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On Reserve

A Wine Law Blog

Category: Prohibition

Supreme Court Says Tennessee Law Requiring Citizenship for Alcohol Retail License is Unconstitutional

Lindsey A. Zahn, June 26, 2019June 26, 2019

Today, the Supreme Court struck down on a Tennessee regulation that requires residency of two years for applicants applying for an in-state retail alcohol license. In a 7-2 decision, the Court reasoned that, while the 21st Amendment extends states the right to regulate sales of alcohol within state border, there…

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Bill Introduced to New York State Assembly Supports Empire Wine

Lindsey A. Zahn, March 13, 2015March 13, 2015

As reported by The Albany Times Union and Capitol Confidential, a bill was introduced this week to the New York State Assembly by Assemblyman Phil Steck that proposes to amend New York State’s alcohol beverage laws. See Bill Supports Empire Wine Sales; Bill Would Curb SLA’s Power Over Out-Of-State Wine Shipments. The bill will reportedly stop…

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Retailer Empire Wine Sues New York State Liquor Authority: Direct Shipping

Lindsey A. Zahn, October 1, 2014December 15, 2014

In August, the New York State Liquor Authority (“NYSLA”) charged a New York retailer, Empire Wine & Spirits, with sixteen counts of improperly shipping wine to out-of-state consumers in states including California, Illinois, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. See New York Retailer Charged with Illegally Shipping Wine to Out-of-State Consumers. The charges…

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Revisiting the Volstead Act: The Power Behind the Eighteenth Amendment for Prohibition

Lindsey A. Zahn, December 5, 2013December 15, 2014

Happy National Repeal Day! In honor of the repeal of the National Prohibition Act on December 5, 1933, we thought it appropriate to re-post an article originally written two years ago on the Volstead Act. See Revisiting the Volstead Act: The Power Behind the Eighteenth Amendment for Prohibition; see also Revisiting the Roads to…

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Revisited: Granholm v. Heald and the Wine Industry

Lindsey A. Zahn, August 6, 2013December 15, 2014

This blog entry was originally posted on August 7, 2010, five years after the Supreme Court decided a major case impacting the wine industry. The decision Granholm v. Heald remains important to the wine industry and provides great context for the types of legal issues the American wine industry faces on a…

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Defining the Limits of Intoxicating Beverages for Non-Beverage Purposes: Prohibition’s Dumbra v. United States

Lindsey A. Zahn, May 7, 2013August 11, 2014

As lovers of wine and the law, we all know about the renowned 2005 Supreme Court case Granholm v. Heald, as well as several recent wine lawsuits from the early and mid-2000s involving our precious beverage. In the upcoming weeks, On Reserve seeks to focus on additional cases that shaped…

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Revisiting the Roads to Prohibition: The Maine Laws

Lindsey A. Zahn, March 19, 2013December 15, 2014

One of the most interesting time periods in the American history of alcohol beverage regulation is Prohibition; but the road to Prohibition was not paved overnight. Perhaps the most significant time period is the years prior to the national prohibition on the sale, transportation  or manufacture of alcohol beverages within the…

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Revisiting the Volstead Act: The Power Behind the Eighteenth Amendment for Prohibition

Lindsey A. Zahn, August 1, 2011December 15, 2014

The Volstead Act: the legislative measure whose primary intent was to frame the execution of the Eighteenth Amendment, a curt and inexorable constitutional revision whose overtones still reside in contemporary American society even upon its repeal almost one hundred years ago.  The legal supremacy of the Eighteenth Amendment, however, often overshadows…

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