                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
                                          444444444444
                                             NO . 12-0657
                                          444444444444


      ASHISH PATEL, ANVERALI SATANI, NAZIRA MOMIN, MINAZ CHAMADIA,
         AND V IJAY LAKSHMI Y OGI, PETITIONERS/C ROSS-RESPONDENTS,

                                                   v.


            TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING AND REGULATION, ET AL.,
                      RESPONDENTS/CROSS-PETITIONERS,


           4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
                             ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
                      COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS
           4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444


       CHIEF JUSTICE HECHT , joined by JUSTICE GUZMAN and JUSTICE BROWN , dissenting.


       This is one of those cases in which, once the Court has decided whom it wants to win, the

less said the better. Result is an inapt tool for shaping principle; it’s supposed to work the other way

around. And when principle ends up being mutilated, it can no longer be used to guide other results.

Since it turns out that the Court thinks substantive due process means whatever judges say it means,

it would be best to leave bad enough alone rather than pretend the idea has any support in the

Constitution’s text or history. The Court runs the risk that what passes for constitutional analysis

around here will be seen as just picking words out of the air.

       The Threaders deserve to have the yoke of the regulatory state thrown off, the shackles on

their free enterprise shattered, in short—although brevity is not the hallmark of some of today’s
writings—to stick it to the man. And what better way to do all that than by having judges hold the

State’s 80-year-old cosmetology licensing scheme, also found in ten other states, unconstitutional

as applied to eyebrow threading. The trouble is, this Court, like the United States Supreme Court,

has repeatedly held that a statute with a rational basis does not violate substantive due process, and

applying that standard here will not help the Threaders. Casting about, the Court comes up with

“oppressive”, a brand-new entrant in the substantive due process lexicon. Neither this Court nor any

other the Court can find has ever used “oppressive” as a test for substantive due process. Which is

great because the Court is now free—as free as the grateful Threaders from public health and safety

regulation—to make up substantive due process from scratch.

        Whether eyebrow threaders need 750 hours’ training, or only 430, or 40, or 1, to practice their

trade on the public is not for us to say, as long as the Legislature, whose job it is to say, is making

a rational effort to protect public health and safety. As the Court acknowledges at one point, “it is

not for courts to second-guess [legislative and agency] decisions as to the necessity for and the extent

of training that should be required for different types of commercial service providers.”1 The

question for us is whether, by requiring 750 hours’ training, the Legislature has violated substantive

due process by depriving eyebrow threaders of their fundamental liberty without the due course of

law guaranteed by the Texas Constitution.

        Because the final authority to interpret and apply the Constitution belongs to the Judiciary,

only the people themselves, by constitutional amendment, can alter the Court’s substantive due



       1
           Ante at ___.

                                                   2
process decisions. The Judiciary’s authority is enormous and not lightly to be exercised. Justice

Powell once observed that “[t]he history of substantive due process counsels caution and restraint.”2

The history to which he referred was the Supreme Court’s own adventure with substantive due

process beginning with Lochner v. New York,3 in which the Court abrogated a state statute as

“unreasonable, unnecessary and arbitrary”,4 and ending with United States v. Carolene Products

Company,5 in which the Court established that a statute with any rational basis will be upheld. The

Court disregards the federal courts’ experience with substantive due process in Lochner and its

progeny, invents a new test unprecedented in American jurisprudence, and ushers in a new era of

government by judges.

        The Court, and JUSTICE WILLETT ’S concurring opinion in its wild championing of economic

liberty, seem oblivious to the reality that social liberty is no less important. The same substantive due

process that can free eyebrow threaders from onerous training requirements can also be used to

establish a right of privacy not otherwise to be found in the Constitution.6 Are restrictions on

abortion “oppressive”? How about restrictions on marriage? Unconstrained by any meaningful

standard, substantive due process allows judges to define liberty according to their personal policy




       2
            Regents of the Univ. of Mich. v. Ewing, 474 U.S. 214, 229 (1985) (Powell, J., concurring) (citations omitted).

        3
            198 U.S. 45, 58–59 (1905).

        4
            Id. at 56.

        5
            304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).

       6
            See, e.g., Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965).

                                                             3
preferences. History and reason warn that the Court has gone too far.

         I respectfully dissent.

                                                              I

         The Legislature has regulated cosmetic services for 80 years. The original impetus was

concern for public health and safety. “[T]he public,” the Legislature found in the Cosmetology Act

of 1935, “is daily exposed to disease due to insufficient care as to sanitation and hygiene [and should

be protected by the Act] from inexperienced and unscrupulous beauty parlors and beauty culture

schools”.7 Protection of the public health and welfare remains the driving force for regulating

cosmetology.8 Beauty schools, salons, and practitioners are subject to “sanitation rules to prevent the

spread of an infectious or contagious disease”,9 inspections to ensure compliance,10 and investigation


         7
          Act of Apr. 25, 1935, 44th Leg., R.S., ch. 116, § 26, 1935 Tex. Gen. Laws 304, 311, amended by Act of Nov.
14, 1935, 44th Leg., 2d C.S., ch. 469, §§ 1–2, 1935 Tex. Gen. Laws 1846, 1846–1848. The 1935 Act and its successor
provisions were codified first as article 734b in the former Penal Code, later as former article 734c, then “transferred”
to former article 8451a of the Texas Revised Civil Statutes, which was in turn replaced by Chapter 1602 of the new
Occupations Code. See Act of May 28, 1971, 62d Leg., R.S., ch. 1036, § 49, 1971 Tex. Gen. Laws 3389, 3402 (adopting
a new Penal Code and repealing former articles); Act of May 24, 1973, 63d Leg., R.S., ch. 399, § 5, 1973 Tex. Gen.
Laws 883, 995, 996a, 996c (adopting a new Penal Code and transferring certain provisions to the Revised Civil Statutes);
Act of M ay 13, 1999, 76th Leg., R.S., ch. 388, §§ 1, 6, 1999 Tex. Gen. Laws 1431, 2182–2206, 2439–2440 (adopting
the Occupations Code, including Chapter 1602, and repealing former article 8451a); see also Act of May 28, 2005, 79th
Leg., R.S., ch. 798, §§ 1.01, 6.01–.02, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 2734, 2735, 2759–2760 (adopting Chapter 1603 of the
Occupations Code and repealing or amending related provisions in Chapters 1601 and 1602).

