96-21522. Procedures for Investigations and Related Proceedings Concerning Unfair Practices in Import Trade  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 165 (Friday, August 23, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 43429-43433]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-21522]
    
    
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    INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION
    
    19 CFR Part 210
    
    
    Procedures for Investigations and Related Proceedings Concerning 
    Unfair Practices in Import Trade
    
    AGENCY: U.S. International Trade Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commission hereby adopts certain interim rules as final 
    rules of practice and procedure for investigations and related 
    proceedings under section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. 
    1337). The Commission also revises the interim rule concerning 
    investigation target dates, and adopts that rule as a final rule. This 
    change is made, in response to public comment, so that any decision 
    that results in a target date beyond fifteen months will be by initial 
    determination. The Commission further revises the final rule concerning 
    modification or rescission of exclusion orders, cease and desist 
    orders, and consent orders to eliminate the publication of Federal 
    Register notices that are not required by law, to eliminate unnecessary 
    publication costs.
    
    DATES: The effective date of these final rules is September 23, 1996. 
    These final rules will apply to all section 337 investigations and 
    proceedings instituted after September 23, 1996, as well as to 
    complaints requesting the institution of a section 337 investigation 
    and petitions for modification or rescission of exclusion orders, cease 
    and desist orders, and consent orders filed after September 23, 1996.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sidney Harris or Paul J. Luckern, 
    Office of Administrative Law Judges, U.S. International Trade 
    Commission, telephone (202) 205-2692 or (202) 205-2694. Hearing 
    impaired individuals can obtain information on the final rules by 
    contacting the Commission's TDD terminal at (202) 205-1810.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Rulemaking Analysis
    
        The final rules proposed in this notice do not meet the criteria 
    enumerated in
    
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    section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866,1 and therefore do not 
    constitute a significant regulatory action for purposes of that 
    Executive Order.
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        \1\ 58 FR 51735, Oct. 4, 1993.
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        In accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act,2 the 
    Commission hereby certifies 3 that the revised rules set forth in 
    this notice are not likely to have a significant economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small business entities. The Commission notes 
    that most section 337 complainants are not small businesses. Moreover, 
    proposed final rule 210.51(a) merely requires any extension of a target 
    date beyond 15 months to be by initial determination, and proposed 
    final rule 210.76(b) merely ceases publication of certain section 337 
    Federal Register notices that are not required by law.4 In any 
    event, the Regulatory Flexibility Act is inapplicable to this 
    rulemaking, because it is not one for which a notice of proposed 
    rulemaking was required under 5 U.S.C. 553(b) or another statute.5
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        \2\ 5 U.S.C. 601 note.
        \3\ Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
        \4\ See 60 FR 53119 (Oct. 12, 1995).
        \5\ See 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
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    Background
    
