Havana Docks Corp. v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
Date FiledMay 21, 2026
Docket24-983
JudgeClarence Thomas
StatusPublished
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Full Opinion
(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2025 1
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD., ET AL.
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
No. 24–983. Argued February 23, 2026—Decided May 21, 2026
In 1928, the United States-based Havana Docks Corporation acquired
from the Cuban Government a property interest in the development
and operation of docks at the Port of Havana. That property interest,
a usufructuary concession, was time-limited and set to expire in 2004.
The Cuban Government agreed that, if it expropriated the docks before
2004, it would compensate Havana Docks for the value of the works it
had constructed. After Fidel Castro seized power in 1959, the new Cu-
ban Government decreed that it would forcibly take American-owned
properties and enterprises in Cuba and specifically identified Havana
Docks. As relevant here, the Cuban Government seized, without com-
pensation, the docks that Havana Docks had constructed and its prop-
erty interest in those docks. Havana Docks filed a claim with the For-
eign Claims Settlement Commission, which certified about $9 million
in losses, plus six percent annual interest. Despite these certified
losses, Havana Docks lacked any means to obtain compensation. That
began to change in 1996, when Congress enacted the Cuban Liberty
and Democratic Solidarity Act, 22 U. S. C. §6021 et seq., which creates
a private right of action for United States nationals who own claims to
“property which was confiscated by the Cuban Government on or after
January 1, 1959,” §6082(a)(1)(A). Title III of the Act imposes liability
on those who knowingly and intentionally traffic in such confiscated
property. §§6023(13)(A)(i), (ii). The Act authorizes the President to
“suspend” the Title III right of action, §§6085(c)(1), (2), and Presidents
Clinton, Bush, and Obama continuously suspended the right of action
from its effective date onward. President Trump allowed the suspen-
sion of the Title III right of action to expire in May 2019.
2 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Syllabus
From 2016 to 2019, four commercial cruise lines—Royal Caribbean
Cruises, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, Carnival Corporation, and
MSC Cruises—transported nearly a million paid passengers to Cuba,
using the docks that Havana Docks built to embark and disembark
their passengers. In 2019, Havana Docks invoked Title III and sued
the cruise lines in the United States District Court for the Southern
District of Florida. The cruise lines argued they were not liable be-
cause Havana Docks’ property interest would have expired in 2004
even absent confiscation. The District Court rejected that argument
and entered summary judgment against all four cruise lines, awarding
Havana Docks more than $100 million from each. A divided panel of
the Eleventh Circuit reversed. In its view, a defendant is liable for
trafficking in confiscated property only if its actions would have inter-
fered with the plaintiff ’s property interest had there been no confisca-
tion. On that view, because Havana Docks’ concession would have ex-
pired before 2016, the cruise lines’ challenged conduct from 2016 to
2019 did not constitute trafficking.
Held: The cruise lines’ use of the docks is sufficient to establish that they
used “property which was confiscated by the Cuban Government”; Ha-
vana Docks is not required to establish that the cruise lines trafficked
in Havana Dock’s property interest. Pp. 8–16.
(a) Title III generally makes any person who “traffics in property
which was confiscated by the Cuban Government . . . liable to any
United States national who owns the claim to such property.”
§6082(a)(1)(A). This dispute turns on whether the relevant “property
which was confiscated” must be Havana Docks’ property interest in the
docks (the concession), or whether it could instead be the docks them-
selves.
Under the plain text of Title III, “property which was confiscated”
can refer to the physical property in which the plaintiff had an interest,
and not just the interest itself. Title III makes entities liable for traf-
ficking in “any property . . . and any . . . interest therein” that the Cu-
ban Government confiscated, §§6023(12)(A), 6082(a)(1)(A), and the
Act’s definition of “property” makes clear that the Act imposes liability
for trafficking in both physical property and property interests. The
term “any property” includes physical things, as the Court recognized
when it previously considered Fidel Castro’s expropriations and noted
that the Cuban Government “nationalize[d] by forced expropriation
property . . . in which American nationals had an interest.” Banco
Nacional de Cuba v. Sabbatino, 376 U. S. 398, 401 (emphasis added).
The relevant “property which was confiscated” is therefore not lim-
ited to the plaintiff ’s interest in that property; it can refer to the phys-
ical property in which the plaintiff had an interest when the Cuban
Government “seiz[ed] . . . control of ” it after January 1, 1959.
Cite as: 608 U. S. ___ (2026) 3
Syllabus
§6023(4)(A). Confiscated property is, as it were, tainted—off limits—
such that anyone who uses the property can be liable to those who had
any interest in the tainted property. Pp. 8–11.
(b) On that understanding of “property,” Havana Docks has shown
that the cruise lines used confiscated property in which Havana Docks
had a property interest and to which it owns a claim. The docks are
“property which was confiscated” because Havana Docks established
that the Cuban Government confiscated those docks without compen-
sation when Castro’s forces physically took possession of the docks and
expelled Havana Docks’ agents in 1960. The cruise lines “use[d]” or
“engage[d] in commercial activity using” the docks, §§6023(13)(A)(i),
(ii), when they transported nearly a million paying passengers to Cuba
“without the authorization of ” Havana Docks, §6023(13)(A). Finally,
Havana Docks is a “United States national who owns the claim” to the
confiscated docks, §6082(a)(1)(A), as its Commission-certified claim is
“conclusive proof ” that it has satisfied this element, §6083(a)(1).
Pp. 11–13.
(c) The Court of Appeals’ analysis and the cruise lines’ arguments
conflict with Title III’s text. Pp. 13–16.
(1) The Court of Appeals interpreted the Act to require a counter-
factual analysis, assuming that there had been no confiscation of the
owner’s property interest: “[T]he way to give effect to the statutory
language (‘traffics in property which was confiscated’),” the court said,
“is to view the property interest at issue in a Title III action as if there
had been no expropriation and then determine whether the alleged
conduct constituted trafficking in that interest.” 119 F. 4th, at 1287.
That counterfactual approach rested on the premise that “property”
could refer only to present property interests, but this approach is dif-
ficult to understand and apply, and would foreclose liability in cases
where the text demands it. If the approach requires courts to assume
that the original rightsholder retained his legal rights, it would read
out of the Act cases of trafficking that should be in the heartland of
Title III, such as when companies sell and purchase confiscated prop-
erty interests. Title III is instead simply an antitrafficking right of
action that recognizes that the effect of the Cuban Government’s ex-
propriation was the destruction of the plaintiff ’s interest in the prop-
erty. It then provides a right to compensation based on the plaintiff ’s
former property interest from those who later traffic in the property
and thereby help to support the Communist Cuban Government.
Pp. 13–15.
