In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________
No. 01-4304
EBY-BROWN COMPANY, LLC,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, TRADE
AND CONSUMER PROTECTION AND ITS SECRETARY,
JAMES HARSDORF,
Defendants-Appellees.
____________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Wisconsin.
No. 3:00-C-0718-C—Barbara B. Crabb, Chief Judge.
____________
ARGUED MAY 15, 2002—DECIDED JULY 8, 2002
____________
Before FLAUM, Chief Judge, and BAUER, and RIPPLE,
Circuit Judges.
FLAUM, Chief Judge. The appellant, Eby-Brown Company
LLC (“Eby-Brown”), a distributor of tobacco products in the
state of Wisconsin, appeals the district court’s grant of
summary judgment against it. According to Eby-Brown, a
Wisconsin statute that prohibits unfair pricing violates the
equal protection, due process, and commerce clauses of the
Constitution. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the
district court’s decision.
2 No. 01-4304
I. BACKGROUND
Eby-Brown is a wholesale distributor of tobacco products,
food items and sundries. It sells its products to individual
retailers, such as gas stations, convenience stores and larg-
er retail establishments. Eby-Brown claims that tobacco
products form an important part of its business with these
entities, such that if Eby-Brown’s tobacco prices are more
competitive than other wholesale distributors, it will gain
the lion’s share of the food item and sundry business.
Wisconsin statutes recognize two distinct types of ciga-
rette wholesalers: permit holders and jobbers.1 A permit
holder is licensed to affix revenue stamps upon cigarette
packages. Wis. Stat. § 139.30(3). Jobbers are not permitted
to affix such stamps and must instead purchase stamped
products from permit holders. Wis. Stat. § 139.30(6). Eby-
Brown is a permit holder. The state of Wisconsin also
makes a distinction between “retailers” and “multiple re-
tailers.” Under statutory definitions, a “retailer” is any per-
son who acquires stamped cigarettes with the intent to sell
them to consumers. A “multiple-retailer” is any person who
acquires stamped cigarettes and “stores . . . and sells them
to consumers through 10 or more retail outlets which he or
she owns and operates within or without this state.” Wis.
Stat. § 139.30(8). Eby-Brown markets cigarettes to both
“retailers” and “multi-retailers.”
Eby-Brown, and indeed all wholesalers doing business in
Wisconsin, are subject to that state’s Unfair Sales Act
(“Act”). Wis. Stat. § 100.30. The stated policy behind the Act
is to disallow “[t]he practice of selling certain items of mer-
chandise below cost in order to attract patronage . . .”
because such conduct “diverts business from dealers who
maintain a fair price policy.” Wis. Stat. § 100.30(1). In es-
1
Permit holders are also referred to as licensed cigarette dis-
tributors or wholesalers.
No. 01-4304 3
sence, the Act prohibits retailers and wholesalers from sell-
ing products below the minimum price defined by the
statute, which the Act refers to as the “the cost to whole-
saler.” In determining the minimum price at which they
may sell products, wholesalers may not deduct any rebates
given to them by manufacturers for the payments they
made in cash2 or any other manufacturer’s discount.
The Act also creates distinctions between general whole-
salers and those entities that sell tobacco (and in certain
circumstances liquor and gasoline). For example, licensed
cigarette wholesalers, like Eby-Brown, who are permitted
to affix stamps to cigarette packages, are not permitted to
deduct any trade discount from their “cost to wholesaler”
figure. Wis. Stat. § 100.30(2)(c)1.b. Other wholesalers, in-
cluding those wholesalers of tobacco that are not authorized
to affix revenue stamps, are permitted to deduct trade
discounts from their “cost to wholesaler” figure.3 Addition-
ally, all tobacco wholesalers must include a mark-up for the
“cost[s] of doing business.” Id.4 Generally, this mark-up
amounts to three percent of the total costs to the manufac-
turer. Wholesalers of other products are not obligated to
include such a mark-up in tabulating their minimum prices.
2
For example, if Eby-Brown was required to pay $100 for a quan-
tity of merchandise and received a $15 discount for having made
its payment in cash, its statutorily defined “cost to wholesaler”
remains $100.
3
A trade discount is “calculated on the basis of the quantity or
dollar amount of merchandise actually purchased or sold” and “is
not a customary discount for cash.” Wis. Admin. Code. § ATCP
105.007(3)(b). A trade discount essentially operates as a way for
manufacturers to offer a reduced price for higher volume or more
successful wholesalers.
