Thе first case is a bill in equity by a corporation, conducting a package store, so called, where intoxicating liquor is sold not to be consumed on the prеmises, brought against the defendants who comprise the alcoholic beverages control commission, seeking to enjoin the enforcement of a six day susрension of its license imposed by the commission upon the plaintiff as a penalty for selling a bottle of whiskey below the price fixed in accordance with G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 138, § 25C, inserted by St. 1952, c. 385, and c. 567, § 1. The remaining two cases are petitions for writs of certiorari to quash a similar penalty imposed upon the petitioners eаch of whom maintained a package store and is also alleged to have violated said § 25C. The cases were consolidated for trial in the Superiоr Court. They were presented to the judge upon statements of agreed facts. The plaintiff and the petitioners also saved exceptions to the exclusion of evidence. The trial judge reported the cases without decision to this court.
General Laws (Ter. Ed.) c. 138, § 25C, inserted by St. 1952, c. 385, and c. 567, § 1, requires the owner, manufacturer or wholesaler of a brand or trade name to file with the commission at different times during the year a schedule of prices to be charged for different brands оr trade named intoxicating liquors but no filing of schedules “shall take effect unless within thirty days thereafter the commission has ap *61 proved the said prices as not being еxcessive, inadequate, or unfairly discriminatory.” Provisions are made for the display of the schedules where the goods are sold and also for penalties for a violation of the statute.
There is not much doubt that the plaintiff and the petitioners sold a small quantity of whiskey below th,e “minimum consumer resale price list” approved by the commission and that each seller was found guilty by the commission after a hearing and the license of each was ordered suspended for six days. The immediate object of these present proceedings was to avoid the suspension of these licenses.
It is first contended that the statute, said § 25C, providing for the fixing оf the minimum consumer resale prices for alcoholic beverages, is contrary to both the Federal and the State Constitutions.
A statute is not to be declared void as contrary to our Constitution “unless it is impossible by any reasonable construction to interpret its provisions in harmony with the Constitution,”
Perkins
v.
Westwood,
The power of the State to protect itself by an exercise of the police power is commensurate with the nature of the evil which it seeks to eliminate. If the Legislature came to the conclusion that the establishment of retail prices for customers of package stores would tend to promote temperance, to stabilize the packagе store business, to avoid price wars and cut throat competition, and to instill more observance for the law in those engaged in the business and would better protect the public, we cannot say its belief was so irrational that none of these objects would result from the passage of the act.
A price fixing devicе has been recently used to control the so called package store business.
Gipson
v.
Morley,
We do not agree that sponsorship of the statute now § 25C adversely affects it. The fact, as alleged in the intervening petition, that legislation prohibiting price cutting was sponsorеd by the corporate intervener, which was said to represent twelve hundred package stores, did not render the statute null and void if it was otherwise valid. This statute wаs derived from St. 1952, c. 385 and c. 567, which according to their substantially similar titles were enacted for the purpose of eliminating “certain trade abuses in the sale and distribution of alcoholic beverages.” The mere fact that members of a corporation are in favor of the passage of a statute and nothing more is shown does not invalidate the measure. See
Simon
v.
Needham,
The approval of prices by the commission is not shown to be discriminatory. Those selling alcoholic bevеrages at retail not to be drunk on the premises comprise a separate and distinct branch of the liquor business. They are required to charge the same price for the same brand of liquor throughout the Commonwealth. The subject matter is within the police power of the Commonwealth and the imposition of a uniform price cannot be said to be discriminatory.
There is nothing in the contention that there has been an unlawful delegation of legislative power to the commissiоn. The Legislature set out the general policy and also considerable detail which was sufficient in guiding the commission in maintaining established, prices for retail salеs of alcoholic beverages.
Commonwealth
v.
Hudson,
The plaintiff and the petitioners offered evidence by a qualified psychiatrist tending to show that the price at which alсohol or bottled liquors can be purchased at retail *64 liquor stores has nothing to do with the prevalence of alcoholism or alcoholism as a disease in any individual.
We think the judge was right in excluding the opinion of the psychiatrist. The part which the price of an article plays in its retail sale is a matter of commоn experience. Indeed, each of the sales now before us was effected by the plaintiff or the petitioners only after a reduction was made frоm the established price. See
Commonwealth
v.
Isenstadt,
Neither was there any error in the exclusion of the chart offered by the plaintiff and the petitioners. This chart contained statistics compiled by the commission showing cases before local licensing boards and the courts for the years 1934 through 1954 involving sales to minors and sales outside legаl hours. It was offered, presumably, to show that such violations were not reduced by the statute. A sufficient answer is that the statute, § 25C, was operative about a year before the present proceedings were commenced and that would seem to be too short a time to test its effectiveness. Furthermore, the statute is nоt especially directed against sales to minors and sales after hours but aims at a general improvement of the liquor business. The chart with the other evidence falls short of showing that the statute is invalid.
It follows that a final decree is to be entered dismissing the bill in equity and that judgments are to be entered dismissing the petitions for writs of certiorari.
So ordered.