(2) The cruise lines’ argument that the Cuban Government did not
confiscate the docks, but only the concession, fails. The Act defines
“confiscat[ion]” to include the seizure of “control of property,”
§6023(4)(A), and when armed agents physically occupied the dock
4 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Syllabus
facilities, they seized control of the docks. Before the seizure, Havana
Docks was in possession of the works; after the seizure, the Cuban
Government stopped Havana Docks from operating, using, enjoying,
possessing, or otherwise controlling the docks. The Cuban Govern-
ment thereby extinguished Havana Docks’ concession and physically
occupied the docks, and those actions constitute confiscation of the
docks under Title III. Pp. 15–16.
(d) Because the Court of Appeals wrongfully concluded that the
cruise lines did not use confiscated property to which Havana Docks
owns the claim, it did not reach the cruise lines’ remaining arguments
against liability; those arguments are not before the Court, and the
Court does not address them. P. 16.
119 F. 4th 1276, vacated and remanded.
THOMAS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ROBERTS, C. J.,
and ALITO, SOTOMAYOR, GORSUCH, KAVANAUGH, BARRETT, and JACKSON,
JJ., joined. SOTOMAYOR, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which
KAVANAUGH, J., joined. KAGAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 1
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of
Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543,
pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 24–983
_________________
HAVANA DOCKS CORPORATION, PETITIONER v.
ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES, LTD., ET AL.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
[May 21, 2026]
JUSTICE THOMAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1996, Congress enacted the Cuban Liberty and Demo-
cratic Solidarity Act. The Act seeks to deter trafficking in
property that the Cuban Government confiscated from
Americans after the Communist Revolution of 1959. 22
U. S. C. §§6081(3)(B), (11). To that end, the Act generally
imposes liability on those who use confiscated property to
which an American entity owns a claim. §§6082(a)(1)(A),
6023(13)(A)(i), (ii).
This case concerns whether the Act imposes liability on
four cruise lines that used docks that the Cuban Govern-
ment took from an American company in 1960. Before the
Communist Revolution, petitioner Havana Docks Corpora-
tion built, operated, and held a time-limited property inter-
est in docks at the Port of Havana. After the Communist
Revolution, the Cuban Government seized control of those
docks. Then, between 2016 and 2019, four commercial
cruise lines used those same docks to embark and disem-
bark nearly a million passengers. Havana Docks sued the
cruise lines under the Act and won judgments against each
of them in the District Court.
2 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Opinion of the Court
The Court of Appeals reversed. In its view, a defendant
is liable for trafficking in confiscated property only if its ac-
tions would have interfered with the plaintiff ’s property in-
terest had there been no confiscation. The court held that
the cruise lines were not liable because Havana Docks’
property interest in the docks would have expired before
2016 had the Cuban Government not confiscated the docks.
We disagree. The Act generally makes those who use
property tainted by a past confiscation liable to any United
States national who owns a claim to that property. Havana
Docks did not have to prove that the cruise lines interfered
with a property interest that would have existed in the
counterfactual scenario in which the Cuban Government
did not confiscate it. Instead, Havana Docks had to prove
only that the cruise lines used confiscated property—such
as the docks—to which Havana Docks owns a claim. We
therefore vacate the Court of Appeals’ decision.
I
A
In 1928, the United States-based Havana Docks Corpo-
ration acquired a property interest, specifically a “usufruc-
tuary concession,” that allowed it to develop and operate
dock facilities at the state-owned Port of Havana. A usu-
fruct is a right to use, enjoy, or profit from another’s prop-
erty, 2 G. Cabanellas de las Cuevas & E. Hoague, Butter-
worths Spanish/English Legal Dictionary 659 (1991); F.
Moore, The Cyclopedic Law Dictionary 1141 (3d ed. 1940),
and a concession is a privilege granted by the government,
Black’s Law Dictionary 361 (rev. 4th ed. 1968). Relying on
this usufructuary concession from the Cuban Government,
Havana Docks completed a large terminal building and
three piers—which we collectively refer to as the “docks”—
at the Port of Havana.
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 3
Opinion of the Court
Havana Docks acquired this property interest with cer-
tain conditions and guarantees. It enjoyed the right to op-
erate and profit from the docks that it completed. Its prop-
erty interest was time-limited and set to expire in 2004.
Havana Docks therefore expected to control, operate, and
profit from the docks for 76 years. At the end of the conces-
sion’s term, the Cuban Government would “replace the con-
cessionaire in possession of the works,” and Havana Docks’
“enjoyment of it and its proceeds” would come to an end. 1
App. 454–455. The Cuban Government agreed that, if it
“expropriated” the docks before 2004, it “w[ould] compen-
sate [Havana Docks] for the value of all works constructed
by it.” Id., at 449.
The Communist Revolution cut Havana Docks’ conces-
sion short without that compensation. After Fidel Castro
seized power in 1959, he declared that “it is fundamental
for the liberation and economic development of our country
to liquidate the [American] commercial or industrial enter-
prises” operating in Cuba. Id., at 483. To that end, the new
Cuban Government decreed that it would forcibly take
American “properties and enterprises located” in Cuba, tar-
geting Havana Docks by name. Id., at 483, 487. Under the
decree, government forces seized the docks in 1960 and con-
fiscated “all” of Havana Docks’ “assets.” Id., at 497–498; see
also id., at 257. These assets included, as relevant here, the
docks that Havana Docks had constructed and its property
interest in those docks. All agree that this action prema-
turely destroyed Havana Docks’ concession in 1960 and, by
extension, its ability to benefit from the docks that it built.
Brief for Respondents 21; 119 F. 4th 1276, 1286 (CA11
2024) (opinion below). The Cuban Government has never
compensated Havana Docks for “the taking of its property,”
and it continues to operate parts of the docks to this day.
Id., at 1283.
4 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Opinion of the Court
Havana Docks filed a claim with the Foreign Claims Set-
tlement Commission. Congress had authorized the Com-
mission to determine “the amount and validity of claims . . .
for losses resulting from the nationalization, expropriation,
intervention, or other taking of ” “any property, right, or in-
terest” by the Cuban Government. 22 U. S. C. §§1643a(3),
1643b(a). The Commission concluded that Havana Docks
had “a concession for the construction and operation of ” the
docks and “real property with all improvements and appur-
tenances located” at the Port. 1 App. 256–257. It also con-
firmed that “the facilities of the company were physically
occupied by agents of the Cuban Government” and that the
Cuban Government had expropriated Havana Docks’ as-
sets. Id., at 257. It therefore certified about $9 million in
losses, plus six percent annual interest. But, despite its cer-
tified losses, Havana Docks lacked any means to obtain
compensation.