          Before 1935, a statute required registration, but not licensing, of “beauty parlor” owners and operators, imposed
certain health and cleanliness requirements, and set fines for statutory violations. See Act of 1921, 37th Leg., R.S., ch. 79,
1921 Tex. Gen. Laws 155, 155–158, codified in T EX . P EN . C OD E arts. 728–733 (Vernon’s 1925).

         8
           See House Comm. on Gov’t Org., Bill Analysis, Tex. S.B. 384, 66th Leg., R.S. (1979) (“The need for
regulation has primarily been based on the protection of the public health and welfare.”); House Comm. on Public Health,
Bill Analysis, Tex. S.B. 127, 69th Leg., R.S. (1985) (“The need for regulation has primarily been based on the protection
of the public health and welfare.”).

         9
             T EX . O CC . C O D E § 1603.102.

         10
              Id. §§ 1603.103, 1603.104.

                                                              4
of public complaints.11 The 1935 Act made it unlawful to practice, provide, or teach

cosmetology—broadly defined to include any practice for beautifying the upper body12—without a

license.13 Applicants were required to complete 1,000 hours of training at a licensed school of beauty

culture and pass an examination.14

         In 1971, the Legislature rewrote the Act. An expanded definition of cosmetology specifically

included “removing superfluous hair from the body by use of depilatories15 or tweezers”.16 The

revised Act was more discriminating, creating five classes of licenses with different restrictions on

the activities in which a holder could engage.17 Training requirements ranged from 1,500 hours down

to 150 hours,18 and applicants had to pass written and practical examinations.19 Since then, the



         11
              Id. § 51.252; see also id. § 1603.151.

         12
              Act of Apr. 25, 1935, 44th Leg., R.S., ch. 116, § 3(a), 1935 Tex. Gen. Laws at 304, codified as former T EX .
P EN . C OD E art. 734b, § 3(a) (“Any person who with hands, or mechanical or electrical apparatus or appliances, or by the
use of cosmetological preparations, antiseptics, tonics, lotions or creams, engages in any one or combination of the
following practices for remuneration or pay, to-wit: cleansing, beautifying, or any kindred work of the scalp, face, neck,
arm, bust, or upper part of the body or manicuring the nails of any person, shall be construed to be practicing the
occupation of a cosmetologist.”).

         13
              Id. § 1, 1935 Tex. Gen. Laws at 304, codified as former T EX . P EN . C O D E art. 734b, § 1.

         14
              Id. §§ 9, 11(a), 1935 Tex. Gen. Laws at 306–307, codified as former T EX . P EN . C O D E art. 734b, §§ 9, 11(a).

         15
             A depilatory is “a cosmetic for the temporary removal of undesired hair”. W EBSTER ’S T H IR D N EW
I N TERN ATIO N AL D IC TIO N ARY 605 (2002).

         16
           Act of May 28, 1971, 62d Leg., R.S., ch. 1036, § 1(3)(C), 1971 Tex. Gen. Laws 3389, 3389, codified as
former T EX . P EN . C O D E art. 734c, § 1(3)(c).

         17
              Id. §§ 13–17, 1971 Tex. Gen. Laws at 3392–3394, codified as former T EX . P EN . C O D E art. 734c, §§ 13–17.

         18
              Id.

         19
              Id. §§ 4(d), 13–17, 1971 Tex. Gen. Laws. at 3391–3394, codified as former T EX . P EN . C O D E art. 734c §§ 4(d),
13–17.

                                                                5
Legislature has repeatedly adjusted the kinds of licenses and the training requirements for each.20

There are now six classes of licenses with required training ranging from 1,500 hours to 320 hours.21

         In 2005, the Legislature assigned the regulation of cosmetology to the Texas Department of

Licensing and Regulation (“the Department”),22 “the primary state agency responsible for the

oversight of businesses, industries, general trades, and occupations that are regulated by the state and

assigned to the department by the legislature.”23 The Department is managed by an executive

director24 and governed by the Texas Commission of Licensing and Regulation (“the

Commission”).25 The Commission is comprised of seven members appointed by the Governor and

confirmed by the Senate,26 each of whom must be “a representative of the general public.”27 The

Commission soon became aware of the practice of eyebrow threading, and in 2008 it began to insist

that threading be included in the regulatory scheme like other forms of hair removal. In a 2011 case,


         20
            See, e.g., Act of May 28, 1979, 66th Leg., R.S., ch. 606, § 1, 1979 Tex. Gen. Laws 1340, 1343–1344
(amending former T EX . R EV . C IV . S TAT . art. 8451a, §§ 10–12); Act of May 27, 1991, 72d Leg., R.S., ch. 626, § 11, 1991
Tex. Gen. Laws 2260, 2265 (adding § 13A to former T EX . R EV . C IV . S TAT . art. 8451a); Act of May 27, 2011, 82d Leg.,
R.S., ch. 1241, §§ 15–17, 2011 Tex. Gen. Laws 3319, 3325–3326 (amending T EX . O CC . C O D E § 1602.257 and adding
§§ 1602.2571, 1602.2572, and 1602.261).

         21
           T EX . O CC . C OD E §§ 1602.254–.2572, 1602.261, amended by Act of May 22, 2015, 84th Leg., R.S.,
H.B. 2717, available at http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/tlodocs/84R/billtext/pdf/HB02717F.pdf.

         22
          Act of May 28, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., ch. 798, §§ 1.01, 6.01–.02, 2005 Tex. Gen. Laws 2734, 2735,
2759–2760 (adopting Chapter 1603 of the Occupations Code and repealing or amending related provisions in Chapters
1601 and 1602); see T EX . O CC . C O D E § 1603.002.

