Here's an expansion on Michael Speer's answer to take it a few steps further:
An instance method decorator which takes arguments and acts on a function with arguments and a return value.
class Test(object):
    "Prints if x == y. Throws an error otherwise."
    def __init__(self, x):
        self.x = x
    def _outer_decorator(y):
        def _decorator(foo):
            def magic(self, *args, **kwargs) :
                print("start magic")
                if self.x == y:
                    return foo(self, *args, **kwargs)
                else:
                    raise ValueError("x ({}) != y ({})".format(self.x, y))
                print("end magic")
            return magic
        return _decorator
    @_outer_decorator(y=3)
    def bar(self, *args, **kwargs) :
        print("normal call")
        print("args: {}".format(args))
        print("kwargs: {}".format(kwargs))
        return 27
And then
In [2]:
    test = Test(3)
    test.bar(
        13,
        'Test',
        q=9,
        lollipop=[1,2,3]
    )
    
    start magic
    normal call
    args: (13, 'Test')
    kwargs: {'q': 9, 'lollipop': [1, 2, 3]}
Out[2]:
    27
In [3]:
    test = Test(4)
    test.bar(
        13,
        'Test',
        q=9,
        lollipop=[1,2,3]
    )
    
    start magic
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    ValueError                                Traceback (most recent call last)
    <ipython-input-3-576146b3d37e> in <module>()
          4     'Test',
          5     q=9,
    ----> 6     lollipop=[1,2,3]
          7 )
    <ipython-input-1-428f22ac6c9b> in magic(self, *args, **kwargs)
         11                     return foo(self, *args, **kwargs)
         12                 else:
    ---> 13                     raise ValueError("x ({}) != y ({})".format(self.x, y))
         14                 print("end magic")
         15             return magic
    ValueError: x (4) != y (3)