B
That began to change in 1996. On February 24 of that
year, Cuban fighter jets shot down two unarmed American
civilian airplanes over international waters. 61 Fed. Reg.
8843 (1996). In response, Congress promptly enacted the
Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act
of 1996, 22 U. S. C. §6021 et seq. Among other things, the
Act codified the longstanding embargo against Cuba and
set conditions for the normalization of relations between
the two countries. §§6032(h), 6061, 6064, 6067(d).
As relevant here, the Act also sought to “deter trafficking
in wrongfully confiscated property.” §6081(11). Congress
found that the Cuban Government had allowed foreign in-
vestors to use confiscated property to secure “badly needed
financial benefit” for the regime, contrary to the American
foreign policy goals of undermining the Castro regime and
compensating United States nationals. §§6081(5), (6). Con-
gress further found that the “international judicial system”
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 5
Opinion of the Court
failed to provide “fully effective remedies . . . for unjust en-
richment from the use of wrongfully confiscated property by
. . . private entities.” §6081(8). So, in Title III of the Act,
Congress “endowed” American victims of confiscation “with
a judicial remedy in the courts of the United States.”
§6081(11).
Under Title III, any entity that “traffics in property which
was confiscated by the Cuban Government on or after Jan-
uary 1, 1959, shall be liable to any United States national
who owns the claim to such property.” §§6023(11),
6082(a)(1)(A). Subject to certain exceptions, someone “ ‘traf-
fics’ in confiscated property if ” he “knowingly and inten-
tionally” “sells,” “purchases,” or “uses” the confiscated prop-
erty or “engages in a commercial activity using or otherwise
benefiting from confiscated property” without authorization
from the claimholder. §§6023(13)(A)(i), (ii). “Property” in-
cludes “any property,” including “real, personal, or mixed,
and any present, future, or contingent right, security, or
other interest therein, including any leasehold interest.”
§6023(12)(A). And, “confiscated” refers to the “nationaliza-
tion, expropriation, or other seizure by the Cuban Govern-
ment of ownership or control of property” without compen-
sation, settlement, or return of the property. §6023(4)(A).
To prevail, then, a plaintiff must show that (1) the Cuban
Government confiscated property on or after January 1,
1959; (2) the defendant trafficked in the property, such as
by knowingly and intentionally using it without authoriza-
tion; and (3) the plaintiff is a United States national who
owns a claim to the property.1
——————
1 The definition of “traffics” in Title III includes several exceptions, in-
cluding one for “transactions and uses of property incident to lawful
travel to Cuba, to the extent that such transactions and uses of property
are necessary to the conduct of such travel.” §6023(13)(B)(iii). These
exceptions are not at issue before this Court. See n. 4, infra, at 12.
6 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Opinion of the Court
An entity that traffics in confiscated property is liable for
“money damages.” §6082(a)(1)(A). Those damages are pre-
sumptively equal to the amount certified by the Commis-
sion if the plaintiff has a certified claim.
§§6082(a)(1)(A)(i)(I), (2). Title III trebles those damages “if
a United States national owns a claim with respect to that
property which was certified by the” Commission.
§6082(a)(3).
This right of action lay dormant for more than two dec-
ades. The Act authorizes the President to “suspend” the
Title III right of action based on a determination that the
suspension is in the national interest and will “expedite a
transition to democracy in Cuba.” §§6085(c)(1), (2). Presi-
dents Clinton, Bush, and Obama continuously suspended
the right of action from its effective date onward. But, in
May of 2019, President Trump allowed the suspension to
expire, permitting the right of action to go into effect for the
first time. That policy change exposed traffickers in confis-
cated property of United States nationals to Title III liabil-
ity.
C
From 2016 to 2019, respondents—Royal Caribbean
Cruises, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, Carnival Corpo-
ration, and MSC Cruises—transported nearly a million
paid passengers to Cuba. These cruise lines paid entities
affiliated with the Cuban Government tens of millions of
dollars to do business in Cuba. They collectively earned
hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue from voyages that
included a stop in Havana. As part of this enterprise, their
cruise ships arrived at the docks that Havana Docks built,
where they embarked and disembarked their passengers.
They continued to do so even after receiving notice of Ha-
vana Docks’ certified claim to the docks.
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 7
Opinion of the Court
D
Shortly after President Trump allowed the suspension of
the right of action to expire in May 2019, Havana Docks
filed lawsuits against these four cruise lines in the United
States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
Havana Docks alleged that, between 2016 and 2019, the
cruise lines had trafficked in confiscated property to which
Havana Docks owned a claim.2 The cruise lines did not dis-
pute that they used the docks in question “without the au-
thorization of ” Havana Docks. §6023(13)(A). Instead, the
cruise lines argued they are not liable because Havana
Docks’ property interest in those docks would have expired
in 2004 even if there had been no confiscation, and the
cruise lines “could not have trafficked in a time-limited con-
cession that expired in 2004.” Havana Docks Corp. v. Car-
nival Corp., 592 F. Supp. 3d 1088, 1194 (2022).
The District Court rejected that argument, and, after re-
jecting other defenses not at issue here, entered summary
judgment against all four cruise lines. Id., at 1202–1203.
Because the cruise lines had independently trafficked in the
confiscated property, they were independently liable under
Title III, and the District Court awarded Havana Docks
more than $100 million from each of the cruise lines.
A divided panel of the United States Court of Appeals for
the Eleventh Circuit reversed. It held that the cruise lines
had not trafficked in confiscated property to which Havana
Docks owned a claim. In its view, courts must “view the
property interest at issue in a Title III action as if there had
been no expropriation and then determine whether the al-
leged conduct constituted trafficking in that interest.” 119
——————
2 Havana Docks also alleged that Carnival had trafficked in its confis-
cated property from 1996 to 2001, but these allegations are not at issue
here because the Court of Appeals did not address them and instead left
them for the District Court to consider on remand. 119 F. 4th 1276, 1290
(CA11 2024).
8 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Opinion of the Court
F. 4th, at 1287. Applying that test, it concluded that, be-
cause “any property interest that Havana Docks had by vir-
tue of th[e] concession ended” in 2004, “the cruise lines’ con-
duct from 2016 to 2019” would not have constituted
trafficking if there had been no confiscation. Id., at 1288.
Its analysis assumed that Havana Docks had to establish
trafficking in the time-limited property interest that had
permitted it to build and operate the docks.
Judge Brasher dissented. In his view, Havana Docks
could establish liability based on the cruise lines’ trafficking
in the underlying physical property, “the docks—which still
exist, are still in use, and have not expired, ended, or fallen
into the sea.” Id., at 1294. And, he explained, the “major-
ity’s counterfactual analysis—asking what would have hap-
pened to Havana Docks’ docks if they had not been confis-
cated in 1960—is incompatible with the text of the Act.” Id.,
at 1291. Instead, the analysis Title III requires here is
“very simple”: “The Cuban Government stole Havana
Docks’ property—its docks, piers, and other things that it
had the right to operate under its concession.” Id., at 1292.
