Opinion
Argued September 5, 1979
Decided October 23, 1979
Appeal from the Supreme Court in the Second Judicial Department, MORRIS R. HENKIN, J.
Samuel S. Yasgur, County Attorney (Lester D. Steinman and Jonathan Lovett of counsel), for appellant.
Frederick J. Martin, Bleakley Schmidt, P.C., and Hugh D. Fyfe for respondent.
The issue in this case is whether a county may ban all signs on or near service station premises which refer directly or indirectly to the price of gasoline, and thus limit service station price advertising to the uniform price signs atop the gasoline pumps which the ordinance requires. We hold section 3 of the Westchester County law in question when read in the context of the entire law to be unconstitutional because, in violation of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution as made applicable by the Fourteenth Amendment to the States, it makes speech impermissible solely on the basis of content.
The facts are not in dispute. Defendant, Mobil Oil Corporation, was found guilty of violating section 3 of Local Law No. 9 of the Local Laws of 1974 of the County of Westchester because it posted at its gasoline station and car wash in Tuckahoe along the curb side of the station premises, facing in opposite directions, so that the large lettering of the signs could be seen by passing motorists, two signs, approximately four feet by four feet in size and reading "Check Our Low Low Low Prices". Mobil conceded that the purpose of the signs was "to attract persons to the gas pumps as well as the car wash". On appeal, the Appellate Term reversed on the law and dismissed, two Judges holding section 3 unconstitutional, and the third being of the opinion that the sign did not violate the ordinance. The matter is here by leave of a Judge of this court.
Mindful of the rule that constitutional issues are not to be decided when there exists a nonconstitutional basis of decision, we note our disagreement with the reasoning of the concurring Judge. His concurrence was based on Matter of Great Eastern Liq. Corp. v State Liq. Auth. ( 25 N.Y.2d 525) which held that a statute prohibiting advertisement of liquor prices was not violated by advertisements referring to percentage savings and "less than wholesale" prices. Great Eastern is distinguishable on at least two grounds: (1) the statute there involved spoke only to advertisement of the price; the law here in issue prohibits any sign "stating or referring directly or indirectly to the price" (emphasis supplied); (2) the liquor authority's interpretation of the Great Eastern statute was that there was no violation unless the actual price was stated in the advertisement; there is no similar interpretation in this case.
Local Law No. 9 in its first two sections details specifications as to size, lettering, content, placement and visibility of price signs it requires to be posted on each individual pump from which gasoline or diesel fuel is sold. Sections 3 and 4 of the law then provide:
"Section 3. No sign or placard stating or referring directly or indirectly to the price or prices of gasoline or diesel motor fuel other than such signs or placards as hereinabove provided shall be posted or maintained on, at, near or about the premises on which said gasoline is sold or offered for sale.
"Section 4. Fraudulent Practices. It shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation to sell or offer for sale gasoline or diesel motor fuel in any manner so as to deceive or tend to deceive the purchaser as to the price, nature, quality or identify thereof."
Violation of the law is an offense punishable by fine, each day of noncompliance after a notice of violation constituting a separate offense.
In People v Arlen Serv. Stas. ( 284 N.Y. 340) we considered a local law of the City of New York which contained essentially the same requirements as to posting signs on individual pumps and which included a provision substantially identical with section 3 of the Westchester law. In Arlen the law was attacked as in violation of the due process and equal protection clauses, but not on free speech grounds, presumably because the then understanding (proven correct some two years later by the Supreme Court's holding in Valentine v Chrestensen, 316 U.S. 52) was that commercial speech was not protected by the First Amendment. The intervening years have seen Chrestensen first distinguished (Bigelow v Virginia, 421 U.S. 809), then expressly overruled by Virginia Pharmacy Bd. v Virginia Consumer Council ( 425 U.S. 748, 765), and the law of commercial speech expounded and delimited in a series of decisions, which are considered below. The result with respect to the instant case has been that on this appeal the law in question is attacked on all three grounds. Since we hold it unconstitutional on free speech grounds, we do not reach or consider the due process and equal protection grounds argued by the parties.
