UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                    Form 8-K

                                 Current Report
     Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of The Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Date of Report (Date of 
earliest event reported):     May 26, 2005

                            Brown-Forman Corporation 
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

   Delaware                  002-26821            61-0143150        
(State or other            (Commission         (I.R.S. Employer
 jurisdiction of            File Number)       Identification No.)
 incorporation)

 850 Dixie Highway, Louisville, Kentucky           40210          
(Address of principal executive offices)         (Zip Code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code (502) 585-1100




Item 5.02.  Departure of Directors or Principal Officers; Election of Directors;
            Appointment of Principal Officers

On May 26, 2005,  the Board of Directors  elected Paul C. Varga to the office of
Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation, effective as of August 1. Mr. Varga,
age 41, an eighteen  year  employee  of  Brown-Forman,  currently  serves as the
President  of  Brown-Forman  Beverages,  a  division  of the  registrant,  and a
director of the Company,  positions he has filled since 2003.  In 1998 he became
director of marketing for the Company's spirits brands in North America,  and in
2002 was promoted to global chief  marketing  officer for the Company's  spirits
brands. Owsley Brown II will remain Chairman of the Board.

Andrew Varga, brother of Paul Varga, is an employee of the Company.


Item 5.03.  Amendment of Articles of Incorporation or Bylaws;
            Changes in Fiscal Year.

On May 26, 2005,  the Board of Directors  amended  section 2.1 of the By-Laws of
the Corporation to read as follows:

   SECTION 2.1 Number;  Qualification.  The Board of Directors of the
   Corporation shall consist of not less than three (3) nor more than seventeen
   (17) persons, who shall hold office until the Annual Meeting of the
   Stockholders next ensuing after their election, and until their respective
   successors are elected and shall qualify. The number of Directors to serve
   from time to time shall be fixed by the Board of Directors subject to being
   changed by the stockholders at any Annual Meeting of Stockholders.  Directors
   need not be stockholders.  Directors may serve on the Board during their 70th
   year, but shall retire thereafter, except that the Board upon a two-thirds
   vote (and without the participation of the director concerned) may by special
   resolution ask a director to remain on the Board  through his or her 72nd
   year, or until a given date, if it finds that such service is of significant
   benefit to the corporation.

The complete By-Laws, as amended, are filed herewith as Exhibit 3(ii).


Item 7.01.  Regulation FD Disclosure.

A copy of the press release  issued in  connection  with the election of Paul C.
Varga to the office of Chief  Executive  Officer of the  Registrant is furnished
herewith as Exhibit 99.



Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of  1934,  the
registrant  has duly  caused  this  report  to be  signed  on its  behalf by the
undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
                                      
                                       Brown-Forman Corporation
                                            (Registrant)


Date:   May 27, 2005                       By:  /s/ Nelea A. Absher
                                                Nelea A. Absher
                                                Vice President, Senior Counsel
                                                and Assistant Corporate
                                                Secretary




                                                                   Exhibit 99

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

BROWN-FORMAN ANNOUNCES NEXT STEP IN SUCCESSION PLAN
Paul Varga Named New CEO; Owsley Brown Remains Chairman

Louisville,  KY, May 27, 2005 - Brown-Forman Corporation Chairman and CEO Owsley
Brown II announced  today that the company's  board of directors has unanimously
approved the next stage of the firm's leadership succession. The duties of chief
executive officer of Brown-Forman  Corporation,  which Brown has performed since
1993, will transfer August 1 to Paul C. Varga,  while Brown will continue as the
company's chairman.
 
"Paul Varga is a great  brand  builder  whose  career and  accomplishments  have
paralleled  the evolution  and  strengthening  of our  company's  brand-building
capabilities,"  stated Brown.  "He has a keen  strategic mind and is a visionary
with appropriately challenging growth goals for Brown-Forman.

"By its actions,  the board is expressing its strong  confidence that Paul is an
excellent  long-term choice for CEO of Brown-Forman,"  said Brown. "The board is
also  reaffirming  its  unceasing  belief in  Brown-Forman's  great future as an
independent,  growing company of unsurpassed  quality in our industry,  led by a
strong and highly capable senior leadership team."

