寻求关税退款的企业涌向经验丰富的鲜为人知的美国法院


2026-03-03T11:05:43.873Z / 路透社

作者:汤姆·哈尔斯(Tom Hals)和大卫·托马斯(David Thomas)

2026年3月3日 上午11:05 UTC 更新于47分钟前

(图片说明:2024年11月26日,美国华盛顿乔治敦社区,黑色星期五准备期间,一名联邦快递(FedEx)司机站在包裹旁,背景是送货卡车。路透社/贝努瓦·泰西埃(Benoit Tessier) 购买授权,打开新标签页)

  • 摘要
  • 企业
  • 跨国公司和小型企业提起2000起关税退款诉讼
  • 最高法院将退款流程交由海关和贸易法院法官处理
  • 贸易律师建议美国海关与边境保护局(CBP)为小型进口商建立简单的退款流程

3月3日(路透社)——寻求超过1300亿美元关税退款的进口商正纷纷涌向美国一个鲜为人知的贸易法院,而该法院现在必须解决预计会出现的大量案件。

根据法院记录,联邦快递(FDX.N)和欧莱雅(OREP.PA)等跨国公司以及数百家小型企业已在曼哈顿的美国国际贸易法院提起约2000起诉讼,要求退还去年唐纳德·特朗普总统实施的关税。这些案件可能只是冰山一角——2月20日最高法院裁定非法的关税涉及超过30万家进口商。

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根据法院数据,案件数量较2024年激增,当时该法院仅收到252起新案件。

最高法院未直接处理退款问题,而是将其交由海关官员和该贸易法院的8名在职法官处理。该法院通常处理反倾销措施和进口分类纠纷,涵盖从百叶窗到猪油等各类商品。

由玩具公司Learning Resources、烈酒进口商VOS Selections及其他进口商提起的最高法院案件现在已回到贸易法院处理。

五名原告的律师在2月24日的法院文件中建议,他们的诉讼应作为测试案例,以确定退款的计算和发放方式。

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在此期间,其他案件将被搁置。

并非所有人都愿意等待。

绝大多数缴纳关税的企业是小型进口商,他们希望绕过诉讼流程,因为这可能花费数千美元的法律费用。

他们希望美国海关与边境保护局(CBP)建立一个简单、低成本的退款流程,例如专门的网页门户,用于输入基本信息以生成退款申请。

贸易律师表示,CBP可能会要求进口商通过其既定的行政流程提交正式抗议。使流程复杂化的是,2025年初缴纳的关税退款可能与近期缴纳的关税退款处理方式不同。

曾在当前关税退款索赔浪潮中提起诉讼的贸易律师约翰·彼得森(John Peterson)表示,流程是“最大的问题”。

美国海关与边境保护局未回应置评请求。

类似处理方式


在2月24日的文件中,进口商的律师提醒贸易法院,该法院曾组织过数千起退款诉讼,尽管涉及的潜在索赔人数量和金额要少得多。

1998年美国最高法院一项推翻了已征收11年的出口税的裁决,引发了一波类似当前关税退款要求的诉讼浪潮。

法院文件称:“本法院在挑战港口维护费时采用了类似的方法。”

贸易法院没有同时处理数千起案件,而是暂停了诉讼,并成立了一个由专门从事贸易的原告律师组成的指导委员会,由该委员会监督唯一继续进行的案件。该测试案例用于诉讼诸如退款利息和诉讼期限等问题,测试案例中的裁定适用于所有诉讼。

在最高法院推翻该税款不到六个月后,法院批准了退款流程。该流程要求每个索赔人单独起诉,然后向CBP提交索赔表格。如果进口商与CBP存在分歧或出现法律问题,双方可以请求法院审查索赔。

根据贸易法院网站上发表的一篇关于该案件的论文,在最高法院下令废除港口税后约2.5年内,约有10万美元(原文应为“10亿美元”?注:此处原文为”$730 million”)被支付给多达10万名索赔人。

VOS Selections及当前诉讼中的其他四名原告的法律团队敦促贸易法院基本遵循这一模式,让他们的案件推进以建立可适用于所有人的退款流程。

虽然港口税诉讼提供了一个框架,但与需要退还的巨额关税支付量相比,任何框架都显得不足。根据政府法院文件,截至12月10日,非法关税已对约3400万批货物征收。

未参与关税退款案件的贸易律师丹尼尔·皮卡德(Daniel Pickard)表示:“仍有很多问题需要解答,而当涉及到1330亿美元(原文应为“1300亿美元”?注:此处原文为”$133 billion”)时,必然会有争议。因此,在一切结束前,肯定还会有大量的诉讼。”

