Sterling Drug, Inc. v. Benatar

221 P.2d 965, 99 Cal. App. 2d 393, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1721
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 14, 1950
DocketCiv. 14198
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 221 P.2d 965 (Sterling Drug, Inc. v. Benatar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sterling Drug, Inc. v. Benatar, 221 P.2d 965, 99 Cal. App. 2d 393, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1721 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

NOURSE, P. J.

This is an appeal by defendant from a final judgment and decree of permanent injunction under the Fair Trade Act (Bus. & Prof. Code, div. 7, pt. 2, eh. 3), certain orders modifying findings and judgment and denying modification in other respects and from the judgment as. modified. As the preliminary steps have no separate importance and no separate errors have been submitted the appeal will be treated as one from the judgment as modified.

The complaint alleges in effect that defendants (sued under several fictitious names) with knowledge of the fair trade agreements signed and maintained between plaintiff’s predecessors and a great number of California retail dealers but rejected by defendants, and despite plaintiff’s repeated protests, sell commodities the subject of these contracts and identified by trade marks, brands or names belonging to plaintiff, among others Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder, at prices substantially less than the prices stipulated in said contracts; that defendants purchased huge stocks of one or more of these commodities with the plan of selling them at cut-rate prices under the pretense of “close-out” sales; that they plan to continue such price cutting, and, as a second cause of action, that defendants committed acts of unfair competition by advertising and selling Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder below the minimum price stipulated in said contracts; that the conduct of defendants described in both causes of action was oppressive and malicious and intended to injure plaintiff and damage its business, with prayer for a permanent injunction, temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction and compensatory and exemplary damages.

*396 The case was decided below on stipulations to the effect that the hearings on the motion for a preliminary injunction should be deemed the final trial of the action, evidence introduced by affidavits should have the force of oral testimony, the complaint should be deemed an affidavit as well as a pleading and plaintiff should be deemed to have filed affidavits supporting all allegations of the entire complaint, defendant should be deemed to have denied those allegations of the complaint denied or controverted by affidavits actually filed in its behalf and moreover certain specified allegations, to have filed affidavits supporting all of those denials and to have alleged affirmatively that defendant's acts complained of involved only “war surplus” goods, that plaintiff discriminated against defendant by bringing this action against it alone, whereas it had otherwise waived its fair trade rights with regard to “war surplus” goods by not proceeding with reasonable diligence to prevent such sale by others, and that sales of “war surplus” goods, even if within the Fair Trade Act, are closeout sales which are and continue within an exception of the Fair Trade Act.

The court found in all respects in accordance with the complaint restricting its allegations to defendant Benatar, a California corporation, and made moreover specific findings as to the oppressive and malicious character of said defendant’s conduct, the character of the commodity so sold by defendant and plaintiff’s diligence in stopping violations of its rights under the Fair Trade Act by others. It issued a permanent injunction against cut-rate selling, etc., by defendant of any of the stated commodities distributed by plaintiff except where all reference to trade marks, brands, etc., showing derivation from plaintiff were omitted or under circumstances bringing the transaction under one of the three exceptions of section 16902, subdivision (b) of the Business and Professions Code and granted plaintiff $1.00 as nominal damages, $200 as exemplary damages and costs.

Appellant’s main argument is that the sales in dispute related only to war surplus property purchased by appellant indirectly from the War Assets Administration and that such property is not subject to the California Fair Trade Act. This argument is not based on any express exemption in the statute but on contentions that war surplus goods are a kind of commodity separate and distinct from regular merchandise and unknown in the year 1941 when the Fair Trade Act was added to the Business and Professions Code and that the Legislature *397 would not have made the act applicable to war surplus goods had they existed at the time because the application would seriously hamper the sale of these goods by the United States government and would be detrimental to the general public both as taxpayer and as consumer. In support of the separate character of war surplus goods appellant points to certain statutory enactments in this state, among which section 17531.5 of the Business and Professions Code added by Statutes 1945, chapter 1144, which requires advertisement of sales of war surplus material clearly to indicate the war surplus character thereof.

The contentions are without merit. Even if it were accepted that war surplus goods form a separate species of the genus “commodities” which are the subject of the act and that that species was unknown at the time when the act became law, such would not exclude the applicability of the act. “ Where a statute deals with a genus, and the thing which afterward comes into existence is a species thereof, the language of the statute will generally be extended to the new species, although it was not known and could not have been contemplated by the legislature when the act was passed; . . .” (59 C.J. 973-74; Hurley v. Inhabitants of South Thomaston, 105 Me. 301 [74 A. 734, 736]; McCleary v. Babcock, 169 Ind. 228 [82 N.E. 453, 457] ; Crawford Statutory Construction, p. 268). There is no reason why that rule should not be followed here. The statute is generally applicable to ‘1 any commodity,” defined as “any subject of commerce” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 16901). The exceptions to the prohibition of cut-rate selling contained in section 16902, subdivision (b), do not include any exception relating to the manner in which the seller acquired them. Moreover the fact that the Legislature in the year 1945 when it was aware of the problems of disposition of war surplus material added new provisions in that respect to the Business and Professions Code (Stats. 1945, ch. 1144, supra) but did not add an exception to the chapter containing the Fair Trade Act may well indicate that the Legislature did not desire the exception advocated by appellant. Under the above circumstances for the court to add an exception in no way expressed in the statute would be a wholly unwarranted invasion of the function of the Legislature. In this respect the well settled principle may be mentioned “that when the legislature has made exceptions to a general rule it must be deemed to have included in its excep *398 tions all that it intended to except. ’ ’ (Rothschild v. Superior Court, 109 Cal.App. 345, 348 [293 P. 106].)

The question whether in the interest of an efficient and advantageous disposal of the war surplus goods exemption from the state Pair Trade Act is desirable evidently also belongs solely to the province of the Legislature. It is not contended that any federal statute excludes the applicability. It may nevertheless be pointed out that the federal government has given no indication whatever . that it desires such exemption.

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Bluebook (online)
221 P.2d 965, 99 Cal. App. 2d 393, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-drug-inc-v-benatar-calctapp-1950.