The Federal Maritime Commission has issued a final rule that, effective Dec. 29, 2025, removed part of regulation establishing requirements for how shipping lines and port facilities bill for demurrage (fees charged for cargo containers exceeding allotted free time at a terminal) and detention (fees charged for use of carrier-provided containers beyond the allotted free time).
Among other things, that regulation limited to the following the parties against which such fees may be assessed by vessel-operating common carriers, NVOCCs, and marine terminal operators: (1) those for whose account the ocean transportation or cargo storage is provided and who contracted for those services (typically the shipper), and (2) the consignee (the person to whom final delivery of the cargo is to be made).
However, in September 2025 a federal appeals court struck down this part of the regulation while leaving the other parts intact. The court explained that while the FMC had intended to limit liability for charges to parties in a contractual relationship with the billing party, its rule (1) prohibits motor carriers from being billed even when they have a direct contract with the ocean carrier and (2) appears to allow consignees to be billed regardless of whether or not they are in some sort of contractual relationship with the billing party. The court said these contradictions between the rule’s logic and application make it arbitrary and capricious under the Administrative Procedures Act.
ST&R’s team of former FMC and DOJ litigation personnel, freight forwarders, and former administration and congressional staffers can help shippers facing higher costs from carriers. For more information, please contact Andy Margolis at (305) 894-1021 or via email.
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