Varga's appointment as CEO continues  Brown-Forman's  long-standing tradition of
entrusting  the  leadership of the company to the people of the highest  ability
who have a lengthy tenure of success at the firm. Upon assuming the CEO position
on August 1, Varga will be the third  leader of the  company to come from beyond
the Brown  family,  the others being Daniel L. Street and William F. Lucas,  who
successively  and very  ably led the  company  from the  mid-1960s  through  the
mid-1970s.

The promotion of Varga to chief executive  officer of  Brown-Forman  Corporation
will  make him the  highest-ranking  member of  management  and he will have the
ultimate   decision-making   authority  and  responsibility  for  the  company's
performance  and  long-term  prosperity.  Varga  will  report  to the  board  of
directors, chaired by Owsley Brown, and will have all divisions and areas of the
company reporting to him. He will continue to serve on the board as a director.



"I  am  truly  honored  to  be  entrusted   with  leading  this  great  American
brand-building  company," said Varga. "I have always respected and been inspired
by our company's  wonderful brands,  its incredible  135-year history,  its deep
Louisville roots, and our people throughout the world who create its success.  I
believe  strongly in our company's  strategy and in the long-term  prospects for
our business.  Fortunately for me, and for all stakeholders,  Brown-Forman has a
superb team of executive  leaders and  employees  who are well prepared to seize
the vast opportunities which lie ahead of us."

As chairman,  Brown will remain fully  engaged  strategically  in the  company's
affairs.  As the chief advocate for all shareholders'  long-term  interests,  he
will also work to ensure the company  builds on its tradition of creating  value
by paying proper attention to the interests of all of its long-term  shareholder
base - institutional,  individual,  as well as family.  In addition,  Brown will
continue to take the lead in managing the affairs of the board.

"These  changes  will  permit me to alter how I spend my working  time,"  stated
Brown.  "Although I will  continue  to stay 100%  engaged  strategically  in the
business,  I will reduce my daily workload in the months and years following the
change, with an appropriate reduction in my compensation."

Brown will  continue  to play a leading  role on the  Brown-Forman  team that is
working with a consortium  considering a possible bid for Allied Domecq. "I will
be  working  very  closely on this  critical  matter  with  Paul,  who is deeply
involved  now and who  will,  after  August 1,  ultimately  be  responsible  for
building the brands that Brown-Forman will secure,  should the consortium make a
successful bid for Allied Domecq," said Brown.

Varga,  41,  joined the  company  over 18 years ago while  working on his MBA at
Purdue  University.  After earning his degree, he became a full-time employee in
1987.  He  progressed  through  a  series  of  increasingly  responsible  sales,
marketing,  and staff positions,  including several years as a key member of the
Jack Daniel's  marketing  team as well as two years as director of the office of
the CEO.  In 1996 Varga was named  senior  vice  president  and  director of the
entity which helped create global brand development strategies for Jack Daniel's
and Southern Comfort and which provided him with a solid international  business
foundation.  In 1998 he became director of marketing for Brown-Forman's  spirits
business in North  America,  and in 2000 was promoted to global chief  marketing
officer  for  the  company's  spirits  brands.  In  2003  he  was  named  CEO of
Brown-Forman  Beverages, by far the corporation's largest operating segment, and
was  thereafter  elected a director of the  corporation.  Varga will continue to
perform the duties of CEO of the company's beverage business.  



"In recent years, Paul Varga has exemplified the skills and abilities we seek in
the company's leader," said Brown, "quickly grasping his new responsibilities as
well as increasing  his  involvement  in  shareholder,  investor,  and strategic
industry relationships.

"In  addition,  our  earnings  growth rate over the last few years is one of the
strongest  in the wine and  spirits  industry,  and this is a  testament  to the
excellence of our management  team as well as the quality of our brands," stated
Brown.  "About two years ago,  as our  corporation's  respected  President  Bill
Street  was  preparing  to  retire,  we moved  some very  talented  individuals,
including Paul Varga, into positions of significantly increased  responsibility.
This executive team has worked diligently,  collaboratively,  and brilliantly to
capitalize on the enormous opportunities that exist for our portfolio of premium
wine and spirits brands around the world."

