The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by Mary E. Keith, who operates in Wichita a place which she styles “Ladies’ Hairdressing and Beauty Parlors,” against the State Barber Board and others, to prevent their requiring her to comply with the regulations imposed upon barbers. She was refused relief, and appeals.
The trial court found upon sufficient evidence that the plaintiff in her beauty parlor shop had been doing all of these different kinds of work which barbers in general do: cutting hair, massaging the face, clipping hair with barber clippers, singeing the hair, giving tonics, shampooing, manicuring; that these activities were not merely incidental but were important features of the business, coordinating with other parts of it. The defendants argue that in order for a person to be engaged in the occupation of a barber it is not necessary that he should perform all its usual functions — that if -he confined his activities to shaving or even to cutting hair he might nevertheless be practicing that calling; that all the reasons for regulating any barber shop apply with equal force to such an establishment as that conducted by the plaintiff; and that a principal purpose of the statute is to prevent the spread of communicable disease, precautions to which end are as necessary in the one case as in the other.
The argument is plausible, but we think it is overcome by these considerations: Violation of the statute is punishable by both fine and imprisonment, and its provisions must be construed with some degree of strictness on that account. There may be difficulty in stating the precise difference between the two, but we do’not think the use of the term barber shop fairly indicates or suggests the kind of place kept by the plaintiff. Such places are not ordinarily spoken of as barber shops, nor those working therein as barbers. If the
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to render judgment for the plaintiff.