         23
              T EX . O CC . C O D E § 51.051(a).

         24
              Id. §§ 51.101, 51.103.

         25
              Id. § 51.051(b).

         26
              Id. § 51.052(a).

         27
              Id. § 51.053(a).

                                                             6
the court of appeals was skeptical of the Department’s position,28 but after the decision issued, the

Legislature amended the definition of cosmetology to include “removing superfluous hair from a

person’s body using depilatories, preparations, or tweezing techniques”.29 The Department then

amended its regulations to define “tweezing techniques” as “the extraction of hair from the hair

follicle by use of . . . an instrument, appliance or implement . . . made of . . . thread or other

material.”30

         The Department requires an esthetician specialty license for threading.31 The license covers

various skin care treatments such as facials and cleansing, “beautifying a person’s face, neck, or

arms” with preparations or other products, and removing superfluous hair from the skin.32 An

applicant for an esthetician specialty license must complete 750 hours of instruction in a licensed

beauty culture school,33 half the hours required for an “operator license” allowing the performance



         28
            Kuntz v. Khan, No. 03-10-00160-CV, 2011 W L 182882, *7–8 (Tex. App.— Austin, Jan. 21, 2011, no pet.)
(mem. op.), available at http://www.search.txcourts.gov/Case.aspx?cn=03-10-00160-CV&coa=coa03. In an interlocutory
appeal from the trial court’s partial denial of the governmental defendants’ plea to the jurisdiction and temporary
injunction barring defendants from taking any action to further investigate, regulate, or otherwise disrupt Khan’s
business, the Department argued that eyebrow threading constitutes the practice of cosmetology in three ways: threading
involves “beautifying a person’s face” using an “appliance”, “administering a facial treatment”, and “removing
superfluous hair from a person’s body using depilatories”. See T EX O CC . C O DE §§ 1602.002(7), 1602.002(8),
1602.002(9). In affirming the temporary injunction, the court of appeals concluded, inter alia, that the trial court
reasonably determined that Khan had shown “a probable right to recovery based on the plain language of the statute”.
Khan, 2011 W L 182882, at *8.

         29
            Act of May 27, 2011, 82d Leg., R.S., ch. 1241, § 12, 2011 Tex. Gen. Laws 3319, 3323–3324 (emphasis in
original) (amending T EX . O CC . C O D E § 1602.002(a)(9) to substitute “tweezing techniques” for “mechanical tweezers”).

         30
              37 Tex. Reg. 681, 681 (Feb. 10, 2012), codified at 16 T EX . A D M IN . C O D E § 83.10(36).

         31
              T EX . O CC . C O D E § 1602.257 (eligibility for esthetician specialty license).

         32
              Id. § 1602.257(a) (setting out the services that the holder of an esthetician license is authorized to perform).

         33
              Id. § 1602.257(b)(3).

                                                                  7
of “any practice of cosmetology.”34 The instruction for an esthetician specialty license covers the

following subjects35:

                    orientation, rules and laws. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 hours
                    sanitation, safety, and first aid. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 hours
                    anatomy and physiology.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90 hours
                    facial treatment, cleansing, masking, therapy. . . . . . . . . . 225 hours
                    superfluous hair removal. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 hours
                    electricity, machines, and related equipment. . . . . . . . . . . . 75 hours
                    makeup.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 hours
                    chemistry. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 hours
                    care of client.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 hours
                    management. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 hours
                    aroma therapy.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 hours
                    nutrition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 hours
                    color psychology. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 hours

Depending on the school, the training can take from nine to sixteen months and cost anywhere from

$3,500 for a public junior college to $22,000 for a private school. Threading is not a required part

of the curriculum, which generally covers “superfluous hair removal”, and only a handful of schools

offer instruction in threading. Health, safety, and sanitation issues are covered as part of the first five

subjects listed above; these subjects account for 430 of the prerequisite hours.

        An applicant must also pass a written and a practical examination.36 The examinations test

on safety, sanitation, and disinfectant criteria as well as the ability to perform various services. Hair




        34
             Id. §§ 1602.254(a) (permitting “any practice of cosmetology”), (b)(3) (required hours).

        35
             16 T EX . A D M IN . C O D E § 83.120(b) (esthetician curriculum).

        36
             Id. §§ 83.20(a)(6), (b)(6), 83.21; see also T EX . O CC . C O D E §§ 1602.254(c)(3), 1602.262(a)(2).

                                                                   8
removal is part of the practical exam, though threading is not, but an applicant may use threading

to demonstrate her hair-removal ability.37

         Cosmetology regulations require eyebrow threaders, like other cosmetologists, to wash their

hands or use a liquid hand sanitizer before performing any services on a customer; dispose of all

single-use items that have come in contact with the client’s skin; store thread in sealed bags or

covered containers and in a clean, dry, and debris-free storage area; and clean, disinfect, and sterilize

or sanitize all multi-use items prior to each service.38 Regulations further require cosmetologists and

estheticians to clean the client’s skin before performing hair removal services.39 Special precautions

must be taken with items such as creams, astringents, lotions, and other preparations, which are

subject to possible cross-contamination.40 Single-use items used to apply these products—such as

tissue, cotton pads, or cotton balls—must be discarded in a trash receptacle that is emptied daily and

kept clean by washing or using plastic liners.41 Facial chairs, beds, and headrests must be cleaned and




         37
           Petitioners argue that they could not do so because the examinee is required to “hold the [client’s] skin taut”
while removing the hairs, and the threading technique requires two hands. But the record shows that it is nevertheless
necessary that the client’s skin be held taut during threading and that the usual practice is to direct the client to hold her
own skin taut during the threading process. The record does not tell us whether or not this would suffice during the
examination.

         38
              16 T EX . A D M IN . C O D E §§ 83.102(c), (d), (f), 81.104(a), (d), (e), 83.105(a), (c), (e), (f).

         39
              Id. § 83.105(b).

         40
              Id. § 83.104(g).

         41
              Id. §§ 83.102(i), 83.104(e).

                                                                   9
disinfected before service is provided to a client.42 Regulations also provide specific procedures to

follow whenever a cosmetology service causes bleeding.43

        The Threaders acknowledge that threading poses health risks. In the trial court, they offered

evidence from a physician, Dr. Patel (no relation to Petitioner Ashish Patel), that removing a hair

from its follicle opens a portal through which bacteria or a virus can permeate the skin. Dr. Patel

opined that threading may lead to “redness, swelling, itching, inflammation of the hair follicles,

discoloration, and . . . superficial bacterial and viral infections.” She testified that threading could

cause the spread of infections such as flat warts, skin-colored lesions known as molluscum

contagiosum, pink eye, ringworm, impetigo, and methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (often

called a “staph infection”). She opined that a threader’s failure to use appropriate sanitation

practices—such as using disposable materials properly, cleaning the work station, using effective

hand-washing techniques, and correctly treating skin irritations and abrasions—can expose threading

clients to infection and disease. She also testified that these health risks can be fully addressed by

giving threaders one hour’s training in sanitation and hygiene.

