ORDER
BE IT REMEMBERED on this day the Court reviewed the file in the above-styled cause, and specifically Defendants William H. Kuntz, Jr., Mike Arismendez, LuAnn Roberts Morgan, Fred N. Moses, Catherine Rodewald, Deborah Yurco, Ravi Shah, and Thomas F. Butler’s Motion for Summary Judgment [# 33], Plaintiffs’ Response [# 36] thereto, Defendants’ Reply [# 39] thereto, Plaintiffs Isis Brantley and Isis Ornamentations and Natural Hair Care Consultant d/b/a The Institute of Ancestral Braiding’s Motion for Summary Judgment [# 34], Defendant’s Response [# 35] thereto, and Plaintiffs’ Reply [# 40] thereto. Having considered the documents, the governing law, and the file as a whole, the Court now enters the following opinion and orders.
Background
This 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action raises a constitutional challenge to the manner in which Texas regulates the practice of African hair braiding, a method of styling “tightly textured” or “coily” hair popular with men and women of African descent. African hair braiding does not involve cutting hair, washing or conditioning hair, or treating hair with heat or chemicals; rather, it consists of “the intricate twisting, braiding, weaving, and locking of hair using a braider’s hands[.]” First Am. Compl. [# 25] ¶ 13. Plaintiffs allege the Texas statutory scheme governing licensure of schools which wish to teach African hair braiding is unconstitutionаl as applied and violative of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
A. Plaintiff Isis Brantley’s Braiding Activities
Plaintiff Isis Brantley is an African hair braider who has, for the past thirty-two years, made her living braiding African hair. Brantley holds a Texas hair braiding license, may legally braid hair for compensation, and provides hair braiding services to the public through her sole proprietorship, Plaintiff Isis Ornamentations and Natural Hair Care Consultant d/b/a The Institute of Ancestral Braiding (the Institute),
B. Texas’s Regulatory Scheme
African hair braiding is regulated by Texas statutes governing the practice of “barbering.” See Tex. Occ.Code § 1601.002(1)(K). The statutory definition of “barbering” includes several trades, including cutting and washing hair, skin care, and nail care. See id. § 1601.002. Brantley’s African hair brаiding services fall within the portion of the definition that includes “braiding a person’s hair, trimming hair extensions only as applicable to the braiding process, and attaching commercial hair only by braiding and without the use of chemicals or adhesives.” Id. § 1601.002(1)05).
Texas requires persons who perform any type of “barbering” to be licensed as required for the type of barbering performed. See id. § 1601.251. Braiders are required to obtain the “Hair Braiding Specialty Certificate of Registration,” Texas’s hair braiding license.
Only licensed barber schools may teach the practice of barbering as defined by the barbering statutes; thus, only classes taught in licensed barber schools count toward the thirty-five hour hair brаiding curriculum requirement. See Tex. Occ. Code § 1601.001(a)(l-a). A would-be barber school must comply with a number of facility and equipment requirements in order to become licensed. See id. § 1601.353; 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 82.23. Those facility and equipment requirements include the three Plaintiffs have placed in issue: (1) a requirement the school have “at least 10 student workstations that include a chair that reclines, a back bar, and a wall mirror” (the 10-Chair Minimum); (2) a requirement the school install “a sink behind every two workstations” (the 5-Sink Minimum); and (3) a requirement the school have at least 2,000 square feet of floor spаce (the Square-Footage Minimum). Tex. Occ. Code §§ 1601.353(1)(A),
Plaintiffs initiated this action by filing their original Complaint [# 1] on October 1, 2013. Plaintiffs challenge the constitutionality of the Mínimums as applied to them, arguing the Mínimums bear no rational relationship to any legitimate government interest. Defendants are members of the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR), the agency charged with administration of the regulatory scheme, and the Texas Commission of Licensing and Regulation, which governs TDLR and appoints its administrative director. Tex. Occ.Code §§ 51.101, 51.201, 1603.002. All are sued in their official capacities. While Plaintiffs originally asserted claims against Defendants under the Equal Protection Clause, Privileges and Immunities Clause, and Due Process Clause, the. Court dismissed all but the substаntive due process claim in its December 16, 2013 Order [# 10]. Plaintiffs thereafter filed their First Amended Complaint [# 25], and the instant cross-motions for summary judgment followed.