Brown-Forman  Corporation is a diversified producer and marketer of fine quality
consumer products,  including Jack Daniel's,  Southern Comfort, Finlandia Vodka,
Canadian Mist,  Fetzer and Bolla Wines,  Korbel  California  Champagnes,  Lenox,
Dansk, and Gorham Tableware and Giftware, and Hartmann Luggage.




IMPORTANT NOTE ON FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS:
This news release contains statements, estimates, or projections that constitute
"forward-looking  statements"  as defined under U.S.  federal  securities  laws.
Generally,   the  words  "expect,"  "believe,"  "intend,"   "estimate,"  "will,"
"anticipate," and "project," and similar expressions  identify a forward-looking
statement,  which speaks only as of the date the  statement  is made.  Except as
required  by law,  we do not  intend to update  or  revise  any  forward-looking
statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.

We  believe  that  the   expectations   and  assumptions  with  respect  to  our
forward-looking statements are reasonable. But by their nature,  forward-looking
statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that
in some  cases are out of our  control.  These  factors  could  cause our actual
results to differ materially from  Brown-Forman's  historical  experience or our
present expectations or projections.  Here is a non-exclusive list of such risks
and uncertainties:

 - changes in general economic conditions, particularly in the United States
   where we earn the majority of our profits;
 - a strengthening U.S. dollar against foreign currencies, especially the
   British Pound;
 - reduced bar, restaurant, hotel and travel business in wake of other terrorist
   attacks, such as occurred on 9/11;
 - developments in the class action lawsuits filed against Brown-Forman and
   other spirits, beer and wine manufacturers alleging that our advertising
   causes illegal consumption of alcohol by those under the legal drinking age,
   or other attempts to limit alcohol marketing, through either litigation or
   regulation;
 - a dramatic change in consumer preferences, social trends or cultural trends
   that results in the reduced consumption of our premium spirits brands;
 - tax increases, whether at the federal or state level;
 - increases in the price of grain and grapes;
 - continued depressed retail prices and margins in our wine business because of
   our excess wine inventories, existing grape contract obligations, and a
   worldwide oversupply of grapes; and
 - the effects on our Consumer Durables business of the general economy,
   department store business, response rates in our direct marketing business,
   and profitability of mall outlet operations.




                                                                   Exhibit 3(ii)


                                     BY-LAWS
                                       OF
                            BROWN-FORMAN CORPORATION
                                   AS AMENDED.


                                   ARTICLE I.
                                  STOCKHOLDERS.

SECTION 1.1 Annual  Meetings.  The annual  meeting of the  stockholders  for the
purpose of electing  directors and for the transaction of such other business as
may properly be brought before the meeting shall be held at such date,  time and
place  either  within or without the State of Delaware as may be  designated  by
resolution  of the Board of  Directors,  but no later than  September 30 of each
year.

SECTION l.2 Special  Meetings.  Special meetings of the stockholders may be held
upon call of a majority of the Board of Directors, Executive Committee, Chairman
of the Board or  President  (and shall be called by the Chairman of the Board or
the President at the request in writing of stockholders owning a majority of the
outstanding  shares of the corporation  entitled to vote at the meeting) at such
time and at such place within or without the State of Delaware as shall be fixed
by the call for the meeting,  and as may be stated in the notice  setting  forth
such call.

SECTION 1.3 Notice of Meeting;  Waiver of Notice.  Notice of the time, place and
purpose of every meeting of stockholders  shall be mailed not less than ten (10)
nor more than fifty (50) days next  preceding  the date of said  meeting to each
stockholder of record entitled to vote at the meeting,  who shall have furnished
a written address to the Secretary of the corporation for the purpose. Notice of
any stockholders'  meeting may be waived in writing by any stockholder  entitled
to vote at the  meeting.  Attendance  of a person at a meeting  of  stockholders
shall constitute a waiver of notice of such meeting, except when the stockholder
attends a meeting for the express purpose of objecting,  at the beginning of the
meeting,  to the transaction of any business because the meeting is not lawfully
called or convened.  Neither the business to be  transacted  at, nor the purpose
of, any regular or special meeting of the stockholders  need be specified in any
written waiver of notice.