        The Threaders allege that, as applied to them, the cosmetology licensing scheme violates

substantive due process—that is, that it deprives them of economic liberty without due course of law

in violation of Article I, Section 19 of the Texas Constitution. The Threaders assert that Texas’

regulation of cosmetology “places senseless burdens on eyebrow threaders and threading businesses

without any actual benefit to public health and safety.” But the Threaders acknowledge that Texas’

        42
             Id. § 83.104(c).

        43
             Id. § 83.111.

                                                  10
longstanding regulation of cosmetology, including superfluous hair removal, is needed to protect the

public health. They argue only that it is excessive.

                                                       II

        On our record, Texas’ regulation of threading seems excessive and misguided as a matter of

policy, though I hasten to add, nothing of what prompted the regulation is before us. We have

conducted no investigations and held no hearings. As in any case, we know what the parties have

told us, and nothing more. This distinguishes the Judiciary from the Legislature. We are ill-equipped

to set policy because we have no way of summoning the various interests for input or exploring all

considerations. But on this record, threading regulation is obviously too much.

        Is it also unconstitutional? Federal and Texas constitutional protections of due process are

closely related. The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, adopted by Congress in

1789 and ratified by the states two years later, provides that no person shall “be deprived of life,

liberty, or property, without due process of law”.44 The Fourteenth Amendment, ratified in 1868,

prohibits the states from violating the same guarantee.45 In between, in 1845, the first Constitution

for the State of Texas provided that “[n]o citizen of this State shall be deprived of life, liberty, [or]

property . . . except by due course of the law of the land.”46 The provision is now Article I, Section

19 of the Texas Constitution.




        44
             U.S. C O N ST . amend. V.

        45
             U.S. C O N ST . amend. XIV, § 1.

        46
             T EX . C ON ST . OF 1845, art. I, § 16.

                                                       11
                                                       A

       This Court has recognized that Texas’ due course of law guarantee protects both procedural

and substantive rights.47 But we have been mindful that applying substantive due process doctrine

to economic regulation has never met with recognized success. The United States Supreme Court

has vacillated in its view of the scope of federal due process protection. In Lochner v. New York, the

Supreme Court famously took a broad view, holding that New York’s regulation of bakers’ working

hours violated the Fourteenth Amendment.48 Finding an implicit right of contract in the United States

Constitution, the Supreme Court concluded that whether the state regulation deprived bakers of this

right depends on whether it is:

       a fair, reasonable, and appropriate exercise of the police power of the state, or [rather]
       an unreasonable, unnecessary and arbitrary interference with the right of the
       individual to his personal liberty or to enter into those contracts in relation to labor
       which may seem to him appropriate or necessary for the support of himself and his
       family[.]49

       Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes dissented, warning:

               This case is decided upon an economic theory which a large part of the
       country does not entertain. If it were a question whether I agreed with that theory, I
       should desire to study it further and long before making up my mind. But I do not
       conceive that to be my duty, because I strongly believe that my agreement or
       disagreement has nothing to do with the right of a majority to embody their opinions
       in law[.] It is settled by various decisions of this court that state constitutions and
       state laws may regulate life in many ways which we as legislators might think as
       injudicious or if you like as tyrannical as this, and which equally with this interfere
       with the liberty to contract. Sunday laws and usury laws are ancient examples. . . .


       47
            Barshop v. Medina Cnty. Underground Water Conservation Dist., 925 S.W .2d 618, 632 (Tex. 1996).

       48
            198 U.S. 45, 58–59 (1905).

       49
            Id. at 56.

                                                       12
         Some of these laws embody convictions or prejudices which judges are likely to
         share. Some may not. But a constitution is not intended to embody a particular
         economic theory, whether of paternalism and the organic relation of the citizen to the
         State or of laissez faire. It is made for people of fundamentally differing views, and
         the accident of our finding certain opinions natural and familiar or novel and even
         shocking ought not to conclude our judgment upon the question whether statutes
         embodying them conflict with the Constitution of the United States.50

Subsequent cases proved true Holmes’ warning that a mere reasonableness standard for substantive

due process was unworkable and that judges cannot practically or legally constitutionalize economic

theory.51 Lochner’s substantive due process adventure soon ended.

         Thirty-three years later, the Supreme Court recanted Lochner, stating matter-of-factly, as if

it should always have been obvious:

         regulatory legislation affecting ordinary commercial transactions is not to be
         pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally
         assumed, it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon
         some rational basis . . . .52

         50
              Id. at 75–76 (Holmes, J., dissenting).

         51
            See, e.g., New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann, 285 U.S. 262, 278 (1932) (striking down a state law prohibiting
the sale of ice without a permit as unreasonable because the sale of ice was not a “public business” that could be so
regulated); Louis K. Liggett Co. v. Baldridge, 278 U.S. 105, 113–114 (1928) (prohibition on anyone not a licensed
pharmacist owning a pharmacy or drug store struck down because the state had not shown a “reasonable relationship to
the public health”); Adams v. Tanner, 244 U.S. 590, 596–597 (1917) (finding a statute prohibiting employment agencies
from demanding or receiving fees from workers “arbitrary and oppressive” and “unduly restrict[ive]”); Bunting v.
Oregon, 243 U.S. 426, 433–434, 438 (1917) (law that prohibited employees in factories from working more than 10
hours a day, or 13 hours a day if paid overtime, upheld as a reasonable exercise of the police power). Compare Adkins
v. Children’s Hosp., 261 U.S. 525, 559 (1923) (minimum wage requirement for women is an unconstitutional intrusion
on freedom of contract, not proper exercise of the police power), with W. Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, 300 U.S. 379,
399–400 (1937) (minimum wage requirement for women and children is proper exercise of police power, as a means
of protection for those “in an unequal position with respect to bargaining power”); compare Muller v. Oregon, 208 U.S.
412, 416, 423 (1908) (limitation on hours worked in “any mechanical establishment, or factory, or laundry” by women
upheld as a valid exercise of the police power aimed at the protection of women), and Holden v. Hardy, 169 U.S. 366,
395 (1898) (limitation on hours worked in underground mines a valid exercise of the police power for the protection of
those employed in a dangerous profession), with Lochner, 198 U.S. at 58 (limitation on hours worked in a bakery is not
a valid exercise of the police power).