Analysis
I. Legal Standard
A. Summary Judgment
Summary judgment shall be rendered when the pleadings, the discovery and dis
Once the moving party has made an initial showing that there is no evidence to support the nonmoving party’s case, the party opposing the motion must come forward with competent summary judgment evidence of the existence of a genuine fact issue. Matsushita,
“Only disputes over facts that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing laws will properly preclude the entry of summary judgment.” Anderson, All U.S. at 248,
B. Section 1983 — Fourteenth Amendment Substantive Due Process
Section 1983 provides a federal remеdy for violations, under color of state law, of the rights secured by the Constitution, including the right to substantive due process guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. Energy Mgmt. Corp. v. City of Shreveport,
The liberty protected by substantive due process encompasses an individu
II. Application
Plaintiffs claim the Mínimums are irrational as applied to them and argue Defendants have articulated no rational basis for application of the Mínimums Plaintiffs have not negated. Defendants respond the Mínimums have “multiple conceivable rational bases,” Plaintiffs have failed to negate all such conceivable bases, and the Mínimums are therefore valid. At hearing, Defendants candidly admitted the provisions Plaintiffs • challenge may not be sensible or particularly well-crafted, but nevertheless maintained their сonstitutionality, arguing the Texas legislature could have believed its decision to apply the Mínimums to African hair braiding schools served the government’s legitimate interests in protecting public health and safety and in establishing uniformity among barber schools.
In support of their position, Defendants cite the Supreme Court’s decision in Williamson v. Lee Optical, Inc.,
The Oklahoma law may exact a needless, wasteful requirement in many cases. But it is for the legislature, not the courts, to balance the advantages and disadvantages of the new requirement. ... [T]he law need not be in every respect logically consistent with its aims to be constitutional. It is enough that there is an evil at hand for correction, and that it might be thought that the particular legislative measure was a rational way to correct it.
Plaintiffs strenuously refute Defendants’ characterization of the test, noting that while rational basis review does not serve as “a forum for mere disagreement with legislative choices,” it remains a meaningful standard of review, and merely describing the test “does nоt explain what courts actually do when they conduct a rational-basis inquiry.” Pis.’ Opp. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. [# 36] at 7-8 (emphasis in original). The linchpin of Plaintiffs’ argument is St. Joseph Abbey v. Castille,
In considering the agency’s argument, the Fifth Circuit discussed Lee Optical at length, noting Lee Optical “is generally seen as a zеnith of [ ] judicial deference to state economic regulation” and embodied a “willingness to accept post hoc hypotheses” to shield such regulation against constitutional challenge. Id. But, the Fifth Circuit explained, despite its healthy measure of deference to the legislature, Lee Optical “placed emphasis on the ‘evil at hand for correction’ to which the law was aimed” and “insisted] upon a rational basis, which it found.” Id. at 221, 223. Thus, for the St Joseph Abbey panel, “[t]he pivotal inquiry” remained whether a rational basis “that can now be articulated and is not plainly refuted by thе Abbey” supported the Louisiana scheme. Id. at 223. The Fifth Circuit therefore evaluated the agency’s proffered rational bases “informed by [the scheme’s] setting and history,” “Mindful that a hypothetical rationale, even post hoc, cannot be fantasy,” and urging the correct “analysis does not proceed with abstraction for hypothesized ends and means do not include post hoc hypothesized facts.” Id.