“And the cruise lines have—all agree—commercially bene-
fited by depositing paying customers on those docks and
piers.” Ibid. So, “the cruise lines trafficked in confiscated
property to which Havana Docks owns a claim.” Ibid.
We granted certiorari. 606 U. S. 1065 (2025).
II
Title III generally makes any person who “traffics in
property which was confiscated by the Cuban Government
. . . liable to any United States national who owns the claim
to such property.” §6082(a)(1)(A). The cruise lines argue
that “[t]he Act demands a one-to-one correspondence be-
tween the property interest confiscated and the property in-
terest trafficked.” Brief for Respondents 20 (emphasis
added). Havana Docks, meanwhile, argues that the Act im-
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 9
Opinion of the Court
poses liability for trafficking in underlying physical prop-
erty, not just interests in property. Reply Brief 1, 3–5. The
dispute before us thus turns on whether the relevant “prop-
erty which was confiscated” must be Havana Docks’ prop-
erty interest in the docks, or whether it could instead be the
docks themselves. We hold that the cruise lines’ use of the
docks is sufficient to establish that they used “property
which was confiscated by the Cuban Government.”
§6082(a)(1)(A). Havana Docks is not required to establish
that the cruise lines used its property interest.
A
Under the plain text of Title III, “property which was con-
fiscated” can be the physical property in which the plaintiff
had an interest, and not just the interest itself. Title III
makes entities liable for trafficking in “any property . . . and
any . . . interest therein” that the Cuban Government con-
fiscated. §§6023(12)(A), 6082(a)(1)(A). The Act’s definition
of “property” thus makes clear that the Act imposes liability
for trafficking in both the physical property and the prop-
erty interests. Accord, post, at 4 (KAGAN, J., dissenting).
Ordinary meaning reinforces that conclusion. The term
“any property,” of course, includes physical things. “Any
external thing over which the rights of possession, use, and
enjoyment are exercised” can be “property.” Black’s Law
Dictionary 1232 (7th ed. 1999) (Black’s). Title III itself pro-
vides examples, including “real” property, §6023(12)(A),
which includes “[l]and and anything . . . attached to” it, id.,
at 1234, and “personal” property, §6023(12)(A), which in-
cludes movable things, id., at 1233.
This Court has recognized that “property” ordinarily can
refer to physical things in which people can have property
interests. When this Court previously considered Castro’s
expropriations, it recognized that “property” can refer to
both physical things and interests in them, noting that the
Cuban Government “nationalize[d] by forced expropriation
10 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Opinion of the Court
property . . . in which American nationals had an interest.”
Banco Nacional de Cuba v. Sabbatino, 376 U. S. 398, 401
(1964) (emphasis added). For that reason, the Cuban Gov-
ernment could, for example, expropriate “sugar itself ” in
addition to, or “rather than,” “merely contractual rights” re-
lated to the sugar. Id., at 413.
Construing “property which was confiscated” to refer only
to the plaintiff ’s interest in the property would read out of
the Act obvious ways in which people can traffic in confis-
cated property. One traffics, for example, by “us[ing]” con-
fiscated property. §§6023(13)(A)(i), (ii). This form of “traf-
ficking” ordinarily concerns things, not property interests:
One uses land or other physical property, but one does not
ordinarily use someone else’s property interests. If, for ex-
ample, your car is stolen and the thief lets another drive it,
the other uses your car, but he does not use your property
interest in your car. So, requiring “a one-to-one correspond-
ence between the property interest confiscated and the
property interest trafficked,” Brief for Respondents 20 (em-
phasis added), would lead to the surprising result that en-
tities could freely “us[e]” many kinds of confiscated property
without exposure under Title III, contra, §§6023(13)(A)(i),
(ii).
This case illustrates the point. The Court of Appeals
agreed that, if the cruise lines had used the docks before
Havana Docks’ property interest was set to expire, they
could have been liable under the Act. 119 F. 4th, at 1288,
1290. The dissent seems to agree. Post, at 3 (opinion of
KAGAN, J.). Yet no matter when Havana Docks’ property
interest was set to expire, the cruise lines would not have
“used” (or otherwise trafficked in) Havana Docks’ conces-
sion. The cruise lines would have “used”—and trafficked
in—“the docks” themselves. Ibid. But, the use of the docks
would not be enough for liability on the Court of Appeals’
and the dissent’s view. See post, at 4 (“where the only ‘prop-
erty’ confiscated from the plaintiff is an intangible property
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 11
Opinion of the Court
interest, the defendant is liable only if he has trafficked in
that interest”).
We thus conclude that the relevant “property which was
confiscated” is not limited to the plaintiff ’s interest in that
property. “[P]roperty which was confiscated,”
§6082(a)(1)(A), can refer to the physical property in which
the plaintiff had an interest when the Cuban Government
“seiz[ed] . . . control of ” it after January 1, 1959,
§6023(4)(A). Knowingly and intentionally “traffic[king]” in
that physical property by, for example, using it, can lead to
liability under the Act. §§6023(13)(A)(i), 6082(a)(1)(A). In
that way, confiscated property is, as it were, tainted—off
limits—such that anyone who uses the property can be lia-
ble to those who had an interest in the tainted property.3
B
On that understanding of “property,” Havana Docks has
shown that the cruise lines used confiscated property in
which Havana Docks had a property interest and to which
it owns a claim.
The docks are “property which was confiscated.”
§6082(a)(1)(A); 119 F. 4th, at 1294 (Brasher, J., dissenting).
Havana Docks has established that the Cuban Government
confiscated those docks without compensation. In 1960, the
Castro regime expropriated American property, specifically
targeting Havana Docks. 1 App. 483, 487. Then, Castro’s
forces physically took possession of the docks and expelled
Havana Docks’ agents. Id., at 257. The Cuban Government
therefore “seiz[ed] . . . control of ” the docks, §6023(4)(A)—
the physical property in which Havana Docks had an inter-
——————
3 This is not to say that property interests are irrelevant for Title III.
A plaintiff can argue that the defendant trafficked in a confiscated prop-
erty interest by, for example, purchasing, selling, or transferring the in-
terest. See §6023(13)(A)(i).
12 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Opinion of the Court
est. It follows that the docks are “property which was con-
fiscated by the Cuban Government” after January 1, 1959.
§6082(a)(1)(A). See also infra, at 13–16.
