Ground 1
22 The central issue raised by way of ground 1 is whether, in reaching its conclusion that the purchases or sales of the relevant goods in respect of which the respondent had made an anti-dumping application were not required to be treated as non-arms length transactions, the Panel proceeded on the basis of a legally incorrect construction of s 269TAA(1)(b) of the Customs Act.
23 Mr Borsky QC who appeared with Mr Clolek for the Applicant described the provisions of Part XVB of the Customs Act 1901 - Special Provisions relating to dumping duties which extend over 201 pages of the statute book (ss 296SM to 296ZZY) as Byzantine. Mr Borsky's reference to those provisions as Byzantine might be thought to unfairly cast a slur on the reputation of an extraordinary vanished empire. Although I am charged with being mindful that the task of construction of any statutory language requires regard to be had to its text read as part of the Act as a whole, fortunately the central contention of the Applicant concerns the proper construction of only one section of Part XVB's complex web of provisions; specifically, the true meaning of the language in s 269TAA(1)(b).
24 Section 269TAA in which that subsection appears is as follows:
269TAA Arms length transactions
(1) For the purposes of this Part, a purchase or sale of goods shall not be treated as an arms length transaction if:
(a) there is any consideration payable for or in respect of the goods other than their price; or
(b) the price appears to be influenced by a commercial or other relationship between the buyer, or an associate of the buyer, and the seller, or an associate of the seller; or
(c) in the opinion of the Minister the buyer, or an associate of the buyer, will, subsequent to the purchase or sale, directly or indirectly, be reimbursed, be compensated or otherwise receive a benefit for, or in respect of, the whole or any part of the price.
(1A) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(c), the Minister must not hold the opinion referred to in that paragraph because of a reimbursement in respect of the purchase or sale if the Minister is of the opinion that the purchase or sale will remain an arms length transaction in spite of the payment of that reimbursement, having regard to any or all of the following matters:
(a) any agreement, or established trading practices, in relation to the seller and the buyer, in respect of the reimbursement;
(b) the period for which such an agreement or practice has been in force;
(c) whether or not the amount of the reimbursement is quantifiable at the time of the purchase or sale.
(2) Without limiting the generality of subsection (1), where:
(a) goods are exported to Australia otherwise than by the importer and are purchased by the importer from the exporter (whether before or after exportation) for a particular price; and
(b) the Minister is satisfied that the importer, whether directly or through an associate or associates, sells those goods in Australia (whether in the condition in which they were imported or otherwise) at a loss;
the Minister may, for the purposes of paragraph (1)(c), treat the sale of those goods at a loss as indicating that the importer or an associate of the importer will, directly or indirectly, be reimbursed, be compensated or otherwise receive a benefit for, or in respect of, the whole or a part of the price.
(3) In determining, for the purposes of subsection (2), whether goods are sold by an importer at a loss, the Minister shall have regard to:
(a) the amount of the price paid or to be paid for the goods by the importer; and
(b) such other amounts as the Minister determines to be costs necessarily incurred in the importation and sale of the goods; and
(c) the likelihood that the amounts referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) will be able to be recovered within a reasonable time; and
(d) such other matters as the Minister considers relevant.
(4) For the purposes of this Part, 2 persons shall be deemed to be associates of each other if, and only if:
(a) both being natural persons:
(i) they are members of the same family; or
(ii) one of them is an officer or director of a body corporate controlled, directly or indirectly, by the other;
(b) both being bodies corporate:
(i) both of them are controlled, directly or indirectly, by a third person (whether or not a body corporate); or
(ii) both of them together control, directly or indirectly, a third body corporate; or
(iii) the same person (whether or not a body corporate) is in a position to cast, or control the casting of, 5% or more of the maximum number of votes that might be cast at a general meeting of each of them; or
(c) one of them, being a body corporate, is, directly or indirectly, controlled by the other (whether or not a body corporate); or
(d) one of them, being a natural person, is an employee, officer or director of the other (whether or not a body corporate); or
(e) they are members of the same partnership.
25 It is uncontentious that the relevant transformers, the sales of which were the subject of the investigations that had been terminated by the Commissioner, were not fungible commodities: rather they were large individual items of manufacture. Each was constructed only after tenders defining their specifications had been called and accepted. It is not suggested that that circumstance will change in the future.
26 The Commissioner, whose decisions the Panel was charged with reviewing, had determined that the relevant sales of those transformers had been arms length transactions. He had terminated the investigations on that premise.
