This appeal requires us to revisit the scene of an earlier battle. In
Wine & Spirits Retailers, Inc. v. Rhode Island,
I. BACKGROUND
Typically, we review factual determinations made during a bench trial for clear error and afford plenary review to the trier’s formulation and application of the law.
See Smith v. F.W. Morse & Co.,
This does not mean that, in such a situation, we must necessarily reinvent each and every wheel. To the extent that the record compiled at the preliminary injunction stage was “sufficiently developed and the facts necessary to shape the proper legal matrix were sufficiently clear, and [if] nothing in the record subsequently developed at trial constitutes substantially dif *5 ferent evidence that might undermine the validity of the prior panel’s rulings of law,” those rulings may be deemed the law of the case. Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). It is against this backdrop that we turn to the record below.
For efficiency’s sake, we assume the reader’s familiarity with our earlier opinion. That said, we briefly recount the identity of the parties. Plaintiff-appellant Wine & Spirits Retailers, Inc. (W & S) is a Rhode Island corporation engaged in the interstate business of franchising package stores. Plaintiff-appellant John Haronian, a Rhode Island resident, is W & S’s principal. Following our earlier decision, these two plaintiffs amended their complaint and enlisted three new plaintiffs, all Rhode Island-based package stores (the Retail Stores) that had entered into franchise agreements with W & S. The Retail Stores are all appellants here. Each of them possesses a Class A license to sell liquor at retail. Furthermore, each of them has operated, and desires to operate in the future, under the trade name “Douglas Wine & Spirits.”
The principal defendants (appellees before us) are the State of Rhode Island and Jeffrey J. Greer, in his official capacity as the associate director of the Rhode Island Department of Business Regulation. We henceforth shall refer to these defendants, collectively, as “the State.” In addition, a trade association, the United Independent Liquor Retailers of Rhode Island, has intervened as a defendant.
In our previous decision, we described in detail the relevant aspects of the statutory amendments challenged by the plaintiffs.
See Wine & Spirits,
There is another facet to this case (not mentioned in the earlier appeal). That facet involves the plaintiffs’ challenge to a related statutory provision, not part of the 2004 amendment cycle, that imposes an instate residency requirement for prospective liquor licensees. See id. § 3-5-10.
In the court below, the plaintiffs attacked the statutory scheme on several fronts. As stated, the district court nonetheless denied preliminary injunctive relief.
See Wine & Spirits,
This timely appeal followed. For ease in analysis, we divide the plaintiffs’ assignments of error into three groups.
II. THE FIRST AMENDMENT CLAIMS
The First Amendment applies to the several states by operation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See 44 Liquormart, Inc. v. Rhode Island,
In essence, the plaintiffs assert that (i) the prohibition against participation in joint advertisements, R.I. Gen. Laws § 3-
*6
5&emdash;11 (b)(1) (iii) ,
1
and (ii) the prohibition against the use of a trade name associated with a chain-store organization,
see id.
§ 3-5-ll(b)(l)(vi), violate the First Amendment. In our earlier decision, we acknowledged that “commercial speech, truthful liquor advertising, is entitled to a measure of protection under the First Amendment.”
Wine & Spirits,
aspect the matter because, in our earlier decision, we left open the question of whether the on joint advertising and shared trade names might infringe the First Amendment rights of a franchisee holding a Class A liquor license&emdash;a claim that W & S nor Haronian had standing to pursue. See id. at 48-50. Given the emergence of the Retail Stores as parties plaintiff&emdash;they appear to have been joined for precisely this purpose&emdash;we must now examine the merits of these contentions.
A. Joint Advertising.
With respect to joint advertising, the Retail Stores contend that section 3-51. ll(b)(l)(iii) does not prohibit agreements about prices and products but, rather, prohibits the advertisements themselves. Building on this foundation, they suggest that, at its core, the prohibition “bans speech as a means of addressing underlying conduct.” Appellants’ Br. at 44. To support this extravagant claim, the Retail Stores point to evidence adduced at trial regarding joint advertisements that make no reference to agreed-upon prices or common products.
This argument lacks force. Section 3-5ll(b)(l)(iii) forbids a licensee’s “[participation in a coordinated or common advertisement.” This prohibition does not target speech; each individual liquor licensee remains at liberty to disseminate information about its prices and products to other retad stores and to the public at large.
