MEMORANDUM
Plаintiffs, Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Co., Inc. (“Santa Fe”), and Robin L. Sommers, filed this action against Defendant, Robert A. Judge, Sr., Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue, seeking a declaration that a particular provision of Pеnnsylvania’s Cigarette Sales and Licensing Law, 72 Pa. Stat. § 204-A(a)(2) (1995), violates the United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions, and requesting a permanent injunction against its enforcement. Before us are Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and Defendant’s motion for judgment on the plеadings.
I. Background
Santa Fe is a New Mexico corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of specialty cigarettes; Sommers is Santa Fe’s President and a principal owner of the corporation. Unlike the major cigarette companies, Santa Fe does not use established cigarette wholesalers or distributors. Instead, it distributes its products directly to retailers, or through Robin Sommers Marketing, a sole proprietorship owned by Sommers which distributes cigarettes exclusively for Sаnta Fe.
In order to distribute Santa Fe’s products to retailers in Pennsylvania, Sommers obtained a Pennsylvania Cigarette Dealer’s License, authorizing him to act as a cigarette stamping agent. 1 Sommers maintained this license and renewed it annually frоm 1991 through 1995. During that period, Sommers acted as Santa Fe’s licensed distribution agent in Pennsylvania.
On January 24, 1996, Sommers applied for renewal of his license. Santa Fe had also applied for a license on December 4, 1995 (the company intended tо take over its own distribution in Pennsylvania). Both applications were denied.
Defendant, through the Miscellaneous Tax Division of the Bureau of Business Trust Fund Taxes, explained to Plaintiffs that their applications had been denied pursuant to a 1993 amendment to the Cigarette Sales and Licensing Law. This amendment changed 72 Pa. Stat. § 204-A(a)(2) to include the requirement that an applicant for a license have “received commitments from at least two cigarette manufacturers whose aggregate share is at least forty per centum of the Commonwealth’s cigarette market” (the “Commitment Requirement”). 2 1993 Pa. Legis. Serv. 46 (West 1993). Because Sommers acts as distributor exclusively for Santa Fe (and because Santa Fe intended to act solely as its own distributor), Plаintiffs had not obtained such commitments, and allege that they are unable to do so.
Plaintiffs filed this action on June 28,1996, alleging that the Commitment Requirement violates the United States and the Pennsylvania Constitutions. On that date we issued a temporary restraining order, extending the effectiveness of Sommers’ Cigarette Dealer’s License. On July 2, 1996, we issued a preliminary injunction, extending the license until all proceedings in this Court are completed. The material facts are not in dispute, and the parties now seek finаl resolution of the dispute, Plaintiffs through a motion for
II. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answеrs to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56;
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
III. Discussion
Plaintiffs assert that Pennsylvania’s Cоmmitment Requirement is unconstitutional on two grounds: first, that it constitutes an impermissible delegation of legislative authority to cigarette manufacturers, in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and in violatiоn of Article II, § 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution; and second, that it creates a classification between similarly situated entities without any rational basis, and thus violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. 3
A. Delegation of Legislative Authority
A delegation of legislative аuthority to private parties violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Washington ex.
rel. Seattle Title Trust Co. v. Roberge,
In
Roberge,
the Supreme Court struck down a Seattle zoning ordinance which permitted the construction of a philanthropic home for the elderly in a residеntial district only “when the written consent shall have been obtained of the owners of two thirds of the property within four hundred feet of the proposed budding.”
Article II, § 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution imposes similar restrictions. In
Life Fellowship,
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court struck down a provision of the Chiropractic Registratiоn Act, requiring chiropractors to attend a two-day conference held by the Pennsylvania Chiropractic Society, or an equivalent educational conference, as a prerequisite to renewal of their licenses.