The cruise lines “use[d]” or “engage[d] in commercial ac-
tivity using” the docks. §§6023(13)(A)(i), (ii). It is undis-
puted that when they transported nearly a million paying
passengers to Cuba, the cruise lines “used the docks.” Brief
for Respondents 23; see also Tr. of Oral Arg. 72 (“We have
used the docks”). It is likewise undisputed that they did so
“without the authorization of ” Havana Docks.
§6023(13)(A). So, if the cruise lines did so knowingly and
intentionally, the cruise lines “traffic[ked] in property”—
the docks—“which was confiscated by the Cuban Govern-
ment.” §§6023(13)(A)(i), (ii), 6082(a)(1)(A).4
Finally, Havana Docks is a “United States national who
owns the claim” to the confiscated docks.5 §6082(a)(1)(A).
Although a plaintiff need not have a Commission-certified
claim, §6083(a)(2); Brief for Respondents 24, Havana Docks
has such a certified claim, which is “conclusive proof ” that
Havana Docks has satisfied this element, §6083(a)(1). The
Commission found that Havana Docks had acquired “a con-
cession for the construction and operation of ” the docks and
“the real property with all improvements and appurte-
nances located” at the Port. 1 App. 256–257. And, the Com-
mission found “that the facilities of [Havana Docks] were
physically occupied by agents of the Cuban Government”
——————
4 The cruise lines have argued that their use of the docks fell within
the exception to Title III’s definition of “traffics” for “uses of property in-
cident to lawful travel,” §6023(13)(B)(iii), an argument that the District
Court rejected based on the general ban against travel to Cuba for tourist
activities, see 22 U. S. C. §7209(b)(1). Havana Docks Corp. v. Carnival
Corp., 592 F. Supp. 3d 1088, 1173–1174 (SD Fla. 2022). The Court of
Appeals did not reach this issue because of its primary holding, and we
do not address it here. 119 F. 4th, at 1279, n. 1.
5 The Court of Appeals rejected the cruise lines’ argument that Havana
Docks is not a United States national within the meaning of the Act, see
id., at 1281, a holding that is not before us here.
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 13
Opinion of the Court
after the Cuban Government had nationalized Havana
Docks’ assets in 1960. Id., at 257.
* * *
In sum, the Cuban Government seized control of “prop-
erty”—the docks that Havana Docks built—in 1960. At
that point, the docks were tainted as confiscated property,
the “the use of ” which the United States sought to “deter.”
§§6081(8), (11). The cruise lines later used the confiscated
docks—property to which Havana Docks owns a certified
claim—when they transported nearly a million passengers
to Cuba between 2016 and 2019. The Court of Appeals
therefore erred in concluding that Havana Docks failed to
establish these requirements for Title III liability.
III
The Court of Appeals’ analysis below, as well as the
cruise lines’ and dissent’s arguments here, conflict with Ti-
tle III’s text.
A
The Court of Appeals interpreted the Act to demand a
counterfactual analysis. “[T]he way to give effect to the
statutory language (‘traffics in property which was confis-
cated’),” the court said, “is to view the property interest at
issue in a Title III action as if there had been no expropria-
tion and then determine whether the alleged conduct con-
stituted trafficking in that interest.” 119 F. 4th, at 1287.
This approach rested on the premise that “property”
could refer only to present property interests. But, no “Title
III plaintiff ” owns a present property interest “because that
property now belongs to the Cuban Government.” Id., at
1286. After all, the Cuban Government expropriated those
property interests in 1960. See 1 App. 483. In order to re-
solve this tension and “give effect” to its understanding of
the statute, the Court of Appeals had to eliminate the “dis-
torting effect of the confiscation” by assuming that there
14 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Opinion of the Court
had been no confiscation and then asking whether the de-
fendant’s use of the property would have interfered with the
owner’s property interest absent the confiscation. 119
F. 4th, at 1287–1288. In this case, the court posited a coun-
terfactual scenario in which the Cuban Government “had
never expropriated” Havana Docks’ concession and then an-
alyzed the defendants’ conduct in that scenario. Id., at
1288. Because the “concession expired in 2004” in this
counterfactual scenario, and Havana Docks would have had
to hand the docks over at that point anyway, the court rea-
soned that the cruise lines’ conduct from 2016 to 2019 did
not violate Havana Docks’ rights and therefore cannot con-
stitute trafficking under Title III. Ibid.
This counterfactual approach is difficult to understand
and apply. If the approach requires courts to assume that
the original rightsholder retained his legal rights, it would
foreclose liability in cases where the text demands it. Sup-
pose that an American owned land; the Cuban Government
expropriated his property interest in the land; the Cuban
Government transferred the property interest to a com-
pany; and the company sold it to another company. There
should be no doubt that both companies are liable under
Title III for “traffick[ing] in property which was confis-
cated” from an American, §6082(a)(1)(A): the first, by
“sell[ing]” the property interest, and the second, by “pur-
chas[ing]” it, §6023(13)(A)(i). But if, as the Court of Appeals
suggested, we “treat” the property interest “as if the Cuban
Government had never expropriated it,” id., at 1288, then
the American would still own it, in which case the other
companies could not have sold or purchased it. It makes
little sense to “determine whether the alleged conduct con-
stituted trafficking in that interest” because the alleged
conduct—selling and purchasing—cannot occur in the
counterfactual scenario. Id., at 1287. We decline to adopt
an approach that appears to read out of the Act cases of
trafficking that should be in the heartland of Title III.
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 15
Opinion of the Court
On the other hand, if all that the Court of Appeals meant
is that the Act requires that the defendant traffic in the
same property interest that the plaintiff held, then it still
misunderstood the Act. In that case, the Court of Appeals’
analysis simply rested on the assumption that the relevant
confiscated and trafficked-in “property” must be the plain-
tiff ’s original property interest—here, the usufructuary
concession. Id., at 1287–1288. But, as Judge Brasher ex-
plained, “Havana Docks’ theory is that the cruise lines are
using the docks”—the physical property—not that they are
using the property interest. Id., at 1294. And, as we have
explained, the Act allows Havana Docks to proceed on that
theory. See supra, at 9–13. This understanding explains
why a cruise line could have been liable under Title III for
using the docks in 1997, 2001, or 2021, even though the
cruise line would not have used Havana Docks’ interest in
the docks at any of those times.
Title III is simply an antitrafficking right of action. It
recognizes that the effect of the Cuban Government’s expro-
priation was the destruction of the plaintiff ’s interest in the
property. See Black’s 602 (“expropriation” is a “governmen-
tal taking or modification of an individual’s property
rights”); accord, 119 F. 4th, at 1286. It then provides a right
to compensation based on the plaintiff ’s former property in-
terest from those who later traffic in the property and
thereby help to support the Communist Cuban Govern-
ment.