    Interim rules
    
        On December 30, 1994, the Commission published interim rules 
    implementing the statutory amendments to section 337 effected by the 
    Uruguay Round Agreements Act (URAA) (59 FR 67622, Dec. 30, 1994). 
    Public comment was invited during a 90-day period ending March 30, 
    1995. The Commission received comments from The International Trade 
    Commission Trial Lawyers Assoc. (ITCTLA), Texas Instruments (TI), 
    Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co. (3M), Mr. Gilbert B. Kaplan of 
    the law firm of Hale and Dorr (Kaplan), the Government of Canada 
    (Canada) and the Japan Machinery Exporters' Association (JMEA). The 
    Commission took those comments into account before promulgating these 
    final rules. As these final rules are, with one exception, identical to 
    the interim rules on which public comment was invited and received, no 
    further notice and comment period is found necessary. See e.g. American 
    Transfer & Storage Co. v. I.C.C., 719 F.2d 1283 (5th Cir. 1983); 
    Methodist Hosp. of Sacramento v. Shalala, 38 F.3d 1225 (D.C. Cir. 
    1994); City of Stoughton, Wis. v. EPA, 858 F.2d 747 (D.C. Cir. 1988). 
    Each comment on the interim rules is summarized and the Commission's 
    responses are provided in the section-by-section analysis of the final 
    rules. Only section 210.51(a) is changed from the interim rules. In 
    response to public comment, final rule 210.51(a) now provides that any 
    extension of an investigation target date beyond 15 months shall be by 
    initial determination, subject to discretionary review by the 
    Commission. Final rule 210.76(b)
        Final rule 210.76(b) is being revised to eliminate the provision 
    stating that the Commission will institute proceedings to modify or 
    rescind a remedial order or a consent order by publishing a notice in 
    the Federal Register. This change is being made to increase the 
    efficiency and economy of the section 337 process by eliminating 
    unnecessary publication costs, as recommended by the Commission's 
    Inspector General. See generally Audit Report No. IG-03-94, Review of 
    Ways to Increase the Economy and Efficiency of the Process for 
    Conducting Section 337 Investigations, at pages 2-4 and 8 (Aug. 19, 
    1994).
        Last year, the Commission conducted a separate rulemaking to 
    eliminate provisions of 19 CFR Part 210 requiring the publication of 
    Federal Register notices that are not required by law. The proposed 
    revision of final rule 210.76(b) was inadvertently omitted from the 
    notice of proposed rulemaking published at 60 FR 16082 (Mar. 29, 1995). 
    The notice of final rulemaking published at 60 FR 53117 (Oct. 12, 1995) 
    acknowledged that omission. That notice also stated that the Federal 
    Register publication requirement of final rule 210.76(b) had been 
    suspended in Administrative Orders 95-12 (Mar. 21, 1995) and 95-18 
    (Oct. 4, 1995) and that a proposed revision of final rule 210.76(b) to 
    delete the Federal Register notice requirement would be published for 
    public comment at a later date. See 60 FR at 53119.
        The Commission has since decided, however, that the costs and the 
    administrative burden of utilizing the notice and public comment 
    procedure to revise final rule 210.76(b) outweigh any potential 
    benefits. Significant amounts of staff time and resources are consumed 
    in the preparation of notices for publication. In addition, publication 
    fees are not nominal. Though discounts are available, the fee for 
    publishing a notice in the Federal Register can be as high as $125 per 
    column (with no proration for partial columns) and $375 per page. The 
    Commission also must bear the cost of reproducing the notice for 
    distribution to the public through the Office of the Secretary and 
    other sources, as well as the cost of mailing copies to various bar 
    groups, other Federal agencies, and other interested persons or 
    organizations.
        The notice and comment procedure of 5 U.S.C. 553(b) is not only 
    costly, it also lengthens the time it takes for the Commission to 
    effect the desired rule change. After a notice of proposed rulemaking 
    is published in the Federal Register, interested persons must be given 
    adequate time to review the proposed rules and determine whether they 
    wish to submit comments, as well as adequate time to prepare and file 
    the comments. The Commission must then review those comments before 
    making a final decision on the content of the revised rule. (Moreover, 
    after the Commission makes a final decision on content, the revised 
    rule generally cannot go into effect for at least 30 days after a 
    notice of final rulemaking is published in the Federal Register. See 5 
    U.S.C. Sec. 553(d).)
        Judging by the response to the notice of proposed rulemaking 
    published at 60 FR 16082, it seems unlikely that a notice of proposed 
    rulemaking concerning the revision of final rule 210.76(b) would 
    generate much public comment. In addition to publishing that notice in 
    the Federal Register, the Commission mailed that notice to bar groups, 
    Federal agencies, and other interested persons or organizations that 
    routinely receive such notices. Only one bar group and one agency 
    commented on the proposed revision of the part 210 rules to eliminate 
    the publication of Federal Register notices that are not required by 
    law.
        Even though the aforementioned notice of proposed rulemaking did 
    not set forth a proposed revision of final rule 210.76(b), the ITCTLA 
    urged the Commission not to suspend or eliminate the Federal Register 
    notice requirement of that rule. The ITCTLA noted that the Federal 
    Register is a reliable and readily accessible data base. The ITCTLA 
    added that Federal Register notices of Commission proceedings to modify 
    or rescind a remedial order or a consent order fill a valuable due 
    process role by alerting interested persons to a potential disturbance 
    of the status quo--which enables them to take whatever action they deem 
    necessary to protect their interests.
        The Commission considered the ITCTLA comments, but has decided that 
    final rule 210.76(b) must be revised for the same reasons that the 
    relevant provision of that rule was suspended and that other part 210 
    rules were revised last year to eliminate Federal Register notice 
    requirements. (See 60 FR at 53118.) Those reasons include (1) the need 
    to reduce unnecessary spending, (2) the fact that section 337 notices 
    are available from various sources, (3) the absence of any indication 
    that
    
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    suspension of the Federal Register notice requirement imposed by final 
    rule 210.76(b) has caused significant problems for parties, the 
    Commission's staff, interested members of the public, or other Federal 
    agencies, and (4) the absence of any indication that revising that rule 
    by deleting the publication requirement is likely to cause such 
    problems in the future.
        Interested persons who wish to contest the revision of final rule 
    210.76(b) can petition the Commission to have the revised rule amended 
    or repealed, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(e) and 19 CFR 201.4(b).
        The Federal Register publication requirement of final rule 
    210.76(b) is an agency rule of practice and procedure. Hence, the 
    proposed revision of final rule 210.76(b) to eliminate that requirement 
    need not be published in a notice of proposed rulemaking that solicits 
    public comment. See 5 U.S.C. 553(b).
    
