So.... four people *can* brew 400 gallons at Fred's house? And if the four people are married or have room-mates, four people can brew 800 gallons at Fred's house?
So.... four people *can* brew 400 gallons at Fred's house? And if the four people are married or have room-mates, four people can brew 800 gallons at Fred's house?
Thats what i am thinking. It seems like the general idea is that its per brewer not buy the location. Even if "Fred" has all the equipment stored so the product stays there to be keged for the brewer and by the brewer.
house full of illegals across the street from us can brew 3200 gallons
right
interesting; the key part is REMOVAL and at what point does it have to be removed?
let's say that one day you have 19 friends come over to the house where you reside by yourself and brew 5 gallons for yourself and each of your friends. once all of you pitch your yeast, all of your friends take their share home.
you could do this 20 times and be in full compliance of the law. federal at least
but what if you keep all that beer while it's fermenting? you're at your household limit for production
BUT! let's say you keg it all in cornies and THEN each of your friends takes their amount home. is it considered removal under the statute and you still have 95 gallons to go to reach the limit?
how about consuming? if you invite your 19 friends back and you drink it all, does it still still count against YOUR household limit?
So.... four people *can* brew 400 gallons at Fred's house? And if the four people are married or have room-mates, four people can brew 800 gallons at Fred's house?
or if brewer one is married= 200, brewer 2 is married=200, brewer 3 is single=100, brewer 4 has roommate = 200, for a total of 700 gal a year, with each staying within the perspective limit.
That begs the 'what is a household' for terms of the brewing law? Different families at the same address? are they serveral different 'housholds'. Given that you do all your taxes seperately I'd say yes spereate households. And yet easiest way of defining houshold, who lives in the house/appartment/condo/igloo/cave?
I'm guessing since you have to report overages on your taxes (25.207) that unless you are living like some polyamourous group you are seperate households. (geeze, went from legal issues on beer to poly amourousness.. get your post in now before the thread gets locked!). But again, what do I know about how this law is interpereted.
Business & Professions Code § 23356.2.
(a) No license or permit shall be required for the manufacture of beer for personal or family use, and not for sale, by a person over 21 years of age. The aggregate amount of beer with respect to any household shall not exceed (1) 200 gallons per calendar year if there are two or more adults in the household or (2) 100 gallons per calendar year if there is only one adult in the household.
(b) No license or permit shall be required for the manufacture of wine for personal or family use, and not for sale, by a person over 21 years of age. The aggregate amount of wine with respect to any household shall not exceed (1) 200 gallons per calendar year if there are two or more adults in the household or (2) 100 gallons per calendar year if there is only one adult in the household.
(c) Any beer manufactured pursuant to this section may be removed from the premises where manufactured for use in competition at organized affairs, exhibitions, or competitions, including homemakers’ contests, tastings, or judgings.
(d) Any wine made pursuant to this section may be removed from the premises where made for personal or family use, including use at organized affairs, exhibitions, or competitions, such as homemakers’ contests, tastings, or judgings. Wine used under this section shall not be sold or offered for sale.
(e) Except as provided herein, nothing in this section authorizes any activity in violation of Section 23300, 23355, or 23399.1.
Also, if any of you are married, you can double that amount
I believe I'm at 75 gallons right now between, beer, cider, and wine. So "legally" I can do another 125 gallons still since I'm married. But how will they ever know![]()
"Note the "dozen roommates" argument doesn't work here... or under the CFR, as MaxStout posted above."
But under some jurisdictions your roommates are considerate a separate household altogether.
"The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) defines a member of household as a person who is related to you or lives with you for the entire year as a member of your household" Which is odd, do roomates now need to file joint tax returns?
No, because they are taking "household" to be quasi-synonymous with "family" in this context. If you rent out a room in the attic to a college student and he lives there for the entire year but you never eat meals wiht him and you never take him on weekend trips to Grandma's he isn't considered a member of the household.
From the census people:
"A household consists of all the people who occupy a housing unit..."
But this is only for the purpose of and in the context of the census.
Which goes the the obvious - everyone living at one address is one 'household'.
Except for the cases of homebrewing it doesn't make sense. So what if I'm a lodger in a house with another family. When they brew their beer they aren't sharing it with me so why should the fact that the family already has two adults brewing beer limit how much beer I can brew? Nor when i brew I'm not sharing it with them so why should I limit their brew?
OK, this is getting rather pedantic, but here we go anyway...
Trying to read in some other interpretation of the term "household," as it applies to the CFR, is disingenuous. Making an argument about how the IRS (or any other governmental body) views numerous individuals living under one roof, does not inpact the plain language of the CFR. The CFR makes it abundantly clear that the limit is reached once you have 2 or more adults residing in that household. Its interpretation has nothing to do with the IRS' definition of multiple income taxpayers residing in one place. That's 200 gallons in a calendar year, regardless of whether there are 2 or 20 or 200 adults residing there, and regardless of what relation any of them have to one another. And the law doesn't care of they are sharing it with one another.
Courts apply a "plain-language" interpretation to a statute; barring any ambiguities, the court will construe the law based on its language. There is nothing ambiguous in the CFR, nor does it incorporate by reference any definition by the IRS, or any other body.
The CFR is quite simple. I wish more laws were written this well.
As as often as you see it work on TV, clever technicalities, or applications of grammar-tiwsts do not often result in a get-out-of-jail free card.
I agree with your solution/end result, but disagree with your understanding about the CFR. the CFR which controls the IRS (who is another name for the TTB whose web page has the HB info) isn't clear. But the plain reading would be 'all who live at a legal address.' And it is best in some areas to error on caution than not.