delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе plaintiff, Kinsey Distilling Sales Company, brought an action in the circuit court of Cook County to permanently enjoin Foremost Liquor Stores, Inc., its president, and others from wilfully and knowingly advertising, offering for sale or selling three named brands of whisky at less than the prices stipulated from time to time under, and conformably to, the Fair Trade Act, and in accordance with contracts executed under it, and to recover damages of $150,000. All but one defendant joined in a motion to dismiss, the motion was denied, defendants elected to abide by their motion, and a decree was entered granting the injunctive relief sought. Defendants prosecute this direct appeal, constitutional questions being involved, within the contemplation of section 75 of the Civil Practice Act. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1957, chap, no, par. 75.
Plaintiff, the sole sales and distributing agent in Illinois of three brands of whisky produced by Continental Distilling Corporation, sells to various wholesale distributors. The trademarks, brands or names are: Old Hickory Straight Bourbon Whisky, 100 proof Bottlеd-in-Bond for Old Hickory Distilling Corporation; Old Hickory Straight Bourbon Whisky, 86 proof bottled by Old Hickory Distillers Company; Kinsey Silver Blended Whisky, 70% GNS, 86 proof, bottled by Kinsey Distillers Company. Each of the three beverages, the complaint alleged, is in free, fair and open competition with like commodities, produced by others, and sold and distributed throughout Illinois. Plaintiff has expended substantial sums of money in advertising and promoting these products; their trademarks, brands or names have become widely and favorably known to the tradе and public generally in Illinois, thereby enabling plaintiff to sell large quantities of the products in Chicago and throughout the State. Plaintiff has executed fair trade contracts with a number of retailers in Illinois and its products, distributed in the State, are sold subject to the terms of the contracts. These contracts provide that the products shall not be sold, advertised or offered for sale in Illinois below the prices stipulated by plaintiff in written schedules.
Illustrative is a contract between plaintiff and аn individual retailer which provides: (1) that the retailer shall not sell any of plaintiff’s products to consumers in Illinois at other than the resale price therefor; (2) that it shall have the right to revise or change any such resale prices, the resale prices to be in accordance with written schedules furnished from time to time to the retailer by plaintiff; that plaintiff may list additional goods and brands in any such schedules, with designated retail prices to consumers, and that the provisions of the agreements shall apply to the additions; (3) that plaintiff shall not give any article of value or make any concession, rebate or refund which may change the retail prices designed by it; (4) that, in the event of the sale of the retailer’s business, he shall require, as a condition of the sale, that the successor transferee be bound by the provisions of the agreement upon the retailer’s part to be performed; (5) that plaintiff shall be entitled to injunctive relief against both actual or threаtened breaches of the agreement by the retailer; (6) that the retailer agrees to pay plaintiff as liquidated damages $50 for each sale within Illinois at other than the resale prices to consumers then in effect under the contract.
All defendants, excepting two corporations which advertise and promote the sales of the other defendants and the president of the two companies, are engaged in selling alcoholic beverages at retail in the Chiсago area. Plaintiff’s complaint alleged that, prior to the acts complained of, it caused to be announced and made known generally to the trade in Illinois the stipulated retail prices of the three products previously described and that defendants, on November 19, 1957, received copies of the schedules of the stipulated prices; that, nevertheless, they wilfully and knowingly offered for sale and advertised the products at less than those stipulated. Plaintiff allegеd, further, that on January 8, 1958, Irving Garmisa entered into a fair trade agreement with it, providing for the maintenance of stipulated minimum fair trade prices for its products; that, subsequent to the execution of this contract, various named defendants induced Garmisa to breach his fair trade agreement with plaintiff.
Defendants’ motion to dismiss was based upon the grounds, among others, that the Fair Trade Act is unconstitutional. Their principal attack upon appeal, as in the trial court, is directed against section 2, commonly referred to as the “non-signer” provision. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1957, chap. 121 par. 189.) Defendants contend that section 2 violates the due process clause of our constitution and, also, constitutes an unlawful delegation of legislative powers to private persons to fix prices in contravention of section 1 of article IV. Section 2 of the Fair Trade Act declares: “Wilfully and knowingly advertising, offering for sale or selling any commodity at less than the price stipulated in any contract, entered into pursuant to the provisions of section 1 of this Act, whether the person so advertising, offering for sale or selling is or is not a party to such contract, is unfair competition and is actionable at the suit of any person damaged thereby.”
The constitutional validity of the Fair Trade Act was sustained in 1936 in Joseph Triner Corp. v. McNeil,
In the Triner case, we said: “It is argued that section 2 delegates to such individuals as choose to avail themselves of the benefits of the statute the power to regulate the prices of commodities sold by others. The contention, and the argument supporting it, rest upon the unwarranted assumption that the Fair Trade act is primarily, and not incidentally, a price-fixing statute.” (
In Old Dearborn Distributing Co. v. Seagram-Distillers Corp.
In the Triner case we stated that the Fair Trade Act would remain ineffective until and unless the conditions which it prescribes are satisfied, observing: “The plaintiff, for example, is not commanded to operate under it. Only in the event that manufacturers or distributors elect to avail themselves of its provisions does the statute come into actual operation. This does not mean that the act took effect upon the approval of any authority other than the legislative branch of our State government.”
Similarly, in Old Dearborn Distributing Co. v. Seagram-Distillers Corp.
Fair Trade acts have been sustained by eight courts of last resort since 1952. General Electric Co. v. Klein, (Del. 1954)
The New York Fair Trade Act, for all practical purposes identical with the Illinois statute, has been held valid against repeated attacks. (General Electric Co. v. Masters, Inc.
