Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 9012 of 2003
PETITIONER:
M/s. S & S. Enterprise
RESPONDENT:
Designated Authority & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 22/02/2005
BENCH:
Ruma Pal,Arijit Pasayat & C.K. Thakker
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
RUMA PAL, J.
The appellant imported lead acid batteries from
Bangladesh during the period 1.2.2000 to 13.9.2001. The total
number of batteries so imported were found to be less than 3%
of the total imports of such batteries into India during that
period. This was so found by the Designated Authority (the
respondent No.1), on an investigation consequent upon a
complaint lodged by the private respondent under Rule 5 of the
Customs Tariff (Anti-Dumping Duty on Dumped Articles and for
Determination of Injuries) Rules 1995 (referred to as ’the
Rules’).
Rule 14(d) inter alia provides that if the Designated
Authority determines that the volume of the dumped imports
actual or potential from a particular country accounts for less
than 3% of the imports of the like product, he shall terminate
the investigation immediately. Nevertheless the respondent
No.1 continued the investigation in respect of the imports from
Bangladesh on the finding that the value of imports made from
Bangladesh was more than 6% which was more than the de
minimis limit of 3% as provided under Rule 14(d). On 7th
December, 2001 the Respondent No.1 published the final
finding determining that anti-dumping duty was payable in
respect of such imports of batteries during the period under
investigation. The Ministry of Finance accepted the
recommendation of the respondent No.1 and notified the Anti-
dumping Duty by Notification dated 2.1.2002.
The appellant preferred an appeal before the Central
Excise & Gold (Control Appellate Tribunal (CEGAT). The
Tribunal rejected the submission of the appellant that the
Designated Authority should have computed the volume of
exports on the basis of quantity rather than on the basis of
price. It held that the word "volume" in the context of Rule 14
meant value.
In our opinion, the interpretation of Rule 14(d) by the
respondent No.1 and the Tribunal is incorrect and contrary to
its language. The imposition of dumping duty is under Section
9A of the Customs Tariff Act 1975 and the Rules and is the
outcome of the General Agreement on Tariff and Trade
(GATT) to which India is a party. The purpose behind the
imposition of the duty is to curb unfair trade practices resorted
to by exporters of a particular country of flooding the domestic
markets with goods at rates which are lower than the rate at
which the exporters normally sell the same or like goods in
their own countries so as to cause or be likely to cause injury to
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the domestic market. The levy of dumping duty is a method
recognized by GATT which seeks to remedy the injury and at
the same time balances the right of exporters from other
countries to sell their products within the country with the
interest of the domestic markets. Thus the factors to constitute
’dumping’, is (i) an import at prices which are lower than the
normal value of the goods in the exporting country; (ii) the
exports must be sufficient to cause injury to the domestic
industry.
However a negligible quantity of imports would not be
sufficient to cause such injury. Article 5.8 of the Agreement on
Implementation of Article VI of the GATT, 1994 makes this
clear:
"An application under paragraph 1 shall be
rejected and an investigation shall be
terminated promptly as soon as the
authorities concerned are satisfied that
there is no sufficient evidence of either
dumping or of injury to justify proceeding
with the case. There shall be immediate
termination in cases where the authorities
determine that the margin of dumping is de
minimis, or that the volume of dumped
imports, actual or potential, or the injury, is
negligible. The margin of dumping shall be
considered to be de minimis if this margin
is less than 2%, expressed as a
percentage of the export price. The
volume of dumped imports shall normally
be regarded as negligible if the volume of
dumped imports from a particular country is
found to account for less than 3% of
imports of the like product in the importing
Member, unless countries which
individually account for less than 3% of the
imports of the like product in the importing
Member collectively account for more than
7% of imports of the like product in the
importing Member."
The de minimis rule as far as the price is concerned is
when the dumping margin or the difference between the export
price of the article and its normal value, is less than 2%. In
other words the exporter is selling the goods in India at almost
the same price that it does in its country. As far as quantity is
concerned, if the export accounts for less than 3% of the total
imports of the like article into India, it is treated as too trivial for
the law and is ignored.