        52
              United States v. Carolene Prods. Co., 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).

                                                          13
This requirement that economic regulation need only bear a rational relationship to a legitimate state

interest is far more deferential to state legislatures than Lochner’s reasonableness test. Later

reflecting on the passing of the Lochner era, Justice Douglas wrote for the Supreme Court:

         The day is gone when this Court uses the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
         Amendment to strike down state laws regulatory of business and industrial
         conditions, because they may be unwise, improvident, or out of harmony with a
         particular school of thought. . . . For protection against abuses by legislatures the
         people must resort to the polls, not to the courts.53

                                                           B

         The United States Constitution does not, of course, prohibit the states from experimenting

with substantive due process based in their own constitutions,54 and Texas has done a bit of that.

Twenty years ago we summarized the case law thusly:

         Texas courts have not been consistent in articulating a standard of review under the
         due course clause. Our courts have sometimes indicated that section 19 provides an
         identical guarantee to its federal due process counterpart. Under federal due process,
         a law that does not affect fundamental rights or interests—such as the economic
         legislation at issue here—is valid if it merely bears a rational relationship to a
         legitimate state interest. On other occasions, however, our Court has attempted to
         articulate our own independent due course standard, which some courts have
         characterized as more rigorous than the federal standard.55

But, in the decades since the federal courts adopted the rational basis test, we have not wandered far

from that standard. Even in State v. Richards—the case relied on principally by the Threaders to



         53
             Williamson v. Lee Optical of Okla., Inc., 348 U.S. 483, 488 (1955) (citations omitted) (quoting Munn v.
Illinois, 94 U.S. 113, 134 (1876)).

         54
              Slaughter-House Cases, 83 U.S. (16 W all.) 36, 74–78 (1872).

         55
           Tex. Workers’ Comp. Comm’n v. Garcia, 893 S.W .2d 504, 525 (Tex. 1995) (citations omitted) (internal
quotation marks omitted); see also Trinity River Auth. v. URS Consultants, Inc., 889 S.W .2d 259, 263 & n.5 (Tex. 1994).

                                                          14
support heightened scrutiny of economic regulation—the Court’s reasoning and result were

deferential to the legislation at issue. We concluded that a provision authorizing forfeiture of a

vehicle that had been used in furtherance of a crime without the owner’s knowledge did not

contravene the Texas Constitution.56 We explained:

            A large discretion is necessarily vested in the Legislature to determine not only what
            the interests of the public require, but what measures are necessary for the protection
            of such interests. If there is room for a fair difference of opinion as to the necessity
            and reasonableness of a legislative enactment on a subject which lies within the
            domain of the police power, the courts will not hold it void.57

Though we did not refer to the federal rational basis test, our analysis was consistent with it.

            For the past 20 years, we have consistently adhered to the rational basis test. In Barshop v.

Medina County Underground Water Conservation District, we upheld water regulations against a

substantive due process challenge as “rationally related to legitimate state purposes in managing and

regulating this vital resource.”58 In City of San Antonio v. TPLP Office Park Properties, we applied

the rational basis test to city street regulations.59 We explained that the proper inquiry “is whether

the actions rationally could have been related to a proper exercise of its police power.”60 And in

Mayhew v. Town of Sunnyvale, we upheld a zoning ordinance, explaining:




        56
                 State v. Richards, 301 S.W .2d 597, 599–600, 602–603 (Tex. 1957) (on certified questions from court of civil
appeals).

            57
                 Id. at 602.

            58
                 925 S.W .2d 618, 631–633 (Tex. 1996).

            59
                 218 S.W .3d 60, 65 (Tex. 2007) (per curiam).

            60
                 Id.

                                                                15
         A generally applicable zoning ordinance will survive a substantive due process
         challenge if it is designed to accomplish an objective within the government’s police
         power and if a rational relationship exists between the ordinance and its purpose.
         This deferential inquiry does not focus on the ultimate effectiveness of the ordinance,
         but on whether the enacting body could have rationally believed at the time of
         enactment that the ordinance would promote its objective. If it is at least fairly
         debatable that the decision was rationally related to legitimate government interests,
         the decision must be upheld. The ordinance will violate substantive due process only
         if it is clearly arbitrary and unreasonable.61

Under our precedent, a clearly arbitrary and unreasonable regulation is one that has no rational

relationship to its purpose in furthering a legitimate state interest.

         The Court instead opts to concoct an entirely new standard from the differing terminology

used in our precedents. To avoid violating substantive due process, a statute must not be “clearly

arbitrary and unreasonable”, must be sufficiently “rational and reasonable”, must “strike [] a fair

balance” between the legislative purpose and individual rights, must be “justified”, and must not be

“oppressive” or “in contravention of common right”.62 Put all these words in a blender and out pours

the correct standard: a statute must not be “so unreasonably burdensome that it becomes oppressive”.

Reasonable burdensomeness is okay. And I think the Court really means unduly oppressive, as

distinguished from the oppressiveness of the government in general. The analysis would be

laughable if the consequences were not so serious.63 One cannot distill a single test from common

elements of the rational basis and “fair balance” standards; one must choose between them. Instead,


         61
              964 S.W .2d 922, 938–939 (Tex. 1998) (emphasis in original) (citations omitted).

         62
              Ante at ___.

         63
            As we recently observed in a different setting, “the test for determining whether something is oppressive will
necessarily vary from one context to the next, and thus the term has multiple meanings, depending on the circumstances.”
Ritchie v. Rupe, 443 S.W .3d 856, 867 (Tex. 2014).

                                                           16
the Court breeds a strict, deferential standard with a loose, non-deferential one, and the resulting

misbegot is . . . loose and non-deferential.

         While substantive due process has been the subject of many cases and much study since

Lochner, the Court cannot find a Texas case, a case from an American jurisdiction, or a scholarly

treatise or article to cite in support of its “oppressive” test.64 The obvious reason is that it is no

standard at all. Oppression is very much in the eye of the beholder. In this case, the Court takes into

account the amount, cost, and apparent usefulness of the required training, a threader’s lost

income-earning opportunity, and the danger to public health and safety. I suppose the Court would

agree that it should also take into account the number and severity of incidents of harm due to poor

training and the benefit to threaders and the public. This process is what is generally referred to as

legislating. It should be done. It should not be done by judges.