B
The cruise lines make an additional argument for affir-
mance. Havana Docks’ suit fails, the cruise lines contend,
because “the Cuban government did not confiscate the
docks”; it confiscated only the concession. Brief for Re-
spondents 31. The dissent agrees. Post, at 4–5 (opinion of
KAGAN, J.).
16 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
Opinion of the Court
This assertion would have surprised anyone present in
1960 Havana. As explained, the Act defines “confiscat[ion]”
to include the seizure of “ownership or control of property.”
§6023(4)(A) (emphasis added). When armed agents physi-
cally occupied the docks facilities, they seized control of the
docks even if “Cuba owned the docks.” Post, at 4 (opinion of
KAGAN, J.). Before that seizure, the “concessionaire”—Ha-
vana Docks—was “in possession of the works.” 1 App. 454;
Brief for Respondents 32. After the seizure, the Cuban Gov-
ernment stopped Havana Docks from operating, using, en-
joying, possessing, or otherwise “control[ling] the [docks].”
Id., at 23. The Cuban Government thereby extinguished
Havana Docks’ concession and “physically occupied” the
docks, as the Commission found. 1 App. 257. Those actions
constitute confiscation of the docks under Title III.6
IV
We conclude that the cruise lines used confiscated prop-
erty to which Havana Docks owns the claim. Because the
Court of Appeals concluded otherwise, it did not reach the
cruise lines’ remaining arguments against liability. Those
arguments are not before us and we do not address them.
Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of the Court of Ap-
peals and remand for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
It is so ordered.
——————
6 The dissent seemingly does not dispute that the Cuban Government
seized control of the docks. See, post, at 4–5. After all, Havana Docks
controlled the docks, then “armed officers” took them over. Post, at 4.
Congress defined “confiscat[ion]” in the statute to include “seizure by the
Cuban Government of . . . control of property.” §6023(4)(A). “When a
statute includes an explicit definition, we must follow that definition.”
Tanzin v. Tanvir, 592 U. S. 43, 47 (2020) (internal quotation marks omit-
ted). Under the statutory definition, the dissent’s theory has the surpris-
ing consequence that it is not “possible” for a landlord to prematurely
seize control of “property it always owned” from a “renter with a lease.”
Post, at 2, 5.
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 1
SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 24–983
_________________
HAVANA DOCKS CORPORATION, PETITIONER v.
ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES, LTD., ET AL.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
[May 21, 2026]
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, with whom JUSTICE KAVANAUGH
joins, concurring.
I agree with the Court’s resolution of the narrow question
before it and join the majority opinion in full. I write to
highlight two issues that the Court does not reach but that
raise significant concerns for remand or in other future Ti-
tle III cases.
First, petitioner’s reading of Title III, if adopted, could al-
low it to recover a potentially unlimited amount of money
from an unlimited number of people who use the confiscated
docks at issue. Here, the Foreign Claims Settlement Com-
mission (Commission) certified that, in 1960, petitioner lost
around $9 million from the confiscation of the docks. Ante,
at 4. The District Court determined that, under Title III,
each of the four cruise lines in this case was liable to peti-
tioner for $110 million (after trebling the certified loss plus
more than a half-century’s worth of interest, and awarding
additional legal fees and costs).
On petitioner’s interpretation of Title III, however, those
awards could be just the beginning. Title III specifies that
“any person that . . . traffics in property which was confis-
cated by the Cuban Government . . . shall be liable” for no
less than the value of the claim certified by the Commission,
plus interest. 22 U. S. C. §6082(a)(1)(A)(i). Below, peti-
tioner defended the District Court’s awards by arguing, in
2 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring
essence, that “any person” really means “each person,” so
that each cruise line is liable for the full amount.
If petitioner is correct, then petitioner potentially could
recover $110 million from every person who uses the docks
in any way. Here, petitioner sued four cruise lines who used
the docks, but on its theory, nothing would prevent it from
recovering even more if other cruise lines had used the
docks in the past or if any cruise line uses them again in the
future. Nor would petitioner necessarily be limited to one
recovery against each cruise line. It could possibly seek to
recover the full $110 million against respondents for each
individual cruise; each docking, after all, was potentially an
independent instance of trafficking. See 28 U. S. C.
§1603(d) (defining “commercial activity” to mean “either a
regular course of commercial conduct or a particular com-
mercial transaction or act”); 22 U. S. C. §6023(3) (incorpo-
rating that definition); see also §6023(13)(A)(ii); but see
§6082(f )(1)(A) (appearing to limit plaintiffs to one suit per
“subject matter”). Liability could even theoretically extend
to third-party retailers aboard respondents’ ships, mainte-
nance contractors at respondents’ dockyards, and even the
nearly one million passengers who paid respondents to sail
to Cuba, all of whom arguably “engage[d] in a commercial
activity using or otherwise benefiting from” the confiscated
docks or “participate[d] in” respondents’ commercial activi-
ties. §§6023(13)(A)(ii)–(iii). In short, this limitless reading
of the statute could permit petitioner to recover millions, if
not billions, of dollars over and over again, so long as any-
one continues to make any commercial use of the docks.
It is unlikely that Congress intended for someone who
suffered a finite loss to reap infinite recoveries. Congress
defined “confiscated” property to mean property that was
seized by the Cuban Government “without the property
having been returned or adequate and effective compensa-
tion provided.” §6023(4)(A)(i). Congress also created the
Commission and tasked it with assessing the value of
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 3
SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring
claims stemming from the Cuban Government’s confisca-
tions and made the Commission-certified value a presump-
tive measure of a Title III plaintiff ’s recovery. Ante, at 4, 6;
see §6082(a)(1)(A)(i). That statutory scheme suggests that
Congress intended for the Commission’s certification to
supply a benchmark for adequate compensation; it does not
expressly authorize repeatedly recovering the Commission-
certified amount. Furthermore, if the statute is read the
way petitioner suggests, then Title III’s remedies could po-
tentially violate the Due Process Clause to the extent that
the statute imposes penalties against individual defend-
ants that are “so severe and oppressive as to be wholly dis-
proportioned to the offense and obviously unreasonable.”
St. Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Williams, 251 U. S. 63, 66–67
(1919).
Second, there is a significant question as to whether re-
spondents’ conduct fell within a statutory exception to Title
III liability for “transactions and uses of property incident
to lawful travel to Cuba.” §6023(13)(B)(iii); see ante, at 5,
n. 1, 12, n. 4 (declining to address this exception). Indeed,
the Federal Government appears to have previously taken
the position that these cruises were lawful and beneficial to
both Cuba and the United States.
