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CIT Dismisses Scope Ruling Challenge; Says 30-Day Filing Period Begins With Mail, Not Email

The 30-day period to challenge scope rulings in court begins on the date the scope ruling is mailed by the Commerce Department, and is not triggered by email communications, said the Court of International Trade as it dismissed Medline Industries’ challenge. Medline had filed suit after Commerce emailed its lawyer a copy of the adverse scope ruling on wooden bedroom furniture from China. But the snail mail scope ruling from a month later actually triggered the period for filing suit, even though Commerce had allegedly misrepresented that no physically mailed scope ruling would be forthcoming. The case will proceed regardless, as Medline filed a separate challenge following its second receipt of the scope ruling. The company expressed concern, however, at the cost of having to appeal this dismissal of its first suit to protect itself from a jurisdictional challenge.

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(Medline Industries, Inc. v. United States, Slip Op. 13-70, dated 05/30/13, Judge Tsoucalas)

(Attorneys: Lawrence Pilon of Hodes Keating for plaintiff Medline Industries, Inc.; Stuart Delery for defendant U.S. government)