Plaintiff (Motion at 1) — but would do so if it were to ignore the language of the CAFC Decision and grant this motion. The Court rejects Plaintiffs arguments because they (1) have already been presented to, and rejected by, this Court; (2) are inapplicable to the extent that they misread the basis for the Court’s decision; and (3) urge the Court to ignore the specific directives of the CAFC regarding this particular case.
For the above reasons, it is hereby
ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motion for Reconsideration is denied.
Notes
. Plaintiff contends that the Court improperly construed the FP & F Officer's role, which the
. It is also notable that none of the cases cited by Plaintiff involved a trial court's finding that the plaintiff failed to prove its case being set aside by an appeals court on the basis that the defendant did not show “substantial prejudice” from that failure. Simply stating the idea reveals its absurdity.
