Sec. 21a-128. (Formerly Sec. 19-242). Unfair competition.
Sec. 21a-128. (Formerly Sec. 19-242). Unfair competition. No drug retailer shall
sell any drugs, medicines, cosmetics, toilet preparations or drug sundries at a price below
the manufacturer's wholesale list price per dozen; nor, in the case of biologicals or other
of the above-mentioned products which are not customarily sold in dozens or greater
lots, sell such products at less than the manufacturer's wholesale list price per unit.
Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding sentence, any drug retailer may sell at
less than the prices specified above, imperfect or actually damaged merchandise or
bona fide discontinued lines of merchandise, if advertised, marked and sold as such;
merchandise sold upon the complete final liquidation of any business; merchandise sold
or donated for charitable purposes or to unemployment relief agencies and drugs or drug
sundries sold to physicians, dentists, veterinarians or hospitals, but not for the purpose
of resale by them.
(1949 Rev., S. 3959.)
History: Sec. 19-242 transferred to Sec. 21a-128 in 1983.
Annotations to former section 19-242:
Allegations of intent in pleadings proper in action to determine constitutionality of this section. 26 CS 426.
As applied to toilet preparations or drug sundries, this is a price-fixing statute not lying within broad discretion of
legislature under police powers and, since elements necessary to sustain constitutionality are not met, defendant's conviction
violated his rights under due process provisions of federal and state constitutions. 3 Conn. Cir. Ct. 486. Statute is penal
and must be strictly construed. Id., 490.