REQUESTED BY: Dear Senator Landis:
We are in receipt of your letter in which you request an opinion as to the constitutionality of Neb.Rev.Stat.
"No person, partnership, or corporation, not holding a live permit issued under the provisions of section
1-136 , shall hold himself or itself out to the public as an accountant or auditor by use of either or both of such words on any sign, card, letterhead, or in any advertisement or directory, without indicating thereon or therein that such person, partnership, or corporation does not hold such a permit; Provided, that this section shall not prohibit any officer, employee, partner, or principal of any organization from describing himself by the position, title, or office he holds in such organization nor any act of any public official or public employee in the performance of his duties as such."
You inform us that the Board of Accountancy has threatened action against two (2) Lincoln businessmen because they are admittedly holding themselves out to be `Accountants' by way of several means of advertisement when in fact they do not hold a permit pursuant to Neb.Rev.Stat. §
We first wish to emphasize that the statute does not per se prohibit the use of the terms `Accountant or Auditor' by nonlicensed individuals but instead requires that any person who is not so licensed must affirmatively disclose that fact. This manner of regulation chosen by the Legislature is of critical importance to our determination as will be noted below.
The use of the terms `Accountant or Auditor' by persons engaged in that general area of business would most certainly appear to be that type of commercial speech which has been given First Amendment protection. Bates v. State Barof Arizona,
Most recently the Maryland Court of Appeals has had the opportunity to test the constitutional firmness of a statute which appears at first glance to be similar to Neb.Rev.Stat. §
Unlike the regulatory approach taken by the State of Maryland in Comprehensive etc. v. Maryland State Board,supra, the Unicameral has chosen to not totally ban the use of the terms `Accountant and Auditor' by those not so licensed but instead has required that unlicensed persons using those terms make an affirmative disclosure that they do not hold a permit pursuant to Neb.Rev.Stat. §
We believe that it could be effectively argued that the unrestricted use of the titles `Accountant' or `Auditor' by an unlicensed person could in fact cause confusion which would be detrimental to the public and therefore the State regulation of those terms is rationally related to a legitimate state interest. Since the `speech' at issue here is `commercial' it is subject to `reasonable regulation that serves a legitimate public interest.' Bigelow v. Virginia,
It is our opinion that should Neb.Rev.Stat. §