4
Wholesalers of liquor and gasoline must also include a mark-up
for the “cost[s] of doing business” when they calculate their stat-
utory minimum price.
4 No. 01-4304
For several years prior to the commencement of this lit-
igation, Eby-Brown participated in a program with the
manufacturers of tobacco products whereby it was required
to pay for the items it received through an electronic fund
transfer system. For its use of this electronic transfer sys-
tem, Eby-Brown, as well as the other wholesalers who par-
ticipated in the program, was given across-the-board dis-
counts off the invoice price ranging from 2.0% to 3.5%. In
selling its products to retailers in Wisconsin, Eby-Brown
sought to incorporate this discount (as well as others) when
it tabulated its statutorily permissible “cost to wholesaler.”
Since January of 1994, Eby-Brown has received over one
hundred complaints that it was selling tobacco at a statuto-
rily proscribed cost. Several of these complaints were re-
ferred to the appropriate district attorneys for prosecution;
while many others are still being investigated.
As a result of these complaints, Eby-Brown filed suit
against the state of Wisconsin seeking a declaration that
the Act violates its rights to equal protection and substan-
tive due process. Eby-Brown further sought to enjoin the
state of Wisconsin from the enforcement of the Act. Accord-
ing to Eby-Brown, the Act violates equal protection because
licensed cigarette wholesalers, and only licensed cigarette
wholesalers, are forbidden from deducting trade discounts
from their “cost to wholesaler” figure. Eby-Brown claims an
additional breach of equal protection because the Act re-
quires only wholesalers of tobacco, liquor and gasoline to
add a cost of doing business mark-up to their statutorily de-
fined “cost to wholesaler.” Eby-Brown also advanced several
substantive due process claims. Lastly, Eby-Brown alleged
that the Act impermissibly interfered with interstate com-
merce.
After initial proceedings and discovery, both parties filed
motions for summary judgment. The district court ruled in
favor of the state of Wisconsin. According to the district
court, a rational basis existed for the state’s enactment (and
No. 01-4304 5
application) of the Act. Therefore, the district court found
that the Act did not violate Eby-Brown’s right to equal pro-
tection or substantive due process and that it did not un-
necessarily burden interstate commerce.
Eby-Brown now appeals the district court’s decision.
II. DISCUSSION
In reviewing the district court’s grant of summary judg-
ment, we exercise de novo review, viewing all the facts and
inferences in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Johnson v. Nordstrom, Inc., 260 F.3d 727, 731 (7th Cir.
2001).
A. Equal Protection and Substantive Due Process
Claims
Eby-Brown argues that several provisions of the Act vio-
late both its right to equal protection and its rights to sub-
stantive due process. However, many of these arguments
are more properly considered claims under the equal pro-
tection clause alone. When “a particular amendment [like
the equal protection clause] ‘provides an explicit textual
source of constitutional protection’ against a particular
source of government behavior, ‘that amendment and not
the more generalized notion of substantive due process,
must be the guide for analyzing these claims.’ ” Albright v.
Oliver, 510 U.S. 266, 273 (1994) (citing Graham v. Connor,
490 U.S. 386, 395 (1989)). The bulk of the allegations set
forth by Eby-Brown seek redress for the alleged unequal
treatment it received as a licensed wholesaler of tobacco.
We analyze these claims under the equal protection clause.
Eby-Brown’s remaining substantive due process allegations
shall be addressed separately below.
In any event, the scrutiny that we exercise in examining
Eby-Brown’s allegations (under either the equal protection
6 No. 01-4304
or substantive due process clauses) remains the same.
When we review the constitutionality of state legislation,
we must ask whether the act in question impacts a funda-
mental right or targets a suspect class. When no suspect
class or fundamental right is involved, we employ a rational
basis test to determine whether the legislative act is
constitutional. See Heller v. Doe, 509 U.S. 312, 319 (1993).
In employing this test, we will uphold the legislative en-
actment (or classification) so long as it “bears a rational
relation to some legitimate end.” Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S.
620, 631 (1996). This means that we will not “strike down
state laws, regulatory of business and industrial conditions,
because they may be unwise, improvident, or out of har-
mony with a particular school of thought.” Williamson v.