In General Electric Co. v. Klein, (Del.)
Defendants cite decisions of the highest courts of fourteen States describing the non-signer provisions of Fair Trade acts as price-fixing legislation and declaring them invalid. Those authorties are not in harmony with our decisions in the Trinеr and Seagram cases, nor, in our opinion with Old Dearborn Distributing Co. v. Seagram-Distillers Distributing Co.
Defendants contend, further, that the statute unlawfully deprives non-signers of property without due process in compelling them to sell a product at a fixed price without regard to whether they had knowledge of the fixed price at the time of the acquisition of the product. Although the complaint does not allege that defendants had knowledge of plaintiff’s fair trade contract, or the prices stipulаted pursuant thereto, when they acquired the merchandise in question, it does allege that they had knowledge at the time of making the sales. Defendants do not disclaim knowledge of plaintiff’s fair trade contract at the time they acquired its merchandise. Their objection is that the decree does not specifically so find. Lack of knowledge is, of course, an affirmative defense (James Heddon’s Sons v. Callender, (D. Minn. 1939)
The next constitutional contention is new. Defendants contend that the Fair Trade Act is unconstitutional, insofar as applicable to interstate commerce, because it was enacted prior to the Miller-Tydings amendment to* the Sherman Anti-Trust Act and the McGuire amendment tO' the Federal Trade Commission Act, and, hence, wаs contrary to the provisions of the Sherman Act in existence at the time of the enactment of the Fair Trade Act in 1935. In 1937, the Miller-Tydings Act became effective. (15 U.S.C.A. par. 1.) It exempted contracts or agreements prescribing minimum prices for the resale of trade-marked commodities from the prohibition of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act where such contracts or agreements were lawful as applied to intrastate transactions under local law. The McGuire Act became law in 1932. (15 U.S.C.A. par. 45.) The McGuire Act recognized the rights of the States to authorize contracts and agreements prescribing minimum or stipulated prices for the resale of commodities in interstate commerce and to extend the minimum or stipulated prices prescribed by such contracts and agreements to persons who are not parties thereto. In short, the McGuire Act resolved the conflict existing theretofore between the Sherman Act and the nón-signer provisions of State Fair Trade acts.
In thе meantime Schwegmann Bros. v. Calvert Distillers Corp.
The applicable rule is that where a State statute is adjudged unconstitutional because it conflicts with Federal legislation, the State statute is, in effect, merely unenforceable or suspended by the existence of the Federal legislation. This being so, repeal of the Federal statute reinstates or revives the State law without express re-enactment by the State legislature. (1 Sutherland on Statutory Construction, 3d ed., Horade, sec. 2027, p. 501; Field, The Effect of an Unconstitutional Statute, (1935) p. 286, et seq.; Burche Co. v. General Electric Co.
Defendants also contend that injunctive relief is not a proper remedy for unfair competition under the Fair Trade Act, insisting that an action at law is the exclusive remedy. Specifically, they maintain that the language of section 2 “actionable at the suit of any person damaged thereby,” clearly implies an action at law for damages. The only authority relied upon is Calvert Distillers Co. v. Wish, (N.D. Ill. 1957)
Defendants maintain, further, that plaintiff has an adequate remedy of self-help. The sole authority cited to sustain its contention is Calvert Distillers Co. v. Wish,
Defendants also insist that the fair trade contract relied upon by plaintiff lacks mutuality and consideration and is, accordingly, invalid and unenforceable. It is fundamental that each party or promisor to a bilateral contract must be bound оr neither is bound. (Higbie v. Rust,
Defendаnts’ contention was summarily rejected in Seagram-Distillers Corp. v. Old Dearborn Distributing Co.
We are of the opinion that retailers obtain from fair trade agreements the liquors which they sell and other benefits in the nature of substantial benefits of price support, freedom from unfair competition in the sale of trademarked merchandise, and prompt notice of changes in minimum resale prices which occur as a result of the very nature of a competitive economy.
Finally, dеfendants contend that the fair trade contract upon which plaintiff places reliance does not contain the immediate vendee relationship required by section 1 of our Fair Trade Act. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1957, chap. 121Ji, par. 188.) Plaintiff, as previously noted, is a distributor which sells its products to wholesale distributors in the State who, in turn, sell to retailers. Plaintiff does not sell directly to retailers. The agreement attacked is between plaintiff and a retailer. Defendants assert that plaintiff, under its method of distribution, could have entered into agreements conformably with section 1 but, instead, that it chose to enter into contracts directly with retailers to whom it does not sell the products in question, thereby bypassing the wholesalers who' sell to the retailers.
Defendants’ argument ignores the legislative intention manifested by the use of the words “relating to the sale or resale” which modify the word “contract” in the opening sentence of section 1: “No contract relating to the sale or resalе of a commodity * * * shall be deemed in violation of any law of the State of Illinois by reason of any of the following provisions which may be contained in such contract: (1) That the buyer will not resell such commodity except at the price stipulated by the vendor.” The contracts which plaintiff uses relate to the resale of trademarked commodities and do not purport to be contracts of sale.
Defendants’ contention has been rejected in other jurisdictions. Construing statutоry provisions precisely the same as those challenged here, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court held that use of the words “vendor” and “buyer” in section 1(1) does not require that one party to the contract be the other party’s immediate vendee. In General Electric Co. v. Kimball Jewelers, Inc.
The decree of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed.
Decree
