New Mexico Interior Design
Sherry Franzoy and Caryn Armijo v. Barbara Templeman
Defeating New Mexico’s “Titling” Law
New Mexico interior designers are now protected from the state’s interference in their business and speech, thanks to the Institute for Justice’s successful challenge to the state’s “title” restriction. The title law prevented individuals who practice interior design from calling themselves interior designers unless they first obtained an expensive and increasingly difficult-to-secure government license.
Importantly, the law did not prevent anyone from working as an interior designer. Instead, the law achieved its anti-competitive purpose by dictating who could call themselves “interior designers” or use the term “interior design” to describe what they do. Such “titling laws” are part of a larger effort by certain members of the interior design community to suppress competition by suffocating would-be competitors with government regulations.
On September 7, 2006, IJ filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico on behalf of two entrepreneurs challenging the New Mexico Interior Design Board’s censorship law as a violation of free speech rights protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. New Mexico declined to defend its blatantly unconstitutional law, and instead asked the legislature to amend the title law so that it would no longer interfere with the First Amendment. The amendment successfully passed into law, and the Institute dismissed its lawsuit on August 13, 2007.