汤姆·哈尔斯(Tom Hals)在特拉华州威尔明顿、大卫·托马斯(David Thomas)在芝加哥报道;迈克·斯卡尔塞拉(Mike Scarcella)补充报道;由诺埃琳·沃尔德(Noeleen Walder)、艾米·史蒂文斯(Amy Stevens)和伊森·史密斯(Ethan Smith)编辑

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Tariff-refund seekers flock to a little-known US court with big-case experience

2026-03-03T11:05:43.873Z / Reuters

By Tom Hals and David Thomas

March 3, 2026 11:05 AM UTC Updated 47 mins ago

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A driver of FedEx stands with packages near a delivery truck during Black Friday preparations in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, U.S., November 26, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

  • Summary
  • Companies
  • Multinationals and smaller firms file 2,000 lawsuits for tariff refunds
  • Supreme Court leaves refund process to customs and trade court judges
  • Trade lawyers suggest CBP establish simple refund process for smaller importers

March 3 (Reuters) – Importers seeking their share of more than $130 billion in tariff refunds are flocking to a little-known U.S. trade court, which must now figure out how to deal ​with what is expected to be an explosion of cases.

Multinationals such as FedEx(FDX.N), opens new tab and L’Oreal(OREP.PA), opens new tab and hundreds of smaller companies have filed around 2,000 lawsuits at the U.S. Court ‌of International Trade in Manhattan, seeking refunds for tariffs imposed last year by President Donald Trump, according to court records. The cases could be the tip of an iceberg – the tariffs that were ruled illegal by the Supreme Court on February 20 were levied on more than 300,000 importers.

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The number of filings represents a dramatic increase from 2024, when only 252 new cases were filed in the court, according to court data.

The Supreme Court did not ​address refunds, leaving that to customs officials and the eight active judges on the trade court, which typically handles disputes over anti-dumping measures and import classifications on everything from ​window shades to pig fat.

The Supreme Court cases, which were brought by toy company Learning Resources, spirits importer VOS Selections and other importers, are now back ⁠at the trade court.

Lawyers for five of the plaintiffs suggested in a February 24 court filing that their lawsuits should serve as test cases to determine how the refunds will be ​calculated and issued.

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In the meantime, other cases would be put on hold.

Not everyone wants to wait.

Smaller importers, which make up the vast majority of companies that paid tariffs, want to bypass the process ​of bringing a lawsuit, which can cost thousands of dollars in legal fees.

They are hoping Customs and Border Protection will establish a simple, low-cost process for refunds, such as a dedicated web portal for entering basic information to generate a reimbursement.

Trade lawyers said CBP could require importers to go through its established administrative process that requires filing official protests. Complicating the process, refunds on tariffs paid early in 2025 might be treated differently than tariffs ​paid more recently.

The process, according to John Peterson, a trade lawyer who has filed cases in the current wave of tariff-refund claims, is “the mega-question.”

CBP did not respond to a request for comment.

SIMILAR ​APPROACH


In their February 24 filing, the importers’ lawyers reminded the trade court that it has experience organizing thousands of refund lawsuits, albeit involving many fewer potential claimants and much less money.

A wave of refund litigation similar ‌to the ⁠current demands for tariff reimbursements kicked off following a 1998 U.S. Supreme Court decision that struck down a tax that had been collected from exporters for 11 years.

“This court employed a similar approach with respect to the challenges to the Harbor Maintenance Fee,” the court filing said.

Rather than oversee thousands of cases simultaneously, the trade court paused the lawsuits and set up a steering committee of plaintiffs’ lawyers specializing in trade who then oversaw the one case that proceeded. The test case was used to litigate questions such as interest on refunds and deadlines to sue. Orders entered in ​the test case applied to all lawsuits.

Less than ​six months after the Supreme Court struck ⁠down that tax, the court approved a refund process. It required each claimant to sue individually and then send a claim form to the CBP. If the importer and CBP disagreed or legal questions surfaced, the parties could ask the court to review the claim.

Within about 2-1/2 years of ​the Supreme Court order striking down the harbor tax, about $730 million was paid out to as many as 100,000 claimants, according to a ​paper about the case published ⁠on the trade court’s website.

The legal team for VOS Selections and the four other plaintiffs in the current litigation urged the trade court to basically follow that model, letting their cases proceed to establish a refund process that could be applied to everyone.

While the harbor-tax litigation provides a framework, nothing compares to the sheer volume of tariff payments that need to be unwound. As of December 10, the illegal ⁠tariffs were collected ​on about 34 million shipments, according to a government court filing.

“There’s still a lot of questions that are going ​to need to be answered, and whenever you have $133 billion at stake, there’s going to be disputes,” said Daniel Pickard, a trade attorney, who has not filed tariff-refund cases. “So you’ve got to think that there’s going to be a whole ​bunch more litigation before this is all over.”

Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware, and David Thomas in Chicago; Additional reporting by Mike Scarcella; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Amy Stevens and Ethan Smith

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