Since the Virginia Pharmacy case was decided we have had two occasions to consider regulations of commercial speech (People v Remeny, 40 N.Y.2d 527, and Suffolk Outdoor Adv. Co. v Hulse, 43 N.Y.2d 483) and the Supreme Court has dealt with the question in Linmark Assoc. v Willingboro ( 431 U.S. 85); Bates v State Bar of Ariz. ( 433 U.S. 350); Ohralik v Ohio State Bar Assn. (436 447); and Friedman v Rogers ( 440 U.S. 1).
These Supreme Court decisions have given rise to a substantial number of scholarly articles and comments. (See, e.g., Rotunda, Commercial Speech Doctrine in the Supreme Court, 1976, U Ill L Forum 1080; Comment, First Amendment Protection for Commercial Advertising: The New Constitutional Doctrine, 44 U Chicago L Rev 205; Comment, Commercial Speech and the First Amendment: An Emerging Doctrine, 5 Hofstra L Rev 655; Comment, Constitutional Law — First Amendment — Commercial Speech, 24 N.Y. L School L Rev 225; Note: Effect of First Amendment Protection of Commercial Speech on Municipal Sign Ordinances, 29 Syracuse L Rev 941.)
In Remeny (supra), we held invalid a New York City ordinance that absolutely prohibited any street distribution of commercial or business advertising because its absolute prohibition went far beyond the reasonable regulation of time, place and manner of distribution of commercial speech that is constitutionally permissible. In Suffolk Outdoor Adv. Co. (supra), we upheld a Southampton ordinance prohibiting nonaccessory billboards as a proper exercise of the police power to improve the aesthetics of the community, noting with respect to the free speech aspect of the case that the same governmental interest in aesthetics authorized regulation of the place and manner of speech and that the challenged ordinance made no attempt to regulate the content of speech appearing on the billboards. Those two decisions, while strongly suggestive of unconstitutionality of the law in question, are not, however, determinative, in view of the limitation of the First Amendment overbreadth doctrine recognized in the subsequent Supreme Court commercial speech decisions.
The first of those decisions, Linmark, held invalid an ordinance proscribing, in an effort to stem white flight from a racially integrated community, the posting of "for sale" or "sold" signs on all but model homes. The Supreme Court held that the fact that the ordinance restricted only one method of communications (signs) did not save it because, though other alternative methods of selling houses were theoretically available, real estate is not marketed through leaflets or sound trucks and other available media involved greater cost and less autonomy (and consequently less effectiveness) than a sign in front of the house to be sold, and because having prohibited but one type of lawn sign it had not been enacted to protect aesthetic values. Concluding that the township's interest was in regulating content rather than time, place and manner of posting and was not in preventing deception, the court struck the ordinance down because Willingboro had failed to establish that content regulation was needed to assure that the community remained integrated.
The Bates decision is particularly pertinent because it held that a State disciplinary rule prohibiting attorneys from advertising could not constitutionally be applied to an advertisement of "legal services at very reasonable fees" which listed specific services and fees. The court recognized that misleading advertising can be restrained and that an advertising claim with respect to the quality of services, because not readily susceptible of verification, might be misleading. With respect to the advertisement in question, however, it found none of the justifications offered for the regulation to be an acceptable reason for suppression of all advertising by attorneys. Holding inapplicable to professional advertising the overbreadth doctrine (which permits free speech attack without a demonstration that the challenger's specific conduct is constitutionally protected), the court considered the specifics of the advertisement in issue and found neither its reference to "legal clinics" not its offer of services at "very reasonable" prices to be misleading. Ohralik, on the other hand, upheld the prohibition against in-person solicitation by an attorney because of the potential for, and legitimate State interest in preventing those aspects of solicitation involving, fraud, undue influence, intimidation and overreaching. It expressly held that a lawyer can be disciplined for soliciting under circumstances likely to result in such adverse consequences, without a showing that in the particular instance they did result.
Friedman, the most recent decision of the Supreme Court on the subject, upheld a Texas act prohibiting the practice of optometry under a trade name. Noting that use of a trade name conveyed no information about price or the nature of the services offered and presented numerous possibilities for deception with which the Texas Legislature was familiar, which had been reviewed in an earlier Texas Supreme Court decision, and some of which had been substantiated as to Rogers, one of the plaintiffs in the Freidman case, by deposition testimony, the Supreme Court stated that "Even if Rogers' use and advertising of the trade name were not in fact misleading, they were an example of the use of a trade name to facilitate the large-scale commercialization which enhances the opportunity for misleading practices" ( 440 U.S. 1, 15, supra) and concluded that the statute was a constitutionally permissible regulation for the protection of the public from deceptive use of optometrical trade names.