27 Mr Borsky advances no submission that, but for the requirements of s 269TAA(1)(b), the Panel could be concluded to have erred in affirming the Commissioner's decision. The alleged error in the Panel's understanding of and application of that subsection is thus critical to the disposition of ground 1 in this proceeding.
28 Mr Borsky submits that the Panel's error is revealed at [47] of its reasons. That paragraph is as follows:
47. In my opinion, the influence with which s 269TAA(1) is concerned is influence as to price. It is concerned with the appearance of variation from the price that would have been agreed had the sale been negotiated at arms length. Any other effect does not provide a reason why the price agreed between the parties should not be adopted as the export price under s 269TAA(1) or result in the transaction not being used for the determination of the normal value under s 269TAC(1).
29 Mr Borsky submits that the Panel's reasoning that s 269TAA(1)(b) is concerned only with an "appearance of variation from the price that would have been agreed had the sale been negotiated at arms length" involves an error of law. The error revealed in that paragraph was a statement of the Panel's understanding of the legal test. It had then applied that erroneous understanding in its further reasoning. That was so in respect of the Panel's finding at [55] that the conclusion earlier reached by the Commissioner that the impugned export sales had been arms length transactions was correct. Necessarily it was also so when the Panel had affirmed the Commissioner's decision on that basis. The Panel's erroneous construction of the statute had infected both of those conclusions with legal error.
30 But for that error, Mr Borsky submits, the Panel would have given consideration to the correct question posed by s 269TAA(1)(b); that is whether the price of those sales appeared to have been influenced by the relationship between the parties. In that regard whatever might have been the price had those sales been negotiated at arms length, that, as a matter of statutory construction, was an irrelevant consideration. If commercial or other relationships appeared to have influenced the price of a transaction, s 269TAA(1)(b) required the Panel to proceed on the basis that the sales were not at arms length. By taking into account that there was nothing to suggest the prices so set had differed from that which would have been established if they had been at arms length, the Panel had taken into account an irrelevant consideration. It had thus fallen into jurisdictional error.
31 In the course of oral argument the Court enquired of Mr Borsky whether it necessarily followed that the error the Applicant submitted the Panel had fallen into at [47] of its reasons had infected the balance of its reasoning and its ultimate conclusion. It sought Mr Borsky's response to whether, when read as a whole and without an eye to the establishment of error, the asserted flawed reasoning of the Panel might not have been confined to its discussion of the relevance of the TPS Report as the Panel discussed at [46]-[48].
32 Mr Borsky rejected being taken by surprise by the Court's enquiry and did not seek the opportunity to file any supplemental submissions (Transcript p 32, lines 25 and following). Nonetheless, in light of the limited opportunity provided to the Applicant to respond, the Court later made orders in chambers to facilitate the filing of brief supplemental written submissions.
33 To give proper attention to those submissions and so that the impact of the error said to have been exposed at [47] can be determined, it is appropriate first to set out the Panel's consideration of the case that had been advanced by the Applicant that the Commissioner had been wrong to have treated the related party sales as arms length transactions. The Panel's reasoning was as follows;
35. The applicant advanced three grounds why the Commissioner was wrong to treat the related party sales as arms length transactions. They are outlined at paragraph 23.
36. The applicant's position is founded on the fact that the exporters from China and the importers into Australia were, in the cases identified above, related companies. The applicant said that this gave the 'appearance' that the price was influenced by the relationship between them or within the group. The TPS Report dealt with the capacity for profit shifting within large multinational groups and the ability of 'head office' to influence price. It was said to provide evidence supporting the appearance of influence. The applicant contended that, despite this evidence, the Commissioner did not consider whether the transactions were arms length transactions. The applicant also argued that the Commissioner was concerned with whether the transactions were in fact influenced by the relationship of the parties, rather than whether they appeared to be influenced by the relationship as required by s 269TAA(1)(b).
37. There is some force to some of the applicant's arguments.
38. The Commissioner dealt with s 269TAA(1) at Part 6.3 of TER 507. The Report said:
The Commission considers that section 269TAA does not exhaustively set out the criteria for determining whether a transaction is, or is not, 'arms length'. Even if none of the circumstances in section 269TAA exist, the Commission may still examine the relevant information in order to determine whether there has been genuine bargain between buyer and seller.
