By stipulation of counsel and order of court, the above-entitled cause was ordered submitted, and to be decided concurrently with Max Factor & Co. et al. v. Kunsman, L. A. No. 14662 (ante, p. 446 [
The appeal here, as in the Factor case, is by the plaintiff from a judgment of dismissal entered after demurrer to the complaint sustained without leave to amend. Although not as extensive in its allegations as the complaint in the Factor case, the complaint is sufficient to raise the same general question of the constitutionality of the 1933 amendment to the “Fair Trade Act’’ (Stats. 1931, p. 583; Stats. 1933, p. 793). Plaintiff herein seeks an injunction pursuant to the provisions of the act, restraining the defendants from selling Pyroil, a branded and trade-marked article, at retail prices lower than those sought to be maintained by the plaintiff. As in the Factor case, defendants have not bound themselves by any
As the questions on appeal are identical in the two actions, the decision in the Factor case is decisive of the general question on appeal in this ease. Because of that fact, we do not deem it necessary to consider certain specifications iirged in the demurrer that the complaint was uncertain, ambiguous and unintelligible. Therefore on the authority of the decision in Max Factor & Co. v. Kunsman, L. A. No. 14662, ante, p. 446 [
Shenk, J., and Thompson, J., dissented. (See their opinions filed in Max Factor & Co. et al. y. Kunsman, L. A. No. 14662, ante, p. 446, filed to-day.)
Rehearing denied.
