Plaintiff appeals from an order granting a new trial after judgment was entered against defendants in an action brought to enjoin alleged violations of the Cartwright Act. (Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 16700-16758.)
The facts are stipulated. Defendants are the Building Maintenance Contractors’ Association, an unincorporated association, and its members, who are all building maintenance contractors in San Francisco. The building maintenance industry is defined as “all persons, associations, firms, partnerships and/or corporations participating in the maintenance operation (as distinguished from ownership, leasing or managing), cleaning, painting, renovating and supplying of janitorial service for buildings, lofts and stores in San Francisco.” Maintenance contractors are defined as “persons, firms, partnerships and/or corporations engaged, in the building maintenance industry in San Francisco, in the business of contracting, for a fixed term, with owners, lessees or managers of buildings, lofts or stores located in San Francisco to do, *722 for designated buildings, lofts or stores so located, part or all of any one or more of the following: Window cleaning, janitor work, providing of elevator operators and starters, providing of building engineers for maintaining heating equipment and for minor repairs, providing of night watchmen and providing of powder room matrons.” There are 44 maintenance contractors in San Francisco of whom 30 are not members of defendant association. Members of the association, however, employ approximately 90 per cent of the total number of employees employed by all maintenance contractors in San Francisco and service approximately 90 per cent of all San Francisco buildings, lofts, and stores serviced by maintenance contractors. Maintenance contractors employ approximately 25 per cent of the employees supplied by various unions for building maintenance, and the remainder of the organized employees are supplied directly to owners, lessees, and managers. The terms and conditions of employment of the organized workers are the same whether they are employed by maintenance contractors or directly by owners, lessees, or managers. All of defendant maintenance contractors service less than one-half of one per cent of the buildings, lofts, and stores in San Francisco.
Defendants have agreed that if bids are called for by any person having an existing, unexpired contract with any member of their association, the members whose bids are solicited will report that fact to the association. The association then makes an investigation to determine whether the price under the existing contract is reasonable, whether the service is satisfactory, and whether the person soliciting bids has any specific reason, no matter how trivial or personal, for dispensing with the services of the current contractor. If the price is found to be reasonable, the service satisfactory, and there is no specific reason for changing maintenance contractors, the members are required to submit bids in excess of the current price. The amount of the excess is determined by a scale ranging from 20 per cent down to 5 per cent of the current price depending on the current job price per month. If, on the other hand, the current price is found to be unreasonable, or the service unsatisfactory, or there is a specific reason for changing contractors, members may submit any bids they see fit. Defendants entered this agreement “with the intent and for the object and purpose of conducting operations at a reasonable profit, of marketing at a reasonable profit products and services which could not otherwise be so *723 marketed and of acting in furtherance of trade, and with no other intent whatever nor for any other object or purpose whatever. There is no evidence, except as stated in this stipulation, if any is stated herein, that the effect of the admitted agreement has exceeded, exceeds or will exceed the stated intentions, objects or purposes.”
It is clear that defendants’ agreement constitutes a trust as defined in section 16720 of the Business and Professions Code. * Not only have defendants agreed to fix the prices at which maintenance service will be provided (§ 16720 (d), (e)), but they have also undertaken to prevent competition among themselves by forcing their customers to pay higher prices if they seek to change maintenance contractors. (§ 16720 (c).) Defendants contend, however, that their agreement is exempted from the prohibitions of the Cartwright Act by virtue of sections 16723 and 16725 of the Business and Professions Code.
Section 16723 provides that “No agreement, combination or association is unlawful or within the provisions of this chapter, the object and purpose of which are to conduct operations at a reasonable profit or to market at a reasonable profit those products which can not otherwise be so marketed.”
*724
In
Cline
v.
Frink Dairy Co.,
Examination of recent cases upholding statutes attacked on the ground of vagueness does not persuade us that the Cline ease was wrongly decided or that the Supreme Court would not follow it today. In
Bandini Co.
v.
