New Jersey Statutes 56:7-26. Sales to meet price of competitor
Current as of: 2024 | Check for updates
|
Other versions
a. Any retailer may advertise, offer to sell, or sell cigarettes at a price made in good faith to meet the price of a competitor who is selling the same article at cost to him as a retailer as prescribed in this act. Any wholesaler may advertise, offer to sell, or sell cigarettes at a price made in good faith to meet the price of a competitor who is rendering the same type of service and is selling the same article at cost to him as a wholesaler as prescribed in this act. The price of cigarettes advertised, offered for sale, or sold under the exceptions specified in section eight shall not be considered the price of a competitor and shall not be used as a basis for establishing prices below cost, nor shall the price established at a bankrupt sale be considered the price of a competitor within the purview of this section.
b. In the absence of proof of the “price of a competitor,” under this section, the “lowest cost to the retailer,” or the “lowest cost to the wholesaler,” as the case may be, determined by any “cost survey,” made pursuant to section thirteen of this act, may be deemed the “price of a competitor,” within the meaning of this section.
L.1952, c. 247, p. 827, s. 9.