SECTION 1.4 Adjournments.  Any meeting of stockholders,  annual or special,  may
adjourn  from time to time to  reconvene  at the same or some other  place,  and
notice  need not be given of any such  adjourned  meeting  if the time and place
thereof are announced at the meeting at which the  adjournment is taken.  At the
adjourned  meeting the  corporation  may transact any business  which might have
been  transacted at the original  meeting.  If the  adjournment is for more than
thirty  days,  or if after the  adjournment  a new record  date is fixed for the
adjourned  meeting,  a notice of the  adjourned  meeting  shall be given to each
stockholder of record entitled to vote at the meeting.



SECTION 1.5 Quorum.  At each meeting of  stockholders,  except  where  otherwise
provided  by law or the  certificate  of  incorporation  or these  by-laws,  the
holders of a majority of the outstanding  shares of each class of stock entitled
to vote at the  meeting,  present  in  person or by proxy,  shall  constitute  a
quorum.  In the absence of a quorum the stockholders so present may, by majority
vote,  adjourn the meeting  from time to time in the manner  provided by Section
1.4 of these by-laws until a quorum shall attend.

SECTION 1.6 Voting. Each stockholder  entitled to vote at any meeting shall have
one vote in  person or by proxy  for each  share of stock  held by him which has
voting  power upon the  matter in  question  at the time.  At all  elections  of
directors,  the voting shall be by ballot and a majority of the votes cast shall
elect.  Except  where a date  shall  have  been  fixed as a record  date for the
determination of the stockholders  entitled to vote as hereinafter  provided, no
share of stock shall be voted on at any election of  directors  which shall have
been  transferred on the books of the  corporation  within twenty (20) days next
preceding such election.

SECTION 1.7 Record Date.  The Board of Directors may fix in advance a date,  not
exceeding forty (40) days preceding the date of any meeting of stockholders,  or
the date for the payment of any  dividend or  distribution,  or the date for the
allotment of rights,  or the date when any change or  conversion  or exchange of
capital stock shall go into effect,  as a record date for the  determination  of
the  stockholders  entitled to notice of, and to vote at, any such  meeting,  or
entitled to receive payment of any such dividend or distribution, or to any such
allotment  of rights,  or to exercise  the rights in respect of any such change,
conversion or exchange of capital stock, and in such case only such stockholders
as shall be  stockholders  of record on the date so fixed  shall be  entitled to
notice of, and to vote at such meeting,  or to receive  payment of such dividend
or  distribution,  or to receive such  allotment of rights,  or to exercise such
rights,  as the case may be,  notwithstanding  any  transfer of any stock on the
books of the corporation after any such record date fixed as aforesaid.

SECTION 1.8 Organization. Meetings of stockholders shall be presided over by the
Chairman of the Board,  if any, or in his absence by the President,  or in their
absence by a Vice President,  or in the absence of the foregoing  persons,  by a
chairman  chosen at the  meeting.  The  Secretary  shall act as secretary of the
meeting but in his absence the chairman of the meeting may appoint any person to
act as secretary of the meeting.


                                   ARTICLE II.
                               BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

SECTION 2.1 Number;  Qualification.  The Board of Directors  of the  Corporation
shall consist of not less than three (3) nor more than  seventeen  (17) persons,
who shall hold office until the Annual Meeting of the Stockholders  next ensuing
after their  election,  and until their  respective  successors  are elected and
shall qualify. The number of Directors to serve from time to time shall be fixed
by the Board of Directors  subject to being changed by the  stockholders  at any
Annual Meeting of Stockholders.  Directors need not be  stockholders.  Directors
may serve on the Board  during  their 70th year,  but shall  retire  thereafter,
except that the Board upon a two-thirds vote (and without the  participation  of
the director  concerned)  may by special  resolution ask a director to remain on
the Board  through his or her 72nd year, or until a given date, if it finds that
such service is of significant benefit to the corporation.



SECTION 2.2 Vacancies.  Vacancies in the Board of Directors shall be filled by a
majority of the  remaining  directors,  and the  directors  so chosen shall hold
office until the next annual election and until their  successors  shall be duly
elected and shall qualify.

