Ms. Debra Norton, Director State Board of Cosmetology 1515 West 7th Street-Room 400 Little Rock, AR 72201-3988
Dear Ms. Norton:
This is in response to your request for an opinion regarding the Cosmetology Act ("Act") which is codified as A.C.A.
This chapter does not prohibit the recommendation, demonstration, administration, or sale of cosmetics by any person not claiming to be a cosmetician.
The first rule in determining the meaning of a statute is to construe it just as it reads, giving words their ordinary and usually accepted meaning in common usage. Bolden v. Watt,
Reference may thus reasonably be made in this instance to Webster's Dictionary in construing the phrase "recommendation, demonstration, administration, or sale of cosmetics" under A.C.A.
"Recommendation" is "the act of recommending", and the term "recommend" in Webster's means:
"1 a: to present as worthy of acceptance or trial
b: to urge the fitness of. . . ." Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary 715 (1972). "Demonstration" is defined as
"1: an outward expression or display
2: an act, process, or means of demonstrating to the intelligence. . .
b: a showing to a prospective buyer of the merits of a product. . . ." Webster's at 220. "Administration" is the act or process of administering", and the definition of "administer" includes:
1: to superintend the execution, use or conduct of
2a: to mete out: DISPENSE
b: to give ritually
c: to give remedially. . . .
Id. at 12.
It is my opinion that a court would in all likelihood look to these definitions in determining the extent of the exemption under Section
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker.
[1] The definitional section of the Act states that the "art of cosmetology" includes, inter alia, "[m]assaging, cleaning, or stimulating the scalp, face, neck, arms, bust, or upper part of the human body. . . . with or without the use of cosmetic preparations. . . ." (A.C.A.