Lee Optical of Oklahoma, Inc., 348 U.S. 483, 488 (1955). Ab-
sent some antipathy directed at a particular group or an
enactment that encumbers a fundamental right, improvi-
dent decisions by the political branches of government
should be rectified through the democratic process and not
the courts. See FCC v. Beach Communications, Inc., 508
U.S. 307, 314 (1993).
1. Equal Protection
Eby-Brown has conceded that it is not a member of a
suspect class. Therefore, in analyzing its equal protection
claims, we employ the highly deferential rational basis test
articulated above. Under that standard, we find that the
state of Wisconsin acted rationally and that the relevant
portions of the Act should be upheld.
Eby-Brown contends that the Act violates equal protec-
tion because licensed wholesalers of tobacco are forbidden
from deducting “trade discounts” when they calculate their
“cost to wholesaler,” whereas all other wholesalers (includ-
ing unlicenced tobacco wholesalers) are permitted to deduct
such discounts in calculating their minimum costs. While
No. 01-4304 7
one may question whether the distinctions made by the
Wisconsin legislature are the most desirable, a “governmen-
tal action [satisfies] the rational basis test if a sound reason
may be hypothesized” for the classification. Northside San-
itary Landfill v. Indianapolis, 902 F.2d 521, 522 (7th Cir.
1990). The state of Wisconsin permissibly could have con-
cluded that licensed wholesalers of tobacco, as opposed to
wholesalers of other products, should not be allowed to
deduct trade discounts when they determine their “cost[s]
to wholesaler.” Compare, Wis. Stat. § 100.30(2)(c)1.b. with
Wis. Stat. § 100.30(2)(c)2. Given the relatively small profit
margins that exist for wholesalers of tobacco (resulting in
an extremely competitive sales price offered to retailers),
the state of Wisconsin could have concluded that trade dis-
counts constitute a way for predatory wholesalers in the
industry to artificially depress their prices for short periods
to steer business away from other wholesalers. Similarly,
the distinction that the state has drawn between licensed
tobacco wholesalers, who are not allowed to deduct trade
discounts when they determine their “cost to wholesaler,”
and unlicenced tobacco wholesalers (“jobbers”) seems ra-
tional. Licensed wholesalers have primary contact with
cigarette manufacturers. They could conceivably use trade
discounts to temporarily deflate prices and increase demand
for the cigarettes that they (and not the smaller “jobbers”)
sell to retailers. Jobbers are not authorized to affix stamps
to cigarette packages and do not generally purchase cigar-
ettes directly from the manufacturers. This is because “job-
bers” can only sell cigarettes that are affixed with revenue
stamps. As a result, jobbers generally must acquire ciga-
rettes from licensed wholesalers before selling them to re-
tailers. Therefore, jobbers almost uniformly lack the means
to use trade discounts to artificially deflate their “cost to
wholesaler.”
Eby-Brown’s other claims of unequal treatment must also
fail in the face of the deferential rational basis test. For
8 No. 01-4304
example, Eby-Brown claims that the “cost of doing busi-
ness” mark-up, which wholesalers of gasoline, tobacco, and
alcohol must include in calculating their minimum prices,
violates equal protection. However, the state of Wisconsin
could have rationally drawn a distinction between wholesal-
ers of these products and other vendors. For example,
tobacco, alcohol and gasoline are products that are heavily
regulated, costly to insure, and generally considered dan-
gerous. By requiring wholesalers of these products to in-
clude a “cost of doing business” mark-up, the state could be
attempting to discourage these individuals from cutting
corners when it comes to warehousing and insuring their
products. This hypothetical rationale, in and of itself, would
support the constitutionality of this portion of the Act.
2. Substantive Due Process
Eby-Brown has also conceded that its remaining substan-
tive due process claims should be examined under the def-
erential rational basis test. When we employ that level of
scrutiny, we find that these claims must also fail.
Eby-Brown asserts that the Act, in prohibiting all whole-
salers from deducting manufacturers’ discounts from “the
cost to wholesaler” figure, operates in an arbitrary and
irrational matter. Similarly, Eby-Brown contends that the
state of Wisconsin’s refusal to allow wholesalers to deduct
rebates that they receive from manufacturers for participat-
ing in electronic payment programs from the “cost to whole-
saler” figure, violates substantive due process.