         The Court’s answer is that a rational basis standard is no better because if, as in the present

case, the State could rationally require some training, the State could require an unlimited amount

of training.65 The argument is nonsense. That some training is rational does not mean that more is.

There are no bright lines for setting a permissible training requirement under either test. The




         64
           Three Lochner-era cases reference the impropriety of “arbitrary or oppressive” legislation, but not one uses
the phrase as a formal test for substantive due process. Adams v. Tanner, 244 U.S. 590, 595–596 (1917); McLean v.
Arkansas, 211 U.S. 539, 547 (1909); accord Hous. & Tex. Cent. Ry. Co v. City of Dall., 84 S.W . 648, 653 (Tex. 1905)
(noting that without justification, an “invasion of [] rights under the guise of [the State’s police] power” would be
properly characterized as “unreasonable, arbitrary, [or] oppressive”). The Court instead focused its Lochner-ian sights
on the existence of a “just relation to the protection of the public within the scope of legislative power,” and finding none,
concluded that the legislature had overstepped its constitutional bounds. Adams, 244 U.S. at 596; McLean, 211 U.S. at
547; cf. Hous. & Tex. Cent. Ry. Co, 84 S.W . at 653.

         65
              Ante at ___.

                                                             17
difference is that the rational basis standard invokes objective reason as its measure, while the

“oppressive” test is nothing more than an appeal to a judge’s predilections.

          The subjectiveness of the Court’s new test is clear from its response to the fact that Texas

is not the only state that has concluded threading should be regulated as part of the practice of

cosmetology or esthetics. Eight other states explicitly regulate threading in this way: Delaware,

Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and West Virginia.66 Two others define

cosmetology to encompass any type of superfluous hair removal.67 These states each require aspiring

cosmetologists and estheticians to complete hours of coursework in numbers similar to those

required in Texas.68 This is strong evidence that Texas’ regulatory framework has a rational basis;


          66
              24 D EL . A D M IN . C O D E § 5100-14.7 (listing “threading” as an example of “hair removal” and providing that
“[h]air removal shall be performed by a licensed cosmetologist or licensed aesthetician only”); H AW . R EV . S TAT . § 439-1
(“‘Esthetician’ means any person who, with hands or nonmedically prescribed mechanical or electrical apparatus or
devices . . . engages for compensation in . . . [r]emoving superfluous hair about the body of any person.”); 225 I LL . C O M P .
S TAT . 410 / 3-1 (cosmetology includes “removing superfluous hair from the body of any person by the use of
depilatories, waxing, threading, or tweezers”); id. 410 / 3A-1(a)(3) (esthetics includes “removing superfluous hair from
the body of any person”); I O W A C O D E § 157.1(5)(c) (“‘Cosmetology’ means . . . [r]emoving superfluous hair from the
face or body of a person with the use of depilatories, wax, sugars, threading, or tweezing”); id. § 157.1(12)(c) (esthetics
includes “[r]emoving superfluous hair”); L A . R EV . S TAT . A N N . § 37:563(6) (esthetics includes “hair removal by cosmetic
preparations, threading, waxing, or other similar means”); M ISS . C O D E A N N . § 73-7-2(b)(iv) (cosmetology includes
“[a]rching eyebrows, to include tweezing, waxing, threading or any other methods of epilation”); id. § 73-7-2(d)(ii)
(esthetics includes the same); O KLA . A DM IN . C O D E § 175:10-9-55(a) (“Only licensed Facialist/Estheticians,
Cosmetologists or Barbers may perform threading.”); W . V A . C O D E § 30-27-3(a)(4) (esthetics includes “[t]he waxing,
tweezing and threading of hair on another person’s body”).

          67
          63 P A . C O N S . S TAT . § 507 (cosmetology includes “the removal of superfluous hair”); S.D. C O D IFIED L AW S
§ 36-15-2(4) (the practice of cosmetology includes “removal of superfluous hair by nonpermanent means”).

          68
              Like Texas, Illinois and Louisiana require applicants for a cosmetology license to complete 1,500 hours of
coursework. 225 I LL. C O M P . S TAT . 410 / 3-2(1)(c); L A . A D M IN . C O D E tit. 46 § 301. And, like Texas, they require
applicants for a more limited esthetician’s license to complete 750 hours of coursework. 225 I LL . C O M P . S TAT . 410 / 3A-
2(c); L A . A D M IN . C O D E tit. 46 § 303. Delaware, Mississippi, and Oklahoma require applicants for a cosmetology license
to complete 1,500 hours of coursework. D EL . C O D E A N N . tit. 24 § 5107; M ISS . C O D E A N N . § 73-7-13; O KLA . A D M IN .
C O D E § 175:10-3-34. These states require applicants for an esthetics license to complete 600 hours of coursework. D EL .
C O D E A NN . tit. 24 § 5135; M ISS . C O D E A N N . § 73-7-18; O KLA . A D M IN . C O D E § 175:10-3-39. Hawaii and W est Virginia
require 1,800 hours of coursework for cosmetology and 600 hours for esthetics. H AW . R EV . S TAT . § 439-12(b), (d); W .
V A . C O DE R. §§ 3-1-5.1, 3-1-9.1. Iowa and South Dakota require 2,100 hours of coursework for a cosmetology license

                                                                 18
it is common to many states. The Court’s response is “so what”. The reasoned judgment of multiple

state legislatures is irrelevant to the Court because whether the training requirements are excessive

and oppressive depends on what Texas judges think. The Court’s “oppressive” test is pure judicial

policy.