The undersigned agrees with Plaintiffs that St. Joseph Abbey’s nuanced articulation and application of the rational basis test controls. See also United States v. Carolene Prods. Co.,
Defendants argue the 10-Chair Minimum has a rational basis because it “ensures that each student has an adequate space in which to work and maintain a clean environment,” which the Court reads as an appeal to public health and safety. Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. [# 33] at 16. While at first blush that justification seems reasonable, it is fatally undermined by another portion of the regulatory scheme. Barber schools “that offer[ ] only the hair braiding curriculum” are exempt from the requirement they have “one barber chair available for each student”; rather, such schоols need provide only an “adequate number” of “chairs.” See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 82.72(h) (exempting schools which teach only hair braiding from the requirements of 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 82.72(c)). If braiding students actually needed barber chairs to have adequate workspace or to maintain a clean environment, it would make no sense to exempt braiding schools from the requirement that students have
The 5-Sink Minimum is irrational as applied to Plaintiffs for similar reasons. Defendants’ proffered justification for the 5-Sink Minimum is that it “relates to the health and safety purpose of the Barber Act by ensuring that every student will have ample access to a sink to practice the necessary disinfecting protocols mandated by the statu[t]es and rules — including those governing hair braiding instruction and practice.” Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. [# 33] at 17 (citing 16 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 82.101, 82.110). Defendants’ justification, however, does not make sense in light of the very statutorily mandated disinfecting rules which they cite. Braiders can satisfy Texas’s sanitation standards for their hands through use of liquid hand sanitizer alone. See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 82.110(a) (“[Hjair braiders shall wash their hands with soap and water, or use a liquid hand sanitizer, prior to performing any services on a client.” (emphasis added)). Further, the statutory scheme does not “require” use of a sink, as Defendants erroneously argue, to clean and disinfect the tools braiders use when braiding clients’ hair. The scheme defines “[c]lean or cleansing” as “[wjashing with liquid soap and water, detergent, antiseptics, or other adequate methods to remove all visible debris or residue” and “[djisinfect or disinfection” as “[t]he use of chemicals to destroy pathogens ... to render an item safe for handling, use, and disposal[J” See id. §§ 82.100(2)-(3). Nowhere does the scheme mandate use of a sink to clean or disinfect.
The irrationality of the 5-Sink Minimum as applied to Plaintiffs becomes even more apparent in light of the fact the Institute, as a licensed braiding salon, is not required to provide sinks for its braiders to use while actually braiding clients’ hair.
Finally, Defendants argue the Square-Footage Minimum (and, to some extent, the 10-Chair Minimum) rationally relates to the government’s interest in promoting “effective and efficient inspection of facilities” by ensuring the state will not be required to inspect many small barber schools for compliance with state law. Relatedly, Defendants contend uniform barber school size ensures “schools ... may be able to offer a ‘broader range of services that better serve consumer needs.’ ” Def.’s Reply [# 39] at 5 (quoting Greater Hous. Small Taxicab Owners Ass’n v. City
Concerning Defendants’ argument regarding inspection of facilities, the Court is not persuaded concern regarding inspections was an “ ‘evil at hand for correction’ to which the [Square-Footage (or 10-Chair) Minimum] was aimed.” See St. Joseph Abbey, 712 F.3d at 221. Defendants point to a Texas House Research Organization bill analysis which, in 2005, concluded authority to administer the cosmetology and barbering regulations should be transferred to the TDLR from the Texas Cosmetology Commission (TCC) and the State Board of Barber Examiners (SBBE), the agencies then responsible for administering the scheme, because annual health and safety inspections were backlogged under the TCC and SBBE. See Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. [# 33-2], Ex. 2 (Bill Analysis) at 6-7. But the backlog cited by the bill analysis had nothing to. do with the number or size of barber schools that needed to be inspected. Rather, the bill analysis points to problems with TCC and SBBE management — “gross fiscal mismanagement” and “inadequate enforcement authority,” among others — as reasons the backlog devеloped, and concludes “a well managed agency such as TDLR .... would resolve th[ose] operational deficiencies[.]” Id.
Moreover, the current regulatory scheme as it relates to inspections casts serious doubt upon Defendants’ hypothesized claim that were small braiding schools permitted to enter the market, an inspection backlog would result. Licensed barber schools are required to pay the fées associated with their own state inspections, 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 82.80(h), and the TDLR sets fees “in amounts that will cover [TDLR’s] costs and ensurе [TDLR] has adequate resources to operate effectively and efficiently.” 38 Tex. Reg. 9519 (Dec. 27, 2013). Further, TDLR is authorized to contract with outside inspectors to perform school inspections. Tex. Occ.Code § 1603.1045. Consequently, as Plaintiffs point .out, TDLR is permitted to require the schools being inspected to pay any costs associated with hiring sufficient personnel to conduct inspections.
