This morning the Court of International Trade handed down a ruling that, if it survives appeal, will terminate the 10 percent Section 122 tariffs, which took effect February 24, 2026.
Did the President exceeded his authority when he claimed that a balance-of-payments emergency warranted invoking Section 122. On that question, the judges were direct.
"Nowhere does Proclamation No. 11012 identify balance-of-payments deficits within the meaning of Section 122 as it was enacted in 1974." — Court of International Trade ruling, May 2026
Section 122 of the Trade Act is a narrow, time-limited tool. It gives the President the ability to impose a temporary surcharge of up to 15 percent for a maximum of 150 days in response to a fundamental international payments problem. The court is saying that the proclamation did not meet the balance-of-payments deficit as defined in the statutory language. Just declaring one is not enough.
Two reasons, and they are unrelated to each other but equally important.
This adds to a growing body of case law that the President's tariff-imposing power is narrow. The decision pushes future tariff action back toward the more traditional and durable mechanisms — Section 301 investigations, anti-dumping and countervailing duty proceedings, or actual congressional tax legislation. Each of those carries procedural rigour that broad presidential proclamations do not.
If the ruling holds on appeal, we are likely heading into another major refunds process for the +20 billion dollars already collected. Importers and their brokers have been able to secure refunds via CAPE for the IEEPA duties.
Keep accurate records and await for a decision from the final appeal.
The IEEPA tariff cycle taught us how the refund process can work. CAPE works great but is unforgiving. Compliant entries have never mattered more than ever as the refund process is essentially another audit.
The court ruled that the President exceeded his statutory authority when he invoked Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 to impose a 10 percent baseline tariff under Proclamation 11012. The judges held that the proclamation did not identify a balance-of-payments deficit as Section 122 actually defines one, so the legal basis for the tariffs failed.
What is Section 122 of the Trade Act?Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 gives the President authority to impose temporary import surcharges of up to 15 percent for a maximum of 150 days to address a fundamental international payments problem. The authority is narrow, time-limited, and tied specifically to balance-of-payments emergencies as defined in the 1974 statute.
How much have importers paid in Section 122 tariffs?Estimates suggest importers have paid over 20 billion dollars in Section 122 tariffs since the tariffs took effect on February 24, 2026. The tariffs were in place for 72 days before the Court of International Trade struck them down.
Will the tariffs continue during the appeal?Likely yes, at least in the short term. The administration is expected to seek a stay of the ruling pending appeal, which would keep collection in place. Importers should not assume duty stops accruing on goods entering the United States until clearer guidance from CBP is issued.
How do importers claim refunds if the ruling stands?Refunds would most likely flow through the CAPE submission process, which is the same system used for IEEPA tariff refunds. Protests are filed under 19 CFR 174 within the protest window. Accurate entry data, attestation by the importer of record, and clean documentation is necessary to secure a refund.
Should I file protests now or wait for the appeal?Protest windows run on calendar deadlines from the date of liquidation, not from the date of any court ruling. Entries that liquidated early in the Section 122 period will hit their 180-day protest deadlines regardless of whether the appeal is decided. Coordinate with your customs broker and file protests as necessary.
What is CAPE?CAPE is the refund process for processing IEEPA tariff refunds. It is the most likely vehicle if Section 122 refunds become a reality.
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This article is provided for general information and does not constitute legal or customs advice. Tariff regulations and court rulings change frequently. Consult a licensed customs broker or trade attorney before applying these analyses to specific shipments.
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Related reading: Section 232 April 2026 update | CAPE error codes that importers are seeing | IEEPA refund compliance