          As long as judicial policy is made in the name of substantive due process, the Court argues,

it is judging, not legislating. But the Court cannot, simply by invoking a constitutional doctrine,

mask the true policy-making character of its ruling. One could take the Court’s analysis of the costs

and benefits of regulating eyebrow threaders and offer it in evidence at a legislative hearing, only

there would also be evidence relating to the needs of the public and the cosmetology industry

generally, evidence that the Court does not have and cannot weigh. The substantive due process

doctrine empowers the Judiciary to check regulation that is a clearly arbitrary deprivation of

economic liberty in violation of due course of law. The rational basis test for making this

determination is not a disclaimer of judicial responsibility but a legal and practical recognition that

“[t]he wisdom or expediency of the law is the Legislature’s prerogative, not ours.”69




and 600 hours for an esthetics license. I O W A C O D E § 157.10(1); I O W A A DM IN . C O D E r. 645.61.14, S.D. A D M IN . R.
20:42:06:09, 20:42:06:09.02. Pennsylvania requires 1,250 hours of coursework for a cosmetology license and 300 hours
for an esthetics license. 63 P A . C O N S . S TAT . §§ 510(a)(3), 511(b)(1). Some states allow aspiring cosmetologists and
estheticians to complete an apprenticeship in lieu of or in combination with classroom work. See, e.g., D EL . C O D E A N N .
tit. 24 § 5107(a)(3)(b)–(c); H AW . R EV . S TAT . § 439-12(b), (d); 63 P A . C O N S . S TAT . §§ 510(a), 510.3, 516; S.D. A D M IN .
R. 20:42:07:06–07.

          69
          Tex. Workers’ Comp. Comm’n v. Garcia, 893 S.W .2d 504, 520 (Tex. 1995) (quoting Smith v. Davis, 426
S.W .2d 827, 831 (Tex. 1968)).

                                                                 19
                                                  III

       That the Court has gone where no one has gone before is proudly declared by JUSTICE

WILLETT ’S concurring opinion. Gone are the constraints of the rational basis standard, a standard

dismissed as a “rubber stamp” and a “judicial shrug”. JUSTICE WILLETT ’S rhetorical torrent against

economic regulation carries along its ultimate demand: Texas judges must conduct an investigation

“asking” what the “government [is] actually up to”, weighing “what policymakers really had in mind

at the time,” “scrutin[izing]” “actual assertions with actual evidence.”70 All this Sturm und Drang

announces a new day. And to be sure, all this “asking” and “scrutiniz[ing]” is not judicial activism.

It is merely judicial un-passivism.

       I agree with JUSTICE WILLETT about one thing: “[t]his case concerns far more than whether

Ashish Patel can pluck unwanted hair with a strand of thread.”71 It is about a dramatic arrogation of

power by the Court. Economic regulation is invalid whenever a majority of this Court feels it is

oppressive.

       Hair stylists could make the same argument the Threaders do: why should they be required

to have instruction and examination in facial treatment, manicuring, massage, and the removal of

unwanted hair? Whether to create various licensing classification schemes, and which practices to

include within each, have been questions central to cosmetology regulation since 1971. It is the kind

of line-drawing that the Legislature and the Department, not courts, are equipped to do. More




       70
            Ante at ___ (emphasis in original).

       71
            Ante at ___.

                                                  20
importantly, the Constitution gives this line-drawing power—this policymaking—to the Legislature

and the Executive, not to the Judiciary.

         The same issue applies to other occupational regulation. There is an ongoing debate regarding

whether law school should have a third year, whether students should be allowed to sit for the bar

exam earlier, and whether a lawyer should be allowed to obtain a special, limited-practice license

with less instruction. Further, students intent on pursuing a particular area of practice—tax law, for

example—question why they should be required to take other courses, including those, like civil

procedure, thought to be part of a fundamental first-year curriculum. Medical education is similarly

questioned. Why should students intent on confining their practice to particular areas or specialities

be required to take unrelated courses? The answer is often that subjects unrelated to a particular field

of practice are nevertheless part of the background information important to the discipline. But even

when this rationale is lacking, substantive due process is not violated merely because medical

education is not tailor-made for each student. Our inquiry is whether the cosmetology licensing

scheme is unconstitutional, not whether we think the lines chosen by the Legislature are well-placed

as a matter of policy.

         And while Lochner justified judicial invalidation of economic regulation in the name of

substantive due process to protect a liberty interest grounded in an implied constitutional right to

contract, liberty is not solely, not even primarily, an economic concept. Other constitutional rights

have been found by implication in our constitutions.72 Scholars argue that the right to privacy implied

         72
           For a recent discussion of the development of substantive due process and the fundamental rights it has been
held to protect, see Joshua D. Hawley, The Intellectual Origins of (Modern) Substantive Due Process, 93 T EX . L. R EV .
275, 280, 328–334 (2014) (discussing the demise of the Lochner-era police powers jurisprudence and its replacement

                                                          21
by the United States Supreme Court in the federal Constitution provides the basis for protecting

personal liberty from social regulation.73 The Court’s power grab will not be limited to the

“regulation of economic interests”,74 but will be wielded in future cases against all manner of

legislation, maybe not by members of this Court, but by others who see today as precedent. The

Lochner monster, rediscovered and unleashed by the Court, will stray far from the Judiciary’s proper

sphere of authority—and to places far afield of the economic realm to which the Court is

sympathetic. Judicial usurpation of authority over the State’s policies may provide protection for the

economic liberties on which the concurrence waxes eloquent, but it also gives rise to such decisions

as Roe v. Wade.75 JUSTICE WILLETT applauds the Court for “narrow[ing] the difference” between

fundamental rights—a varsity team (to use his metaphor) that includes not only rights protected by

the First Amendment, but also privacy-based liberty interests discovered solely in the due process

clause itself—and the economic interests asserted here. JUSTICE WILLETT ’S concurring opinion fills

the Court’s sails and sets a Lochner-ian course.




with modern fundamental-rights jurisprudence, and arguing that this shift occurred because the Supreme Court came to
find “personal moral choice” and “self-development”— such as the “right of privacy” the Court protected in Roe v. Wade,
410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973)— to be more “compelling” types of liberty than the private property protections that were the
aim of the Lochner era).

        73
            See, e.g., David. E. Bernstein, Lochner Era Revisionism, Revised: Lochner and the Origins of Fundamental
Rights Constitutionalism, 92 G EO . L.J. 1, 60 (2003) (arguing that “Lochnerian fundamental rights analysis returned in
mutated form” in modern fundamental-rights decisions striking down laws as violative of “unenumerated due process
rights”); David N. Mayer, Substantive Due Process Rediscovered: The Rise and Fall of Liberty of Contract, 60 M ERCER
L. R EV . 563, 640–642 (2008) (discussing the liberty of contract cases that were used as groundwork for the Supreme
Court’s later protections of a “right to privacy”).

