Under the Oklahoma Unfair Sales Act, a State Court enjoined
appellant from selling at retail any items of merchandise at prices
less than statutory cost, even though some of appellant's
competitors were selling below cost at prices appellant either knew
or had reason to know were illegal. The Oklahoma Court also refused
to enjoin certain of appellant's competitors from giving away
trading stamps with goods sold at or near statutory cost, and
enjoined appellant from reducing its prices below cost to meet that
competition.
Held: The Oklahoma Unfair Sales Act, as construed and
applied in this case, does not transgress the Equal Protection or
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
360 U. S.
334-342.
322 P.2d 178 affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit for an injunction, brought in a state court in
Oklahoma by appellee, Oklahoma Retail Grocers Association, against
appellant, Safeway Stores, for selling several
Page 360 U. S. 335
specified items of retail grocery merchandise below "cost" in
violation of the Oklahoma Unfair Sales Act. Okla.Stat. tit. 15,
§§ 598.1-598.11 (1951). Section 598.3 of the Act
provides:
"It is hereby declared that any advertising, offer to sell, or
sale of any merchandise, either by retailers or wholesalers at less
than cost as defined in this Act with the intent and purpose of
inducing the purchase of other merchandise or of unfairly diverting
trade from a competitor or otherwise injuring a competitor, impair
and prevent fair competition, injure public welfare, are unfair
competition and contrary to public policy and the policy of this
Act, where the result of such advertising, offer or sale is to tend
to deceive any purchaser or prospective purchaser, or to
substantially lessen competition, or to unreasonably restrain
trade, or to tend to create a monopoly in any line of
commerce."
The elements of "cost" are enumerated in other sections of the
statute. Safeway defended on the ground,
inter alia, that
its reductions were permitted by § 598.7 of the Unfair Sales
Act, which allows "any retailer or wholesaler" to
". . . advertise, offer to sell, or sell merchandise at a price
made in good faith to meet the price of a competitor who is selling
the same article or products of comparable quality at cost to him
as a wholesaler or retailer."
Safeway, by cross-petition, sought to enjoin several named
members of appellee Association, including Speed, alleging that
they were selling below cost in violation of the Act. The trial
court, with some qualification, granted the injunction against
Safeway and denied relief against appellees. On appeal, the Supreme
Court of Oklahoma affirmed,
322 P.2d 179,
and, since the constitutionality of
Page 360 U. S. 336
the state statute was challenged under the Fourteenth Amendment,
we noted probable jurisdiction, 358 U.S. 807, and brought the case
here under 28 U.S.C. § 1257(2).
Safeway makes two main claims.
1. Safeway justified cutting prices below cost in some cities by
claiming it was to meet the prices of some of its competitors who
were also selling below cost. The statute allows a reduction below
cost only when it is a good faith meeting of the competition of a
seller who is selling at his own cost. The trial court found that
Safeway's reductions violated the Act, and that Safeway could not
avail itself of the statutory defense of meeting competition, since
its reductions were not in good faith, but were made to meet prices
Safeway "either knew or had reason to know were illegal. . . ." The
court enjoined Safeway from
". . . selling at retail, any items of merchandise . . . at
prices which are less than cost to the retailer as defined in the
Oklahoma 'Unfair Sales Act' and in violation of the provisions of
said 'Unfair Sales Act', except to meet in good faith the prices of
competitors who are selling the same articles or products of
comparable quality at cost to them as retailers as defined in the
Oklahoma 'Unfair Sales Act', and except in instances of other
exempted sales as provided in Section 598.6 of said Oklahoma
'Unfair Sales Act.'"
The injunction, phrased substantially in the terms of the
statute, allows Safeway to meet the prices of competitors who are
selling "at cost to them" if the other requisites of the good faith
defense are met. Appellant claims that this injunction deprives it
of a constitutional right to compete, since it forbids meeting the
prices of competitors who are selling below cost. There is no
constitutional
Page 360 U. S. 337
right to employ relation against action outlawed by a State.
Safeway, the Oklahoma court held, had ample means, under the state
statute, to enjoin the illegal methods of its competitors. It had
no constitutional right to embark on the very kind of destructive
price was the Act was designed to prevent.
