Edward J. Gurry seeks review of a decision of the Board of Public Accountancy (board) that he surrender for two years his certificate and license to practice as a certified public accountant. The case reaches us pursuant to a reservation and report by a single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court for Suffolk County. We affirm the board’s order suspending Gurry’s certificate and license for two years.
*119 The board issued its decision suspending Gurry’s certificate and license after Lee Kennedy Co., Inc. (company), brought a complaint in July, 1982. The board held a hearing on the complaint and issued its decision on July 14, 1983, in which it concluded that Gurry had made an unauthorized appropriation of funds from the company, which constituted “discreditable conduct” for a certified public accountant in violation of 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1) (1979).
After Gurry filed a complaint pursuant to G. L. c. 30A, § 14, in the Superior Court seeking review of the board’s order suspending his certificate and license to practice as a public accountant, a single justice ordered that the matter be transferred to the Supreme Judicial Court for Suffolk County. 1 After a hearing, the single justice reserved and reported the case to the full court, and allowed Gurry’s motion for a preliminary injunction to stay the board’s action.
Gurry argues that we should overturn the board’s decision because the suspension was for conduct unrelated to the profession of public accounting and, therefore, the board exceeded its authority under G. L. c. 112, § 87C (a). Gurry contends, alternatively, that the regulation proscribing discreditable conduct by a certified public accountant is impermissibly vague in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The board argues that the single justice erred in staying the board’s decision pending review by this court, because G. L. c. 112, § 64, prohibits a stay prior to entry of a final judgment revising or reversing the board’s decision.
We conclude that the board acted within its authority under G. L. c. 112, § 87C (a), in suspending Gurry. Furthermore, we hold that the board’s regulatory standard proscribing “discreditable conduct,” as applied in this case, is not impermissibly vague in violation of due process. We discuss but need not decide the board’s challenge to the issuance of the stay by the single justice.
*120 Gurry had been licensed as a certified public accountant by the Commonwealth since 1972. In 1980, the company became a client of Gurry, O’Neill & Company, the accounting firm in which Gurry was the only active partner. In October, 1980, after acting as the outside accountant for the company for about two months, Gurry was hired as an employee with the title “treasurer.” As treasurer, Gurry organized and supervised the bookkeeping and financial planning functions for the company. Gurry’s authority included the right to issue checks on the company account. 2 Gurry, O’Neill & Company continued to act as the outside accountant for the company and its related ventures until April or May, 1981.
On April 3, 1981, Gurry wrote a check for $11,000 on the company account payable to himself. Gurry testified that he wrote the check because Lee Kennedy had authorized him to borrow $20,000 from company funds with no repayment schedule. Kennedy testified, however, that he had authorized a loan of $3,000 for a few days only, and that initially he knew nothing of the April check. It was brought to his attention by the firm’s bookkeeper, Catherine Graham.
Sometime before May 1,1981, Gurry wrote a personal check dated May 1, 1981, for the full amount of the April “loan.” On May 2, 1981, a second check for $11,000 was issued to Gurry on the company account. This check was also unauthorized and was signed with Graham’s signature plate. Gurry testified that Graham had prepared it, but Graham denied this. In June, Gurry repaid $1,000 of the $11,000 that he had “borrowed.”
On July 1, 1981, Kennedy directed a memorandum to Gurry in which he demanded full repayment by July 15, 1981, and informed him that “[u]nder no circumstances is anyone authorized or allowed to write checks without [Graham’s] signature or my signature.” Kennedy’s secretary testified that she *121 typed the memorandum on July 1, 1981, and delivered it to Gurry personally. Gurry testified that he never received the memorandum.
On July 14, 1981, a check for $10,000 was issued to Gurry on the company account. Gurry testified that he had prepared this check and used Graham’s signature plate. Graham testified that, unlike the first and second checks, the July 14 check was not taken from the top of the checkbook, but rather was taken out of sequence, so that she did not discover its disappearance until several days later through an interim bank statement. Graham and Kennedy testified that, when Kennedy learned of the July 14 check, he went directly to Gurry’s office, informed him that he was fired, and obtained a promissory note for the $10,000. 3 The board found that Gurry had caused the July 14 check to be issued without authority.
1. The board’s authority. Gurry argues that the board exceeded its authority under G. L. c. 112, § 87C (a), because it suspended him for conduct unrelated to the practice of public accounting. In its July 14, 1983, decision, the board found that Gurry had made an unauthorized appropriation of funds from his employer, the company. The board concluded that this conduct constituted “an act discreditable to the profession [of public accounting]” in violation of 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1). The board promulgated § 3.05(1) under, its power to adopt “such rules of professional conduct as may be instrumental in fixing and maintaining high standards of integrity and dignity in the profession of public accounting.” G. L. c. 112, § 87C (a), as appearing in St. 1963, c. 663, § 2. The board suspended Gurry’s license for two years under its power to “revoke or suspend any certificate . . . [for] violation of a rule of professional conduct promulgated by the board under [§ 87C (a)].” G. L. c. 112, § 87C (h) (4), as appearing in *122 St. 1963, c. 663, § 2. Gurry contends that the conduct for which he was disciplined did not occur while he was practicing as a certified public accountant, but rather occurred when he was acting as an employee, in the capacity of treasurer, of the company and its related ventures. Gurry does not challenge the factual basis for the board’s finding that he made an unauthorized appropriation of funds, 4 but rather argues, in effect, that, when acting as treasurer of the company, he was outside the scope of the board’s disciplinary authority. We disagree.