In practical terms, the mere fact that parties are legally associated is not taken to automatically mean that they cannot be engaged in 'arms length' transactions. In assessing whether transactions between related parties comprise 'arms length' transactions, the Commission looks beyond the legal or functional relationship. It will determine whether the parties deal with each other as parties at 'arms length' would, and whether the outcomes are the result of real bargaining.
Based on these considerations, whether a transaction is an 'arms length' transaction is a matter of fact to be determined having regard to all the circumstances of the sale in question…
39. The Commissioner's discretion under s 269TAA(1)(b) is more limited than this passage contemplates. Section 269TAA provides criteria which, if established, lead to the conclusion that a transaction was not an arms length transaction. If the criterion set out in s 269TAA(1)(b) is satisfied, the transaction is not an arms length transaction. The Commissioner has no residual discretion to treat such a transaction as an arms length transaction.
40. The applicant pointed out that s 269TAA(1) uses the word 'appears'. That word was included by an amendment to s 269TAA(1) in 2013. The applicant referred to the Explanatory Memorandum for the Customs Amendment (Anti-dumping Measures) Bill 2013 (Explanatory Memorandum). The passage from the Explanatory Memorandum dealing with s 269TAA(1) reads:
19 Sub section 269TAA(1)(c), operating with sub-section 269TAA(2), allows 'sales at a loss' to not be treated as arms length transactions during an investigation or a review.
20 Subsection 269TAA(1)(b) specifies that where 'the price is influenced' by a relationship between the buyer and seller, it shall not be treated as an arms length transaction. This section can be used to address a range of circumstances where a relationship between the parties affects the price paid or payable for goods.
21 Article 2.3 of the Anti Dumping Agreement sets out procedures for establishing an export price where there is no export price or the export price appears unreliable to the authorities concerned. Specifically Article 2.3 provides that "where it appears" an export price is unreliable because of an association or compensatory arrangement between the parties, an export price may be established by specified alternative means.
22 By including the phrase 'the price appears to be' in paragraph 269TAA(1)(b) the Customs Act is better aligned with the Anti-Dumping Agreement, and recognises that the evidence that authorities may have available in an investigative process may not be entirely conclusive as to the effect of a relationship on a price, and instead allows a reasoned and objective approach to such an issue based on what the available information suggests.
41. The applicant's argument is supported by passages from TER 507 which suggest that the Commissioner was required to be positively satisfied that the transaction was influenced by the relationship between the parties. For example, in the case of Siemens, TER 507 said that the Commissioner was satisfied that the export sales between Siemens Jinan and its Australian purchaser 'were the result of arms length transactions' 'having regard for the findings contained in the combined Siemens Jinan verification report'. At page 13 of the Exporter Verification Report for Siemens Australia the Commissioner said:
In respect of Siemens Jinan's Australian sales of the goods during the period, the verification team found no evidence that:
• there was any consideration payable for, or in respect of, the goods other than its price; or
• the price was influenced by a commercial or other relationship between the buyer, or an associate of the buyer, and the seller, or an associate of the seller; or
• the buyer, or an associate of the buyer, was directly or indirectly reimbursed, compensated or otherwise receive a benefit for, or in respect of, the whole or any part of the price.
The verification team therefore considers that all export sales to Australia made by Siemens Jinan during the period were arms length transactions.
42. The approach in respect of the other exporters with related importers was the same.
43. Section 269TAA(1)(b) does not require the Commissioner to be satisfied that, as a matter of fact, the export price was influenced by the relationship between the exporter and importer. A transaction may appear to be influenced by the relationship between the parties even if there is not enough evidence to satisfy the Commissioner, on the balance of probabilities, that the transaction was in fact influenced by the relationship. The reference to 'appears' in s 269TAA(1) imports a lower standard than would be necessary if the Commissioner was required to be satisfied that, in fact, price was not influenced by the parties' relationship. The Commissioner must treat a transaction as falling within s 269TAA(1)(b) if it merely 'appears' that the price is influenced by the relationship. Consequently, a statement that the Commissioner was not satisfied that the price was (in fact) influenced by the relationship between the parties would not address the statutory criterion.
