If the general question *Page 425 of the power of the Legislature to regulate prices is to be settled once and for all by the decision in this case, it be hard to overestimate the importance of the question presented. But I think the question here presented is much narrower in its scope than the question discussed in the able opinions of Mr. Presiding Justice ELLIS and Mr. Justice BUFORD.
Section 12 of Chapter 16799 shows that the regulatory board set up in the Act is required to fix minimum prices "generally throughout the State of Florida or in any county thereof." This section also provides that, "The board shall have authority to fix a minimum price of a barber's work in each county in the State of Florida, or may in its discretion fix a uniform minimum price for barber work to run throughout the State of Florida."
The Court judicially knows that conditions vary so much in different portions of the State and in different portions of the same county or city as to make it impossible to fix a fair reasonable minimum price for barber work on the basis required by the section of the statute quoted from.
The pleadings in this case state that the board of barber examiners, after investigating conditions, made an order fixing minimum prices to be charged for barbering services in Duval County, failing, however, to state what those prices were. But in the brief filed in behalf of the respondents and on the oral argument it was conceded by counsel for both sides that such order fixed the minimum price of haircuts at 40 cents, shaves 20 cents, plain shampoos 40 cents, medicated shampoos 75 cents, and other prices for the various kinds of barber services. The price so fixed for the entire county of Duval may have been entirely reasonable as minimum prices to be charged in the expensively equipped and gleaming white barber shops located in the central *Page 426 business district of Jacksonville, where rents are high and where the patrons of the shops so located are able to pay such prices, and probably even more; whereas those prices would be unreasonably high to be charged by the barbers in the poorer sections of the city where rents are much lower, and this would probably be likewise the case in the smaller towns of Duval county.
This thought is further illustrated by a statement made in the oral argument by counsel for the relator. In the course of his argument, he stated in substance that the relator was a colored man who had been in the barber business for many years and was a thoroughly competent barber; that his shop was located in a section of the city inhabited almost entirely by people of small means, most of whom were poor and not able to pay the minimum price thus fixed by the barber board for the entire county, and that it would practically destroy the relator's business and work a hardship upon his patrons if he were compelled to charge such prices.
The impossibility of fixing fair and reasonable minimum prices for barber work on a flat rate basis for an entire county would of course apply with greater force to an attempt to fix such prices for the entire state. Therefore, no matter how laudable the purpose of the statute, this section of the statute, in the form enacted by the Legislature, is incapable of being put into practical operation without denying to relator and many other barbers in the state the equal protection of the laws.
The field within which the police powers of the state may be exercised without unduly encroaching upon those fundamental personal and property rights of the individual citizen which are protected by both our state and national Constitutions, should be marked out and established, not by *Page 427 attempt to lay down any general rule which would be applicable in all cases, and certainly not by any speculative theorizing, but the line should be drawn step by step by the careful and practical decision of specific cases as they arise. It is important therefore that the court go no further than is absolutely necessary in each particular case. By the gradual process of judicial inclusion and exclusion, the courts can much better apply the fundamental law to legislative Acts designed to regulate business, labor and agriculture, and the professions, by considering each case on its merits as it arises, fairly and impartially facing the facts, the realities, of each situation as it is presented, than by any intensive effort to lay down general rules to govern all future cases that may come up.
The great difficulty of drawing the line in cases of this kind is illustrated by the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. Thus, in Holden v. Hardy,
In the case of Tyson Bro. v. Banton,
"The attitude in which we should approach new problems in the field of price regulation was indicated in German Alliance Ins. Co. v. Kansas,
Finally, in the recent New York Milk case, Nebbia v. New York, cited in both the opinions of Mr. Presiding Justice ELLIS and Mr. Justice BUFORD, the Court, as we have seen, abandoned its previous views that price fixing could not be employed as a means of public regulation of industry, unless those industries were in effect public utilities.
In the opinion of Mr. Presiding Justice ELLIS, as I understand it, it is intimated that the learned Justice might uphold the validity of Section 12 of this statute if it dealt with a "paramount" industry. Whether the sale of milk in a state like New York, which contains America's largest city, might be deemed a paramount industry is perhaps a somewhat debatable question. But undoubtedly, the Supreme Court held that the milk business was of such vital importance to the people of the State of New York as to justify the Legislature in fixing minimum and maximum prices for that very necessary product, in order to remedy conditions of over-supply, destructive competition and low prices. It was somewhat on this basis that this Court in the case of Earle v. Dade County,
"It must be admitted that the policy of promoting the progress and welfare of the great basic agricultural industry of our country, upon which the prosperity and welfare of all classes depends, by the establishment and maintenance of agricultural departments, in both the state and national governments, has long since became a well established public policy. While possibly this policy may not be rested upon an absolute public necessity, it may very probably be justly based upon the vital interest of the public in the proper functioning of the agricultural interests."
The mere fact that the statute now under consideration deals with a comparatively small business or occupation, there being only some 3,700 active registered barbers in the State, does not negative the fact that it is a business which has a very real relation to the public health and I do not think that there is any doubt that the Legislature has the power to regulate such a business. In the Act of 1931, various provisions were incorporated which were designed to raise the standard of barbering work in this State, even to the extent of providing certain educational qualifications *Page 432 for apprentices, and examination before registration, and schools of barbering wherein the scientific functions of barbering, physiology, hygiene, elementary chemistry relating to sterilization and antiseptic massage and manipulation of the muscles of the face, neck, scalp, etc., should be taught. Each applicant for a certificate of registration was required to pass a satisfactory examination. The validity of this Act, Chapter 14650, has been upheld against such attacks as have heretofore been made, and I am inclined to think that both that statute and the one now under review here were and are in their general features within the power of the Legislature to adopt.
The constitutional provision regarding the equal protection of the law does not prohibit legislation which is limited either in the object to which it is directed or by the territory within which it is to operate. It merely requires that all persons subject to such legislation shall be treated alike, under like circumstances and conditions, both in privileges conferred and liabilities imposed. It is not infringed by legislation which applies only to those persons falling within a specific class, if it applies alike to all persons within such class, and reasonable grounds exist for making a distinction between those who fall within such class and those who do not. Cooley's Constitutional Limitation, page 824-25; DiLustro v. Penton,
While freely admitting that it is difficult to construe or apply to new circumstances as they arise Section 1 of the Declaration of Rights in our Constitution and the due process and equal protection clauses of the Federal Constitution, and while I am inclined to agree in the main with the reasoning contained in Mr. Justice BUFORD'S opinion, I am clearly of the opinion that Section 12 of Chapter 16799, as it appears before us in this Act, is in conflict with those *Page 433 provisions of the Constitution, state and national, because of the arbitrary county wide and state wide features of said price-fixing section, as discussed in the beginning of this opinion. I therefore concur in the granting of the peremptory writ.