Retail customers file lawsuits over tariffs against FedEx and Ray-Bans
maker
[February 28, 2026] By
MAE ANDERSON
NEW YORK (AP) — At least two retail customers pursuing tariff-related
refunds have filed proposed class-action lawsuits in U.S. courts against
companies that also sued to recoup costs from the import taxes the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled President Donald Trump imposed without the legal
authority to do so.
The federal court lawsuits brought against delivery company FedEx and
French eyewear company EssilorLuxottica, which makes Ray-Ban sunglasses,
seek to ensure that consumers get a share of any refunds the businesses
get. More than 1,000 companies, including large corporations like Revlon
and Costco, filed suit in the U.S. Court of International Trade to
preserve their right to reimbursement.
On Feb. 20, The Supreme Court invalidated tariffs implemented under the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, worth an
estimated $130 billion to $175 billion.
A refund process either through the U.S. Court of International Trade or
the U.S. Customs and Border Protection is set to be worked out in coming
days or months as a bevy of lawsuits and claims work their way through
government systems. Companies have been filing lawsuits protectively to
ensure they receive refunds.
FedEx said in a statement on Thursday that it would return any tariff
refund it might get to shippers and customers who had paid them. The
complaint filed against FedEx on Friday by Matthew Reiser of Miami
states the company's pledge “creates no legally enforceable obligation
and is expressly contingent on future government and court guidance that
may never materialize.”

Reiser claims he paid $36 in tariffs and customs brokerage and duty
advancement fees on tennis shoes shipped via FedEx by Tennis Warehouse
Europe, an online retailer based in Schutterwald, Germany.
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FedEx cargo plane is shown on the tarmac at Fort
Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, Tuesday, April 20, 2021,
in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee, File)
 FedEx did not immediately respond to
a request for comment.
In a separate proposed class action filed this week, Nathan Ward of
New York states that he purchased Ray-Ban sunglasses from ray-ban.com
in August 2025 that were priced higher than in the past, reflecting
a tariff surcharge.
“Despite seeking an order entitling it to a refund of the duties
collected as a result of the subject tariffs, EssilorLuxottica
continues to collect and has not refunded the tariff surcharges it
collected from consumers,” the complaint states.
EssilorLuxottica also did not respond to a request for comment.
Barry Appleton, co-director of the Center for International Law at
New York Law School, said he expected many more such consumer
lawsuits to surface, especially against companies that issued
invoices or receipts with itemized tariff charges. The legal
viability of the cases is not clear-cut but they put pressure on
businesses to share any tax refunds they manage to secure, he said.
“What we are watching is the predictable next chapter of the IEEPA
story," Appleton said. "The Supreme Court told the White House it
overreached, the major importers lined up for refunds, and now
ordinary consumers are asking the obvious question — if those duties
were illegal, why shouldn’t we get our money back too?”
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