New York State Food Merchants' Ass'n v. Grant

62 Misc. 2d 644, 309 N.Y.S.2d 747, 1970 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1702
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1970
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Misc. 2d 644 (New York State Food Merchants' Ass'n v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York State Food Merchants' Ass'n v. Grant, 62 Misc. 2d 644, 309 N.Y.S.2d 747, 1970 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1702 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

Irving H. Saypol, J.

TIP is the acronym for both truth-in-pricing and truth-in-packaging. This case is about the first TIP. It has had the close official attention and pursuit of New York City’s Commissioner Bess Myers on Grant’s Department [645]*645of Consumer Affairs. Her TIP she described as “ A Proposal For Marking Retail Grocery Offerings to Show Their Price Per Measure and Thereby Enable Consumers To Know What They Are Getting For Their Dollar.” Commissioner Grant’s project is directed to compelling grocery retailers in New York City to maintain a continuing disclosure of the unit price, per pound or quart, for the things they sell. Both Mrs. Grant’s TIP and the other TIP (truth-in-packaging) are written up in Consumer Reports, January 1969, pages 40-43. Between the two TIPS, succinctly, it may be expressed that all of us as consumers are mesmerized in our grocery purchases. Odd sized and. shaped packaging, partly filled containers, fractionally filled containers, “ Large “ Extra Large ” and “ Giant ” loaves of bread, mean nothing comparatively: — which really is the largest and most economical. These practices, perhaps, are the reasons why even Judges on a shopping errand, say for a jar of mustard, or a container of milk come out with $10 purchases. Regarding Commissioner Grant’s TIP, here is its description in Consumer Reports (supra, p. 40) :

“ ‘We can’t compare prices, ’ housewives complained during the long fight for a truth-in-packaging bill. Can prices be compared now, two years after the Federal Fair Packaging and Labeling Act was signed into Law?

‘ ‘ The troublemaker has been the odd-sized package, which almost completely superseded the pound, the pint and the quart as basic pricing units for household commodities. All manner of peculiar package sizes boggled the mind, often with deception intended. Manufacturers instituted the practice of ‘ packaging to price ’ — taking covert price increases by cutting quantity. A 150-sheet box of tissues quitely dropped in quantity to 125, say, or a 16-ounce can of vegetables to 14% ounces — with no reduction in price.

“ Down the long self-service aisles, the package has done the selling. Some consumers may have found cart-shopping more convenient and efficient than waiting while the corner grocer pulled down a package from a ceiling-high pile with his long-handled clamp. But the grocer at least knew his prices per pound — and would tell you. The odd-sized package defied you to find out for yourself. Somewhere — anywhere — on the surface of the can, bag, box, carton, or bottle a statement of net quantity lurked. Somewhere else, usually, was a price, often smudged and indecipherable. Once you’d managed to ferret out the pertinent data, all you had to do was engage in some modest calculating. • Let’s say a box of detergent was labeled ‘ 1 lb. 7 oz. net weight ’ and stamped ‘ 3/89.’

[646]*646Step 1: Convert odd-sized quantity to total ounces (1 pound 7 ounces equals 23 ounces).

Step 2: Convert multiple price into price per package (3 for 89^5 comes to about-30^ a package) or price per total ounces (3 times 23 equals 69 ounces for 89^).

Step 3: Divide price by quantity to get price per ounce (30^ divided by 23 ounces or 89$i divided by 69 ounces equals about 1.3^ per ounce).

Step 4: Convert price per ounce to price per pound or pint, frequently a more realistic measure of effect on the purse (16 times 1.3^ equals about 21^ per pound).

Step 5: Repeat process for the several competing brands and sizes of the same product.

Step 6: Make whatever quality judgments you can, based on almost no label information about comparative quality.

Step 7: Make a selection based on price, quality judgment and brand preference.

The prowling computer

“ t A woman in a store is a mechanism, a prowling computer,.’ said Scott Paper Co. when arguing against truth-in-packaging legislation. To be a successful comparison shopper, one really did have to be some kind of calculating machine. But few women are.”

The plaintiffs move for an injunction pendente lite pursuant to CPLR 6301, in their action for a declaratory judgment and a permanent injunction to bar enforcement oí .regulation 49 of Department of Consumer Affairs, as amended, which was promulgated on September 26, 1969 and was to become effective on February 20,1970. The defendant has answered. Neither party seeks summary judgment.

The challenged regulation, as amended, reads as follows:

Regulation 49. Display of Price by Quantity Required — Any commodity sold, exposed for sale or offered for sale at retail, shall be plainly marked by stamp, tag, label, or sign at the point of display as follows:

“ (a) Any commodity, whether edible or inedible, sold by weight, standard measure or numerical count, shall be marked so as to display its total selling price, (b) The following commodities, however packaged or contained when offered for retail sale shall indicate the appropriate price per measure as well as the total .selling price:

(i) meat and fish

‘ ‘ (ii) cereals

“ (iii) cooking oils

“ (iv) carbonated soft drinks and beer

[647]*647“ (v) napkins, facial tissue and toilet tissue

“ (vi) bread

“(c) The appropriate price per measure shall be defined as:

“ (i) the price per pound for non-liquid items measured by volume

“ (ii) the price per quart for liquids

“ (iii) the price per fifty units for non-liquid products sold by numerical count.

* This change shall become law in 30 days. ’ ’

The following explanatory note was published in the City Record immediately following regulation 49: “ The amendment will require that consumer commodities sold at retail indicate the price per appropriate unit of measurement to the nearest tenth of one cent. The price per measure of a commodity shall be conspicuously, plainly and clearly ¡shown by a stamp, tag or label on the commodity or on the shelf of which it is displayed, or by a sign or list of prices per measure posted at or near the point of display. A sign or list of prices per measure posted in the aisle where the commodity is displayed shall be deemed to be ‘ near ’ the commodity and in compliance with this regulation.

“Note that for commod’^^s sold by six or eight pack, the appropriate price per measisle shall be computed on the basis of the total pack cost divided > uc'he total pack net contents. For example, 95^ for a six pacilili0A' 2 ounce cans of soda should be displayed as 95^ at 42.4^ pe[

In April and May, 1969, tJBjWpartment of Consumer Affairs conducted a .study to deterwhether the then existing price marking and packaging puHfces provided adequate information to grocery .shoppers aseTthe real value of their purchases. On May 26 and 27, 1969, puWie hearings were held.

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Related

Matter of Picone v. Comr. of Licenses
149 N.E. 336 (New York Court of Appeals, 1925)
Weiss v. Department of Public Markets, Weights & Measures
168 Misc. 881 (New York Supreme Court, 1938)
Art Dealers Ass'n of America, Inc. v. Pacetta
48 Misc. 2d 22 (New York Supreme Court, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
62 Misc. 2d 644, 309 N.Y.S.2d 747, 1970 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-state-food-merchants-assn-v-grant-nysupct-1970.