    Section-By-Section Analysis of the Final Rules
    
        Many of the final rules discussed in this notice are identical to 
    the correspondingly numbered interim rules published on December 30, 
    1994. No comment was received on many of the interim rules, and the 
    Commission found no reason to change those interim rules on its own 
    before adopting them as final rules. Thus, the preamble to those final 
    rules is as set forth in the ``Section-By-Section Analysis of the 
    Interim Rules'' found at 50 FR 67624-67626 (Dec. 30, 1994) (hereinafter 
    referred to as ``preamble'').6
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        \6\ The Commission received no comments on the following interim 
    rules: 210.3-210.5; 210.16; 210.21-210.22; 210.24; 210.39; 210.41; 
    210.43; 210.49-210.50.
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        The Commission did receive comments on certain interim rules, and 
    those comments and the views of the Commission are summarized below. 
    The commentary in the December 30, 1994, notice is considered part of 
    the preamble to those final rules, to the extent that such commentary 
    is not inconsistent with the discussion below.
    
    Subpart C--Pleadings
    
    Section 210.14
        The interim rules added a new paragraph (e) to section 210.14 to 
    implement the amendment to Section 337(c) of the Tariff Act with regard 
    to counterclaims. Interim rule 210.14(e) requires that counterclaims be 
    filed not later than 10 business days before the commencement of the 
    evidentiary hearing.
        The ITCTLA, TI, 3M and Kaplan commented that the preamble to 
    interim rule 210.14(e) suggests that the deadline for counterclaims is 
    being set at 10 business days before the evidentiary hearing to permit 
    respondents to use discovery mechanisms to ``identify potential 
    counterclaims'' and that because counterclaims which a respondent can 
    raise also include permissive counterclaims (i.e., claims unrelated to 
    the complaint), the preamble can be construed to support discovery on 
    unrelated matters to determine whether they constitute potential 
    counterclaims.
        Canada and the JMEA objected to the changes made by the URAA 
    regarding counterclaims as insufficient to meet U.S. obligations under 
    the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). Canada and the JMEA 
    further commented on the inability of a respondent to raise a 
    counterclaim at the Commission, at least to the extent that the subject 
    matter of the counterclaim falls within the jurisdiction of the 
    Commission. The JMEA proposed that the Commission draft rules to 
    provide that if a respondent in a first section 337 investigation files 
    a complaint with the Commission alleging violation of section 337 in a 
    second investigation, the second investigation can be joined to the 
    first investigation.
        The requirement that counterclaims be filed not later than ten 
    business days before the commencement of the evidentiary hearing was 
    included to provide a respondent adequate time to identify potential 
    counterclaims while avoiding the distraction that might occur if 
    counterclaims could be filed during (or after) the evidentiary hearing. 
    Discovery at the Commission is not for the purpose of generating a 
    counterclaim and the scope of discovery is not expanded by the new 
    counterclaim provision beyond what was previously allowed in Commission 
    investigations.
        The comments of Canada and the JMEA regarding interim rule 
    210.14(e) are based on their perceptions of deficiencies in the URAA. 
    As such, the Commission does not find it appropriate to incorporate 
    changes based on these comments into its final rules. Moreover, the 
    joinder of two section 337 investigations, as proposed by the JMEA, may 
    be sought by motion under section 210.15. The Commission notes that 
    such a motion for joinder was, in fact, granted in Certain Precision 
    Resistor Chips, 337-TA-63/65, Order No. 2 (May, 1979).
        In view of the foregoing, the Commission has determined that no 
    changes to interim rule 210.14 are warranted.
    