Appellant also claims that there are situations in which a
competitor might reduce his prices below cost without violating the
Act, and hence, under the injunction, Safeway would have no remedy
whatsoever, since it could not retaliate in kind, and judicial
relief would not be available. The conclusive answer to this claim
is that it is not before us for adjudication. The court below found
that Safeway was meeting prices it "knew or had reason to know"
were illegal. It then phrased its injunction in the terms of a
statute which has yet to be construed in the abstract circumstances
presented by appellant. The Oklahoma Supreme Court carefully noted
that it was interpreting the Unfair Sales Act as applied to the
particular facts of this case, pointing out that,
"until a proper factual case is presented which requires a clear
determination and offers a practical situation in which all the
conflicting problems and considerations of the area involved are
apparent, this court will refrain from theorizing."
322 P.2d at 181. If this is a rule of wise restraint for the
courts of Oklahoma in this situation, it clearly bars
constitutional adjudication here. [
Footnote 1]
Page 360 U. S. 338
2. Appellant's second contention involves its competitors' use
of trading stamps. Trading stamps, it hardly needs to be stated,
are, generally speaking, coupons given by dealers to retail
purchasers on the basis of the dollar value of the items purchased,
e.g., one stamp for each ten cents' worth of goods, and
are collected by the purchaser until he has enough to redeem for
various items of merchandise. Trading stamps have had a checkered
career in the United States, but, since World War II, their
popularity has grown until now it is a reasonable estimate that
these multi-colored scraps of paper may be found in almost half of
America's homes. [
Footnote
2]
When this suit was brought, Safeway did not use trading stamps.
In the Oklahoma City-Midwest City area, several of its competitors
did. These stamps were deemed to be worth approximately 2.5 percent
of the price of the goods with which they were given. Safeway
contended in the Oklahoma courts that giving a trading stamp with
goods sold at or near the statutory minimum resulted in an unlawful
reduction below "cost" to the extent of the value of the trading
stamp. To be specific, if an item sold for $1, and that price was
statutory cost, the trading stamps given with it would be worth
approximately 2.5
Page 360 U. S. 339
cents and the net price was therefore $.975, or 2.5 cents below
cost. Safeway sought to restrain its competitors from selling below
cost in this manner, and also claimed that it was justified, in
order to meet competition, in reducing its prices to the net of its
competitors' prices, taking into account the value of trading
stamps. The Oklahoma court found that the giving of trading stamps
with items sold at or near statutory cost was not a violation of
the statute, and denied Safeway's request for an injunction. The
court also decided that Safeway could not reduce its prices to meet
the trading stamp competition. It did, however, provide that
Safeway could do what appellees did, it might issue "trading
stamps, cash register receipts, or other evidence of credit issued
as a discount for prompt payment of cash . . . ," as long as the
value of the discount did not exceed three percent. [
Footnote 3]
Safeway contends that such a construction of the Unfair Sales
Act violates the Fourteenth Amendment. Appellant claims that even
though the State may prohibit sales below "cost," it is barred from
allowing a merchant to give trading stamps with goods sold at or
near "cost" unless it allows competing merchants to make an
equivalent price reduction. For the State to differentiate between
the use of trading stamps and price-cutting is, so the argument
runs, a constitutionally inadmissible discrimination. [
Footnote 4]
"It would be an idle parade of familiar learning to review the
multitudinous cases in which the constitutional assurance of the
equal protection of the
Page 360 U. S. 340
laws has been applied. The generalities on this subject are not
in dispute; their application turns peculiarly on the particular
circumstances of a case."
Goesaert v. Clearly, 335 U. S. 464,
335 U. S.
467.
The Oklahoma court decided that, although price cuts below cost
were prohibited by the statute, the use of trading stamps was not a
price reduction, but constituted a cash discount,
i.e., a
reduction given to customers for prompt payment of cash. Opposing
expert accountants sustained and rejected the validity of such a
difference. In matters of this sort, we might content ourselves in
resting on the clash of expert opinion to show that the Oklahoma
decision was not wanting in a foundation that may not unjustifiably
have commended itself as a state policy. However, we may note some
readily apparent differences between the practices which support
the State's differentiation, and thereby the power asserted by the
State.
Trading stamps are given to cash customers "across the board,"
namely, the number of stamps varies directly with the total cost of
goods purchased. Safeway's price-cutting, however, was selective.