44. However, the Commissioner must still act on all the information available to him. If there is some information which gives the appearance of influence and other evidence which establishes that, in fact, the prices were not influenced by the relationship between the parties, the Commissioner is entitled, and indeed obliged, to act on all the information available to him. This is consistent with paragraph 22 of the Explanatory Memorandum. The Minister or Commissioner is to reach a conclusion based on what (all) the available information suggests. Conversely, if there is no evidence from which it 'appears' that the price was influenced by the relationship, the Commissioner may treat the transaction as an arms length transaction.
45. In my opinion, the Commissioner does not fall into error by conducting the investigation with a view to ascertaining whether, in fact, the transaction was influenced by the relationship between the parties. It may be that the inquiries will not enable the Commissioner to reach a positive conclusion about the fact of influence. If, at the end of that inquiry, there was evidence which fell short of that standard, but gave the appearance of influence, the transaction would not be an arms length transaction.
46. In the present case, the applicant contends that there is information available to the Commissioner which gives the appearance that the sales between the related exporters and importers were 'influenced by a commercial or other relationship between the buyer, or an associate of the buyer, and the seller, or an associate of the seller'. It pointed to the TPS Report. Ms Smits, the author, has extensive experience working as a consultant in the field of transfer pricing. She was asked the question:
Would prices between relevant related entities (ie importers and exporters) of the following multinational suppliers of power transformers … be influenced by their commercial, structural or other relationship?
Ms Smit opined:
…the price between related parties is invariably influenced by the commercial, structural and other relationships between the entities.
However, Ms Smit also said that the question she was asked:
… is not concerned with whether prices between related entities of the multinational PT suppliers are or are not at a level that would pertain in an arm's length transaction.
47. In my opinion, the influence with which s 269TAA(1) is concerned is influence as to price. It is concerned with the appearance of variation from the price that would have been agreed had the sale been negotiated at arms length. Any other effect does not provide a reason why the price agreed between the parties should not be adopted as the export price under s 269TAA(1) or result in the transaction not being used for the determination of the normal value under s 269TAC(1).
48. I am not, therefore, persuaded, that Ms Smit's report provides a basis for concluding that the prices 'appeared' to be influenced by the relationships between exporters and importers in this case, within s 269TAA(1)(b).
49. I accept that relationships between the exporters and importers provides an opportunity for the price to be influenced and that this might well lead the Commissioner to scrutinise the transactions more carefully than transactions between unrelated parties. It must be borne in mind, however, that the opportunity and the capacity to influence the price, is not the same thing as actually influencing the price. It does not follow that the appearance of influence, such as that which might exist between related exporters and importers, creates the appearance that the influence has been exercised.
50. I also note that s 269TAA(1) does not enable the Commissioner to reframe the nature of the commercial relationship between exporter and importer. In the present case, for example, importers did not purchase the goods on their own account, in the hope that customers would approach them for a power transformer. Power transformers are bespoke products. This background would inform the commercial relationship between exporters and importers who were not members of the same corporate group.
51. The Commissioner referred to the practice identified in the Dumping and Subsidy Manual to identify whether related party transactions are arms length. The practice is to compare the related party transaction to other similar transactions between parties who are not relation. The Commissioner considered that this approach was not possible in this case because the exporters did not sell goods to unrelated parties.
52. The applicant claimed that, in light of the TPS Report and the difficulties with the method of inquiry outlined in the Manual, the Commissioner failed to make inquiries into whether prices were influenced by the commercial and structural relationships between the related parties. This is not correct. The Commissioner did make inquiries. Documents were obtained from the related parties and the issue raised in verification visits. Information gathered during those inquires is identified in the worksheets prepared in respect of the exporters and importers. The worksheets contained confidential information and were not disclosed to the applicant.
53. The information provided about the dealings between exporter and importer showed that the details of the arrangements between them varied. In broad terms, xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxx xxx xxxxxxxxxxx (A description of the relationship between exporters and importers - confidential to the importers and the exporters). The sales between exporter and importer were formalised. On occasions, the documentation attributed liability for defects and overruns. One set of documentation even allowed for determination of disputes by an independent arbitrator.
54. Although the conclusions in the various verification reports were expressed in terms of a lack of evidence to persuade the Commissioner that the export prices were in fact influenced by the relationship between the exporter and importer, the evidence also supports the conclusion that the prices did not appear to be influenced by the relationship of the parties.
55. For these reasons, I consider that the conclusion reached by the Commissioner in relation to whether the export sales were arms length transactions within s 269TAA(1) was correct. The applicant did not raise any other grounds in respect of the decisions under s 269TDA(1) (Citations omitted).