We have considered the question of the scope of a regulatory board’s authority in several recent cases involving other professions. In response to appeals from decisions of the Board of Registration in Medicine, we have ruled that that board has broad disciplinary authority. See, e.g.,
Raymond
v.
Board of Registration in Medicine,
In Raymond, supra at 712, we held that the board “correctly found that Raymond’s conviction reasonably called into question his ability to practice medicine.” Similarly, we upheld the board’s decision in Levy, supra at 526, because we agreed “with the Board’s determination that the crimes of which Levy was convicted are closely related to the practice of medicine.” There, the board had revoked Levy’s license after he had been convicted of grand larceny from the Department of Public Welfare and of submitting false data to the Rate Setting Commission in connection with his ownership and management of eleven nursing homes. We reasoned that “an intentional misdeed relating to third-party payors [of medical expenses] reflects adversely on a physician’s fitness to practice medicine.” Id. at 527. We find ample basis in the record in the instant case to support the board’s finding that Gurry’s unauthorized appropriation of the company’s funds reflected adversely on his fitness to practice as a public accountant and, therefore, constituted an act discreditable to the profession of public accountancy.
Gurry was initially retained by the company in 1980 when the company became a client of Gurry, O’Neill & Company. After acting as the company’s outside accountant for a few months, Gurry was hired as treasurer of the company. In this capacity he organized and supervised the bookkeeping and financial planning functions of the company. By July, 1981, the month in which Gurry made the appropriation found by the board to be unauthorized, another accounting firm had been hired to act as outside accountant for the company. Gurry’s responsibilities at the time of the appropriation, however, included supervision of the company ’ s financial planning requirements. Gurry argues that, even though he was hired initially to act as the company’s outside accountant and continued to perform financial services for the company at the time of the appropriation, he was not engaged in the practice of public accounting and therefore not within the board’s jurisdiction. It is not necessary to decide whether Gurry was practicing as *124 a public accountant when acting as treasurer, because the close nexus between his unauthorized appropriation from the company and his professional status as a public accountant brings him within the board’s authority so that the board could properly regulate his conduct.
In adopting regulations under G. L. c. 112, § 87C, the board must comply with the Legislature’s prescription that the rules be “instrumental in fixing and maintaining high standards of integrity and dignity in the profession of public accounting.” G. L. c. 112, § 87C {a). The regulation at issue subjects public accountants to board discipline for acts “discreditable to the profession.” 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1). This provision is consistent with the statutory requirement that public accountants be “of good moral character” as a prerequisite to certification. See G. L. c. 112, § 87A (a). It is, moreover, consistent with statutory provisions which recognize the board’s power to discipline public accountants for certain acts involving dishonesty, fraud, or deceit. See G. L. c. 112, § 87C (b) (1), (2), (6). The statutory provisions of § 87C (b) are not the exclusive grounds for which the board may discipline a public accountant. Under G. L. c. 112, § 87C (b) (4), the board may promulgate its own rules of professional conduct, of which 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1) is an example.
We conclude that the board’s application of 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1) to discipline Gurry was rationally related to accomplishing the legislative purpose of protecting the public welfare. See
Consolidated Cigar Corp.
v.
Department of Pub. Health,
Gurry’s argument receives no support from
Finkelstein
v.
Board of Registration in Optometry,
2.
Constitutionality of 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1).
As a preliminary matter, the board contends that we should refrain from addressing the merits of the constitutional claim because Gurry failed to raise it during the hearing before the board. “The general rule is that it is too late to raise a claim before a reviewing court if the point had not been raised before the administrative agency.”
M. H. Gordon & Son
v.
Alcoholic Beverages Control Comm’n,
We address the merits of Gurry’s claim that 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1) is unconstitutionally vague so that its application to him violated his due process rights. The board found that Gurry had made an unauthorized appropriation of $10,000 of the company’s funds, and concluded that this constituted “discreditable conduct for a certified public accountant” in violation of G. L. c. 112, § 87C (b) (4), and 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1). Gurry contends that the standard “an act discreditable to the profession” in § 3.05(1) is not sufficiently specific and therefore is unconstitutionally vague. We conclude that, as a rule which regulates business activities, 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1) is not penal in nature, does not affect First *127 Amendment rights, and is not unconstitutionally vague as applied in this case.
“A law is void for vagueness if persons ‘of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application. ’ ”
Caswell
v.
