In my view the opinion prepared for the Court of Appeal by Presiding Justice Devine and concurred in by Justice Rattigan and Justice Christian (reported in (Cal.App.) 62 Cal.Rptr. 914) properly construes and applies the constitutional and statutory provisions relied upon by appellants, the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control and its director, in their efforts to sustain the rule forbidding quantity discounts on wholesale sales of beer. Furthermore, I think it adequately discusses and correctly resolves adversely to the department the questions presented on this appeal.1 *185For the reasons therein stated, I would affirm the judgment of the trial court.
McComb, J., and Peters, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for a rehearing was denied September 11, 1968. McComb, J., Peters, J., and Burke, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Presiding Justice Devine’s opinion, with deletions appropriate to this dissent, is as follows (brackets together, in this manner [ ], are used to indicate deletions from the opinion of the Court of Appeal; see Simmons v. Civil Service Emp. Ins. Co. (1962) 57 Cal.2d 381, 383, fn. 1 [19 Cal. Rptr. 662, 369 P.2d 262]) :
[ ] The Constitution
That part of section 22, article XX, of the California Constitution upon which appellants rely provides: ‘ ‘ The Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control shall have the exclusive power, except as herein provided and in accordance with laws enacted by the Legislature, to license the manufacture, importation and sale of alcoholic beverages in this State, and to collect license fees or occupation taxes on account thereof. The department shall have the power, in its discretion, to deny, suspend or revoke any specific- alcoholic beverage license if it shall determine for good cause that the granting or continuance of such license would be contrary to public welfare or morals. ...” That this part of the Constitution is not the source of the- authority to fix prices, and that the forbidding of quantity discounts does constitute price fixing, has been established in Schenley Industries, Inc. v. Munro, 237 Cal.App.2d 106, 111-112 [46 Cal. Rptr. 678], The Schenley case had to do with the department’s rule 100, which restricted quantity discounts on wholesale sales of distilled spirits, while rule 105(a) deals with sales of beer. But whatever suggestions may be made of distinctions between the statutes relating to sales of distilled spirits and those regulating sales of beer, the section of the Constitution is the same. It cannot be said of wholesale sales of beer, any more than of wholesale sales of distilled spirits, that the prevention of quantity discounts is a proscription of conduct or conditions which, in the wording of the Constitution, “would be contrary to public welfare or morals.” In fact, since certain evidence cited by appellants is to the effect that the discounts would not be passed on to the consumer if the rule were abolished; appellants cannot rely on the proposition (as expressed in Allied Properties v. Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 53 Cal.2d 141 [346 P.2d 737], and Wilke & Holzheiser, Ine. v. Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 65 Cal.2d 349 [55 Cal.Rptr. 23, 420 P.2d 735], sustaining the Pair Trade Act as applied to alcoholic beverages) that the rule promotes temperance by eliminating price cutting to the consumer.
Business # Professions Code Section $5006
This section reads as follows: ‘ ‘ The department may adopt such rules including but not limited to rules respecting beer price posting, as will foster and encourage the orderly wholesale marketing and wholesale distribution of beer, but no such action shall be taken by the department except after public hearing and ten (10) days notice to all licensed manufacturers of beer in California of the time and place of the hearing and of the character of the action intended to be taken by the depart*185ment.” Since 1937 there has been a statute giving rule-making authority to the department or to its predecessor, the State Board of Equalization, to adopt such rules as "will foster and encourage the orderly wholesale marketing and wholesale distribution of beer. The predecessor section to 25006 was section 38e of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act. (Stats. 1937, ch. 758, p. 2159.) In 1953 the words “such rules” were modified by addition of the clause, "including but not limited to rules respecting beer price posting.” (Stats. 1953, ch. 152, p. 1009.)
We conclude that section 25006 does not confer on the department the power to forbid quantity discounts in wholesale sales of beer. Our reasons are:
1. The fixing of prices by governmental agencies is a large intervention by government into the economy. The delegation of such power by the Legislature ought to be explicit and not to be inferred from a statute which provides in a general way for rules relating to orderly marketing and distribution.
2. When the Legislature wished to limit (although it did not completely forbid) quantity discounts in the wholesale purveying of wine, it did so explicitly by the terms of section 24871 of the Business and Professions Code.
3. When, in 1953, the Legislature added the words, "including but not limited to rules respecting beer price posting” (italics added), it would be expected that if the Legislature intended to grant the power to prevent quantity discounts, it would have said so.
4. The whole pattern of price regulation in respect of alcoholic beverages, with the exception of the limitation on quantity discounts in the wholesale marketing of wine, as expressly provided for by statute, is a conjunction of posting of prices by the seller at his own choice as he views the state of the market and of competition with a prohibition against sales at prices which depart from the posted ones, and the use, wherever applicable, of the Pair Trade Act. It is true that the outlawing of quantity discounts does not fix prices in the same manner as would exist if the government were to declare the exact price at which a commodity could be sold, but it does fix prices by making it impossible for a seller to choose a lower price for a larger sale.
