Koloa Rum Company v. Noem

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJanuary 20, 2026
DocketCivil Action No. 2025-0554
StatusPublished

This text of Koloa Rum Company v. Noem (Koloa Rum Company v. Noem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koloa Rum Company v. Noem, (D.D.C. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

KŌLOA RUM COMPANY,

Plaintiff, v. KRISTI NOEM, Secretary of Homeland Security, et al.,

Defendants, Civil Action No. 25-554 (JEB) MATSON NAVIGATION COMPANY, INC.,

Defendant-Intervenor,

and

AMERICAN MARITIME PARTNERSHIP, et al.,

Defendant-Intervenors.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Kōloa Rum Company is a small business that distills premium rum on the Hawaiian

island of Kauai. Since its establishment in 2009, the company has thrived by sourcing local

ingredients, investing in the state’s local economy, and cultivating a loyal customer base. That

success, according to Kōloa Rum, has long faced headwinds. The price of doing business on the

idyllic island is the thousands of miles of water separating Hawaii from a broader customer base

on the mainland. The distance itself, however, is not the problem. The alleged culprit is a

maritime statute known as the Jones Act.

1 Enacted in 1920, the Act regulates domestic shipping by requiring that all transport

between United States ports be undertaken by vessels owned, built, and primarily crewed by U.S.

citizens. Foreign vessels, in other words, may transport goods into or out of the United States,

but they cannot transport items between ports within the country. The ostensible purpose of

these restrictions is to preserve a robust American merchant marine for both commercial and

national-security needs. For Kōloa Rum, the true purpose is discrimination. The company

asserts that Hawaii’s ocean-bound businesses are captive to expensive Jones Act vessels, while

mainland businesses benefit from competitive alternatives like rail and trucking. Hawaii, as a

result, is forced to keep the Jones Act fleet afloat.

Seeking safe harbor, Kōloa Rum filed this action against the Secretary of Homeland

Security and the Acting Commissioner of Customs and Border Protection to enjoin enforcement

of the Act. The company advances two constitutional claims. First, the Jones Act violates the

Port Preference Clause by discriminating against Hawaiian ports through higher shipping costs

and limited shipping options. Second, the Act violates the Due Process Clause by infringing on

the company’s substantive right to earn a living.

The Government — along with Intervenors Matson Navigation Company, Inc, and the

American Maritime Partnership and the Maritime Trades Department of the AFL-CIO — moves

to dismiss, advancing both jurisdictional and merits arguments to sink the suit. First, Intervenors

maintain that Plaintiff lacks standing because the company is not the direct target of the Jones

Act, thereby rendering any alleged injury too indirect and any redress too dependent on the

speculative conduct of third parties. Second, Intervenors say that Plaintiff’s challenge to the

century-old Act is time barred under the six-year statute of limitations in 28 U.S.C. § 2401.

Finally, both Defendants and Intervenors contend that Kōloa Rum fails to state claims upon

2 which relief could be granted. Although the standing inquiry is no pleasure cruise, the Court

concludes that Plaintiff has cleared the threshold. The statute-of-limitations and merits waves,

however, swamp Kōloa Rum’s craft. The Court will thus grant the Motion to Dismiss.

I. Background

A. Statutory Background

Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, more commonly known as the Jones Act,

prohibits vessels from transporting “merchandise by water . . . between points in the United

States” unless the vessel “is wholly owned by citizens of the United States” and holds “a

certificate of documentation with a coastwise endorsement.” 46 U.S.C. § 55102(b). Vessels

engaged in coastwise trade — the domestic transportation of merchandise — must be built,

owned, and primarily crewed by U.S. citizens. Id., §§ 55102(b), 12103, 12112(a), 8103(b)(1).

The exigency behind the Act was Congress’s determination that fostering a domestic merchant

marine was “necessary for the national defense and for the proper growth of [] foreign and

domestic commerce.” Merchant Marine Act of 1920, ch. 250, § 1, 41 Stat. 988. Limiting

domestic commerce to domestic vessels would ensure both a viable U.S. shipping industry and

vessels that could serve as a “naval or military auxiliary in time of war or national emergency.”

Id. Without such legislation, “U.S.-flag vessels would not be positioned to contend with foreign-

flagged vessels” since “[t]he construction and operation costs of United States ships [] are

substantially higher than those of their foreign counterparts.” Am. Trading Transp. Co. v. United

States, 791 F.2d 942, 944 (D.C. Cir. 1986).

Prioritizing domestic vessels over foreign vessels in cabotage — the transport of goods or

passengers from one port or place to another in the same country, see Cabotage, Black’s Law

Dictionary (12th ed. 2024) — is no 20th-century innovation. In 1789, the third law passed by the

3 First Congress imposed duties on cargo with rates differing based on the provenance of a vessel.

See Act of July 20, 1789, ch. 3, 1 Stat. 27. “[A]ll ships or vessels built within the [United]

States, and belonging wholly to a citizen” were subject to a one-time “rate of six cents per ton”

when engaging in coastwise transportation. Id., § 1, 1 Stat. at 27. In contrast, foreign vessels

“employed in the transportation of any of the produce or manufactures of the United States,

coastwise within the said States,” were required to, “on each entry, pay fifty cents per ton.” Id.,

§ 3, 1 Stat. at 27–28. Congress enacted such duties to build American maritime capacity for both

commercial and national-security purposes. See 1 Annals of Cong. 197 (1789) (Joseph Gales

ed., 1834) (“Granting a preference to our own navigation will insensibly bring it forward to that

perfection so essential to American safety.”).

Our legislature further refined cabotage laws in the 19th century, establishing restrictions

later incorporated into the Jones Act. In 1813, for example, Congress required that “it shall not

be lawful to employ on board of any public or private vessels of the United States any person or

persons except citizens of the United States,” imposing crew-nationality requirements that would

remain central to later maritime legislation. See Act of Mar. 3, 1813, ch. 42, § 1, 2 Stat. 809,

809. The Navigation Act of 1817 transformed the previous duties imposed on foreign vessels

engaged in cabotage into an outright ban, providing that “[n]o goods, wares, or merchandise,

shall be imported . . . from one port of the United States to another port of the United States, in a

vessel belonging wholly or in part to a subject of any foreign power.” Act of Mar. 1, 1817, ch.

31, § 4, 3 Stat. 351, 351. Congress reaffirmed that restriction against foreign vessels in

coastwise commerce by adapting the law to address evasive schemes. An 1898 statute closed a

significant loophole by prohibiting the coastwise transportation of goods routed through foreign

4 ports and by establishing forfeiture as the consequence for violations. See Act of Feb. 17, 1898,

ch. 26, 30 Stat. 248.

The above legislative developments created a framework for modern cabotage law that

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