Plaintiffs and interveners, owners and operators of self service gasoline stations, appeal from a judgment declaring that sections 20880, 20882, 20883, 20884, 20885 and 20886 of the Business and Professions Code, regulating price advertising on or near gasoline stations, are constitutional and are applicable to plaintiffs’ price signs.
Appellants contend that the sections in question involve an improper exercise of the police power, depriving them of their property without due process of law. It is further contended that these sections violate article IV, section 25, subdivision 33 of the California Constitution in that they constitute a special law that is unnecessary because a general law (Bus. & Prof. Code § 17500) is and can be made applicable. We have concluded that this regulation of price advertising is a proper exercise of the police power and that the judgment must be affirmed.
The sections in question 1 require price signs, other than price signs on the gasoline dispensing apparatus (Bus. & *817 Prof. Code §§ 20820-20826), to set forth in detail and in lettering as large as other lettering thereon, the total price of the gasoline, including tax and grade. Signs using the words “save,” “off,” “discount,” “less,” “below,” or words of similar meaning are considered price signs. The signs employed by appellants and others in the business of owning or operating gasoline stations use thereon the words “Save,” “Serve Yourself and Save,” and “Save 5,” followed by small lettered words “cents,” “ways,” “minutes,” or minor variations of the same. Many of said signs do not refer to the name nor state the price of the gasoline offered for sale.
In reviewing legislation for the purpose of testing its propriety as an exercise of the police power, “ [t]he power of the court is limited to determining whether the subject of the legislation is within the state’s power, and if so to determine whether the means adopted to accomplish the result are reasonably designed for that purpose, and have a real and substantial relation to the objects sought to be attained.”
*818
(Max Factor & Co.
v.
Kunsman,
With this brief statement of the governing principles, we turn to the legislation at hand. It is apparent upon its face that the primary purpose of this legislation is the prevention of misleading advertising, which purpose has long been deemed a proper subject for the exercise of the police power. (Note, Ann.Cas. 1916A, 900,
The next step is the consideration of the means employed by the Legislature to reach this legitimate end. These involve primarily the requirement of full disclosure, a method approved in
In re Sidebotham, supra,
The decision of the United States Supreme Court in
Williams
v.
Standard Oil Co.,
Although the right to advertise is a property right
(People
v.
St. John,
Nor is there any merit in the contention that this legislation represents an arbitrary attempt to eliminate competition in the retail selling of gasoline. It is not our function to search for motive in testing the constitutionality of a statute.
(Daniel
v.
Family Security & Ins. Co.,
There can be no doubt that many gasoline price signs are misleading. When a motorist on the highway sees a sign which states in large letters “Save 5” or “5 Off,” he can reasonably assume that he will save 5 cents per gallon below the price of gasoline sold in conventional service stations. And when these words are followed by the words “minutes,” “ways,” or the like, in small letters, the signs are highly misleading. Appellants do not argue at great length that the regulation of such signs is a violation of due process. Rather, they argue that the statute would be unconstitutionally applied if enforced against the sign “Serve Yourself and Save.”
(Brock
v.
Superior Court,
The final contention that this statute violates article IV, section 25, subdivision 33 of the California Constitution is likewise without merit. This section states: “The Legislature shall not pass local or special laws in any of the following enumerated cases, that is to say: In all other cases where a general law can be made applicable.”
The question whether a general law can be made applicable is one for the Legislature, “to be determined in the light of the evils intended to be avoided, and with its determination upon that question we may not interfere, unless the disregard of the constitutional requirement is clear and palpable.”
(People
v.
Mullender,
The distinction between a general and a special law within the meaning of the Constitution has been stated as follows -. “ [A law] ... is general . . . when it applies equally to all persons embraced in a class founded upon some natural or intrinsic or constitutional distinction . . . [It is a special law] ... if it confers particular privileges or imposes peculiar disabilities or burdensome conditions, in the exercise of a common right, upon a class of persons arbitrarily selected from the general body of those who stand in precisely the same relation to the subject of the law.”
(City of Pasadena
v.
Stimson,
The judgment is affirmed.
Gibson, C. J., Shenlc, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and McComb, J. pro tem., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a rehearing was denied November 25, 1952. Edmonds, J., did not participate therein.
Notes
§ 20880. “ (a) No person shall keep, maintain or display on or near the premises of any place of business in this State any advertising medium, which indicates or shows or advertises the price of gasoline or other motor vehicle fuel sold, offered for sale or advertised for sale from such premises, unless the actual price per gallon of gasoline or other motor vehicle fuel, including taxes, is also shown on such advertising medium, together with the word or words ‘gasoline’ or ‘motor fuel’ and the trade name or brand of the gasoline or other motor vehicle fuel product advertised for sale by such advertising medium.
“(b) No person offering for sale or selling any gasoline or motor vehicle fuel from any place of business in the State of California shall post or display a sign or statement or other advertising medium reading, in substance,.‘save’ a designated amount, or a designated amount per gallon, such as ‘save 5 cents’ or ‘save 5 cents per gallon,’ or using the expression ‘off’ a designated amount, such as ‘5 cents off’ or ‘5 cents less,’ or ‘discount’ of a given amount, such as ‘5 cents discount,’ or otherwise using the words ‘save,’ ‘off,’ ‘discount,’ ‘less,’ ‘below,’ or any of them, or a word or words of similar meaning or other phraseology indicating a reduced price, unless there is posted and displayed in letters of equal size and as part of the same sign, statement, or other advertising medium, the total price, including all taxes, at which gasoline or motor vehicle fuel is being sold or offered for sale, designating the price for *817 each brand or trade name of gasoline or motor vehicle fuel being sold or offered for sale.
“The size of the letters, words, figures or numerals used for the purpose of indicating or showing the total price per gallon, including all taxes, shall be of a size as provided under the provisions of Section 20883 of this article.
“ (e) Nothing in this article shall be construed to apply to the price signs referred to in Article 6 of this chapter. ’ ’
§20882. “All letters, figures or numerals used in designating the brand name or words ‘no brand’ in any advertising medium referred to in this article, shall be of uniform size and at least six inches in height and the height shall not be more than twice the dimension of the width of each such letter, figure or numeral.”
§ 20883. “All letters, words, figures or numerals used on the advertising medium referred to in this article for the purpose of indicating or showing prices of gasoline or other motor vehicle fuel sold or advertised for sale shall be uniform in size and shall be not more than twice the size of the letters, figures or numerals used to designate the brand name, or the words ‘no brand.’ ”
§ 20884. “The advertising medium referred to in this article shall not contain any other advertising matter whatsoever, except words of description of the product sold or offered for sale, and if words of description of the product offered for sale or advertised for sale by any such signs are used, the letters, figures or numerals which form any words, marks, letters, figures or numerals of description shall not be larger than the words, marks, letters, figures or numerals used in forming or designating the brand name or the words ‘no brand.’ ”
§ 20885. “For the purpose of this article, fractions are considered one numeral.”
§ 20886. “The numeral one or the letter ‘1’ need not conform to specifications prescribed for other letters, words, figures or numerals by this article but all letters, words, figures or numerals shall be the same type and design and shall be uniform with other letters, words, figures or numerals with which they are used. ’ ’