With respect to both measures, Eby-Brown claims that
they transform Act from a piece of legislation aimed at
curbing unfair and predatory pricing, to a price fixing mech-
anism. The truth of this assertion matters little—as the
state of Wisconsin could have had a rational objective in
taking the above course. With respect to the exclusion of
manufacturers’ discounts, the state of Wisconsin could have
No. 01-4304 9
concluded that such discounts can be employed to artifi-
cially deflate prices, allowing certain wholesalers to gain a
competitive advantage over others. In addition, the exclu-
sion of manufacturers’ discounts from the “cost to whole-
saler” calculus might promote a more efficient administra-
tion of the Act. Manufacturers’ discounts can take many
forms and may be tied to many variables (e.g., quantity of
goods sold over a certain period of time by a particular
wholesaler). The complex nature of such discounts might
make it difficult for the relevant enforcement agencies to
determine what was the actual minimum price paid by the
wholesalers for certain goods.
With respect to electronic transfers, the state of Wiscon-
sin could have determined that discounts premised upon
such payment methods operate as discounts for “cash pay-
ment.” Under the Act, wholesalers are prohibited from
deducting discounts for “cash payments” from the “cost to
wholesaler” figure. The primary purpose of excluding such
discounts is that a cash discount is generally considered to
be a reward for prompt payment (and therefore, part of the
parties’ financing terms) and not a reduction in price. See
E&H Wholesale, Inc. v. Glaser Bros., 158 Cal. App.3d 728,
734-35 (Ct. App. 1984); see also American Heritage Dictio-
nary 288 (4th ed. 2000) (“cash discount” defined as “reduc-
tion in the price of an item for sale allowed if payment is
made in a stipulated period”). As with cash payments, man-
ufacturers receive electronic transfers instantly and may
use the proceeds therefrom without hindrance. Based solely
upon these cogent similarities, the state of Wisconsin ra-
tionally could have found that wholesalers should not be
permitted to deduct discounts for what are, in its opinion,
merely part of its financing terms.
B. Commerce Clause
Finally, Eby-Brown contends that the Act violates the
commerce clause in that it unfairly burdens interstate com-
10 No. 01-4304
merce. The commerce clause of the Constitution delegates
to Congress the power regulate commerce among the states.
U.S. Const. Art I, § 8. This “affirmative grant of authority
to Congress also encompasses an implicit or ‘dormant’
limitation on the authority of the states to enact legislation
affecting interstate commerce.” Healy v. The Beer Institute,
491 U.S. 324, 326 n. 1 (1989). The so-called “dormant com-
merce clause” prohibits the various states from discrim-
inating against or burdening items in the interstate stream
of commerce. See Oregon Waste Sys. v. Dept. of Envtl. Qual-
ity, 511 U.S. 93, 98 (1994). In examining whether a state
enactment violates the “dormant” aspect of the commerce
clause, courts must first determine if the regulation pro-
vides “differential treatment of in-state and out-of-state
economic interests that benefits the former and burdens
the latter.” Id. at 99. Non-discriminatory state laws that
have only an incidental effect upon interstate commerce will
be considered valid unless “the burden imposed on such
commerce is clearly excessive in relation to putative local
benefits.” Id.
First and foremost, the Act applies to both in-state and
out-of-state cigarette wholesalers that do business in Wis-
consin. It does not attempt to tie the price wholesalers are
permitted to charge in Wisconsin with out-of-state prices.
See Healy, 491 U.S. 324 (state regulation found invalid
when it required out-of-state shippers to affirm that their
prices were no higher than prices posted in neighboring
states). Furthermore, the Act does not excessively burden
interstate commerce. Indeed, Eby-Brown’s only argument
in this regard is that the Act has affected the way in which
it does business as a national chain of stores. The fact that
doing business in Wisconsin has become more difficult for
Eby-Brown does not mean that the Act violates the princi-
ples of interstate commerce. Eby-Brown has failed to dem-
onstrate either prong of the relevant test: that the Act
discriminates against out-of-state interests or excessively
No. 01-4304 11
burdens interstate commerce. Accordingly, we find that
there has been no commerce clause violation.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we find that the Wisconsin
Unfair Sales Act does not violate the Constitution and we
therefore AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
A true Copy:
Teste:
________________________________
Clerk of the United States Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
USCA-97-C-006—7-8-02