Napa Wine War: Family Vineyard Battles County Over $4 Million Judgment

Last Wednesday, Pacific Legal Foundation stepped in for Hoopes Vineyard, asking a judge to wipe out a post-trial judgment that the nonprofit and the winery say comes to nearly $4 million. In court papers, they argue the combined civil penalties, attorneys’ fees and costs are punitive, wildly out of proportion and would effectively bankrupt the multigenerational family operation. What started as a Napa County code-enforcement case over tastings, tours and other hospitality at the former Hopper Creek site has grown into a full-scale legal brawl that sharply curtails public activity at the property.

Pacific Legal Foundation Files Post-Trial Motion

In its notice and supporting briefs, the Sacramento-based group attacks the court’s award, which it pegs at about $3.96 million once fees and costs are added, as a violation of the Constitution’s Excessive Fines Clause and a crushing blow to a small, family-run winery. Pacific Legal Foundation says it is representing Hoopes Vineyard pro bono and is urging the judge to vacate the judgment outright or at least slash it to what they argue is a constitutionally acceptable level. “No family should lose everything over ordinary business activity that harms no one,” a foundation attorney is quoted as saying in the group’s announcement.

Those arguments appear in filings and a press statement from Pacific Legal Foundation.

What the Court Ordered

The trial court turned an earlier preliminary injunction into a permanent one and imposed civil penalties totaling $1,525,000, while putting off to a later hearing the full calculation of attorneys’ fees and other costs that Napa County is seeking. Under the permanent injunction, many public-facing hospitality activities at the property are barred, including on-site public tastings, tours, marketing events and sales of merchandise linked to those events. The order still allows winemaking and limited retail use that lines up with historic entitlements for the site. The county has also made the court orders and trial filings available for public review.

Key details are set out in the court’s court order dated Nov. 3, 2025, with posted case materials available through Napa County.

Where Appeals Stand

Hoopes and two other wineries have also raised federal claims, and those matters have been consolidated on appeal. The Ninth Circuit docket indicates the combined appeals are being placed on a San Francisco oral-argument calendar in March 2026, with local coverage reporting that a March 10 hearing date has been set. What happens in those appellate arguments will help determine whether the injunction and the nearly $4 million post-trial judgment stay in place while the parties continue to fight over constitutional and preemption issues…

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