As if nasty weather didn't make things hard enough, two Minnesota wineries say the state — and now a federal judge — are unfairly suppressing their vineyard sales by requiring most of their grapes to be homegrown.
A ruling from U.S. District Judge Wilhelmina Wright on Monday dismissed a lawsuit by Alexis Bailly Vineyard and Next Chapter Winery. Bailly in Hastings and Next Chapter in New Prague sued the state a year ago, saying state law restricted their ability to expand because of a licensing requirement that 51 percent of their grapes be Minnesota-grown.
The lawsuit, filed by the nonprofit, self-described libertarian Institute for Justice on behalf of the two wineries, claims Minnesota law governing their wine sales violates the commerce clause of the U.S. Constitution. The law unfairly restricts business across state lines, the lawsuit said.
"I'm an artist making wine. Wine is my craft. I'm limited in the palette I can choose," said Nan Bailly, owner of Alexis Bailly, the state's oldest winery, started in 1973.
Plan to appeal
Bailly and her lawyer Anthony Sanders said the law is unconstitutional, so they will ask the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn the ruling. Wright's 10-page ruling Monday didn't address the constitutionality of the state law. Instead, she said the wineries lacked the authority to sue over the law because they have the option of expanding their businesses through a manufacturer's license.
Most of the state's 80 farm wineries favor current law, said Dave Mohn, president of the Minnesota Grape Growers Association, because using homegrown grapes ultimately will give the region an identity as a wine producer. Most Minnesota producers use the hardier grapes bred to survive the cold.
"We've been trying to build an industry from these grapes. They're more acidic than what is grown in Napa Valley," he said.
Like Bailly, Winehaven in Chisago City is one of the state's oldest and largest growers. But winemaker Kyle Peterson, who is also a lawyer, agreed with Wright's ruling, saying it protects the unique appeal of Minnesota agritourism and wines sold on the farms here.