U.S. Court of International Trade

judiciary

Last mentioned: Mar 6, 2026

Timeline

  1. Judicial Ruling

    Judge declares tariff expansion illegal and orders full refunds plus interest.

  2. Multi-State Lawsuit

    24 states file suit to block the new tariffs, citing separation of powers violations.

  3. Trade Court Decision

    Judge Richard Eaton rules that companies are legally entitled to refunds.

  4. Appeals Court Refusal

    A federal appeals court declines to delay the implementation of the SCOTUS ruling.

  5. Section 122 Invocation

    Trump administration introduces 10% global tariffs using Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974.

  6. Supreme Court Ruling

    The high court rules 6-3 that President Trump exceeded authority under IEEPA.

  7. Supreme Court Ruling

    The Court strikes down tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).

  8. Record Revenue

    U.S. customs collections hit $287 billion for the fiscal year.

  9. Mass Litigation

    Thousands of U.S. companies file lawsuits at the Court of International Trade.

  10. List 4A Expansion

    Tariffs expanded to include consumer goods like apparel and electronics.

  11. Initial Tariffs

    Trump administration imposes 25% duties on $34 billion of Chinese goods.

Stories mentioning U.S. Court of International Trade 3

regulation Bearish

24 States Challenge Trump’s Section 122 Tariffs Following Supreme Court Defeat

A coalition of 24 states has filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, alleging that newly imposed 10-15% global tariffs under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 are unconstitutional. This legal challenge follows a landmark Supreme Court ruling that invalidated previous tariffs levied under emergency powers, creating significant volatility for global supply chains.

2 sources
regulation Bearish

Judge Orders Massive Refund of 'Illegal' Trump Tariffs in Major Trade Blow

A federal judge has ruled against the Trump administration's tariff implementation, ordering the government to issue refunds for duties deemed illegally collected. This landmark decision marks a significant shift in trade policy enforcement and provides substantial financial relief to thousands of impacted importers.

2 sources
regulation Bullish

Trade Court Orders $175B in Refunds After Trump Tariffs Overturned

A federal judge has ruled that U.S. importers are legally entitled to refunds for billions in tariffs previously invalidated by the Supreme Court. The decision marks a massive fiscal liability for the federal government, with estimates suggesting total payouts could reach $175 billion.

20 sources