Against this background we consider the arguments advanced by the parties. Mobil's position is that Westchester's law regulates content rather than time, place and manner, that its total prohibition bears no relation to the purpose it purports to serve, and that there are no effective alternate channels of communication. The county contends that Mobil has not borne its burden of overcoming the presumption of constitutionality, that Mobil's "Check Our Low Low Low Prices" sign is potentially misleading and that Mobil, not having shown that its prices are in fact lower than its competitors', has not shown that as applied to Mobil the statute is unconstitutional. The difference between them is, thus, that Mobil's argument is addressed primarily to facial unconstitutionality, while the county's burden of proof argument essentially addresses unconstitutionality of the law as applied.
In light of the holding in Bates (433 US, at p 380, supra), reiterated in Ohralik (436 US, at p 462, n 20, supra) and Friedman (440 US, at p 10, n 9, supra), that overbreadth analysis is not applicable to commercial speech, it is clear that, considering section 3 alone, unconstitutionality as applied cannot be found on the present record. As the county contends, Mobil has introduced no evidence to establish that its prices are lower than its competitors' and, absent such evidence of truthfulness, the presumption of constitutionality and the failure to negate the possibility of deception would require that the law be upheld against Mobil's attack (Friedman v Rogers, supra).
The inquiry does not end there, however, for the law in question must be interpreted under applicable State law principles of statutory construction, and under those principles section 3 must be held to be addressed only to truthful speech. So interpreted the section cannot constitutionally be applied to proscribe defendant Mobil's signs.
It is a well-settled principle of statutory construction that a statute or ordinance must be construed as a whole and that its various sections must be considered together and with reference to each other (Abood v Hospital Ambulance Serv., 30 N.Y.2d 295, 300; see McKinney's Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes, §§ 97, 98, 130). Section 3 cannot, therefore, be considered apart from section 4, which is directed expressly at an "offer for sale [of] gasoline or diesel motor fuel in any manner so as to deceive or tend to deceive the purchaser as to the price, nature, quality or identity thereof".
When sections 3 and 4 are considered together and together with section 5 (which makes violation of either section 3 or section 4 an offense), section 3 cannot be construed as aimed at deception. What section 3 proscribes is the posting on or near premises where gasoline is sold of a sign referring to the price of gasoline or diesel fuel. What section 4 proscribes is deceit or tendency to deceive as to price, among other things, in offering for sale in any manner gasoline or diesel fuel. The differences in the two sections are only that section 3 is explicit as to the medium (signs) and content (price of gasoline) proscribed while section 4 covers any medium and three other content categories than price, and that section 4 expressly requires deceit or the tendency to deceive whereas section 3 does not. Construing the entire law as a whole and bearing in mind the rule that a general provision of a statute applies only where a particular provision does not (Hoey v Gilroy, 129 N.Y. 132; People ex rel. Davidson v Gilon, 126 N.Y. 147; see McKinney's Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes, § 238) and that the statutes enacting regulations malum prohibitum are to be strictly construed (State of New York v Mobil Oil Corp., 38 N.Y.2d 460, 466; Matter of Asheroff v Parking Violations Bur. of Transp. Admin. of City of N.Y., 38 A.D.2d 474, 477; see McKinney's Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes, § 271), we conclude that section 3 is not aimed at the possibility of deception through the posting of a sign referring to the price of gasoline because section 4 is.
That, as the county argues, a section 4 prosecution may require proof of intent is perhaps a pragmatic problem for the prosecution but does not indicate a legislative purpose to reach through section 3 deceitful or misleading commercial speech which is expressly proscribed by section 4.
With respect to the instant prosecution, therefore, there is no overbreadth problem, for section 3, as it must be construed, is being unconstitutionally applied to Mobil to proscribe truthful commercial speech. Unless it can be justified on other grounds, or as a regulation solely of time, place or manner, or unless there are available alternate channels of communication, section 3 is, therefore, under the reasoning of the Supreme Court cases discussed above, unconstitutional as applied to defendant Mobil.