SECTION 2.3 Meetings.  Meetings of the Board of Directors  shall be held at such
place  within or without the State of Delaware as may from time to time be fixed
by  resolution  of the Board or as may be  specified in the call of any meeting.
Regular  meetings of the Board of  Directors  shall be held at such times as may
from time to time be fixed by resolution of the Board,  and special meetings may
be held at any time upon call of the  Executive  Committee,  the Chairman of the
Board,  if any,  the  President  or a  majority  of the Board by  telephonic  or
telegraphic  notice duly given to each  director not less than three days before
the meeting or written notice sent or mailed to each director not less than five
days  before the  meeting.  Such  notice  shall  state the time and place of the
meeting, but need not specify the purpose thereof. A meeting of the Board may be
held without notice  immediately after the annual meeting of stockholders at the
same place at which such  meeting is held.  Notice  need not be given of regular
meetings  of the  Board  held at the time  fixed  by  resolution  of the  Board.
Meetings may be held at any time without  notice if all directors are present or
if those not present waive notice of the meeting in writing.  At all meetings of
the  Board  of  Directors  one-third  of the  entire  Board of  Directors  shall
constitute a quorum for the  transaction  of business and the vote of a majority
of the directors  present at a meeting at which a quorum is present shall be the
act of the  Board of  Directors.  Meetings  of the Board of  Directors  shall be
presided  over by the  Chairman  of the Board,  if any, or in his absence by the
President,  or in their  absence by a  chairman  chosen at the  meeting  and the
chairman  of the  meeting  may  appoint  any person to act as  secretary  of the
meeting.

SECTION 2.4 Informal Action by Directors. Any action required or permitted to be
taken at any meeting of the Board of Directors, or of any committee thereof, may
be taken  without a meeting if all members of the Board of  Directors or of such
committee,  as the case may be, consent  thereto in writing,  and the writing or
writings are filed with the minutes of  proceedings of the Board of Directors or
committee.

SECTION.2.5  Executive  Committee.  The Board of Directors may, by resolution or
resolutions,  passed by a majority of the whole  Board,  designate  an Executive
Committee  to  consist  of the Chief  Executive  Officer  and one or more of the
directors as the Board may from time to time determine.  In addition,  the Board
of Directors  may appoint  persons who are not directors of the  Corporation  as
associate non-voting members of the Executive Committee. The Executive Committee
shall have and may exercise, when the Board is not in session, all the powers of
the Board of  Directors  in the  management  of the  business and affairs of the
corporation, and shall have power to authorize the seal of the corporation to be
affixed to all papers which may require it; but the  Executive  Committee  shall
not have power to fill vacancies in the Board, or to change the membership of or
fill the vacancies on the said Committee, or to make or amend the By-laws of the
corporation.  The Board shall have power at any time to change the membership of
the  Executive  Committee,  to fill  vacancies  in it, or to  dissolve  it.  The
Executive  Committee may make such rules for the conduct of its business and may
appoint  such  committees  and  assistants  as it shall  from  time to time deem
necessary. A majority of the members of the Executive Committee shall constitute
a quorum.



SECTION 2.6 Other Committees. The Board of Directors may by resolution designate
one or more other  committees  which committees shall have and may exercise such
powers as the Board of Directors shall by resolution provide.


                                  ARTICLE III.
                                    OFFICERS.

SECTION  3.1  Election.  The  Board of  Directors,  as soon as may be after  the
election  held in each  year,  shall  choose a  Chairman  of the Board  and/or a
President  of  the   corporation,   one  or  more  Vice  Presidents  (with  such
classifications  as the Board may determine),  a Secretary and a Treasurer,  and
may if it so determines choose one or more Vice Chairmen of the Board. The Board
of  Directors  may also from time to time appoint  such  Assistant  Secretaries,
Assistant  Treasurers  and such other  officers,  agents and employees as it may
deem proper.  The  Chairman of the Board,  Vice  Chairman of the Board,  and the
President  shall be chosen from among the directors,  and the Board of Directors
shall  designate  either the  President  or the  Chairman of the Board to be the
Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation. Any two or more offices, except that
of the Chief Executive Officer and Secretary, may be held by the same person.

