This is аn action under G. L. c. 30A, for judicial review of a decision of the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission (commission), prohibiting Major Brands Delaware, Ltd. (Major Brands), from selling or supplying to M. H. Gordon & Son, Inc. (Gordon), any alcoholic beverages for which Major Brands is neither the brand owner nor the designated agent for sale thereof in the Commonwealth. The case is before this court on the plaintiffs’ appeal from a judgment entered in the Superior Court affirming the dеcision of the commission. The court also enjoined Gordon, pending this appeal, from selling or supplying to retailers in this Commonwealth any alcoholic beverages obtained from any holder of a certificate of compliance under G. L. c. 138, § 18B, but who is not the brand owner or designated agent therefor within the meaning of G. L. c. 138, §§ 25B-25D.
We summarize the pertinent facts about which there is no disagreement. Major Brands is a Delaware corporation which supplies various brands of liquor to customers from its primary business location in Oklahoma. It holds a certificate of compliance issued by the commission under G. L. c. 138, S 18B. Gordon is a Massachusetts wholesaler and importer of alcoholic beverages, licensed under G. L. c. 138, § 18, which permits it to import alcoholic beverages from holders of certificates of compliance issued under G. L. c. 138, § 18B, and to sell such alcoholic beverages to licensed Massachusetts rеtailers.
For some time Gordon has attempted unsuccessfully to obtain certain popular brand name alcoholic beverages known as “best sellers” from the brand owners of the beverages, from their designated agents, or from a limited number of Massachusetts wholesalers who, as favored distributors, are provided with a continued supply of certain best selling brands to the exclusion of other wholesalers. In order to obtain several of these “best sellers” for distribution to Massachusetts retailers, Gordon and Major Brands entered into the following agreement. Major Brands procures name brand alcoholic beverages desired by Gordon from sources unavailable to Gordon, such as other non-
1. Importation of alcoholic beverages by Massachusetts wholesalers is regulated by several sections of c. 138 of the General Laws. Section 18, as amended through St. 1973, c. 520, authorizes wholesalers “to import alcoholic beverages into the commonwealth from holders of certificates issued under section eighteen B whose licensed premises are located in other states and foreign countries____” Section 18B permits the commission to issue certificates of compliance to persons having a place of business and a license granted outside the Commonwealth and whose out-of-State license permits that person to sell alcoholic beverages to licensees in Massachusetts.
4
Section 25B (a) and
(b)
proscribes the sale of any brand of alcoholic beverage to a Massachusetts wholesaler unless a written, duly verified schedule of bottle and case prices to wholesalers for that brand has been filed with the commission. Section 25B (c), as appearing in St. 1970, c. 140, § 2, directs that the schedule of prices “shall be filed by (1) the owner of such brand, or (2) a wholesaler... who is designated as agent for the purpose of filing such schedule [if the brand owner] is not licensed by the commission, or (3) with the
General Laws c. 138, § 25D, which was originally inserted by St. 1966, c. 706, after a message by the Governor stating reasons for further regulation of the pricing of alcoholic beverages brought into the Commonwealth for resale, 5 complements § 25B. Section 25D requires that the schedule of prices filed pursuant to § 25B be accompanied by an affirmation, duly verified by the brand owner or its designated agent, stating that the price set forth in the schedule is no higher than the lowest price at which the beverage is to be sold during the calendar month covered by the schedule to any wholesaler anywhere in the country or to any State or State agency which owns and operates retail liquor stores.
