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Statute of Limitations in Play

2-Year Anniversary Looms of Section 301 List 4A Tariff Notice

There’s a steady recent uptick in the volume of Section 301 complaints at the U.S. Court of International Trade, but lawyers with active cases told us they're not sure if that’s to do with Friday’s two-year anniversary of the Federal Register notice on Aug. 20, 2019, that put the List 4A tariffs into effect on Sept. 1, 2019, on goods from China. All the roughly 3,800 complaints (and counting) inundating the court seek to vacate the Lists 3 and 4A tariffs and get the money refunded on grounds that the duties are unlawful under the 1974 Trade Act and violate 1930 Administrative Procedure Act protections against sloppy rulemakings.

We analyzed court records and found an average of 4.54 cases a day were filed in the first 13 business days of August, more than double the average daily volume of 2.05 cases in all of July and up significantly from the 0.91 daily average in June.

The court’s timeliness rules require an importer to file an action “within two years after the cause of action first accrues.” Attorneys pursuing the most conservative of strategies have tied the accrual date to FR publication of the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative tariff notices. Other strategies are based on starting the two-year clock when the tariffs take effect, while others say the clock starts from the date when an importer first paid the duties.

A complaint Wednesday from Teac America, the high-end audio components vendor, typified the increasing number of Section 301 cases we observed that rely on multiple layers of fallback arguments to establish timeliness. “Plaintiff’s cause of action accrued at liquidation, when the final assessment of duties was fixed,” said Teac's filing (in Pacer). The U.S. subsidiary of the age-old Japanese audio manufacturer once famous for its cassette decks still maintains a limited-distribution business in North America for component amplifiers and preamps. It imports "various goods" with Lists 3 and 4A tariff exposure, said the complaint. Voxx subsidiary 11 Trading Co. took over exclusive U.S. distribution of the Teac product line from Onkyo USA in April.

Teac's challenge "properly encompasses all liquidations of entries assessing List 3 and List 4A duties that occurred in the two years prior to the date of this Complaint and all subsequent liquidations,” said its filing. Alternatively, argued Teac, “Plaintiff’s claims accrued upon its deposit of List 3 and List 4A tariffs at the time of entry, and thus Plaintiff has timely filed this action with respect to all such entries filed within the previous two years of this action.”

As a final additional fallback, Teac’s “cause of action with respect to List 4A entries accrued on September 1, 2019,” the date those tariffs took effect, it said. “Plaintiff has timely filed this complaint with respect to all entries made after this date.” The court's opinion, if it sides with the plaintiffs that the Lists 3 and 4A tariffs are unlawful, ultimately will set the timeliness bar for all the 3,800 cases filed, said attorneys we polled. Crowell & Moring represents Teac in the complaint. It's on the 15-member plaintiffs' steering committee.