SECTION 3.2 Term; Removal.  The term of office of all officers shall be one year
or until their  respective  successors  are elected and shall  qualify;  but any
officer  may be removed  from  office at any time by the  affirmative  vote of a
majority of the members of the Board then in office.  Any vacancy  occurring  in
any office of the corporation by death, resignation, removal or otherwise may be
filled for the  unexpired  portion of the term by the Board of  Directors at any
regular or special meeting.

SECTION  3.3  Powers and  Duties.  Subject  to the  limitations  as the Board of
Directors  or the  Executive  Committee  may from  time to time  prescribe,  the
officers of the corporation  shall each have such powers and duties as generally
pertain to the  respective  offices,  as well as such  powers and duties as from
time to time may be  conferred  by the Board of  Directors  or by the  Executive
Committee.  The Treasurer and the Assistant  Treasurers  may be required to give
bond for the  faithful  discharge  of their  duties,  in such sum and with  such
surety as the Board of Directors may prescribe.


                                   ARTICLE IV.
                            FUNDS OF THE CORPORATION.

All moneys of the  corporation,  or under its charge,  deposited  in any bank or
other place of deposit,  shall be deposited to the credit of the  corporation in
its  corporate  name, in such  institutions,  and shall be subject to withdrawal
upon such  signatures,  as may from time to time be  prescribed by resolution of
the Board of Directors.



                                   ARTICLE V.
                             CERTIFICATES OF STOCK.

SECTION 5.1  Certificates.  The interest of each  stockholder of the corporation
shall be evidenced by a certificate or certificates  for shares of stock in such
form as the Board of Directors  may from time to time  prescribe.  The shares of
stock of the  corporation  shall be transferable on the books of the corporation
by  the  holder  thereof  in  person  or by  his  attorney  upon  surrender  for
cancellation  of a certificate or  certificates  representing  the same, with an
assignment  and power of transfer  endorsed  thereon or attached  thereto,  duly
executed and with such proof of authenticity of the signature as the corporation
or its agents may reasonably require.

SECTION  5.2  Signatures.  The  certificates  of stock  shall be  signed  by the
Chairman of the Board or the President or a Vice  President and by the Secretary
or the  Treasurer or an Assistant  Secretary or an Assistant  Treasurer  (except
that  where  any  such  certificate  is  signed  by a  transfer  agent  and by a
registrar,  the  signatures of any such Chairman of the Board,  President,  Vice
President,  Secretary, Treasurer, Assistant Secretary or Assistant Treasurer may
be facsimile, engraved or printed), and shall be countersigned and registered in
such manner, if any, as the Board of Directors may by resolution  prescribe.  In
case any officer or officers who shall have signed, or whose facsimile signature
or  signatures  shall have been used on, any such  certificate  or  certificates
shall cease to be such officer or officers of the  corporation,  whether because
of death, resignation or otherwise, before such certificate or certificates have
been  delivered  by  the  corporation,  such  certificate  or  certificates  may
nevertheless  be issued and delivered as though the person or persons who signed
such certificate or certificates or whose facsimile signature or signatures have
been  used  thereon  had  not  ceased  to be such  officer  or  officers  of the
corporation.

SECTION 5.3 Lost, Stolen or Destroyed Certificates. No certificate for shares of
stock in the corporation shall be issued in place of any certificate  alleged to
have been lost, stolen or destroyed,  except upon production of such evidence of
such loss,  theft or destruction  and upon delivery to the corporation of a bond
of indemnity in such amount,  upon such terms and secured by such surety, as the
Board in its discretion may require.


                                   ARTICLE VI.
                                CORPORATE BOOKS.

The books of the  corporation,  except the original or duplicate  stock  ledger,
shall be kept at the office of the Company at Louisville,  Kentucky;  or at such
other place or places as the Board of Directors may from time to time designate.



                                  ARTICLE VII.
                                  FISCAL YEAR.

The fiscal  year of the  corporation  shall  begin on the 1st day of May in each
year and shall  end on the 30th day of April of each  year,  and may be  changed
from time to time by resolution of the Board of Directors.


                                  ARTICLE VIII.
                                 CORPORATE SEAL.

The corporate  seal of this Company shall be circular in form and shall bear the
name of the corporation and the words "Incorporated Delaware 1933."


