Legal disputes In 1986, Ernest and Julio sued their younger brother,
Joseph, for selling cheese that was branded with the Joseph Gallo Farms name. Joseph then counterclaimed, alleging that Ernest and Julio conspired to steal his share of the inheritance from their father. This claim included the winery, where the evidence submitted by Joseph's attorney suggested that it was actually started by their father. Joseph Gallo lost both suits and was forced to change the name of his business to Joseph Farms. In the 1990s, Gallo Winery agreed with Gallo Pasta (a Spanish company) that the latter would not sell its pasta in the United States. Gallo filed a
cease-and-desist order in April 2009 against "The Spanish Table", a Seattle-based specialty food retailer, for carrying the pasta despite the previous agreement with the manufacturer. In October 2019, a lawsuit was filed in the
Eastern District of California that claimed Gallo used patented technology without a license to develop their irrigation system.
Labor relations The
United Farm Workers (UFW) began boycotting Gallo in the summer of 1973 after Gallo did not renew their contract and signed with the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT). The dispute occurred during a broader period of labor conflict in California agriculture in the early 1970s. Following the contract expiration, the UFW called a strike beginning June 27, 1973, and organized a nationwide consumer boycott of Gallo products. The conflict reflected broader tensions between the United Farm Workers and the Teamsters union, as growers across California signed agreements with different labor organizations during the period. Led by
Cesar Chavez, the UFW alleged that Gallo had worked out a "
sweetheart deal" with the IBT that offered fewer protections. The UFW also alleged that workers did not agree to Teamster representation. An estimated 10,000 workers and supporters of the UFW marched 100 miles over the course of a week to the Gallo winery in
Modesto. Nationwide supporters of the boycott protested the buying and selling of Gallo wines, including student groups at
Harvard University in
Cambridge, MA, who demanded a boycott of Gallo by the university and picketed local stores. In October 1974, approximately 70 demonstrators picketed a Harvard-area store, urging customers to boycott Gallo wine during the dispute. The boycott also coincided with broader legislative changes in California, including the 1975
California Agricultural Labor Relations Act, which established formal union election procedures for farmworkers. The boycott against Gallo was called off by the UFW in 1978, after the union felt it had improved workers' rights of representation in labor disputes. citing interference from Gallo. This was the second time in a decade a vote to remove the union was overturned due to allegations of Gallo illegally trying to influence proceedings; the other was a 2003 ruling in which the CALRB threw out an election, citing a foreman who improperly requested signatures for the petition for the vote. Gallo appealed the 2003 decision. In 2023, Gallo laid off 355 of its California workers after a Texas company,
Republic National Distributing Co. (RNDC), took control of handling partnerships with chain retailers in California. ==Wine brands==