OPINION
Thеse cases come before us on appeal by the defendants from judgments of conviction entered against them in the Superior Court on multiple indiсtments for violation of the Rhode Island anti-trust statute, G.L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) § 6-36-16. 1 Since the cases of all defendants involve common questions of law and fact, these cases have been consolidated for purposes of appeal. The facts that are common to all indictments are as follows.
The four defendants were charged with conspiracy to “allocate contracts for home improvements” in connection with contracts fоr home repairs issued by the May- or’s Office of Community Development program and “to submit collusive non-competitive, and rigged bids” in connection with the prоgram in violation of § 6-36-4 and § 6-36-16. In each instance the indictment charged that defendants, who submitted bids for home repairs for a number of different home owners, had agreed in advance in respect to the amounts that would be bid for each contract. Evidence of the rigged bidding procedures included impressions оf other writings from other bid sheets submitted by other defendants, as well as common errors of spelling that tended to show that defendants had prepared these bids in сoncert and agreed upon them in advance. In support of their appeal, defendants have raised a number of issues. However, we are оf the opinion that one issue is dispositive of this appeal. That issue, which has been raised by all defendants, challenges the applicability of the antitrust statute to the type of economic activity in which they were engaged. The two pertinent sections read as follows:
“6-36-4. Restraint of trade or commerce. — Every contract, combinаtion, or conspiracy in restraint of, or to monopolize, trade or commerce is unlawful.”
The term “trade or commerce” is defined in § 6-36-3(7) of the statutе as follows:
“ ‘Trade or commerce’ means any economic activity of any type whatsoever involving any commodity or service or business aсtivity whatsoever; however, *200 ‘trade or commerce’ shall not include economic activities involving real estate unless the 'person whose cоnduct is being challenged is in the business of selling or leasing real estate and has sold or leased or will sell or lease within the twelve (12) month period before оr after the date of service of the complaint or an investigative demand, real estate valued in excess of one million dollars ($1,000,000) * * *.” (Emphasis added.)
The defendаnts contend that the statute is not applicable to the home-repair business in which they were engaged because such a business is unquestionably “economic activities involving real estate.” They suggest that this exemption is drawn in the broadest possible terms and that it is plain and unambiguous. The defendants further point out that there is no allegation or evidence by the state that they come within the exception to such exemption by selling or leasing real estate valued in excess of one million dollars during the twelve-month period before the date of service of the complaint. With this contention we are constrained to agree. The state argues vigorously that we should construe this statute in such a way as to limit the exemption solely to those engaged in the sale or lease of real estate valued below the required amount. The state contends that only such a construction will give effect to the intendеd purpose of the Legislature. In its contentions the state is apparently not mindful of an unbroken line of decisions by this court.
When a statute is free of ambiguity and expresses a clear and definite meaning, there is no room for statutory construction or extension, and the court must give the words of the statute their plain and obvious meaning.
Narragansett Food Services, Inc. v. Rhode Island Department of Labor,
R.I.,
The state concedes that penal statutes must be strictly construed in favor of the party upon whom a penalty is to be imрosed.
Eaton v. Sealol, Inc.,
R.I.,
Here the state argues that we should construe “economic activities involving real estate” as being limited to use of the multiple-listing service or оther similar activities *201 involving the sale or leasing of real estate. Such an interpretation would require a rewriting of the statute in defiance of its plain and unambiguous wording. The statute as enacted by the General Assembly has a plain and sensible meaning, and the cited exemption does not in any way appear to thwart any discernible legislative intent. The state seems to argue that the Legislature could not have intended such a broad exemption.
We must reply in terms of an observation that this court made in
Kastal v. Hickory House, Inc.,
“In the face of a statute so clear and unambiguous, there is no room for the application of the usual canons of statutory construction. In such a case the statute declares itself. * * * We may not where no ambiguity exists search beyond the statute for а different meaning. * * * Only when the legislature sounds an uncertain trumpet may the court move in to clarify the call. But when the call is clear and certain as it is herе we may not consider whether the statute as written comports with our ideas of justice, expediency or sound public policy. In such circumstances that is not the court’s business. Id. at 369,187 A.2d at 264 .
In the case at bar the Legislature has not sounded an uncertain trumpet. In enacting the general prohibition against “restraint of tradе or commerce,” the Legislature has defined the term excluding “economic activities involving real estate,” save for selling or leasing real estаte valued in excess of one million dollars. We have neither the authority nor the competence to rewrite that definition in order to bring it into confоrmity with the state’s concept of how the statute should have been drafted. Consequently, the activities in which the defendants were engaged are not subjeсt to the prohibition or penalties of the statute.
For the reasons stated, the defendants’ appeals are sustained, the judgments of conviction are reversed, and the papers in the case are remanded to the Superior Court with directions to dismiss the indictments.
Notes
. The defendants in this case are Vincent Calise, Theodore Cardillo, Robert Desautel and Ronald Germani.
. Since the date of the opinion in
State v. Dassault,
R.I.,
