Warner Brothers, Inc. appeals from the final decision of the International Trade Commission (ITC) in investigation No. 337-TA-201, which declined to grant Warner’s request for a temporary exclusion order (TEO) because Warner failed to prove that the domestic industry would suffer immediate and substantial harm in the absence of such relief. Because the ITC applied the correct legal standard, and its finding of no immediate and substantial harm is supported by substantial evidence, the decision of the ITC is affirmed. *
OPINION
As a threshold matter in this appeal, the ITC argues that Warner has waived its right to challenge the immediate and substantial harm standard because it failed to file a petition for review of the AU’s initial decision by the Commission. We do not agree. The government’s argument on waiver hopelessly confuses the precedent dealing with requirements that a private litigant must first exhaust administrative remedies with the Commission’s sua sponte right to restrict the disposition of a case to a single dispositive issue.
*564
With respect to the latter, this court held in
Beloit Corp. v. Valmet Oy,
The Commission, on the other hand, is at perfect liberty to reach a “no violation” determination on a single dispositive issue. That approach may often save the Commission, the parties, and this court substantial unnecessary effort. Like many good things, that approach carries with it a risk — here the risk of a reversal, and a consequent need for the Commission to revisit one or more portions of the initial determination on which it had taken no position.
Whether or not a petition for review is filed, the ITC may limit resolution of a case to a single dispositive issue. It may not, however, parse that issue so finely that meaningful judicial review is precluded. In this case, the ITC in its notice of “nonreview” of the initial decision (ID) specifically adopted “that portion of the administrative law judge’s ID finding that there is no immediate and substantial harm to the domestic industry.” Although the ITC’s statement appears to be directed to the factual finding of no immediate and substantial harm, it would make no sense for the ITC to treat that finding as dispositive were it not in agreement with the legal standard. Thus, a challenge to the legal propriety of the standard as well as to the factual satisfaction of that standard may be raised at this time.
With respect to a party’s
waiver
of an issue, the precedent cited by the government has no applicability here.
Tong Seae Industries Co., Ltd. v. USITC,
As we read the current regulations, 19 C.F.R. § 210.55(a)(2), if a party does file a petition for review of the ID, any issue not raised therein “will be deemed to have been abandoned.” That rule obviously applies where a party files such a petition. However, there is no requirement that a party file a petition for review or risk waiver of all adversely decided issues. On the contrary, as indicated in Beloit, supra at 1424, where Valmet filed no petition:
Valmet obviously desires to argue before us the validity and injury issues as insurance against the possibility of our reversing the “no-infringement” finding adopted by the Commission. That desire, and the back-door appeal it would create, are premature. If this court affirms on “no-infringement”, the litigation ends (absent grant of certiorari) favorably to Valmet. If this court reverses on that issue, and if on remand the Commission adopts the portions of the Initial Determination relating to the validity and injury issues, Valmet may appeal that decision to this court at that time.
Beloit clearly did not sanction a rule that a party waives appeal rights by failure to file a petition for review. Where the Commission limits the issues, sua sponte, a reversal on those issues will result in a remand. Id.
Regarding Warner’s challenges to the AU’s refusal to invoke a presumption of irreparable injury in copyright cases, this court has already spoken:
[Sjection 337 does not function merely as the international extension of our patent, trademark and copyright laws____ Instead, section 337 has consistently been interpreted to contain a distinct injury requirement of independent proof.
Textron, Inc. v. U.S. International Trade Commission,
For the foregoing reasons, the ITC’s refusal to issue a temporary exclusion order is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
This appeal was originally decided in an unpublished opinion released January 10, 1986, and has now been reissued in published form.