    Subpart D--Motions
    
    Section 210.23
    
        Interim rule 210.23 eliminates the provision allowing the 
    Commission to suspend an investigation because of a proceeding in a 
    court or agency of the United States involving similar subject matter, 
    except for possible antidumping or countervailing duty matters referred 
    to the Department of Commerce by the Commission.
        Canada maintains that interim rule 210.23 may exacerbate 
    discriminatory features of section 337 identified by the GATT Panel 
    Report in Aramid Fiber, BISD 36S/345, Adopted 11/7/89, pertaining to 
    dual proceedings.
        It is important to bear in mind the reason underlying the changes 
    to section 210.23. Interim rule 210.23 reflects the amendments to 
    section 337(b)(1) that eliminated statutory deadlines. Administrative 
    law judges and the Commission retain the inherent authority to suspend 
    an investigation, based on a parallel proceeding, although it is 
    expected that this authority will be used sparingly. Moreover, the 
    addition of 28 U.S.C. 1659 now provides respondents with the ability to 
    obtain a stay of a parallel District Court proceeding.
        In view of the foregoing, the Commission has determined that no 
    changes to interim rule 210.23 are warranted.
    
    Subpart G--Determinations and Actions Taken
    
    Sections 210.42 and 210.51
    
        Interim rule 210.51 requires the administrative law judge, within 
    45 days of institution of an investigation, to set a target date for 
    completion of that investigation. Any decision to set a target date of 
    15 months or more is by initial determination, subject to discretionary 
    review by the Commission. Interim rule 210.42(c) provides, in relevant 
    part, that motions to set a target date exceeding 15 months from the 
    date of institution, pursuant to interim rule 210.51(a), are granted by 
    initial determination.
        The ITCTLA, 3M, TI and Kaplan commented that the Commission should 
    be directly responsible for setting the target dates, and that this 
    decision should not be delegated to the administrative law judges.
        The JMEA commented that the rules should not be administered in a 
    manner that effectively imposes a time limit on the administrative law 
    judge which the JMEA maintained would be the case if
    
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    the discretion of the judge were limited to establishing target dates 
    of 15 months or less. 3M and Kaplan commented that the choice of 15 
    months as the time that triggers Commission review seems to give a 
    degree of approval to target dates exceeding 12 months, and that 
    Commission review should be triggered by any target date that exceeds 
    12 months.
        The Commission finds that it is appropriate for the administrative 
    law judge to set all target dates. Allowing the administrative law 
    judge to set target dates within a 12- to 15-month period of time, 
    without Commission review, greatly simplifies judicial management of 
    investigations. It is expected that the administrative law judges will 
    abide by the intent of Congress and the Commission, and conclude most 
    investigations within the traditional period of 12 months or less.
        The ITCTLA commented that interim rule 210.51, when read in 
    conjunction with the Commission's review authority set forth in 
    Sec. 210.42(h)(3), violates the amended statute's requirement that the 
    Commission shall establish a target date within 45 days after an 
    investigation is instituted with respect to an initial determination 
    setting a target date of more than 15 months. The ITCTLA commented 
    that, for example, should an administrative law judge, 45 days after 
    institution, set a target date of 18 months, the target date will not 
    become the determination of the Commission until 30 day later, or a 
    total of 75 days, and should the Commission choose to review the 
    initial determination the period could be extended even further.
        The ITCTLA further commented that interim rule 210.51 should be 
    amended such that any subsequent modification by the administrative law 
    judge to the target date, based on good cause, should be in the form of 
    an initial determination subject to review by the Commission in every 
    instance.
        The Commission recognizes that section 337(b)(1) requires that the 
    Commission ``within 45 days after an investigation is initiated, 
    establish a target date for its final determination.'' Under interim 
    rule 210.51, any decision by the administrative law judge to set a 
    target date of 15 months or less is not subject to review, and thus 
    will be final within 45 days after institution of the investigation. It 
    is expected that target dates will rarely exceed 15 months. In the rare 
    case where a target date in the first instance is set in excess of 15 
    months, the initial determination and any subsequent review by the 
    Commission will be completed within 45 days of institution, as required 
    by section 337(b)(1). Thus, no modification of interim rule 210.51 is 
    found necessary. The Commission, however, has modified interim rule 
    210.51, such that, under final rule 210.51(a), any extension that would 
    result in a target date beyond 15 months from institution will be by 
    initial determination, and subject to discretionary review by the 
    Commission.
    
    Subpart H--Temporary Relief
    
    Sections 210.52 and 210.70
    
        These rules provide for the posting and forfeiture of a 
    complainant's bond when a complainant seeks temporary relief.
        Canada commented that the statute and rules make no provision for a 
    bond requirement on a complainant where no temporary relief has been 
    sought, and suggested that provision should be made for the 
    indemnification of the defendant in all situations.
        To the extent that Canada's comment is based on its perception of a 
    deficiency in the URAA, the Commission does not consider it appropriate 
    to incorporate changes based on this comment in its rules. Furthermore, 
    the Commission finds no need for such a provision. In cases involving a 
    successful motion for temporary relief, articles may only enter or be 
    sold in the United States during the pendency of an investigation upon 
    the posting of a bond. In cases that do not involve a motion for 
    temporary relief, by contrast, respondents do not require any 
    indemnification, because respondents' articles are not subject to 
    exclusion until a final determination of violation by the Commission.
    