         74
              Ante at ___.

         75
              410 U.S. 113 (1973).

                                                          22
                                                            IV

         I would apply the test established by our precedent: regulation is unconstitutional only if it

lacks a rational relationship to a legitimate government interest.76 The parties’ evidence, the State’s

purpose in its regulatory scheme, and the effects of that regulation are all to be considered.77 But our

precedent makes clear that judges are not to weigh the evidence to determine whether the State’s

purpose and approach are reasonable or whether they will be successful; the role of judges is instead

to decide whether, in light of the evidence presented, the enacting body “could have rationally . . .

decided that the measure might achieve the objective.”78 Unlike the Court’s “oppressive” test, this

inquiry is objective, looking not to whether the governmental body subjectively believed the purpose

would be accomplished, but to whether a reasonable governmental body could have so believed in

light of the evidence. It is not for the Judiciary to correct a mere error in judgment by the

policymaking branches.

         The Threaders do not dispute that, in general, Texas’ long-standing regulation of



         76
          See City of San Antonio v. TPLP Office Park Props., 218 S.W .3d 60, 64–66 (Tex. 2007) (per curiam);
Mayhew v. Town of Sunnyvale, 964 S.W .2d 922, 938–939 (Tex. 1998); Barshop v. Medina Cnty. Underground Water
Conservation Dist., 925 S.W .2d 618, 631–633 (Tex. 1996); State v. Richards, 301 S.W .2d 597, 602–603 (Tex. 1957).

         77
             In Barshop, we considered the entire record in determining that (1) the State has a legitimate purpose in
regulating the use of water in the Edwards Aquifer, which is a scarce resource; and (2) that the challenged provisions
were rationally related to the State’s “purposes in managing and regulating this vital resource.” 925 S.W .2d at 625, 633.
W e explained that, because Barshop was a facial challenge, “we should presume” the existence of any facts under which
the Act would be constitutional “without making a separate investigation . . . or attempting to decide whether the
Legislature has reached a correct conclusion with respect to the facts.” Id. at 625. This presumption exists because a
facial challenge requires the challenger to show that the challenged regulation is unconstitutional under “any possible
state of facts.” Id. Although this burden is high, a plaintiff challenging a law on its face nevertheless has the opportunity
to put on evidence that the challenged law is unconstitutional in all possible applications.

         78
           TPLP Office Park Props., 218 S.W .3d at 64–65 (citing Nollan v. Cal. Coastal Comm’n, 483 U.S. 825, 834
n.3 (1987)).

                                                             23
cosmetology is rationally related to the State’s legitimate interest in protecting public health and

safety.79 The Threaders argue only that the regulation as applied to eyebrow threading—specifically,

the training and testing required for licensure—is so excessive as to deprive them of their liberty in

choosing an occupation. The State does not dispute that as many as 320 of the required 750 hours

are not useful to eyebrow threaders,80 but it argues that the requirements are not clearly arbitrary, as

they must be to violate substantive due process under the correct test.

         The health risks of commercial hair removal cannot be minimized. Dr. Patel, the expert

offered by the Threaders in the trial court, testified that avulsive hair removal opens a portal through

which bacteria can enter the body through the skin. For this reason, she explained, she trains

threaders in her medical spa to use an antiseptic on the eyebrow area before beginning the threading

process and to apply an astringent to the skin after the process is complete. The astringent helps to

close up the hair follicle to make it difficult for bacteria to enter. Patel testified that she also trains

threaders on methods of keeping their work area clean, keeping the thread sanitary, and on the

importance of always using a new piece of thread (and any other single-use items) on each client.

She testified that threaders may need to be able to identify skin infections or other conditions that

would make threading unsafe for a particular client. Patel recognized that threading may lead to the




         79
            We note that Texas has regulated a related practice, barbering, since 1907. Act of Apr. 18, 1907, 30th Leg.,
R.S., ch. 141, 1907 Tex. Gen. Laws 273. W e have twice held that regulation of barbering is important to public health
and safety. Tex. State Bd. of Barber Exam’rs v. Beaumont Barber Coll., 454 S.W .2d 729, 731 (Tex. 1970); Gerard v.
Smith, 52 S.W .2d 347, 350 (Tex. Civ. App.— El Paso 1932, writ ref’d).

         80
            At oral argument, the State agreed that “430 hours of the 750-hour curriculum are addressed to subject matter
relevant to eyebrow threading” and explained that it “has not argued that the remaining 320 hours of instruction are []
necessary.”

                                                           24
spread of various contagious bacterial and viral infections and that a threader’s failure to utilize

appropriate sanitation can further expose threading clients to infection and disease.

        Applicants for a general cosmetology license or an esthetician speciality license are instructed

in general sanitation and safety practices, and each of the specific procedures they learn incorporates

the hygiene and safety practices pertinent to that procedure. If they attend a school that teaches

threading, they learn to apply these concepts specifically to that practice, and if instead they attend

a school that does not instruct in threading, they nevertheless learn these safety implications and

requirements as applied to other avulsive forms of hair removal. Moreover, although there is

evidence that only a few cosmetology schools currently teach threading, the Legislature could

reasonably have concluded that more schools will teach it as demand for the procedure grows.

Although there is evidence that no more than an hour of sanitation training is necessary for threading,

there is other evidence from which the Legislature could reasonably conclude that the required

instruction and testing would further its goal of protecting public health and safety through the

regulation of cosmetology.

                                    *       *       *        *       *

        Texas’ cosmetology regulation as applied to threading is, to quote Justice Holmes,

“injudicious”, though I would not go so far as to say “tyrannical”, and certainly not clearly arbitrary.

I would hold that the regulation is rationally related to the State’s legitimate interest in protecting the

health and safety of the public.




                                                    25
         The Court pooh-poohs the Lochnerian “monster”. A word of caution: those who cannot

remember the past are condemned to repeat it.81

         I would affirm the judgment of the court of appeals. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.




                                                             Nathan L. Hecht
                                                             Chief Justice

Opinion delivered: June 26, 2015




         81
              I G EO RGE S AN TAY AN A , T HE L IFE OF R EASO N : R EASO N IN C O M M O N S EN SE 284 (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2d
ed. 1929 ).

                                                                26