See Wine & Spirits,
We add, moreover, that even if the joint advertising prohibition could be said
*7
to touch upon commercial speech under other circumstances, it would not implicate any protected interest possessed by the Retad Stores. Acting in concert to implement an advertising plan no more proposes a commercial transaction than does the provision of advertising services by W & S — a practice that we have found not protected under the First Amendment.
See id.
And, finally, the conduct in question is not so inherently expressive as to warrant First Amendment protection under the
O’Brien
doctrine.
See Rumsfeld v. Forum for Acad. & Inst. Rights, Inc.,
[I]t has never been deemed an abridgement of freedom of speech or press to make a course of conduct illegal merely because the conduct was in part initiated, evidenced, or carried out by means of language, either spoken, written, or printed.
FAIR,
Taking a somewhat different tack, the plaintiffs suggest that the Rhode Island statute is flawed because other commercial entities are not forbidden from advertising jointly. That suggestion attempts to invoke the precept that, even in the commercial milieu, “decisions that select among speakers conveying virtually identical messages are in serious tension with the principles undergirding the First Amendment.”
Greater New Orleans Broad. Ass’n v. United States,
The Supreme Court has emphasized the importance of context in evaluating claims that legislation abridges First Amendment rights.
See Edenfield v. Fane,
So it is here. A trial court’s findings of fact, made in connection with one legal theory, may often be treated as fungible in connection with another.
See, e.g., Societe Des Produits Nestle v. Casa Helvetia, Inc.,
The district court found as a matter of fact that the Retail Stores had failed to demonstrate that they and those other entities to which they alluded were similarly situated. This finding is not clearly erro *8 neous (indeed, it appears to be unassailable). Consequently, we reject the plaintiffs’ disparate treatment claim.
B. Shared Trade Names.
The remaining prong of the plaintiffs’ First Amendment challenge involves the statutory restriction on the use of shared trade names. See R.I. Gen. Laws § 3-5-ll(b)(l)(vi) (prohibiting Class A licensees from using “[a]ny term or name identified as a chain or common entity”). The Retail Stores assert a constitutional right to do business under the Douglas name, which they believe “conveys a positive message to potential consumers.” Appellants’ Br. at 42.
It cannot be gainsaid that the use of a trade name implicates the user’s commercial speech rights.
See Friedman v. Rogers,
It is not always necessary, however, to deal with each of the test’s four parts. In framing the inquiry, the threshold question is whether “the commercial speech concerns unlawful activity or is misleading.”
W. States Med. Ctr.,
In a case that antedated
Central Hudson,
the Supreme Court held that the First Amendment posed no obstacle to state regulation of trade names when “a significant possibility” existed that such names would “be used to mislead the public.”
Friedman,
Since its decision in
Friedman,
the Court has made a doctrinal refinement, distinguishing in the professional services context between commercial speech that is inherently or actually misleading and commercial speech that is only potentially misleading.
See, e.g., Ibanez v. Fla. Dep’t of Bus. & Profl Reg., Bd. of Accountancy,
In the ease at hand, the plaintiffs argue that the State has not shown that the use of a shared trade name by independent package stores is misleading and that, in all events, there is no evidence of consumer confusion. While certain elements of this argument are irreproachable — a governmental entity attempting to enforce a restriction on commercial speech has the burden of justifying the restriction,
W. States Med. Ctr.,
Even assuming, for argument’s sake, that the
Ibanez
dichotomy applies here, the State’s concern about the misleading nature of chain-associated trade names, when used by independent package stores, is readily supportable. The district court, in its preliminary injunction ruling, refused to enjoin the enforcement of the “no franchise” provisions contained in the statutory scheme but temporarily blocked the enforcement of the prohibition against the use of a shared trade name.
See Wine & Spirits,
At trial, the district court, as the finder of the facts, examined the Retail Stores’ actual use of the shared trade name during the period when they professed to be operating independently. It determined that each of the former franchisees had simply appended the name of the municipality in which its shop was located to the Douglas name. The court received evidence that newspaper advertisements purportedly placed by individual stores on a rotating basis featured the Douglas name in large letters and bold font, while reporting the store’s location information in much smaller print that was “far less likely to be noticed by the reader”; that participating stores prominently displayed exact replicas of these advertisements and offered for sale the same products (both advertised and non-advertised) for the same prices; and that the Retail Stores continued to receive suggested store layouts and employee dress codes from W & S. Citing this evidence, the court found as a fact that the Retail Stores’ shared use of the Douglas name “conveys and, obviously, is intended to convey to consumers the impression that all of the stores are part of a single entity and operate in concert.” Given the Retail Stores’ assurances that they had been operating independently from and after the effective date of the 2004 amendments, the court concluded that the impression conveyed by the use of the shared trade name was “untrue and, therefore, misleading.”