Further, Defendants’ argument larger schools maybe able to offer a broader range of services to consumers is irrational in light of the facts before the Court for two reasons. First, at hearing, the Court asked Defendants whether they could provide a single example of a Texas barber school which, like the Institute, teaches solely African hair braiding, yet also complies with the Mínimums. Defendants could not. The Court afforded Defendants ten days to come up with such an example. Still, Defendants could not. The absence of any such schools is troubling, as the Texas regulatory scheme explicitly contemplates the existence of barber schools which teach solely.the thirty-five hour hair braiding curriсulum. Given the logical disconnect inherent in a scheme which contemplates the existence of hair braiding schools but makes it prohibitively difficult for a hair braiding school to enter the market in hair braiding instruction, it appears to the Court that as applied to Plaintiffs, the Mínimums, rather than logically connecting means and ends, shoehorn two unlike professions “into a single, identical mold, by treating hair braiders — who perform a very distinct set of services — as if they were [barbers].” See Clayton v. Steinagel,
Second, Plaintiffs’ exclusion from the market in braiding instruction plainly 'does not serve cоnsumer needs. In her affidavit, Brantley testifies many of her students have attended a 35-hour braiding program at a barber school and thereafter enroll at the Institute to actually learn how to braid, “not having learned to braid hair properly at the barber school.” Pls.’s Mot. Summ. J. [# 34-1] (Brantley Ai'f.) ¶ 17. This is perhaps unsurprising, given that as of March 2014, Texas had issued zero individual hair braiding instructors’ licenses, see Pls.’s Mot. Summ. J. [# 34-2], Ex. 4 (Def. Kuntz’s Answers to Pis.’ First Interrogs.) at 8, and braiding is not part of the general barbering licensure curriculum, see 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 81.120(d).
Attempting to demonstrate why closing the market in braiding instruction to Plaintiffs does not demonstrate irrationаlity, Defendants cite Greater Houston Small Taxicab Company Owners Association v. City of Houston, in which the Fifth Circuit found it rational for the city to give preferential treatment in awarding individual driver permits to large taxicab companies over small ones because large companies could better serve consumer needs, effectively preventing small companies from expanding.
Given all of the above, it is the opinion •of the Court acceptance of the argument Defendants urge requires the type of analysis specifically rejected by St. Joseph Abbey: one which “proceed[s] with abstraction for hypothesized ends” and where an explanation of means “inelude[s] post hoc hypothesized facts.”
Conclusion
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED that Plaintiffs Isis Brantley and Isis Ornamentations and Natural Hair Care Consultant d/b/a The Institute of Ancestral Braiding’s claim concerning the constitutionality of Texas Occupational Code § 1601.353(1)(B) is DISMISSED as unripe;
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs Isis Brantley and Isis Ornamentations and Natural Hair Care Consultant d/b/a The Institute of Ancestral Braiding’s Motion for Summary Judgment [# 34] is DENIED as to the claim dismissed above and GRANTED in all other respects; and
IT IS FINALLY ORDERED that Defendants William H. Kuntz, Jr., Mike Aris
Notes
. Defendants argue the Institute has no standing. But Defendants concede Brantley does, and the Court therefore “need not consider
. The statutory scheme distinguishes between certificates, licenses, and permits. See id. § 1601.251. In this Order, the Court refers to all relevant certifications as licеnses.
. The regulations applicable to cosmetologists, rather than barbers, also allow persons to apply for a hair braiding license. See 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 83.20(e). Obtainment of the license under the cosmetology regulations requires completion of the same thirty-five
. In addition to the 2,000 square-foot provision, Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint challenges Tex. Occ. Code § 1601.353(1)(B), which imposes a 1,000 square-foot minimum on barber schools located in municipalities with populations of 50,000 or fewer. Plaintiffs represented at hearing, however, that the 2.000-square-foot provision, and not the 1.000-squarerfoot provision, is applicable to the Institute in its present location. Plaintiffs’ challenge to Tex. Occ.Code § 1601.353(1)(B) is therefore DISMISSED sua sponte as unripe.
. Braiding salons are required to make "[h]and washing facilities, including hot and cold running water” available to their employees. 16 Tex Admin. Code § 82.102(k). There is no minimum associated with this requirement, and it is undisputed the Institute contains a bathroom with a sink and hot and cold running water.