For example, in 2016, President Obama announced at a
joint press conference with Cuban President Raúl Castro
that the United States Government had “removed the last
major hurdle to resuming cruises and ferry service,” which
would “mean even more Americans visiting Cuba in the
years ahead and appreciating the incredible history and
culture of the Cuban people.”* The Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC), which administers and enforces sanctions
——————
*Remarks by President Obama and President Raúl Castro of Cuba in
a Joint Press Conference, The Obama White House (Mar. 21, 2016),
https://obamawhitehouse. archives . gov / the - press - office / 2016 / 03 / 21/
remarks-president-obama-and-president-raul-castro-cuba-joint-press
(archived at perma.cc/2JA3-NTP7).
4 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring
by the United States against Cuba, also granted one re-
spondent a license that specifically authorized “carrier ser-
vices by vessel to, from, or within Cuba in connection with
travel or transportation between the United States and
Cuba.” App. 570. OFAC later amended its regulations “to
authorize persons subject to U. S. jurisdiction to provide
carrier services by vessel, without the need for specific li-
censes.” 80 Fed. Reg. 56916 (2015). Further, the State De-
partment previously informed petitioner that it would not
bring enforcement actions against respondents because of
“the clear exclusion” from the definition of “ ‘traffics’ ” that
shields “transactions and uses of property incident to lawful
travel to Cuba.” App. 834.
To be sure, as petitioner argued below, at the same time
the Government made these statements, it also warned re-
spondents that their activities had to comply with any ap-
plicable regulations and could not exceed the scope of the
licenses provided to them. See, e.g., id., at 570–572 (em-
phasizing additional restrictions on cruises); id., at 869–875
(cautionary letter issued by OFAC). Even so, as the United
States explained at argument, “[t]o the extent that Re-
spondents received assurances from appropriate govern-
ment officials that what they were doing was lawful and
authorized,” holding them liable for that conduct could
“raise due process concerns.” Tr. of Oral Arg. 57–58.
As neither the infinite-recovery issue nor the lawful-
travel issue was fairly included within the question pre-
sented, the Court appropriately does not address either one
here. See this Court’s Rule 14.1(a). The Court also cor-
rectly expresses no view as to other issues unaddressed by
the Eleventh Circuit, such as respondents’ argument that
petitioner’s concession was nonexclusive and limited to
cargo services, Brief for Respondents 34, and respondents’
argument that the Commission’s certification violates due
process or the Seventh Amendment, id., at 40–42. To the
extent any of these or other issues remain and are properly
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 5
SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring
preserved, the Eleventh Circuit should address them in the
first instance on remand.
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 1
KAGAN, J., dissenting
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 24–983
_________________
HAVANA DOCKS CORPORATION, PETITIONER v.
ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES, LTD., ET AL.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
[May 21, 2026]
JUSTICE KAGAN, dissenting.
Today the Court misconstrues the Cuban Liberty and
Democratic Solidarity Act to allow plaintiffs to recover for
trafficking in property that was not theirs. Title III of that
Act provides that “any person” that “traffics in property
which was confiscated by the Cuban Government on or af-
ter January 1, 1959, shall be liable to any United States
national who owns the claim to such property.” 22 U. S. C.
§6082(a)(1)(A). The majority holds that because four com-
mercial cruise lines used docks in the Port of Havana be-
tween 2016 and 2019, they can be held liable to Havana
Docks Corporation, a U. S. company that built, operated,
and once held a property interest in those docks. That may
seem sensible at first blush. But there is a problem: The
docks are not “property which was confiscated by the Cuban
Government” within the meaning of Title III. Why? Be-
cause the docks belonged to the Cuban Government—not
Havana Docks—all along. What Havana Docks owned was
only a property interest allowing it to use those docks for a
specified time. And that time-limited interest expired in
2004—more than a decade before the cruise lines ever used
the docks.
The key to getting this case right is understanding the
nature of the property interest that Havana Docks once
held in the docks. In 1905, the Cuban Government granted
2 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
KAGAN, J., dissenting
Compañia del Puerto a 50-year “usufructuary concession”
so that it could build and then operate docks at the Port of
Havana. See 119 F. 4th 1276, 1278, 1281 (CA11 2024). As
the majority explains, a “usufruct” is a “right to use, enjoy,
or profit from another’s property” (here, Cuba’s property in
the Port), and a “concession” is a “privilege granted by the
government” (here, the Cuban Government). Ante, at 2. So
the deal struck was this: Compañia del Puerto would build
docks for Cuba at the Port and, in exchange, Cuba would let
the company operate those docks for a limited time. Later,
that usufructuary concession was assigned to Havana
Docks and extended to 99 years, meaning that it would ex-
pire in 2004. So Havana Docks’ property interest in the
docks, like its predecessor’s, was a time-limited one. Before
2004, Havana Docks had a right to make use of the docks,
even though they belonged to Cuba; after 2004, the com-
pany had no right to anything. You might think of Havana
Docks as a renter with a lease set to expire in 2004.
Everyone agrees that Havana Docks did not get all it was
promised. That is because in 1960, 44 years before the con-
cession was to expire, Cuba issued a decree nationalizing
Havana Docks’ assets and sent armed agents to physically
occupy the docks. Those actions “prematurely destroyed
Havana Docks’ concession” and, “by extension, its ability to
benefit from the docks.” Ante, at 3. The Foreign Claims
Settlement Commission confirmed as much, finding that
Cuba had seized from Havana Docks a concession for the
“operation of wharves and warehouses in the harbor of Ha-
vana,” which was “to expire in the year 2004,” as well as
associated “equipment, furniture and fixtures.” App. to Pet.
for Cert. 138a, 141a. The Commission thus certified about
$9 million in losses, plus six percent annual interest. Cuba
has never compensated Havana Docks for that harm.
But the question in this case is not whether Cuba should
pay Havana Docks for depriving it of 44 years of its conces-
sion; the question is instead whether cruise lines using the
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 3
KAGAN, J., dissenting
docks twelve years after the concession’s expiration date
are liable to Havana Docks under Title III. And the answer
to that question is no. Recall what the statute says: “[A]ny
person” that “traffics in property which was confiscated by
the Cuban Government on or after January 1, 1959, shall
be liable to any United States national who owns the claim
to such property.” §6082(a)(1)(A) (emphasis added). The
“property which was confiscated” from Havana Docks is a
time-limited concession. We know that is the “property
which was confiscated” because that is the only property
Havana Docks ever owned—and thus the only property
Cuba could have confiscated from it. So to hold the cruise
lines liable, Havana Docks must show that they “traf-
fic[ked] in” its time-limited concession. Had the cruise lines
used the docks before 2004, Havana Docks would have a
good argument that they did so. But the cruise lines did not
use the docks until 2016—years after Havana Docks’ con-
cession was scheduled to expire. Given that fact, the cruise
lines did not “traffic in” the “property which was confis-
cated” from Havana Docks and so are not liable to it under
Title III.