This difference is vital in the context of this Act. One of the
chief aims of state laws prohibiting sales below cost was to put an
end to "loss-leader" selling. The selling of selected goods at a
loss in order to lure customers into the store is deemed not only a
destructive means of competition; it also plays on the gullibility
of customers by leading them to expect what generally is not true,
namely, that a store which offers such an amazing bargain is full
of other such bargains. [
Footnote
5] Clearly there is a reasonable basis for a conclusion that
selective price cuts tend to perpetuate this abuse, whereas the use
of trading stamps does not.
Page 360 U. S. 341
This difference alone would be enough to require affirmance. It
is reinforced by other tenable grounds for distinction. There was a
basis in evidence for the view that the use of trading stamps has
an entirely different impact on the consuming market than do price
cuts. When prices are the same, customers tend to go the store
offering trading stamps. But when prices are cut to the extent of
the value of the trading stamp, the stamps lose their lure, and
lower prices prove a more potent attraction. On the basis of this
not unreasonable belief as to the economics of the highly
competitive, low profit margin retail grocery business, Oklahoma
could well have concluded that its choice was to provide that all
use a cash discount system or none could do so. [
Footnote 6] Such a view of the economic
aspects of the problem affords an ample basis for the legislative
judgment enforced by the court below.
Certainly this Court will not interpose its own economic views
or guesses when the State has made its choice.
"The Fourteenth Amendment enjoins 'the equal protection of the
laws,' and laws are not abstract propositions. They do not relate
to abstract units A, B, and C, but are expressions of policy
arising out of specific difficulties, addressed to the attainment
of specific ends by the use of specific remedies. The Constitution
does not require things which are different in fact or opinion to
be treated in law as though they were the same."
Tigner v. Texas, 310 U. S. 141,
310 U. S.
147.
Page 360 U. S. 342
We are not concerned with the soundness of the distinctions
drawn. It is enough that it is open to Oklahoma to believe them to
be valid as the basis of a policy for its people. [
Footnote 7]
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The Oklahoma Supreme Court said:
"In this connection our attention has been called to the recent
case (10-4-57) of
State by Clark v. Wolkoff, 250 Minn.
504, 85 N.W.2d 401, 403, wherein it was held that '[I]f a merchant
in good faith sets the price of an article on the basis of a
competitor's price, which price he in good faith believes to be a
legal price, there is no violation,' which clearly is not
the case herein. In the instant case, Safeway obviously and
admittedly did not, in good faith, set the price of its articles
which were subject to the Unfair Sales Act on the basis of its
competitors' prices, which it in good faith believed to be legal
prices under the Unfair Sales Act, but, on the contrary, it set
illegal prices for the sole purpose of meeting prices of its
competitors, which it thought to be illegal."
322 P.2d at 181.
[
Footnote 2]
The latest chapter in trading stamp history was recounted in The
[London] Economist for May 30, 1959 at p. 850:
"In Colorado, a proposal to tax the stamps brought battalions of
housewives to the state capital. One of its original sponsors
changed his mind when his own mother threatened to campaign against
his reelection if he did not alter his stand. The newest twist to
the trading stamp story is that they can now be exchanged, in the
East, for a theatre seat, even, after July 12th, for one for 'My
Fair Lady.' This will take, however, the stamps accumulated on
nearly $700 worth of purchases -- about what it costs to feed a
family for five months."
[
Footnote 3]
Safeway, in fact, did offer its own cash discount coupons during
the course of this litigation.
[
Footnote 4]
This Court in other contexts has upheld, against a challenge
based on the Fourteenth Amendment, state tax laws which
discriminated against the use of trading stamps.
Rast v. Van
Deman & Lewis Co., 240 U. S. 342;
Tanner v. Little, 240 U. S. 369;
Pitney v. Washington, 240 U. S. 387.
[
Footnote 5]
See the article by Mr. Brandeis, as he then was, in the
November 15, 1913, issue of Harper's Weekly at p. 10.
[
Footnote 6]
This would come about if the dealer using trading stamps were
allowed to meet the lowered price, or if, by being required to drop
trading stamps, the other dealer were forced to raise prices. It is
conceivable that a mathematical formula might be developed to
equalize the use of trading stamps and price cuts. But certainly
the Constitution does not place such a complex, and, at best,
uncertain and speculative burden on the States.
[
Footnote 7]
Appellant also claims that the Oklahoma law is preempted by
federal antitrust laws. However, this claim was not made below.