Salisbury Beauty Schools v. State Board of Cosmetologists

300 A.2d 367, 268 Md. 32, 1973 Md. LEXIS 1086
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 7, 1973
Docket[No. 78, September Term, 1972.]
StatusPublished
Cited by171 cases

This text of 300 A.2d 367 (Salisbury Beauty Schools v. State Board of Cosmetologists) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salisbury Beauty Schools v. State Board of Cosmetologists, 300 A.2d 367, 268 Md. 32, 1973 Md. LEXIS 1086 (Md. 1973).

Opinion

O’Donnell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1935 the Legislature by Chapter 282 enacted twenty-six new sections to Article 43 [§§ 395-420 inclusive] of the Annotated Code under the title “Health”, Sub-title “Hairdressers and Beauty Culturists.” 1 The title to the Act proclaimed these sections necessary “To promote the public health and safety by providing for the examination and registration of those who desired to engage in the occupation of Beauty Culture, and to regulate the occupation of hairdressers and beauty culturists; to create a State Board of Hairdressers and Beauty Culturists for the examining and licensing of persons engaged in or teaching said practices, to secure the better education of such practitioners and to provide rules regulating the proper conduct and sanitation of hairdressing so as to prevent the spread of contagious and infectious diseases

“Beauty Culture” was described as including: 2 “. . . any and all work done for compensation by any person, which work is generally and usually performed by so-called hairdressers, cosmetologists, cosmeticians, beauticians or beauty culturists and demonstrators of beauty preparations or equipment, and however denominated in *36 so-called hairdressing and beauty shops ordinarily patronized by women, which work is for the embellishment, cleanliness and beautification of women’s hair, such as arranging, dressing, curling, waving, permanent waving, cleansing, cutting, singeing, arching of eyebrows, dyeing of eyebrows and eyelashes, bleaching, coloring, or similar work thereon and thereabout, and the removal of superfluous hair, and the massaging, cleansing, stimulating, exercising, or similar work upon the scalp, face, arms or hands, by the use of mechanical or electrical apparatus or appliances or cosmetics, preparations, tonics, antiseptics, creams or lotions or by any other means, and of manicuring the nails of either sex, which enumerated practices shall be inclusive of the term beauty culture but not in limitation thereof.” 3

Included among those enactments was a section captioned “Student Practice Upon the Public for Pay” which prohibited any school of beauty culture from making any charge “whatsoever for treatment by its students or for materials used in such treatment.”

In 1947 the Legislature authorized clinical work by students, after the student had completed 500 hours of fundamental training. The section prohibiting any charge “whatsoever” for treatment by students in schools of beauty culture—the section here in controversy was amended to read as follows: “No school of beauty culture shall, directly or indirectly, charge any money whatsoever for treatment by its students and may charge only for the actual cost of materials used in such treatments, but no charge shall be made for service supplie[s] (sic).” 4

*37 In 1961 the General Assembly undertook to define a “student” as one “engaged in learning or acquiring the knowledge of the practice of hairdressing and beauty culture for tuition or fee in a duly authorized school”; it defined a “school of beauty culture” as a “premises where such instruction was given a student for tuition or fee.” It discarded the mundane terms of “hairdressers and beauty culturists” by providing that wherever that terminology had been used in the statute those who pursued such a calling were thereafter to be scientifically classified as “cosmetologists.” ** 5

At the same session, in supplementation of the prohibition against such schools of beauty culture charging “any money whatsoever for treatment by its students,” the General Assembly enacted a new section [Art. 43, § 537 (b), Ann. Code (1971 Repl. Vol.)] which provides:

“It shall be unlawful for any school of beauty culture to advertise a list of prices for services to be performed by students other than by posting such a list within the school building.”

Despite this legislative history and revision no steps were apparently taken to enforce Art. 43, § 537 (a) until March 6, 1962, when the members of a newly-constituted Board of Cosmetology, by letter, admonished the various private schools of beauty culture within the State “to reduce their clinic prices to ‘cost of materials’.”

The appellants, comprising fifteen (15) separate privately operated schools of beauty culture and the Maryland Association of Beauty Schools, Inc., on March 15, 1963, in the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City, filed a petition requesting that Art. 43, § 537, be declared unconstitutional and the Board of Cosmetology be enjoined from enforcing it. After a hearing the lower court (Jones, J.), on April 10, 1963, without prejudice, issued an interlocutory injunction (and maintained the status quo) *38 against the enforcement by the Board of the statute, pending decision on the merits. See Md. Rule BB70 c.

After a demurrer on behalf of the Board had been overruled (Perrott, J.) and its Answer filed, both the appellants and the Board filed Cross-Motions for Summary Judgments—each alleging that there was “no genuine dispute as to material fact.”

After a hearing on the respective motions—but before they were decided—the appellants, on January 12, 1972, filed a petition to amend their complaint and to ask, by way of alternative relief, that the court pass an order construing the phrase “the cost of materials”, “so as to allow a reasonable schedule of prices to be charged by the beauty school clinics.” 6

The Chancellor (Cardin, J.) on January 17, 1972 by his memorandum and decree, denied the appellants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, granted the Board’s Motion and declared that the provisions of Art. 43, § 537 (a) were constitutional. At the same time, “at the request of counsel”, the court retained jurisdiction over the subject-matter relating to any “schedule of prices” and referred that issue to the Board “in order that they may promulgate rules and regulations by which the ‘cost of materials’ may be determined.”

The appellants, from the decree upholding the constitutionality of the statute, here contend: (a) that it was error for the trial court to have denied their Motion for Summary Judgment because the pleadings “established a genuine dispute as to material facts”, (b) that it was error to grant the Board’s Motion for Summary Judgment upon the uncontroverted facts presented by the pleadings, (c) that Art. 43, § 537 (a), limiting the charges made in beauty school clinics to “cost of materials” is unconstitutional and invalid, and (d) that the State Board of Cosmetology is estopped, or barred by *39 laches, from enforcing the statute “by virtue of the prior rules, regulations and policy of the Board.”

(a) and (b) RULING ON MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

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Bluebook (online)
300 A.2d 367, 268 Md. 32, 1973 Md. LEXIS 1086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salisbury-beauty-schools-v-state-board-of-cosmetologists-md-1973.