Licensing Comm’n for Brockton,
Revocation or suspension of a physician’s license is not penal or criminal in nature. See
Arthurs
v.
Board of Registration in Medicine,
“As a general matter, a statute which merely regulates business interests need not specify with great particularity the relevant considerations with respect to whether to revoke a license. . . . It is enough that the board exercise its discretion fairly and not act in an arbitrary and capricious manner.” (Citations omitted.) LaPointe, supra at 462. The board promulgated 252 Code Mass. Regs. § 3.05(1) pursuant to its statutory objectives of “maintaining high standards of integrity and dignity in the profession of public accounting,” G. L. c. 112, § 87C (a), and of ensuring that public accountants are “of good moral character.” G. L. c. 112, § 87A (a) (4). Gurry’s conduct appears to raise grave doubt as to his trustworthiness in financial matters. The board could reasonably find that a two-year suspension for the unauthorized appropriation was consistent with its responsibility to maintain “high standards of integrity and dignity in the profession.” 7
3. Interim stay. Because the issue has become moot, it is not necessary for us to address the board’s argument that, under G. L. c. 112, § 64, the single justice erred in staying its decision pending review by this court. Some additional comments for the guidance of single justices of this court are, however, appropriate. We do not read G. L. c. 112, § 64, as prohibiting the issuance of a temporary stay in all circumstances.
General Laws c. 112, § 64, as amended by St. 1954, c. 681, § 9, provides, in part: “The supreme judicial court, upon petition of a person whose certificate, registration, license or authority has been suspended, revoked or cancelled, may enter
*129
a decree revising or reversing the decision of the board, in accordance with the standards for review provided in [G. L. c. 30A, § 14 (7)] . . . .” It has long been the tradition in the Commonwealth that such petitions be reviewed by a single justice who may then enter a judgment affirming, revising, or reversing the board’s decision. See, e.g.,
Arthurs
v.
Board of Registration in Medicine,
Section 64 further provides, in relevant part, that “prior to the entry of [a decree revising or reversing the board’s decision], no order shall be made or entered by the court to stay or supersede any suspension, revocation or cancellation of any such certificate, registration, license or authority.” The board argues that the temporary stay could be valid only if it rested upon a finding that § 64 is unconstitutional. We do not read § 64 so narrowly.
In
Flynn
v.
Board of Registration in Optometry,
Section 64 must be read consistently with the court’s inherent power to provide whatever relief is appropriate to protect constitutional rights. As we recognized in Flynn, supra at 33, “there may be situations where the enforcement of an administrative order may be challenged as denying due process by reason of the fact that no stay is permitted pending a review by the courts.” When a petitioner presents a bona fide claim that the board’s decision violates his constitutional rights, interim relief may be appropriate.
In Flynn, supra at 34, we left open the question whether an interim stay might be appropriate when the petitioner claims a violation of procedural due process at the hearing provided by the board. Although this issue is not now before us, we would be reluctant to conclude that a single justice may not issue a temporary stay when the petitioner raises a substantial procedural due process claim in which the prerequisites for issuing equitable relief are otherwise present.
The action is remanded to the single justice with directions to enter a judgment affirming the decision of the board.
So ordered.
Notes
In its decision the board stated: “You are hereby informed of your right, pursuant to Section 14 of Chapter 30A of the General Laws, to file a petition for judicial review of this decision in Superior Court within thirty days of receipt of this decision.” The Supreme Judicial Court is the appropriate court for such petitions. G. L. c. 112, § 64.
Gurry’s signature was one of three embossed on signature plates for use in a check signing machine. Lee Kennedy, the company president, and Catherine Graham, the bookkeeper, were the other authorized check writers with signature plates.
In its brief, the board states that in September, 1981, a civil action was brought by the company’s insurance carrier after it paid the company’s claim under a policy for fraudulent or dishonest acts by an employee. The action was filed in the Superior Court in Plymouth County in order to recover the loan monies. On March 31, 1983, the loan was repaid, after an execution had been issued.
The evidence presented by Gurry at the hearing conflicted somewhat with the testimony of Kennedy and Graham. Gurry contends that Kennedy had authorized $20,000 in loans and that he had never received a memorandum from Kennedy revoking Gurry’s authority to write checks. Gurry does not argue on appeal, however, that the board’s finding that he made an unauthorized appropriation of funds is not supported by substantial evidence in the record.
The record indicates that, while serving as treasurer of the company, Gurry continued to act as outside accountant to at least two real estate holding companies related to the company. Further, Gurry, O’Neill & Company continued to prepare financial compilations for the company at least until May, 1981.
Gurry’s reliance on
Saxon Coffee Shop, Inc.
v.
Boston Licensing Bd.,
Gurry argues that the board’s decision is arbitrary and capricious in light of its findings in other recent disciplinary cases. We conclude that there is an insufficient showing in the record to permit a determination of unfair discrimination or disparity in the board’s disciplinary rulings.
