CIT Invalidates Section 122 Tariffs: May 7, 2026 Ruling
What the Court of International Trade's May 7, 2026 Section 122 ruling means for importers, refund expectations, CAPE, and entries with 9903.03.* codes.
6 posts found.
What the Court of International Trade's May 7, 2026 Section 122 ruling means for importers, refund expectations, CAPE, and entries with 9903.03.* codes.
A practical checklist for importers outside the May 7, 2026 Section 122 judgment: what to preserve, what not to assume, and what to watch next.
Recovery paths when you were not the Importer of Record: direct customs, cooperation-dependent, and downstream contractual options for tariff refunds.
How to track public signals that an upstream importer or carrier preserved tariff claims, what those signals prove, and what they do not.
Tracker of shipper tariff litigation: which carriers filed public lawsuits, which issued statements only, and what it means for downstream customers.
Who CBP usually pays first on tariff refunds, why that is not always who is owed the money, and what to do when a broker or carrier controlled the entry.
Informational only — not legal advice. RefundArrow is not a law firm, and this resource does not create an attorney‑client relationship with Himmelstein & Adkins, LLC. Tariff/refund outcomes depend on your facts, entry records, and evolving CBP/court guidance; consult qualified customs counsel for advice on your situation.