The strong societal and individual interest in the free dissemination of truthful price information as a means of assuring informed and reliable decision making in our free enterprise system was the basis for holding unconstitutional the statute involved in the Virginia Pharmacy case and the disciplinary regulation at issue in Bates, both of which were sought to be applied so as to prevent the advertising of price data. The Supreme Court was, moreover, at pains in Friedman to identify that interest and to differentiate protected advertising of price from proscribable use of a trade name which "conveys no information about the price and nature of the services offered" (440 US, at p 12, supra).
This is not to say that price advertising can never be subjected to regulation. One valid purpose for regulation, as we held in Suffolk Outdoor Adv. Co. v Hulse ( 43 N.Y.2d 483, supra), would be the improvement of the aesthetics of the community. The county does not argue aesthetics as a ground for sustaining its law, nor would such an argument be upheld in view of the fact that the law prohibits only gasoline price signs and none other, no matter how blatant or bizarre.
What the county does argue is that it is only regulating the place of advertising, its purpose being to centralize the location of price information in the pump top signs by prohibiting all other competing advertising which could divert the consumer's attention from the actual price, by insuring that the consumer's decision is based on facts not advertising "puff", and by eliminating the necessity for the consumer's driving up to the pump to learn the price. Bearing in mind that by hypothesis, this being a prosecution under section 3, we are concerned with truthful information, we think the answers to that argument are that the county has "not demonstrated that the place * * * of the speech produces a detrimental 'secondary effect' on society" (Linmark, 431 US, at p 94, supra) and that, as the Supreme Court observed in Virginia Pharmacy (425 US, at p 770, supra) and quoted with approval in Linmark (431 US, at p 97, supra): "There is, of course, an alternative to this highly paternalistic approach. That alternative is to assume that this information is not in itself harmful, that people will perceive their own best interests if only they are well enough informed, and that the best means to that end is to open the channels of communication rather than to close them."
Finally, the county argues that ample alternatives remain open for gasoline price advertisement through print and electronic media advertising, that no useful consumer information is withheld from the public by virtue of the law and that the advertiser does not lose access to passing motorists as potential customers. Since, as already shown, price information clearly is useful consumer information and not all passing motorists will be able to read the pump top signs from the highway, it is far from clear that useful consumer information is not withheld from the public by the law. Moreover, that serious question exists concerning the adequacy of available alternates is evident from the following paraphrase (omitting citations) of Linmark's reasoning on this issue (p 93): "Although in theory sellers remain free to employ a number of different alternatives, in practice [gasoline] is not marketed through leaflets, sound trucks, demonstrations, or the like. The options to which sellers realistically are relegated — primarily newspaper advertising and [television] — involve more cost and less autonomy than * * * signs; * * * are less likely to reach persons not deliberately seeking sales information * * * and may be less effective media for communicating the message that is conveyed by a * * * sign in front of the [service station]."
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Term, as resettled, should be affirmed.
I respectfully dissent and vote to reverse the order of Appellate Term and reinstate the judgment of Tuckahoe Village Court convicting defendant Mobil Oil Corp. of violating section 3 of Local Law No. 9 of the Local Laws of 1974 of the County of Westchester. At issue in this appeal is whether a local law which imposes reasonable restrictions upon the advertisement of gasoline prices by means of signs posted in service stations violates either the free speech guarantee of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. I would hold that it does not.
Local Law No. 9 constitutes an attempt to regulate the advertisement of gasoline prices so as to prevent fraudulent or deceptive sales techniques and to ensure that the consumer will receive the basic price data necessary to support an informed decision whether to purchase gasoline at a particular gasoline station. As such, it is entirely constitutional.
Although it is indeed true that commercial speech such as advertising is entitled to First Amendment protection, it is equally true that the degree of protection accorded commercial speech is somewhat more limited than that normally afforded more political or personal expressions (see, e.g., Virginia Pharmacy Bd. v Virginia Consumer Council, 425 U.S. 748, 770-773, esp n 24; Linmark Assoc. v Willingboro, 431 U.S. 85, 98; Ohralik v Ohio State Bar Assn., 436 U.S. 447, 455-456; Friedman v Rogers, 440 U.S. 1, 7-13, 15-16). This is so for several reasons. For one thing, commercial speech is firmly founded upon the profit motive. As such, it is inherently hardier than other forms of speech which require greater protection. As the Supreme Court stated in Virginia Pharmacy Bd. v Virginia Consumer Council (425 US, at p 772, n 24, supra):
"[C]ommercial speech may be more durable than other kinds. Since advertising is the sine qua non of commercial profits, there is little likelihood of its being chilled by proper regulation and forgone entirely.