The Rules have also distinguished between volume as
meaning quantity on the one hand and price on the other. For
example under Rule 11(2), the Designated Authority is required
to determine the injury to the domestic industry taking into
account, inter-alia, the volume of dumped imports and their
effect on the price in the domestic market for like articles. In
Section 14 itself, such distinction is maintained in Rule 14 (c)
and (d). Of particular significance is Annexure II to the Rules,
which deals with the principles for determination of injury.
Paragraph 1 provides that :
"A determination of injury shall involve an
objective examination of both (a) the volume
of the dumped imports and the effect of the
dumped imports on prices in the domestic
market for like article and (b) the consequent
impact of these imports on domestic
producers of such products."
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Paragraph 2 speaks of the consideration of whether there
has been a significant increase in the dumped imports while
examining the volume of dumped imports and whether there
has been a significant price under cutting by the dumped
imports in order to assess the effect on the prices in the
domestic market i.e. an increase in quantity and a decrease in
the export prices. Again Paragraph 5 which deals with the
causal relationship between dumping and the injury to the
domestic industry speaks of "the volume and prices of imports"
as one of the relevant factors.
The percentage of 3% vis a vis the quantity is not broad
based but determined, we emphasise, with reference to a ’like
article’. The word "like article" has been defined in Rule (2) (d)
as:-
" (d) "like article" means an article which
is identical or alike in all respects to the article
under investigation for being dumped in India
or in the absence of such an article, another
article which although not alike in all respects,
has characteristics closely resembling those of
the articles under investigation."
The consideration of volume would also be limited to
such "like articles".
Therefore, when Rule 14(d) says that the investigation
must be terminated if the ’volume’ of the dumped imports is less
than 3% of the imports of the like product, it must mean that the
quantity of dumped imports must account for less than 3% of
the total imports. To hold otherwise would mean that if the
price is lower than 3%, irrespective of the quantity imported, the
investigation would be dropped and it would, as submitted by
the appellant, lead to the absurd situation that a small number
of expensive imports would invite anti-dumping investigation but
cheap imports flooding the domestic markets would not. In fact
such a situation is exactly what the dumping rules have been
framed to prevent.
Nobody has questioned the preliminary finding of the
Designated Authority that the quantity of the imports from
Bangladesh during the period of investigation was less than 3%
of the total imports of the ’like article’ to India. The investigation
therefore should have been promptly dropped against
Bangladesh.
The respondents’ submission that the preliminary finding
was not conclusive of the matter and was subject to a final
finding is unacceptable and is against the language of Rule
14(d). The proceedings for investigation, are, under Rule 5,
initiated on a written application by the domestic industry. The
application is required to be supported by evidence of (a)
dumping; (b) injury where applicable; and (c) a causal link
between dumping of imports and the alleged injury. The
Designated Authority is required on the basis of the evidence
as adduced by the domestic industry, to arrive at a prima facie
conclusion even before initiating the investigation. The initiation
of the investigation is then publicly notified with copies being
sent to the known exporters of the articles alleged to be
dumped as well as to the Government of exporting countries
and other interested parties.[Rule 6(2)]. Information may be
required by the Designated Authority from such persons who
are required to supply the same, normally within 30 days from
the date of the receipt of the notice. After collecting such
evidence and information which pertain to the ingredients of
dumping, the Designated Authority is required "in appropriate
cases" to record a preliminary finding regarding export price,
normal value and margin of dumping and the injury to the
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domestic industry under Rule 12. If the Designated Authority is
of the opinion on the basis of its preliminary finding that there
has been dumping which has caused injury to the domestic
industry, it may make a preliminary determination of the margin
of dumping. On the basis of the preliminary finding the Central
Government may, under Rule 13, levy provisional duty. It is at
this stage that Rule 14 comes into operation when the
investigation is yet to be completed finally and the final findings
published under Rule 17.
As we hold that it was incumbent on the respondent No.
1 to have closed the investigation under Rule 14(d) once it
came to the conclusion that the volume of dumped imports was
less than 3% of the total imports it is sufficient to upset the
finding of the Tribunal and the respondent No.1 to set aside the
anti dumping duty imposed on the appellant. In the
circumstances, it is unnecessary to decide on the further
challenge raised by the appellant on the basis of violation of
Rule 16.
The appeal is accordingly allowed and the impugned
decisions of the Tribunal and the Designated Authority are set
aside.