[1] In 1920, the Taylor Wine Company needed room to expand as well as consistent sources of electricity and water.
The winery was moved to a location two miles outside of Hammondsport and the original property, where Bully Hill sits today, was sold to a Lloyd Sprague.
A label was placed on the barrel giving explicit instructions on how the juice would turn into wine if precautions weren't taken.
Bully Hill was one of the first small estate wineries in the Keuka Lake area since Prohibition.
Visitors at Bully Hill Vineyards increased 25% after Taylor went on a media campaign to spread the word of the case.
[citation needed] "Judge Burke then ordered Bully Hill to adhere to a list of 11 stipulations detailing what Taylor could say, and how and when he could use his name.
He also ordered that within 30 days of his decision, Bully Hill had to deliver to Taylor Wine all prohibited labeling and advertising "for destruction.
[citation needed] Taylor was upset: "I remembered when all those farmers demonstrated in Washington, they let loose a bunch of goats, and all the guards were running around after them.
"[citation needed] Until his death Taylor would often say things like, "Just call me Walter S. Blank," or "Yes, I'm the owner of Bully Hill, but I can't tell you where I came from.