"Attributes such as these, the greater objectivity and hardiness of commercial speech, may make it less necessary to tolerate inaccurate statements for fear of silencing the speaker. Compare New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964), with Dun Bradstreet, Inc. v. Grove, 404 U.S. 898 (1971). They may also make it appropriate to require that a commercial message appear in such a form, or include such additional information, warnings, and disclaimers, as are necessary to prevent its being deceptive. Compare Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo, 418 U.S. 241 (1974), with Banzhaf v. FCC, 132 U.S. App. D.C. 14, 405 F.2d 1082 (1968), cert. denied sub nom. Tobacco Institute, Inc. v. FCC, 396 U.S. 842 (1969). Cf. United States v. 95 Barrels of Vinegar, 265 U.S. 438, 443 (1924) ('It is not difficult to choose statements, designs and devices which will not deceive'). They may also make inapplicable the prohibition against prior restraints. Compare New York Times Co. v. United States, 403 U.S. 713 (1971), with Donaldson v Read Magazine, 333 U.S. 178, 189-191 (1948); FTC v Standard Education Society, 302 U.S. 112 (1937); E.F. Drew Co. v FTC, 235 F.2d 735, 739-740 (CA2 1956), cert. denied, 352 U.S. 969 (1957)."
Moreover, commercial speech is somewhat less directly related to the interests normally protected by the First Amendment, since it has no real connection with either the freedom of individual self-expression or that freedom of political expression which together comprise the foundation of our society and our form of government (see Jackson and Jeffries, Commercial Speech: Economic Due Process and the First Amendment, 65 Va L Rev 1, 9-14).
The first two sections of Local Law No. 9 require any retail seller of gasoline to place upon each gasoline pump a sign which clearly indicates the price of the gasoline. The requisite sign must be placed so as to be visible from each approach curb providing access to the station from the street, and the local law also prescribes a minimum size for the lettering on this sign so as to ensure its visibility to passing motorists. Additionally, the local law requires that certain basic pricing information must be provided on the sign: the gasoline dealer is required to state the basic price per gallon, the amount of Federal, State and local taxes assessed against each gallon, and the total price per gallon to the consumer. Moreover, the sign must also indicate the brand and quality of gasoline sold at each pump. In short, the local law is very carefully tailored to ensure that a passing motorist will be provided with the basic pricing information necessary to support an intelligent decision whether to purchase gasoline at a particular service station.
Section 3 of the local law, the section which defendant was convicted of violating, proscribes any signs concerning gasoline prices other than those prescribed by sections 1 and 2. Section 4 provides additional protection to the consumer by prohibiting any other practice which might "deceive or tend to deceive the purchaser as to the price, nature, quality or identity" of gasoline sold at a particular station. The majority of this court appears to have some difficulty in understanding the way in which these two sections supplement each other. It is actually quite simple: both are aimed at practices perceived by the Westchester County Legislature to be potentially deceptive. Section 3 is intended to prevent a specific evil which the Westchester County Legislature deemed to be especially troublesome: namely, the use of an overabundance of signs so as to prevent the actual reception of the necessary data by the consumer. Section 4, on the other hand, constitutes a more general proscription against deceptive conduct. It is based on legislative recognition of the unfortunate fact that "[i]ngenuity keeps pace with greed" (People v Kibler, 106 N.Y. 321, 324). Rather than attempting the impossible task of listing every conceivable device which could be utilized by an unscrupulous gasoline dealer to deceive potential customers, the Westchester County Legislature deemed it advisable to enact a general prohibition against deceptive and misleading practices as a supplement to the more specific provisions of section 3. Unlike the majority, I find no inconsistency between a local law which prohibits all deceptive practices and one which additionally delineates certain practices which are to be forbidden altogether.