In its decision in the present case, the commission concluded that these regulatory provisions created a bar to the importation of alcoholic beverages by Massachusetts wholesalers from anyone but persons, who, in accordance with G. L. c. 138, §§ 25B and 25D, are authorized to file price schedules and affirmations pertaining to each posted price. The commission contends that its interpretation of the statutes implements the expressed legislative purpose of promoting orderly importation of alcoholic beverages and assuring that Massachusetts consumers do not pay prices which are inflated by discriminatory interstate pricing schemes. The plaintiffs disagree with the commission’s interpretation. They contend that the regulatory scheme established by c. 138 does not prohibit Massachusetts wholesalers from importing alcoholic beverages from holders of certificates of compliance under G. L. c. 138, § 18B, where the certificate holder has not filed price schedules or
Section 25B (a) proscribes importation of alcoholic beverages unless price schedules have been filed by persons qualified to do so by § 25B (c). Section 25D (a) requires that a properly verified affirmation be filed with and deemed part of the price schedule. Neither section, however, contains any language which even implicitly forbids the importation of alcoholic beverages from § 18B certificate holders who are not correspondingly authorized to file price schedules and affirmations pursuant to §§25B and 25D. Furthermore, § 18, while identifying § 18B certificate holders as a proper source from which Massachusetts wholesalers may obtain alcoholic beverages, does not require wholesalers to purchase alcoholic beverages solely from certificate holders who are authorized by §§ 25B and 25D to file price schedules and price affirmations. As long as Massachusetts wholesalers import alcoholic beverages, for which filed price schedules and affirmations are in effect, from § 18B certificate holders at the scheduled price, there are no provisions in the regulatory scheme created by c. 138 to prevent wholesalers from purchasing from a § 18B certificate holder who is not eligible to file price schedules or affirmations for the brands of alcoholic beverages involved. 6
The commission argues that prohibiting importation of alcoholic beverages from § 18B certificate holders who are not eligible to file price schedules and affirmations will insure an efficient and manageable system of bringing alcoholic beverages into Massachusetts. Although we give due consideration to the commission’s expertise in adminis
General Laws c. 138, § 2, in conjunction with G. L. c. 6, § 44, delegates to the commission authority to promulgate regulations pertaining to the conduct of the alcoholic beverages industry. Additionally, G. L. c. 138, § 25D
(h),
specifically empowers the commission to make appropriate rules to prevent price discrimination by suppliers of alcoholic beverages.
7
The commission does not appear to have
For these various reasons, the commission’s decision on this issue was incorrect.
2. The plaintiffs contend that the fee charged by Major Brands for the service of providing Gordon with brand name alcoholic beverages did not contravene G. L. c. 138, §§ 25B and 25D. General Laws c. 138, §§ 25B and 25D, explicitly forbids the sale of alcoholic beverages to Massachusetts wholesalers except at the filed and properly affirmed price then in effect, unless the commission grants written approval for sales at a different price. The commission found that the sales of alcoholic beverages to Gordon by Mаjor Brands were not made at the scheduled and affirmed price. It concluded that, because of Gordon’s obligation under the agreement with Major Brands to pay the service charge in addition to the “affirmed price” for each shipment of alcoholic beverages, Major Brands was selling alcoholic beverages to Gordon at a price higher than the “affirmed price.” The plaintiffs acknowledge that alcoholic beverages may be sold to Massachusetts wholesalers only
We have often observed that “when a statute is construed its words are to be given their usual and ordinary meaning considered in light of the aim to be accomplished by the Legislature.”
Prudential Ins. Co. of America
v.
Boston,
“Price” means the actual amount paid to the supplier for goods furnished to the buyer.
Kapiolani Motors, Ltd.
v.
General Motors Corp.,
In construing a Federal statute which levied a tax on soft drink manufacturers of ten per cent of the price at which the beverages were sold, the United States Supreme Court defined the term “price” as “the total sum paid for the goods.” The Court further noted that “[t]he amount
The plaintiffs argue, in the alternative, that even if the sales of alcoholic beverages pursuant to their agreement were consummated at prices in excess of the filed and affirmed price, the commission should have approved the transactions under its authority set forth in G. L. c. 138, § 25B (d), as appearing in St. 1970, c. 140, § 2, to grant written permission for sales at other than the posted price “for good cause shown and for reasons not inconsistent with the purрose of this chapter.” The commission was asked to grant such permission and it declined to do so. Although the commission, in the exercise of its discretion, could have granted permission, there is nothing in the record which persuades us that the commission was legally required to grant it, or that its refusal to do so was unlawful.
3. The plaintiffs question the statutory scheme for regulating the prices at which alcoholic beverages are imported by Massachusetts wholesalers. They сontend that the Legislature has unconstitutionally attempted to vest in private persons the authority to fix such prices. We do not agree.