The Commitment Requirement suffers from the same infirmities as the statutes struck down in Roberge and Life Fellowship. The statute in question here establishes a system in which private approval is a prerequisite for public action. By requiring that an applicant for a stamping agent’s license obtain commitments from two cigarette manufacturers, who must between them represent at least 40% of the market, the Commitment Requirement gives the major cigarette manufacturers (particularly Philip Mоrris, which itself accounts for some 44% of the market) power to control who may or may not become a stamping agent.
The Commonwealth most certainly may exercise control over the distribution and sale of cigarettes. In doing so, howеver, the legislature may not hand
de facto
control over the process to private parties, “uncontrolled by any standard or rule ... not bound by any official duty, [and] free to withhold consent for selfish reasons or arbitrarily.”
Roberge,
278 at 122,
B. Equal Protection
Under the Fourteenth Amendment, a state may not “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1. Where a state law creates non-suspect classifications, and treats those classes differently, the law will be found to violate Equal Protection only if it is not “rationally related to legitimate governmental objectives.”
Schweiker v. Wilson,
The purposes of the Cigarette Sales and Licensing Law are formally expressed by the Legislature in the law’s statement of legislative intent:
It is hereby declared to be in the public interest of this Commonwealth:
(1) To prohibit аdvertising or offering cigarettes for sale below cost if the intent thereof is to increase the incidence of cigarette usage or to injure, destroy or substantially lessen competition.
(2) To declare such practice to be unfair, dеceptive and adverse to the collection of taxes from the sale of cigarettes.
(3) To license cigarette dealers to effect the orderly collection of taxes.
(4) To promote fair competition.
72 Pa. Stat. § 201-A Defendant argues that the Commitment Requiremеnt is rationally related to the third stated legislative purpose, the licensing of cigarette dealers to effect the orderly collection of taxes. Requiring cigarette dealers to have commitments from two major manufacturers priоr to licensing ensures that the only dealers capable of being licensed will be large, well-established wholesalers. This, Defendant argues, is rationally related to the orderly collection of taxes, because it will be more efficient for thе Commonwealth to monitor a small number of large wholesalers than many smaller ones, and because wholesalers who have received advance commitments from large cigarette manufacturers are likely to be financially stable.
Plaintiffs respond that the Legislature could have devised other means of assuring that licenses are given only to large wholesalers, and that having cigarettes wholesaled only by large dealers does not necessarily promote the ordеrly collection of taxes.
IV. Relief
We have concluded that the Commitment Requirement provision of 72 Pa. Stat. § 204-A(a)(2) violates the United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions. Plaintiff seeks permanent injunctive relief preventing the enforcement of this provision.
Permanent injunctivе relief is appropriate when: (1) we may properly exercise equity jurisdiction; (2) the party seeking relief has prevailed on the merits; and (3) the party seeking relief can show that the balance of equities favors an injunction.
Roe v. Operation Rescue,
Notes
. A cigarette stamping agent is authorized by the Commonwealth to purchаse tax stamps and affix them to packages of cigarettes. 72 Pa. Stat. §§ 202-A, 204-A.
. The Act does not define the term "commitment.” The Department of Revenue reads the statute as requiring letters of intent expressing a willingness or intent on the part of the manufacturers to sell cigarettes to the applicant. (See Motion for Summary Judgment ex. 3, at 33-34 (deposition of Anthony Nikoloff)).
In support of their motion for summary judgment, Plaintiffs have submitted Defendant’s answers to interrogatories, which include a table indicating the Pennsylvaniа market share of each of the five major cigarette manufacturers for the months of May and June of 1996. Those figures (averaged and rounded to the nearest whole percentage point) are:
Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. 17%
Liggett & Myers Inc. 2%
Lorillard Tobacco Co. 15%
Philip Morris, Inc. 44%
R J Reynolds Tobacco Co. 22%
100%
(Motion for Summary Judgment, ex. 2, sheet 1).
. The complaint also alleges that the Commitment Requirement violates Article I, § 26 (equal protection) and Article III, § 32 (special legislation) of the Pennsylvania Constitution. As Plaintiffs do not address these claims in their motion for summary judgment, and because their discussion is unnecessary to the disposition of the case, we will not address them here.