The Court reaches the opposite conclusion because it be-
lieves that the “property which was confiscated” in this case
includes the physical docks themselves. See ante, at 11.
The majority believes that not because it thinks the physi-
cal docks ever belonged to Havana Docks. On the contrary,
the majority acknowledges that Havana Docks’ sole “prop-
erty interest was time-limited and set to expire in 2004.”
Ante, at 3. But as the majority sees it, when Title III says
“property which was confiscated,” it means not just the
property interest that was actually confiscated from the
plaintiff (here, the time-limited concession), but also “the
physical property in which the plaintiff had an interest”
(here, the physical docks). Ante, at 9, 10–11. There are
three related problems with that theory of the case.
4 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
KAGAN, J., dissenting
First, it misreads the statute Congress wrote. Congress
could have imposed liability on “any person” that “traffics
in property in which a United States national held an inter-
est which was confiscated.” If so, the majority’s result
would follow. But that is not what Title III says. Instead,
the statute imposes liability on “any person” that “traffics
in property which was confiscated,” period. §6082(a)(1)(A).
So, where the only “property” confiscated from the plaintiff
is an intangible property interest, the defendant is liable
only if he has trafficked in that interest. Trafficking in the
underlying physical thing is not enough, because doing so
is not trafficking in the “property which was confiscated.”
Of course, the majority is right that, by defining “property”
to include both physical things and intangible interests, the
Act “makes clear” that liability can be imposed for traffick-
ing in either. Ante, at 9; see §6023(12)(A) (“The term ‘prop-
erty’ means any property . . . , whether real, personal, or
mixed, and any present, future, or contingent right, secu-
rity, or other interest therein, including any leasehold in-
terest”). But that fact does not help the majority’s cause. It
means that where the “property” confiscated from the plain-
tiff is a physical thing, liability can attach for trafficking in
that thing. It does not mean (as the majority seems to
think) that where the “property” confiscated from the plain-
tiff is an intangible interest, liability can attach for traffick-
ing in something other than that interest—that is, in the
underlying physical thing. Always, according to the stat-
ute, trafficking can give rise to liability only when it is in
the actual “property which was confiscated.”
Second, the docks are not “property which was confis-
cated by the Cuban Government” because they were not, in
fact, confiscated by the Cuban Government; rather, Cuba
owned the docks all along. True enough that in 1960, the
Cuban Government issued a decree expropriating Havana
Docks’ assets and sent armed officers to physically occupy
the docks. That is how Cuba confiscated Havana Docks’
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 5
KAGAN, J., dissenting
usufructuary concession. But in taking those measures,
Cuba did not somehow confiscate the docks, because the
docks already belonged to Cuba. The majority emphasizes
that the Act defines “confiscat[ion]” to include seizing “con-
trol of property” and argues that Cuba’s actions fit that de-
scription because Cuba seized “control” of the docks. See
ante, at 15–16. But nothing in the Act’s definition—more
fully stated, “the nationalization, expropriation, or other
seizure by the Cuban Government of ownership or control
of property, on or after January 1, 1959,” §6023(4)(A)—
makes it possible for Cuba to confiscate property it always
owned (and Havana Docks never did). The definition’s in-
clusion of seizure of “control” just means that Cuba can
“confiscate[ ]” property belonging to someone else by seizing
“control” of it, even if ownership does not change hands. So,
for example, if Havana Docks had owned the docks and
Cuba had taken “control” of them without obtaining title,
that would still have counted as “confiscat[ion].” But that
is not what happened here—because, again, Havana Docks
owned not the docks themselves, but only a time-limited in-
terest in using them.*
Finally, the majority’s approach ignores basic principles
of property law. As every first-year law student learns,
“property” is defined by reference not just to spatial bound-
aries, but also to temporal ones. Cf. Tahoe-Sierra Preserva-
tion Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, 535
U. S. 302, 331–332 (2002) (“An interest in real property is
defined by the metes and bounds that describe its
——————
*The majority is wrong to say that this view “has the surprising con-
sequence that it is not ‘possible’ for a landlord to prematurely seize con-
trol of ‘property it always owned’ from a ‘renter with a lease.’ ” Ante, at
16, n. 6. A landlord could of course prematurely take control of physical
property (say, a house) that he owns but is leasing to a renter. It is just
that, when the landlord does so, what he confiscates is not the house—
which he already owns—but the lease alone, with its scheduled expira-
tion date.
6 HAVANA DOCKS CORP. v. ROYAL CARIBBEAN
CRUISES, LTD.
KAGAN, J., dissenting
geographic dimensions and the term of years that describes
the temporal aspect of the owner’s interest. . . . Both dimen-
sions must be considered if the interest is to be viewed in
its entirety”). Yet the majority inexplicably privileges the
spatial. It is obvious that a plaintiff cannot recover under
Title III for trafficking in property that falls outside its own
property’s spatial boundaries. Suppose Havana Docks had
a concession of unlimited duration, but only in the red
dock—not in the blue dock next to it. Havana Docks could
then recover from a defendant who uses the red dock, but
not from a defendant who uses the blue dock because that
dock lies outside its property interest. And if that is so, why
should it be different when the boundary is temporal, ra-
ther than spatial? Havana Docks had a concession in the
docks until 2004, so it could get compensation from a de-
fendant who used the docks before that date. But just as
Havana Docks could not recover from the user of the blue
dock, so too it should not recover from someone who used
the docks after 2004, when its concession was due to expire.
In either case, the trafficking would be in a thing falling
outside Havana Docks’ property interest—and whether it
falls outside the interest’s spatial boundaries, or instead its
temporal ones, should make no difference to the outcome.
At the end of the day, the Court’s interpretation of Title
III treats all property interests as if they were perpetual
ones. Like the Eleventh Circuit, I “do not believe that Con-
gress, in enacting Title III, meant to convert property inter-
ests which were temporally limited at the time of their con-
fiscation into fee simple interests in perpetuity such that
the holders of such limited interests could assert trafficking
claims through what Buzz Lightyear called ‘infinity and be-
yond.’ ” 119 F. 4th, at 1287 (quoting Toy Story (Pixar Ani-
mation Studios/Walt Disney Pictures 1995)). Instead, I
would hold that a plaintiff can recover under Title III only
when the defendant traffics in the actual property that was
confiscated from the plaintiff. Here, that means Havana
Cite as: 608 U. S. ____ (2026) 7
KAGAN, J., dissenting
Docks’ claim should fail, because the cruise lines did not
traffic in Havana Docks’ time-limited—and long-ago ex-
pired—concession. I respectfully dissent.