Superior Court,
In the present case, however, the vagueness of the words “reasonable profit” infects the whole statutory standard of conduct. An agreement is legal or illegal depending on whether its purpose is to secure reasonable or unreasonable profits. Defendants can know when they have approached the line separating legal from illegal conduct only if they can in some way determine what reasonable profits are. There is no common law background to guide them
(cf. Nash
v.
United States,
Defendants’ contention that the state has no standing to attack the validity of the amendment cannot be sustained. It has generally been held that an invalid amendment to a valid statute is ineffective for any purpose.
(Frost
v.
Corporation Commission,
Defendants contend that their agreement is lawful under the provision of section 16725 of the Business and Professions Code providing that “It is not unlawful to enter into agreements or form associations or combinations . . .
*727
which are in furtherance of trade.” This provisions is the converse of subdivision a of section 16720, which defines an invalid trust as one created “to carry out restrictions in trade or commerce. ’ ’ Since the Cartwright Act articulates in greater detail a public policy that has long been recognized at common law
(Speegle
v.
Board of Fire Underwriters, supra,
Defendants contend that the Herriman case is controlling here because they service less than one-half of one per cent of the buildings serviced in San Francisco. The Herriman case was decided before the Cartwright Act was adopted in 1907, and in view of the specific provisions of the act with respect to price fixing that case is no longer controlling.
(People
v.
H. Jevne Co., supra,
Defendants contend that their agreement is valid because it operates only to prevent tortious interference with existing contract rights. They point out that a member of the association is required to submit a higher bid only if the person soliciting the bid has an existing unexpired contract with another member, and contend that the purpose of requiring the higher bid is to avoid inducing a breach of the existing contract. It is unnecessary to decide whether such a purpose or effect would validate an agreement otherwise prohibited by the Cartwright Act. Defendants’ agreement goes much further. Ordinarily a person soliciting bids for maintenance service would do so in advance of the expiration date of his current contract, not for the purpose of breaching his contract, but to avoid interruption of service in the event that he should not wish to renew it. Thus in the usual situation defendants ’ agreement does not operate to prevent interference with existing contract rights, but rather to fix prices and restrict competition in the future.
Defendants finally contend that the judgment is erroneous because it enjoins them from “Formulating, promoting, participating or combining in any understanding, compact, scheme, plan or agreement to raise, fix, adhere to or maintain prices for the furnishing of labor, material and services in the building maintenance industry,” without distinguishing between agreements among themselves in restraint of trade and legal contracts with their customers establishing prices for particular jobs. In the commonly accepted sense of the term, however, a price fixing agreement is not one whereby one party merely agrees to supply goods or services to another at a given price, but one whereby the parties seek to determine the price at which goods or services shall be offered to third parties. (See
Schwegmann Bros.
v.
Calvert Distillers Corp.,
Since the stipulated facts support the judgment as entered and there is no evidence that would support a contrary conclusion, the order granting a new trial is reversed.
Notes
“A trust is a combination of capital, skill or acts by two or more persons for any of the following purposes:
“(a) To create or carry out restrictions in trade or commerce.
“(b) To limit or reduce the production, or increase the price of merchandise or of any commodity.
‘ ‘ (c) To prevent competition in manufacturing, making, transportation, sale or purchase of merchandise, produce or any commodity.
“ (d) To fix at any standard or figure, whereby its price to the public or consumer shall be in any manner controlled or established, any article or commodity of merchandise, produce or commerce intended for sale, barter, use or consumption in this State.
“(e) To make or enter into or execute or carry out any contract, obligations or agreements of any kind or description, by which they do all or any or any combination of any of the following:
“ (1) Bind themselves not to sell, dispose of or transport any article or any commodity or any article of trade, use, merchandise, commerce or consumption below a common standard figure, or fixed value.
“(2) Agree in any manner to keep the price of such article, commodity or transportation at a fixed or graduated figure.
“(3) Establish or settle the price of any article, commodity or transportation between them or themselves and others, so as directly or indirectly to preclude a free and unrestricted competition among themselves, or any purchasers or consumers in the sale or transportation of any such article or commodity.
“(4) Agree to pool, combine or directly or indirectly unite any interests that they may have connected with the sale or transportation of any such article or commodity, that its price might in any manner be affected. ’ ’
