Key Points
- The Supreme Court ruled 6–3 that IEEPA does not grant the executive branch authority to impose broad global tariffs.
- Companies that paid tariffs under IEEPA may be eligible to pursue refunds, subject to strict deadlines.
- In-house legal teams are advised to audit affected imports and coordinate cross-functionally to assess exposure and recovery options.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6–3 that the administration lacked authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose sweeping global tariffs, holding that Congress did not clearly delegate tariff authority under the statute. The decision significantly narrows executive power under IEEPA and may reshape how future trade measures are structured.
The ruling has immediate implications for companies that paid tariffs assessed under the statute. According to the ACC Newsroom, businesses may be eligible to seek refunds through U.S. Customs and Border Protection or pursue relief at the Court of International Trade. Strict filing deadlines are expected to apply, making timing critical.
For in-house counsel, the decision is not merely doctrinal. Legal departments are being urged to conduct prompt audits of imports affected by IEEPA-based tariffs, quantify potential claims and coordinate with finance and trade compliance teams. Companies with high-volume import operations may face complex reconciliation efforts.
Beyond refunds, the ruling signals renewed scrutiny over statutory delegation in trade policy. Corporate legal leaders will need to monitor whether Congress responds with clarifying legislation and how future tariff measures are structured to withstand judicial review.