These findings are not clearly erroneous (indeed, the plaintiffs do not contest them). They graphically illustrate why the use of a shared trade name in the retail liquor market by supposedly independent package stores poses an area of legitimate concern for a state that has abolished franchise and chain-store arrangements in that market. The findings, therefore, comprise a showing sufficient to underpin the re *10 striction enacted by the Rhode Island General Assembly.
The Retail Stores counter that the State should, at most, be able to require the placement of qualifying language (say, “independently owned and operated”) in connection with independent retailers’ use of a shared trade name. That is whistling past the graveyard: as a general matter, the law imposes no requirement that a regulation of commercial speech constitute the least restrictive means of accomplishing the State’s legitimate goal.
See Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Reilly,
That ends this chapter of the tale. As the district court supportably found, the Retail Stores’ actual usage of the shared trade name tends, in a misleading fashion, to identify the users as part of a chain or entity under common control. For that reason, the restriction imposed by the State is constitutionally permissible. 2
III. THE COMMERCE CLAUSE CLAIMS
The Constitution grants to Congress the power “[t]o regulate Commerce ... among the several States.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3. Within this grant of power, what has come to be known as the dormant commerce clause prohibits “protectionist state regulation designed to benefit in-state economic interests by burdening out-of-state competitors.”
Grant’s Dairy
—Me.,
LLC v. Comm’r of Me. Dep’t of Agric., Food & Rural Res.,
Notwithstanding this constitutionally sanctioned zone of control, the plaintiffs charge that Rhode Island’s liquor distribution regime violates the dormant commerce clause. This charge, which was not addressed in our earlier decision, has two facets — one narrowly focused and the other more global. In a rifle-shot attack, the plaintiffs allege that, by limiting Class A licenses to Rhode Island residents, R.I. Gen. Laws § 3-5-10 discriminates on its face against out-of-state residents. In a broader fusillade, they allege variously that the statutory scheme discriminates in both purpose and effect, legislates extra-territorially, and unduly burdens the free flow of interstate commerce.
A statute that discriminates on its face against interstate commerce, whether in purpose or effect, demands heightened scrutiny.
See Alliance of Auto. Mfrs. v. Gwadosky,
A statute that “regulates evenhandedly and has only incidental effects on interstate commerce engenders a lower level of scrutiny.”
Alliance of Auto. Mfrs.,
With these jurisprudential building blocks in place, we turn to the concerns identified by the plaintiffs.
A. Residency Requirements.
The plaintiffs’ first line of attack is directed at section 3-5-10. A liquor-license residency requirement has been in force in Rhode Island since 1933 (albeit with modifications over time). With exceptions not relevant here, the current version of the Rhode Island law provides that Class A package store licenses are to be issued “only to ... residents of this state.” R.I. Gen. Laws § 3&emdash;5&emdash;10(a)(1). Relatedly, no such license “shall be issued to [a] corporation unless each officer, director or stockholder is a suitable person to hold a license.” Id. § 3-5-10(b)(l). 3
These requirements, the plaintiffs contend, violate the dormant commerce clause because they discriminate on their face against out-of-state residents. The district court did not reach the merits of this contention. Rather, the court ruled that the plaintiffs lacked standing to contest the residency requirements. It based this ruling on its findings (i) that the Retail Stores were Rhode Island entities, each of which already possessed a Class A license; (ii) that W
&
S, a Rhode Island corporation, had never expressed an interest in obtaining a license; and (iii) that Haroni-an, also a Rhode Islander, had displayed a similar indifference to acquiring a Class A license. Given these facts, the plaintiffs had failed to demonstrate any injury in fact stemming from section 3-5-10’s residency requirements.
See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
*12
On appeal, the plaintiffs do not challenge the district court’s findings of fact. They do, however, argue that as a legal matter the district court took too crabbed a view of standing. They urge us to apply the doctrine that, under the dormant commerce clause, “cognizable injury is not restricted to those members of the affected class against whom states ... ultimately discriminate.”
