Friday, April 17, 2026

Freedom for Home Distillery!

By Dan Greenberg - April 17, 2026 at 10:48AM

Over 150 years ago, Congress passed a statute that criminalized home distilling—the practice of setting up a still in one’s home or backyard to manufacture alcoholic beverages. Last week, however, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that this statute was unconstitutional. In other words, the Court of Appeals recognized that my clients—the nonprofit Hobby Distiller’s Association and four of its named members—are now free to distill alcoholic beverages at home as long as they comply with existing state and federal law.

As Devin Watkins (my co-counsel and former colleague) noted on April 10, this is a huge victory—not just for homebrew hobbyists, but also for limited government. As we argued in district court two years ago, the theory of this case is simple. The Constitution authorizes only a limited number of congressional powers. If a power is not found in the Constitution, then Congress cannot exercise it. And there’s no congressional power that can be used to criminalize home distilling.

The Department of Justice disagreed: In district court, the DOJ argued that Congress’s power to criminalize home distillery could rest in either or both its tax power and its commerce power. The district court disagreed with the government, however, and it rejected both these arguments. When the DOJ appealed the district court’s decision, however, it abandoned its commerce-power argument (I will leave it to the reader to speculate why); instead, it rested its arguments for the constitutionality of federal home-distillery criminalization entirely on the tax power. 

That brings us to last week’s opinion, in which the court of appeals found that the tax power cannot be used to criminalize home distilling. By and large, Judge Jones’s opinion adopted the reasoning that we originally advocated; what follows is a highly informal summary of that opinion. As the opinion explained, the tax power has its limits. Its purpose is to raise revenue for the government, and its authority is limited to requiring the public to pay the taxes that they owe. It cannot be used merely as a tool of prohibition, partly because such prohibition is actually an anti-revenue measure and therefore an improper use of the power, and partly because reading the tax power as including a sub-power to ban activities that might give rise to tax evasion would make the tax power almost limitless.

From a constitutional-interpretation perspective, the most interesting part of Judge Jones’s skillfully reasoned opinion was her explanation of the proper construction of Congress’s constitutional power to “make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.” (As the Supreme Court noted in Printz v. United States, this clause is regularly used—or, more precisely, misused—to defend the overly expansive or permissive exercise of congressional powers.) 

As Jones’s opinion explained: In McCulloch v. Maryland, Justice Marshall determined that the clause’s necessity requirement forces federal statutes to be “plainly adapted” to their enabling powers, and because the statutory prohibition at issue is unrelated to the goal of the tax power—raising revenue—it flunks the “plainly adapted” test. Marshall’s explanation of the clause’s propriety requirement was extensive. Most relevant here is this warning: Congress cannot “adopt measures which are prohibited by the constitution,” nor can it pass “laws for the accomplishment of objects not [e]ntrusted to the government … under the pretext of executing its powers.” 

The court of appeals found that the statute at issue fails that test as well for at least two reasons: it improperly removes the option of paying the tax that other (non-home) distillers bear, and it appears to rest on an implied federal police power or something very much like it—that is, a general federal power to regulate health and safety.

Several old friends provided a fair amount of informal advice and consultation throughout this action, and I am extremely grateful to them. I won’t name them all, chiefly because the credit or blame for any pleading must ultimately go to the attorneys who sign it, but I do want to express my ardent appreciation of and admiration for ace appellate advocate Andrew Grossman, who did a predictably excellent job in his appearance before the Fifth Circuit for oral argument. I also should clarify that this lawsuit is not, strictly speaking, a Cato Institute product—although it rests on the work of a fair number of attorneys like me and Andrew who have Cato associations. 

To be clear: I did the bulk of my work on this suit before I was ever employed by Cato, and when I work on it now, I am not on Cato’s clock—my work on this suit occurs on evenings and weekends; if it is necessary, I will take leave to work on it in the future. 

In any event, I celebrated this victory for distillery hobbyists and for freedom this weekend. If you think really hard, I bet you can figure out how!

Reprinted with permission from CATO Institute.



from Ron Paul Institute Featured Articles

via IFTTT

No comments:

Post a Comment

Merchandise

Ron Paul America Cloud

Site Credits

Ron Paul America

is voluntarily affiliated with

Liberty Operations Group

______________________________

Site created, maintained and hosted by

Liberty Web Services

Tags

Constitution Individual Liberty Liberty Report Ron Paul Ron Paul Institute ronpaulinstitute.org #TurnOnTheTruth 2008 2012 4th amendment 911 ACTION Afghanistan war Agency Aggression Principle al-Qaeda Alan Colmes Alert America America's Fault Americans antigun AR 15 assault weapon Audit Authoritarian bailouts Believe Big Brother big government bill of rights Blame blowback bubbles Bush Campaign for Liberty Career Politician Eric Cantor Central Bank Charity China churches collapse Collectivism Commission committee Compassion Congress Conservative constitution Constitution Crash dangerous person Democrat Democrats Donald Trump Donald Trump. Planned Parenthood drones economic Economy Edward Snowden End the Fed European Union Federal Reserve Floyd Bayne floyd bayne for congress force foreign interventionism free market free markets GOP Nominee GOP Presidential Debates Government Great Depression gun control House of Representatives housing bubble HR 1745 I like Ron Paul except on foreign policy If ye love wealth better than liberty IFTTT Individual Individualism Institute Irag Iran Iraq war ISIL ISIS Judge Andrew Napalitano libertarian Liberty Liberty Letters Liberty Report Lost mass Media meltdown metadata Micheal Moore Middle East Mitt Romney nap National Neocons New Ron Paul Ad New York Times Newsletters Newt Gingrich No Non non-interventionism NSA NSA Snooping Obama Overreach overthrow Patriot Act peace Peace and Prosperity politicians Pope Francis President Presidential Presidential Race programs prosperity Race Racist Racist Newsletters Rand Paul Read the Bills Act recessions redistribution of wealth refugee crisis Repeal Obamacare Report Republican Republican Nomination Republican Nominee Republicans Revolution Rick Santorum Rick Santorum Exposed Ron Ron Paul Ron Paul Institute Ron Paul Institute Featured Articles Ron Paul Institute for Peace And Prosperity Ron Paul Institute Peace and Prosperity Articles Ron Paul Next Chapter Media Channel Ron Paul Racist Newsletters ron paul's foreign policy Ronald Reagan ronpaulchannel.com ronpaulinstitute.org Rosa DeLauro russia Samuel Adams Saudi Arabia Second Amendment Security Senate Senator September 11th attacks Show Soviet Spying stimulate Stock Market surveillance Syria tech bubble terrorist The the Fed the poor US US foreign policy Us troops USA Freedom Act Virginia Virginia Republican Primary voluntarism. Liberty Voluntary Warner Warning warrantless wiretaps YouTube