                                   ARTICLE IX.
                                   INDEMNITY.

The Board of Directors  may by  resolution  provide that the  corporation  shall
indemnify to the extent  authorized  by law any person made or  threatened to be
made a party to an action or proceeding, whether criminal, civil, administrative
or investigative, by reason of the fact that he, his testator or intestate is or
was a director,  officer or employee of the  corporation or serves or served any
other  enterprise  as a  director,  officer or  employee  at the  request of the
corporation.


                                   ARTICLE X.
                                   AMENDMENTS.

The By-laws of the  corporation,  regardless of whether made by the stockholders
or by the  Board of  Directors,  may be  amended,  added to or  repealed  at any
meeting of the Board of Directors or of the stockholders, provided notice of the
proposed change is given in the notice of the meeting.


                                 CERTIFICATION.

The undersigned,  Secretary of BROWN-FORMAN  CORPORATION,  hereby certifies that
the  foregoing  seven  printed  pages  contain a true and  complete  copy of the
By-laws of said corporation, as amended from time to time.



Secretary
Brown-Forman Corporation

Dated:  May 27, 2005
Louisville, Kentucky.
 



                               EMERGENCY BY-LAWS.

                                   ARTICLE I.

These  emergency  by-laws shall be effective and operative  during any emergency
resulting  from an attack on the  United  States or on a  locality  in which the
corporation  conducts its business or customarily holds meetings of its Board of
Directors  or its  stockholders,  or during any nuclear or atomic  disaster,  or
during the existence of any catastrophe,  or other similar emergency  condition,
as a result of which a quorum of the Board of Directors or a standing  committee
thereof cannot be readily convened for action.


                                   ARTICLE II.
                               BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

SECTION 1. A meeting of the Board of Directors,  or a committee thereof,  may be
called by any  director or officer by the giving of three (3) days'  notice only
to such of the directors as it may be feasible to reach at that time and by such
means as may be  feasible at the time,  including  publications  and radio.  The
notice shall state the time and place of the  meeting,  but need not specify the
purpose thereof.

SECTION 2: A quorum shall consist of any three (3) directors; and in addition to
duly elected  directors the officers  listed in the  following  Section 4 hereof
shall be eligible as directors to constitute a quorum.

SECTION 3: To the extent  required to  constitute a quorum at any meeting of the
Board of  Directors,  the officers of the  corporation  who are present shall be
deemed,  in order  of rank  and  within  the  same  rank in order of  seniority,
directors for such meeting.  If, within the same rank two or more officers' date
of election as such officer is the same,  seniority  shall be  determined on the
basis of length of service with the corporation.

SECTION 4: Persons holding the following  offices shall, in the order named, and
to the  extent  required  to  provide  a quorum at any  meeting  of the Board of
Directors, be deemed directors for such meeting:

                              Chairman of the Board
                           Vice Chairman of the Board
                                    President
                            Executive Vice President
                              Senior Vice President
                                 Vice President
                                    Secretary
                                    Treasurer
                            Assistant Vice President
                               Assistant Secretary
                               Assistant Treasurer



                                  ARTICLE III.

If,  during any such  emergency,  any  officer  shall be rendered  incapable  of
discharging  his duties,  the  authority,  duties and  functions of such officer
shall be assumed by the person next in line of  authority,  as shown on the then
currently  effective  organization chart of the corporation;  provided,  that no
person  assuming the  authority,  duties and  functions  of an officer  shall be
entitled to act as director,  as provider in Article II hereof,  unless he shall
have been duly elected as an officer or director.


                                   ARTICLE IV.

The Board of  Directors  may at any meeting  change the head office or designate
several  alternative  head  offices or regional  offices of the  corporation  or
authorize officers so to do.


                                   ARTICLE V.

No  officer  or  director  or  employee  acting  in  accordance  with any of the
provisions  of these  emergency  by-laws  shall be  liable  except  for  willful
misconduct.


                                   ARTICLE VI.

To the extent  they are not  inconsistent  with  these  Emergency  By-Laws,  the
By-Laws  of the  corporation  shall  remain  in effect  at all  times.  Upon the
termination  of the  emergency  described in Article I hereof,  these  Emergency
By-Laws shall cease to be operative.