5. The Schenley case is also an authority for our conclusion, but by no means an exclusive one, for we have stated our reasons given independently of that ease, although some of them correspond with the reasoning to be found therein. Appellants argue that the Schenley ease, which invalidated the rule limiting quantity discounts in wholesale sales of distilled spirits, is distinguishable from the case before us in several respects. In the first place, appellants say, section 24749 of Business and Professions Code, upon which the department and its director relied in Schenley, merely announces the declared policy of the state that the sale of alcoholic beverages should be subjected to certain restrictions and regulations for the purpose of fostering temperance and eliminating price wars which disrupt orderly sale and distribution. Section 25006 of Business and Professions Code, say appellants, is not a mere declaration of *186policy but a grant of power. Although wo agree that there is a distinction between the two statutes, we do not find the distinction between the Schenley ease and the one before us to be so great as appellants would have it. In the Schenley case the department did not rely solely on section 24749, but also on several other sections: section 24756, which requires posting of a price list for wholesale sales; section 24757, which allows the department to make rules which it deems necessary for the administration of other sections, including section 24756; section 25750, which directs the department to make reasonable rules to carry out the purposes and intent of section 22, article XX of the Constitution and which will enable the department to exercise the powers and perform the duties conferred upon it by that section or by the entire division of the Business and Professions Code which relates to alcoholic beverages. A reading of the Schenley case shows that the decision was not based on the nature of section 24749 as an expression of policy but on the fact that the Legislature has seen fit to remain silent as to the subject of permissible discounts on quantity sales of distilled spirits and has not delegated the authority to act in this respect to the department. (Schenley Industries, Inc. v. Munro, 237 Cal.App.2d at p. 114 [46 Cal.Rptr. 678].)
It is argued by appellants that an essential distinction exists between the marketing of distilled spirits and the marketing of beer, and that this distinction abrogates the authority of the Schenley ease. The distinction, they say, is this: distilled spirits do not deteriorate on the shelves of the retailer, but beer does deteriorate rather rapidly. Thus, they say, the small retailer must buy from the wholesaler in small lots, paying a higher price than his bigger and more affluent competitors need do, or purchase in too great quantity in order to obtain the discount and risk the spoiling or deterioration of the beer and the probable loss of customers. But we think the trial judge was correct in saying that the test is not one of the desirability or undesirability of the rule, but of what power the Legislature has chosen to give to the department. The evidence as to the advantage of the rule was substantial; but so was the contrary evidence. In the Schenley ease, too, there was sharp disagreement as to the desirability of the rule. The Court of Appeal decided, as we do in sustaining the trial court, that statutory authority to forbid quantity discounts presently is lacking.
The Subject of Legislative Ratification of the Rule
Appellants argue that the Legislature demonstrated its approval of rule 105(a) by re-enacting section 25006 or its predecessors after the Legislature had been informed of the existence of the rule and, as appellants state, judicial approval of wholesale price fixing of beer. We shall consider first the cases referred to by appellants. They antedate rule 105(a). Appellants make reference to Adolph Coors Co. v. Corbett (Cal. App.) 123 P.2d 74, a ease in which hearing by the Supreme Court was granted. The case was subsequently dismissed. This ease is not authority at all. The mind cannot conceive anything so nearly approaching complete annihilation as an opinion of the Court of Appeal after hearing has been granted by the Supreme Court. (See Ronce v. Marr, 47 Cal.2d 159 [301 P.2d 837].) Of course, since oven this obliterated decision preceded the disputed rule by some nine years, it had nothing directly to do during its brief lifetime with quantity discounts. The second cited ease is Blata Brewing Co. v. Collins, 69 Cal.App.2d 639 [160 P.2d 37], In the Blata case, the court declared invalid a rule which required out-of-state beer manufacturers to file a certificate of compliance, which amounted to a license. But in the course of its reasoning, the court uttered this dictum upon which appellants rely: " 'Prom the foregoing review of section 38e it will be seen that what the legislature dealt with therein was the wholesale selling price of beer; the publication of prices; the maintenance of such prices and strict adherence to them. ’ ” (69 Cal.App.2d at p. 651.) But even this dictum, antedating by some six years the rule against quan*187tity discounts, does not purport to say that the Legislature has given the department the power to fix prices, hut to deal with prices, their posting and maintenance. It seems that the court was referring merely to the terms of the statute, which at that time was section 38e of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act (Stats. 1937, ch. 758, p. 2159), which did then, as its successor statute, Business and Professions Code section 25006, does now, require posting of prices which are fixed by the wholesalers and adherence to the prices as posted.
Appellants also point to the principle that the interpretation of a statute made by the agency which must enforce it is entitled to weight, as stated in California Motor Express, Ltd. v. State Board of Equalization, 133 Cal.App.2d 237, 240 [283 P.2d 1063]; Mauro v. Department of Mental Hygiene, 207 Cal.App.2d 381, 387 [24 Cal.Rptr. 505]; and Peck’s Liquors, Inc. v. Superior Court, 221 Cal.App.2d 772, 784-785 [34 Cal. Rptr. 735], But administrative interpretation cannot give to the agency substantial powers which arc not conferred by law. Where the administrative construction is erroneous it does not govern the interpretation of the statute even though the statute is subsequently re-enacted without change. (Louis Stores, Inc. v. Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 57 Cal.2d 749, 759-760 [22 Cal.Rptr. 14, 371 P.2d 758].)
The mere filing of rule 105(a) with the Legislature, as required by section 11380 of the Government Code, does not, simply because no legislative action followed, constitute a ratification by the Legislature. Appellants have not pointed to any instance within the record where the Legislature has had before it a clear presentation, with demand or petition for legislative action, one way or the other, of prohibition of quantity discounts on wholesale sales of beer.