Houlton Citizens’ Coal. v. Town of Houlton,
We have no quarrel with the abstract statements of law set forth in Houlton. But context is all-important, and those statements are of no help to the plaintiffs in the circumstances of this case. Here, significantly, the plaintiffs have failed to show any cognizable harm, direct or indirect, attributable to the residency requirements of section 3-5-10. We explain briefly.
The injuries of which the plaintiffs complain arise in consequence of Rhode Island’s ban on franchise and chain-store arrangements, not in consequence of the residency requirements per se. After all, the plaintiffs are all Rhode Island residents and, if favoritism exists, none of them could conceivably have suffered any cognizable harm as a result of it. This deficiency distinguishes the plaintiffs’ case from cases like
Houlton
in which claimants have succeeded in making out the rudiments of standing.
See, e.g., Gen. Motors,
B. Overall Statutory Scheme.
Taking aim at R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 3-5-11 and 3-5-11.1, the plaintiffs mount a ferocious attack on the State’s prohibition against franchise and chain-store arrangements in the retail liquor industry. Their argument runs along the following lines. In determining whether an entity is a chain-store organization (and, thus, forbidden from obtaining a Class A liquor license), the statutory scheme continues to count “chains in which one or more stores are located outside of the state.” See id. § 3-5-ll(a). That aspect of the statute, when combined with the 2004 ban on franchise-type arrangements, creates (or so the plaintiffs tell us) a regime designed to achieve economic protectionism by advantaging independently owned Rhode Island liquor stores. So viewed, the plaintiffs continue, the statutory scheme discriminates in both purpose and effect, legislates extra-territorially, and unduly burdens the free flow of interstate commerce.
The State takes a diametrically opposite position. It asserts that the statutory scheme applies uniformly across the board, barring chain-store organizations and franchise entities, regardless of whether they are based in Rhode Island, from owning package stores. It adds that the evidence adduced at trial revealed no burden on interstate commerce, let alone a discriminatory effect.
We begin with purpose. Parties challenging the validity of a state statute on “purpose” grounds must show that the statute was prompted by a discriminatory purpose.
See Hughes v. Oklahoma,
The district court declined to make that quantum leap, and so do we. The words of a legislative body itself, written or spoken contemporaneously with the passage of a statute, are usually the most authoritative guide to legislative purpose.
See, e.g., Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery Co.,
To be sure, the plaintiffs try. The centerpiece of their effort is the State’s so-called admission that the 2004 amendments were not intended to promote temperance. That brazen claim relies on the State’s answer to an interrogatory, which clarified that the State was not planning to argue in the district court that the amendments had actually reduced the consumption of alcoholic beverages. We are hard-pressed to see how that interrogatory answer, which merely narrowed the field as to the issues that the State was planning to emphasize at trial, in any way vitiates the General Assembly’s clear statements of overall legislative purpose.
The remainder of the plaintiffs’ eviden-tiary cache consists of two statements of counsel. The first is a comment by counsel for the intervenor-defendant — a trade association, not a state agency — about the need to count out-of-state entities in the chain-store calculus lest a “giant, behemoth, nationwide liquor retailer ... quickly dominate the entire market with [its] nationwide market power, thereby completely undermining in one fell swoop the purpose of the law, which is to treat all Class A license holders equally.” The second is an offer of proof tendered by an attorney for the State in connection with a rebuffed exhibit, which was designed to supply background for the General Assembly’s decision to structure the retail liquor industry without any chain-store “entity controlling the business in a number of different locations.” To say that these statements override — or even weaken — the legislature’s formal statements of purpose would be to elevate hope over reason.
What we have said to this point fully answers the plaintiffs’ questions about the General Assembly’s intent. On this record, we have no choice but to reject the construct that enactment of the overall statutory scheme was driven by a discrimi
*14
natory purpose.
See generally Fireside Nissan, Inc. v. Fanning,
The plaintiffs’ claim of discriminatory effect is equally unavailing. Here, too, the plaintiffs must carry the devoir of persuasion.
See Alliance of Auto. Mfrs.,
The plaintiffs’ principal rejoinder rests on an overly expansive reading of our decision in
Walgreen Co. v. Rullan,
The instant case is. easily distinguishable from
Walgreen.