    Subpart I--Enforcement Procedures and Advisory Opinions
    
    Section 210.76
    
        Paragraph (b) of final rule 210.76 requires that the Commission 
    publish a Federal Register notice in order to institute a proceeding to 
    modify or rescind the exclusion order, cease and desist order, or 
    consent order. The Commission proposes to revise paragraph (b) by 
    eliminating the publication requirement and allowing the Commission to 
    institute such proceedings simply by issuing a notice.
    
    Miscellaneous
    
        The JMEA maintained that in order to comply with the spirit of the 
    Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights 
    (TRIPs), the Commission should clarify that (1) the domestic industry 
    requirement under section 337 cannot be satisfied by an individual 
    inventor pursuing his or her personal monetary interest by enforcing 
    his or her paper patent, and (2) that section 337 is not a vehicle for 
    pursuing such personal interest. Those comments, however, relate to 
    questions of statutory interpretation, dealing with the substance of 
    section 337, and do not implicate any Commission procedural rule.
    
    List of Subjects in 19 CFR Part 210
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Business and industry, 
    Customs duties and inspection, Imports, Investigations.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 19 CFR Part 210 is 
    amended as set forth below.
    
    PART 210--ADJUDICATION AND ENFORCEMENT
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 210 will continue to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 19 U.S.C. 1333, 1335, and 1337.
    
        2. The interim rule amendments to Secs. 210.3, 210.4, 210.5, 
    210.14, 210.16, 210.21, 210.22, 210.23, 210.24, 210.39, 210.42, 210.43, 
    210.49, 210.50, 210.52 and 210.70, published on December 30, 1994 (59 
    FR 67622) are adopted as final rules without change.
    
        Note: Sec. 210.21(d) has been further amended by a rule 
    published on Oct. 12, 1995 (60 FR 53120).
    
        3. The interim rule amending Sec. 210.51 (b) and (c) published on 
    December 30, 1994 (59 FR 67622) is adopted as a final rule and 
    paragraph (a) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.51  Period for concluding investigation.
    
        (a) Permanent relief. Within 45 days after institution of the 
    investigation, the administrative law judge shall issue an order 
    setting a target date for completion of the investigation. If the 
    target date does not exceed 15 months from the date of institution of 
    the investigation, the order of the administrative law judge shall be 
    final and not subject to interlocutory review. If the target date 
    exceeds 15 months, the order of the administrative law judge shall 
    constitute an initial determination. After the target date has been 
    set, it can be modified by the administrative law judge for good cause 
    shown before the investigation is certified to the Commission or by the 
    Commission after the investigation is certified to the Commission. Any 
    extension of the target date beyond 15 months, before the investigation 
    is certified to the Commission, shall be by initial determination.
    * * * * *
    
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        4. Paragraph (b) of Sec. 210.76 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.76  Modification or rescission of exclusion orders, cease and 
    desist orders, and consent orders.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Commission action upon receipt of petition. The Commission may 
    thereafter institute a proceeding to modify or rescind the exclusion 
    order, cease and desist order, or consent order by issuing a notice. 
    The Commission may hold a public hearing and afford interested persons 
    the opportunity to appear and be heard. After consideration of the 
    petition, any responses thereto, and any information placed on the 
    record at a public hearing or otherwise, the Commission shall take such 
    action as it deems appropriate. The Commission may delegate any hearing 
    under this section to the chief administrative law judge for 
    designation of a presiding administrative law judge, who shall certify 
    a recommended determination to the Commission.
    
        By Order of the Commission.
        Issued: August 19, 1996.
    
    Donna R. Koehnke,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 96-21522 Filed 8-22-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 7020-02-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
9/23/1996
Published:
08/23/1996
Department:
International Trade Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-21522
Dates:
The effective date of these final rules is September 23, 1996. These final rules will apply to all section 337 investigations and proceedings instituted after September 23, 1996, as well as to complaints requesting the institution of a section 337 investigation and petitions for modification or rescission of exclusion orders, cease and desist orders, and consent orders filed after September 23, 1996.
Pages:
43429-43433 (5 pages)
PDF File:
96-21522.pdf
CFR: (3)
19 CFR 210.42(h)(3)
19 CFR 210.51
19 CFR 210.76