Loretto Winery Ltd. v. Gazzara

601 F. Supp. 850, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23008
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 30, 1985
Docket84 Civ. 6024-CLB
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 601 F. Supp. 850 (Loretto Winery Ltd. v. Gazzara) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loretto Winery Ltd. v. Gazzara, 601 F. Supp. 850, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23008 (S.D.N.Y. 1985).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BRIEANT, District Judge.

In the present action, this Court has been asked to examine the constitutionality of certain provisions of the New York Alcoholic Beverage Control Law (“ABC Law”). Plaintiff, 1 alleging the absence of any genuine issue of material fact, moves pursuant to Rule 56, F.R.Civ.P. for an order declaring Section 3, subdivisions 36-a and 79-a of the aforementioned statute unconstitutional and enjoining defendants from enforcing those provisions. Defendants also move for summary judgment in their favor, asserting that the legislation is constitutional as a matter of law. 2

The provisions of the ABC Law at issue herein became effective July 24, 1984, and provide in substance that the sale of a newly defined “wine product” in retail grocery stores pursuant to a license, a practice not allowed previously in New York State, would now be permitted. N.Y.Ale.Bev. C.L., Section 79-a. The law defines “wine product” as a beverage containing inter alia, “wine produced exclusively from grapes grown in New York State and containing not more than six percentum alcohol by volume.” (Emphasis added). N.Y. Alc.Bev.C.L., Section 3, subdivision 36-a. 3

Thus, although locally grown grapes can be integrated with other ingredients to produce a “wine product” for sale in licensed retail grocery stores, the prior ban against the sale in retail grocery stores of any wine products remains intact as to items made wholly or in part from grapes grown outside the State of New York.

Generally wines are sold in “package stores” licensed to do so, which do not sell groceries or non-alcohol related products. New York has less than 4,500 package stores, compared to about 23,000 retail grocery stores, so the opportunity to sell a wine product in a grocery invites far greater market penetration with resulting significant advantage to the product made with New York grapes.

Plaintiff Loretto Winery Ltd. is a California corporation with its principal place of business in that State. It is engaged in the business of producing and selling wines and wine products made, at least in substantial part, from grapes grown in the State of California. Among the beverages produced and sold by plaintiff is a “California Special Wine Cooler,” a wine product sold in forty states and containing six percentum of alcohol. (Affidavit of Dominic Scotto, October 15, 1984, at 1-2). This product, it is conceded by defendants, is not chemically different from the newly authorized New York “wine product.” (Transcript of September 6, 1984, at 7).

Plaintiff has previously taken steps to have its wine product sold in New York in package stores, but, until recently, had been prevented from doing so due to its *853 failure to comply with certain state label-ling requirements. Id. at 2. However, pri- or to commencement of this action, the New York State Liquor Authority granted its approval for the sale by plaintiff of its wine product in New York package stores. (See Statement of Defendants submitted pursuant to Rule 3(g) of the Civil Rules of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, at 5). Plaintiff continues to be prevented, by reason of the 1984 amendments, from selling its wine product in New York’s retail grocery stores. This is solely because it does not use 100% grapes grown in New York.

Plaintiff charges that the 1984 amendments to the ABC Law are unconstitutional under the interstate commerce clause. US. Const., art. I, § 8, cl. 3. 4 Specifically, plaintiff contends that the amendments unlawfully discriminate against, and unduly burden, interstate commerce in grapes and grape products, and that as a result of the ban against the sale of its California wine product in New York grocery stores, plaintiff will suffer severe and irreparable injury in the form of lost revenue. Plaintiff further asserts that it has no adequate remedy at law. (Amended Complaint, at 6-8).

In contrast, defendants contend that the challenged provisions of the ABC Law comply with applicable constitutional requirements. Moreover, argue defendants, even though the ABC Law may offend the commerce clause, the Twenty-first or Repeal Amendment of the Constitution left to the states broad powers to regulate the sale or use of alcoholic beverages within their borders, including the authority to enact legislation limiting the sale of wine products in retail grocery stores to those produced exclusively from grapes grown within the State.

A brief review of the history of National Prohibition and the prohibition movement is essential. This effort reached its culmination in the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment, effective January 1, 1920, and declined markedly after that Amendment was repealed in 1933. We consider below the background of the Twenty-first Amendment and the extent to which it conferred upon the states the power, after repeal of National Prohibition, to regulate the sale or use of intoxicating liquors in interstate commerce.

I

The roots of prohibition at the national level in this country date back before the founding of the Prohibition Party in 1869. The prohibitionists, comprised mostly of people living on the farms and in country towns, believed that alcohol constituted a grave threat to the moral fiber of the public in the United States and had to be stamped out. 5 Though the movement did gain public support, its initial achievement was in creating support of principles, rather than having any practical impact. Thus the early effort to achieve prohibition proved largely ineffective. Then, just four years after the inception of the Prohibition Party, the Women’s Christian Temperance *854 Union (“WCTU”) was founded. This organization, building upon the foundation laid by the Prohibition Party, drew the support of women in a nationwide effort not only to gain support for prohibition, but also to elect government officials dedicated to “local option,” a 19th century practice by which communities voted themselves “Dry.” The WCTU also favored the enactment and enforcement of legislation that would restrict the interstate flow of liquor throughout the United States. F. Dobyns, The Amazing Story of Repeal (1940) at 229-30. The WCTU, like the Prohibition Party, was not immediately successful in achieving its objectives. Both organizations, however, did succeed in keeping the prohibition movement alive and created a social climate that would later be conducive to gaining substantive changes in the laws.

Those changes came closer in 1893 with the formation of the Anti-Saloon League. For the very first time those advocating prohibition of unrestricted liquor traffic were able to gain the support of a wide cross-section of the population, including businessmen, and various church groups, university faculties and political parties. 6

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601 F. Supp. 850, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loretto-winery-ltd-v-gazzara-nysd-1985.