Wineries to get day in court
Colin Dacre - Oct 12, 2017 - BC Biz

Image: CNW Group
Five small B.C. wineries have been granted intervener status in the upcoming interprovincial wine shipping case before the Supreme Court of Canada

Five small B.C. wineries will be getting their day in the Supreme Court of Canada, as they argue in favour of interprovincial shipping of liquor.

The nation’s top court will hear R v. Comeau in early December. The case will mark the first time a winery has had the chance to address the legal barriers around shipping Canadian wine within the country.

Curtis Krouzel (50th Parallel Estate), Ian MacDonald (Liquidity), Jim D’Andrea (Noble Ridge), Christine Coletta (Okanagan Crush Pad), and John Skinner (Painted Rock) are heading a coalition of more than 100 small B.C. wineries that say they need national distribution to build long-term businesses.

“The Supreme Court of Canada decision in R. v. Comeau will determine the fate of the B.C. wine industry for decades to come,” said the wineries’ lawyer, Shea Coulson, in a news release.

The five winemakers are one of a couple dozen “interveners” at the hearing on Dec. 6 and 7. After the hearing, the court could take up to a year to make its decision.

“The Court has to balance many complex interests, but my clients will argue that it is possible to incrementally change the law to permit interprovincial shipments of Canadian wine, and why it is of fundamental importance to the future survival of the industry to remove these barriers,” Coulson added.


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