High court wine battle draws local attention
Alicia Robinson
Local wine enthusiasts are hoping the U.S. Supreme Court will allow
vino to flow across state lines, after the court heard cases Tuesday
involving states’ regulation of alcohol sales.
Nearly all 50 states produce wine, but 24 of them have laws that
prohibit direct sales of wine from producers in other states.
California does not have such a law.
States claim they need to regulate alcohol sales for safety, while
winemakers argue the laws are an unconstitutional protection by
states of their own wineries.
Wine producers believe the restrictions allow alcohol distributors
to have a monopoly on wine sales. Small wineries can sell their
product in restrictive states through a licensed distributor, but
that drives up the price and limits access, said Larry Fox, president
of the Costa Mesa-based Orange County Wine Society.
California is the largest wine producer in the United States, but
people in half of the states can’t try its products, Fox said.
Small wineries are trying to get a foothold in a profitable
industry, and direct sales to winery visitors and over the Internet
are essential for that, said Richard Moriarty, who owns Newport Beach
Vineyards and Winery.
“It’s sort of the lifeblood of a small winery,” he said. “[Big
distributors] have a catalog that’s like an inch thick, and you sort
of get lost in the mix.”
Moriarty’s first production in 2001 was 82 cases of wine, which he
sold to local restaurants and at stores such as Hi-Time Wine Cellars
in Costa Mesa.
Moriarty is petitioning the city of Newport Beach to correct what
he thinks was an oversight in his operating license. He’s not allowed
to offer tastings and sales at his winery, and he can’t sell wine
online.
The debate hinges on the 21st Amendment, which gave states total
control over alcohol sales within their borders and included
provisions that say states can’t discriminate against businesses in
other states.
“How much force should the 21st Amendment have?” said Mary Ellen
Gale, a professor at Whittier Law School in Costa Mesa. “Should it
have such force that it cuts off the constitutional protection for
economic protection? ... There’s a larger question here about how we
want to structure our national economy.”
In some past cases, the Supreme Court has chosen to support the
21st Amendment, Gale said.
Wine lovers want to see the sales restrictions struck down so they
can sample more varieties of wine.
“It’s hard for a small winery to bring their wine into another
state because the bigger distributors don’t want to mess around with
them,” said Diana Hirst, general manager at Hi-Time Wine Cellars. “It
gives people choices, where they couldn’t get [those wines] in their
state.”
Attempts to reach local distributors at Young’s Market Co. in
Anaheim and Southern Wine and Spirits in Cerritos were unsuccessful.
The Supreme Court has until the end of its session in June to
decide the case.
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