16-3-221. Illegal acts by brewers or beer importers. (1) It is unlawful for any brewer or beer importer or any officer, agent, or representative of any brewer or beer importer to:

Ask a legal question, get an answer ASAP!
Click here to chat with a lawyer about your rights.

Terms Used In Montana Code 16-3-221

  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Person: includes a corporation or other entity as well as a natural person. See Montana Code 1-1-201
  • State: when applied to the different parts of the United States, includes the District of Columbia and the territories. See Montana Code 1-1-201

(a)coerce, attempt to coerce, or persuade any person licensed to sell beer at wholesale to enter into any agreement or to take any action that would violate or tend to violate any of the laws of this state or any rules promulgated by the department;

(b)sell its products in the state without a written contract, which conforms to the provisions of 16-3-221 through 16-3-226, with each appointed licensed wholesale distributor;

(c)designate or allow more than one wholesale distributor to sell or distribute a specific brand of the brewer’s or beer importer’s products to retail licensees in the same area, provided that nothing in this part prohibits the brewer or beer importer from designating more than one wholesale distributor to sell or distribute different brands of the same manufacturer to retail licensees in the same area;

(d)fix or maintain the price at which a wholesale distributor resells the brewer’s or beer importer’s products. Without limitation, it is a violation of this section if:

(i)after a wholesale distributor has exceeded a resale price increase recommended by a brewer or beer importer, the brewer or beer importer raises the price that it charges the wholesale distributor for those products within 60 days;

(ii)after a wholesale distributor has exceeded a resale price increase recommended by a brewer or beer importer, the brewer or beer importer raises the price that it charges the wholesale distributor in an amount proportionately larger than the amount that it raised the wholesale distributor’s prices initially when compared to the increase in the resale price that it recommended to the wholesale distributor; or

(iii)the brewer or beer importer links or ties its participation in promotional discounts to the wholesale distributor’s compliance with any recommended resale price.

(e)cancel, terminate, discontinue, or fail to renew, except for just cause and in accordance with the current terms and standards established by the brewer or beer importer then equally applicable to all wholesalers, any agreement or contract, written or oral, or the franchise of any wholesaler existing on January 1, 1974, or entered into after that date to sell beer manufactured by the brewer or imported by the beer importer. A brewer or beer importer may, notwithstanding the preceding sentence, make reasonable classifications among wholesalers. If a brewer or beer importer cancels or terminates a wholesaler’s franchise, the brewer or beer importer has the burden of proving that the classification was reasonable and not arbitrary. The provisions of 16-3-221 through 16-3-226 must be a part of any franchise, contract, agreement, or understanding, whether written or oral, between any wholesaler of beer licensed to do business in this state and any manufacturer or beer importer doing business with the licensed wholesaler just as though the provisions had been specifically agreed upon between the wholesaler and the manufacturer or beer importer. A wholesaler of beer licensed to conduct business in the state may not waive any of the protections or agree to any provision contrary to 16-3-221 through 16-3-226 by any conduct, including but not limited to the signing of any contract or agreement with terms contrary to those provisions.

(2)(a) Just cause as used in subsection (1)(e) means that the wholesaler failed to comply with the reasonable requirements placed on the wholesaler by the brewer or beer importer as a part of any written franchise, contract, or agreement between the parties.

(b)The sale or purchase or other restructuring of the brewer or beer importer by a successor in the manufacturing tier of the beer industry does not constitute just cause as that term is used in subsection (1)(e).

(c)For the purposes of this subsection (2), a successor means a person or entity who replaces a brewer or beer importer with regard to the right to manufacture, sell, distribute, or import a brand or brands of beer regardless of the character or form of the succession. A successor is obligated to all of the terms and conditions of any franchise, contract, agreement, or understanding, whether written or oral, in effect on the date of succession. A successor has the right to contractually require its wholesalers to comply with operational standards of performance if the standards are uniformly established for all of the successor’s wholesalers and conform to the requirements of this section.