Here, the plaintiffs adduced no evidence that the prohibition on franchise and chain-store arrangements, in itself, has had, or threatens to have, a debilitating or unfair impact either on competition in general or&emdash;leaving aside residency requirements&emdash;on out-of-state enterprises in particular. There is, for example, no evidence of any carve-out or other device that would enable in-state entities to evade the challenged restrictions, nor is there any hint of a home-field advantage in connection with the State’s enforcement of the restrictions. The absence of any such evidence is telling.
See, e.g., Exxon Corp. v. Gov. of Md.,
Notwithstanding this lack of evidence, the plaintiffs asseverate that evenhanded laws that apply to in-state and out-of-state entities alike nonetheless may produce a discriminatory effect, in violation of the dormant commerce clause, if they “favor a subset of in-state interests.”
Walgreen,
To this, we add one further observation: that a state regulation that bur
*15
dens some interstate firms “does not, by itself, establish a claim of discrimination against interstate commerce.”
Exxon,
This brings us to the claim that the statutory scheme has an impermissible extraterritorial reach. The district court did not address this claim, presumably due to shortcomings in the manner of its presentment. Even assuming that this argument was squarely presented, it does not profit the plaintiffs’ cause.
A statute is per se invalid if it “regulates commerce wholly outside the state’s borders or when the statute has a practical effect of controlling conduct outside of the state.”
Pharm. Care Mgmt. Ass’n v. Rowe,
Leaving residency strictures to one side,
see supra
Part 111(A), the most that the plaintiffs have shown is that the neutral, evenhanded requirements that we have been discussing incidentally burden interstate commerce by precluding various methods of distribution in the retail liquor market. That is not enough. In order to invalidate the requirements, any such burden would have to be “clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits.”
Pike,
Here, the hoped-for local benefits consist primarily of regulating and safeguarding against anticompetitive behavior in the retail liquor market.
See
R.I. Gen. Laws § 3-5-11.1;
see also Heald,
We need not tarry. The Supreme Court previously has rejected the notion that the dormant commerce clause protects particular business structures or methods of op
*16
eration in retail markets.
See Exxon,
IV. THE EQUAL PROTECTION CLAIM
In a last-gasp effort to stem an unfavorable tide, the plaintiffs advance an equal protection challenge to the statutory scheme. This challenge presents of a moving target; its specifics have been in constant flux during the course of the litigation. At this juncture, the has morphed into an assault on the legitimacy of the State’s interest in enacting the statutory scheme.
We apply rational basis scrutiny to equal protection challenges to economic legislation.
See Wine & Spirits,
Y. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. State legislatures acting in the public interest are entitled to considerable deference in mapping the contours of economic legislation. While that deference must take full account of constitutional constraints, the Rhode Island General Assembly has not crossed any constitutional boundaries here. Accordingly, we uphold the judgment below.
Affirmed.
Notes
The plaintiffs to some extent also challenge the restrictions on coordinated marketing, see R.I. Gen. Laws § 3-5-1 l(b)(l)(iv), and the restrictions on agreed pricing, see id. § Because these provisions are similar in character to the joint advertising ban and because the plaintiffs lavish most of their attention on the latter, we use section 35&emdash;1 l(b)(l)(iii) as an exemplar.
. None of the three appellate decisions bruited by the Retail Stores casts doubt upon this conclusion. In two of them, the restricted speech was neither misleading nor related to unlawful activity.
See Bad Frog Brewery, Inc. v. N.Y. State Liquor Auth.,
. In a different provision, the statute states that "[r]etailer's licenses may, however, be issued to corporations incorporated in any other of the United States which are authorized by the secretary of state to transact business in this state.” R.I. Gen. Laws § 3-5-10(a)(1). Despite this provision, the parties have stipulated that "all Class A licenses must be held by Rhode Island residents or Rhode Island corporations.” Given the plaintiffs’ lack of standing, see text infra, we need not resolve the seeming contradiction between the quoted provision and the parties’ stipulation.
. The plaintiffs also make a rather feeble argument that the statutory scheme discriminates by exempting certain types of in-state establishments, such as wineries and brewpubs purveying locally produced wine and beer, from the franchise and chain-store prohibitions.
See
R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 3-5-11(a), 3-5-11.1(a). But there has been no showing here either that these kinds of business establishments are similarly situated to package stores or that their claimed exempt status has "deprive[d] out-of-state businesses of access to a local market.''
C & A Carbone,