Section 2 of the Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that “[t]he transportation or importation into any State, Territory, or possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxicating liquors, in violation of the laws thereof, is hereby prohibited.” The United States Supreme Court has consistently
The comprehensive statutory program for the regulation of the alcoholic beverages industry in Massachusetts includes provisions for the control of pricing of alcoholic beverages in the wholesale sector. For thirty years, G. L. c. 138, § 25B, has required that price schedules be filed for each brand of alcoholic beverage sold to a Massachusetts wholesaler. Section 25D merely complements this longstanding filing requirement by directing that the price schedule, when filed, be accompanied by a statement affirming that the scheduled price is no higher than the lowest price at which the product is sold outside the Commonwealth. This indicates a legislative intent to assure to the Massachusetts alcoholic beverages industry and its patrons the benefit of the lowest prices made available to bulk purchasers in other States.
The authority of the Commonwealth to protect its citizens by the exercise of its police power “is commensurate with the nature of the evil which it seeks to eliminate.”
Supreme Malt Prods. Co.
v.
Alcoholic Beverages Control Comm’n, supra
at 62. Whether supervising the setting of maximum prices which may be сharged by wholesale suppliers of alcoholic beverages is a proper exercise of the police power turns on whether the legislative plan “bears a real and substantial relation to the public health, safety, morals, or some other phase of the general welfare.”
Sperry & Hutchinson Co.
v.
Director of the Div. on the Neces
The plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge is aimed at the authority given by §§ 25B and 25D to brand owners or their designated agents to file schedules and affirmations with the commission and by so doing to establish the price at which they intend to sell those brands of alcoholic beverages to Massachusetts wholesalers. Relying on our decision in
Corning Glass Works
v.
Ann & Hope, Inc. of Danvers,
Although neither § 25B nor § 25D specifically provides for notice and a hearing pertaining to prices set by brand owners or their designated agents, § 25B (d) does provide wholesalers, such as the plaintiffs, and other parties with the opportunity to challenge a scheduled price by requesting permissiоn from the commission to engage in transactions at a price other than that which has been filed and affirmed. There is no merit to the plaintiffs’ argument that comprehensive regulation of the price of alcoholic beverages to wholesalers is unconstitutional for failure to mandate a hearing each time someone seeks approval of a sale at other than the affirmed price.
Paragraphs 1 and 2 of the judgment entered in the Supеrior Court are reversed and the following paragraphs are to be substituted therefor: “1. Major Brands Delaware, Ltd., is enjoined and restrained from selling, transferring, or in any way supplying alcoholic beverages to M. H. Gordon & Son, Inc., or to any other Massachusetts alcoholic beverages wholesaler licensed pursuant to G. L. c. 138, § 18, at a price which fails to correspond exactly with the affirmed price then in effect under G. L. c. 138, §§ 25B and 25D.
Paragraph “3” of the judgment shall remain as originally entered.
So ordered.
Notes
In its decision, the commission noted that valid price schedules and verified affirmations of the prices posted for the alcoholiс beverages sold to Gordon by Major Brands were filed by brand owners or their designated agents in accordance with G. L. c. 138, §§ 25B and 25D.
Section 18B, as amended through St. 1974, c. 279, § 1, includes the proviso that “such certificate shall be issued upon the condition that the holder shall furnish from time to time as the commission may require ... information concerning all shipments or sales of alcoholic beverages made by him to licensees in this commonwealth, and that he comply with the provisions оf this chapter and any rules or regulations made under authority contained therein.”
1966 House Doc. No. 3911.
The commission contends that the Legislature never envisioned the importation of alcoholic beverages from any source other than persons who are authorized to file price schedules and affirmations in accordance with §§ 25B and 25D. We note, however, that a bill, proposed in the House of Representatives, which would have amended § 18 to require Massaсhusetts wholesalers to purchase alcoholic beverages solely from brand owners or their designated agents, was rejected by the House following an unfavorable committee report. 1976 House Doc. No. 1197.
General Laws c. 138, § 25D, was patterned after §§ 7 and 8 of c. 531, 1964 Session Laws of New York, which mandates the filing of price
