JARVIS v. STATE BD. OF BARBER EXAMINERS

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JARVIS v. STATE BD. OF BARBER EXAMINERS
1938 OK 525
83 P.2d 560
183 Okla. 527
Case Number: 28174
Decided: 10/18/1938
Supreme Court of Oklahoma

JARVIS
v.
STATE BOARD OF BARBER EXAMINERS

Syllabus

¶0 1. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW - Due Process and Equal Protection of Law - State Regulation of Businesses Affected with Public Interest.
Since there is no closed class or category of business affected with a public interest, the court in applying the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, and corresponding sections of the State Constitution, will determine in each case whether the circumstances are such as to justify the challenged regulation as a reasonable exertion of governmental authority or condemn it as arbitrary and discriminatory.
2. SAME - Plastic Nature of Limitations of Police Power.
The limitations of the police power are plastic in their nature and will expand to meet the actual requirements of an advancing civilization and adjust themselves to the necessities of our multiplying complexities in moral, sanitary, economic, and social conditions.
3. SAME - Price-Control Provisions of Act Regulating Barber Shops Held not Violative of Constitutional Provisions.
In view of the announced function of the court, the accepted conception of the police power of the state, and the recognized fact that the barber industry is within the regulatory power of the state as to sanitary and health conditions, it cannot be held that the price-control sections of article 2 of chapter 24 of the Session Laws of 1937, are so arbitrary, discriminatory, or unreasonable in their general features as to violate the provisions of either the State or Federal Constitutions which deal with liberty, due process, or freedom of contract.
4. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW - Right of Legislature to Delegate to Designated Instrumentalities Powers of Fact Finding and Regulation.
Although, in general, the power to legislate cannot be delegated, the Legislature has the right to delegate to designated instrumentalities certain powers of fact finding and regulation it possesses, when it fixes the limits within which said powers are to be exercised, and in doing so it does not unconstitutionally delegate legislative power.
5. STATUTES - Law General and Uniform in Nature Though not Universally Applicable.
A law may be general and uniform in its nature and be within the recognized power of the Legislature, although it may not be universally applicable.
6. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW - Right of Litigant to Show Constitutional Law in Operation Is Discriminatory and Unreasonable as to Certain Applications Thereof.
An unsuccessful attack on the general features of a law as unconstitutional does not preclude a litigant from showing or proving that such law in its operation may be so discriminatory and unreasonable as to make certain applications thereof unlawful.

Appeal from District Court, Oklahoma County; Ben Arnold, Judge.

Action by S.M. Jarvis against the State Board of Barber Examiners et al. for injunction. Writ denied, and plaintiff appeals. Affirmed.

Roddie & Beckett, for plaintiff in error.
Mac Q. Williamson, Atty. Gen., and Fred Hansen, Asst. Atty. Gen., for defendants in error.

GIBSON, J.

¶1 The parties to this cause have stipulated that the point at issue here is the same as that decided in Herrin et al. v. Arnold, Judge, No. 28307 (decided July 26, 1938, 183 Okla. 392, 82 P.2d 977), and they have further stipulated that the decision in that case may control the decision in this case. Accordingly the judgment of the district court is affirmed, and the syllabus in cause No. 28307, Herrin et al. v. Arnold, Judge, is adopted as the syllabus in this cause.

¶2 Judgment affirmed.

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