So viewed, it is apparent that section 3 constitutionally prohibited defendant's action in posting a sign advising passing motorists to "Check Our Low Low Low Prices". The Supreme Court has clearly noted, time and time again, that commercial speech is entitled to a lesser degree of protection than that afforded other types of speech and may be regulated to ensure accuracy and prevent fraud (see, e.g., Virginia Pharmacy Bd. v Virginia Consumer Council, 425 U.S. 748, 770-773, esp n 24, supra; Linmark Assoc. v Willingboro, 431 U.S. 85, 98, supra; Ohralik v Ohio State Bar Assn., 436 U.S. 447, 455-456, supra; Friedman v Rogers, 440 U.S. 1, 7-13, 15-16, supra). Indeed, in Virginia Pharmacy Bd., the court explicitly declared that the First Amendment "does not prohibit the State from insuring that the stream of commercial information flow cleanly as well as freely" (Virginia Pharmacy Bd. v Virginia Consumer Council, 425 U.S. 748, 772, supra).
It appears evident that the extent of permissible regulation of commercial speech will vary with such factors as the sophistication of the audience at whom the speech is aimed and the nature of the medium by which the speech is transmitted (see Bates v State Bar of Ariz., 433 U.S. 350, 383-384). I note, moreover, that there certainly exists no bar to the reasonable regulation of the time, place and manner of commercial speech.
In reviewing the validity of a First Amendment challenge to a local law which regulates commercial speech, it is necessary first to carefully examine the nature and extent of the protections accorded commercial speech by the First Amendment. Commercial speech has been provided such protection not because it involves any political expression, nor because it is deemed to comprise a mode of self-expression, but rather because of the importance of the free flow of price information to our society. Thus, in every case in which the Supreme Court has found a regulation of commercial speech to be improper, that conclusion was premised on the fact that the regulation deemed to be invalid served to impede the flow of accurate information to the consumer. The local law at issue in this case, however, has the very opposite effect: instead of limiting information, it ensures the availability of such information in an easily understood form. Hence, it in no way impinges upon the First Amendment protections afforded commercial speech.
The nature of the particular marketplace in which an attempt is made to regulate commercial speech will necessarily be significant in assessing the constitutionality of such regulation. In the instant case, the validity of the challenged local law must be considered in light of the somewhat unique conditions which surround the sale of gasoline to the public. The decision to purchase gasoline at one station rather than another is often made rapidly, on the basis of information obtained from signs glimpsed only for the few moments it takes to approach a service station. Hence, there is a considerable need for such signs to simply, concisely, and accurately provide the potential consumer with the data necessary for an informed decision. Due to the limited opportunity a passing motorist has to obtain whatever information is provided on signs posted in a gasoline station, it is appropriate for the State to take reasonable steps to ensure that the requisite pricing information will not be obscured by an assortment of advertising slogans which serve only to lure the consumer into a service station without giving solid information about the price of gasoline at that station (see Friedman v Rogers, 440 U.S. 1, 15-16, supra). This is the precise purpose of Local Law No. 9. By limiting the number and content of signs posted in a gasoline station, the local law seeks to ensure that a consumer will in fact have a realistic opportunity to obtain needed price information, instead of being faced with a potentially deceptive sign saying "Check Our Low Low Low Prices" and devoid of any pricing information.
We have recently had occasion to declare that "a particular mode of advertising which would not well serve the societal interest in informed decision making * * * may constitutionally be banned" (Matter of Consolidated Edison Co. v Public Serv. Comm., 47 N.Y.2d 94, 109). Similar principles are applicable here. Signs such as that posted by defendant, rather than contributing to the free flow of information, serve only to distract the motorist's attention from the data actually needed for an informed decision. Certainly "the societal interest in informed decision making" is more aptly furthered when the consumer is provided with the actual price of gasoline, than when the motorist is told that Mobil has "Low Low Low" prices for gasoline.
In sum, the section of the local law pursuant to which defendant stands convicted serves as an appropriate and reasonable means of preventing fraudulent and deceptive advertising. As such, it in no way violates the First Amendment. Absent a clear constitutional violation, which is not here present, I refuse to concur in the decision of the majority of this court, for it will have the effect of invalidating a necessary bit of consumer protection legislation in a field which is especially susceptible to deceptive advertising.
As to defendant's due process argument, it suffices to note that this court rejected the same contention in People v Arlen Serv. Stas. ( 284 N.Y. 340). The argument is no more persuasive today than it was then.
Accordingly I vote to reverse the order appealed from and to reinstate the judgment of Tuckahoe Village Court.
Judges JASEN, JONES and FUCHSBERG concur with Judge MEYER; Judge GABRIELLI, dissents and votes to reverse in a separate opinion in which Chief Judge COOKE and Judge WACHTLER concur.
Order affirmed.