By Mike Scarcella
WASHINGTON, Feb 27 (Reuters) – FedEx was sued in federal court on Friday on behalf of customers seeking refunds from the โglobal shipping company after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled this month that โPresident Donald Trump unlawfully imposed billions of dollars in emergency tariffs on imported goods.
The proposed โclass action in the federal court in Miami, Florida, seeks compensation for potentially millions of shippers who paid import duties and related fees on products that they said should have entered the United States duty-free.
FedEx said in a statement on โFriday: โIf refunds are issued โ to FedEx, we will issue refunds to the shippers and consumers who originally bore those charges.โ
Friday’s lawsuit said FedEx’s promise โ was not legally enforceable. โOur goal is to return to American consumers every penny they were improperly charged,โ said John Yanchunis, a lawyer for plaintiff Matthew Reiser, a Miami โresident.
FedEx is โamong at least 2,000 companies already โsuing the federal government in the โU.S. Court of International Trade to recover tariffs they paid on imported goods under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, known as IEEPA. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on February 20 in a 6-3 decision that Trump overstepped his authority by using the emergency powers law to impose sweeping tariffs.
Reiser, the โplaintiff in Friday’s lawsuit, said FedEx billed him $36 – $21 โin IEEPA duties and $15 in brokerage and โclearance fees – for his purchase โof tennis shoes from a German retailer. The lawsuit said โno duty should have been required.
On โFriday, toymaker Hasbro joined โthe thousands of companies suing the government for tariff refunds in the U.S. Court of International Trade. French beauty group L’Oreal, British vacuum โmanufacturer Dyson and contact โlens maker Bausch + Lomb also have filed lawsuits, in addition to โretailers such as Costco and J. Crew.
(Reporting by Mike Scarcella; Editing โby David Bario and Ethan Smith)




