In each of these two cases we must determine whether there may be review under the State Administrative Procedure Act (G. L. c. 30A, § 14, as amended through St. 1957, c. 193, § 1) of the board’s denial of an application for a permit to conduct a retail drug store. See G. L. c. 112, § 38, as amended by St. 1934, c. 236, 2 and § 39, as amended through St. 1953, c. 281. Section 39 was amended after the hearing before the board on May 23, 1962, in the Cohen case (fn. 1), but before the board hearing on December 3,1963, in the Milligan case. See St. 1962, c. 695, and St. 1963, c. 488. Portions of § 39, as amended in 1962, indicating changes from the earlier form of the section, are set out in the margin. 3
1. General Laws c. 30A, § 1 (1), defines “ [a] djudica-tory proceeding” as “a proceeding before an agency in which the legal rights, duties or privileges of specifically named persons are required by constitutional right or by any provision of the General Laws to be determined after opportunity for an agency hearing” (emphasis supplied). The board, at least in respect of proceedings under c. 112, §§ 40 and 42A (see fn. 3, last sentence), is expressly authorized to conduct adjudicatory proceedings, and thus is clearly an “ [a]gency” within the definition of c. 30A, § 1 (2). It was so treated in the earlier Cohen case, see fn. 1. Chapter 30A, § 14, provides for “judicial review,” in accordance with that section, of “a final decision of any agency in an adjudicatory proceeding” (emphasis supplied). The principal issue is whether the proceedings before the board were adjudicatory proceedings.
2. There is growing recognition (1) that administrative decisions on applications for licenses and permits to engage in a lawful occupation (either generally or at a particular place) directly affect the personal rights, property, or economic interests of the applicant, and (2) that fundamental considerations of fairness require such decisions (particularly those resting upon adjudications of facts) to be made objectively, under reasonable procedures, and with appropriate opportunity for judicial review. See Davis, Administrative Law Treatise (1958 ed., hereinafter Davis, op. cit.), §§ 7.01-7.20, revising an earlier article, The Requirement of a Trial-Type Hearing, 70 Harv. L. Rev. 193. The problem is important because of the increasingly large number of occupations now being subjected to administrative regulation. See Monaghan, The Constitution and Occupational Licensing in Massachusetts, 41B. U. L. Rev. 157.
As Professor Davis has said (Davis, op. cit. § 7.02, p. 412), “Judicial opinions have not crystallized any basic principle to guide the determination of when the method of trial should be required, either by due process, or by interpretation of a statutory requirement of ‘hearing,’ or by a kind of common law that often seems to operate in this area, unanchored to any constitutional or statutory provision. The one observation to which the courts most
The general problem has been dealt with principally in respect of an applicant’s opportunity to engage at all in a particular occupation, or a particular aspect of an occupation. In
Goldsmith
v.
United States Bd. of Tax Appeals,
There may be nondiscriminatory (see
Hall-Omar Baking Co.
v.
Commissioner of Labor & Indus.
When regulation is attempted beyond such matters, more difficult questions of constitutional validity may arise concerning whether particular statutes, regulations, or policies, or their application in particular circumstances, bear a reasonable relation to significant aspects of the public interest. 8 Particularly is this so in respect of occupations other than those (for example, insurance, banking, public utility operation, and the traditional professions) most obviously appropriately subject to public regulation. If such other occupations are to be regulated in a manner which materially restricts qualified persons from engaging in them, it is of special importance that there be apparent the public grounds which constitutionally justify the interference with such persons’ freedom of employment and business activity.
The test of “the constitutional validity of restrictions upon the carrying on of otherwise lawful occupations . . . is whether the act [or regulation] has a rational tendency to promote the safety, health, morals, and general welfare of the public. . . . ‘The nature and extent of the public interest and of the exertion of the police power touching it are always a subject for judicial inquiry.’” See
Opinion of the Justices,
The effect of the board’s denial of the registration permits in the two cases before us is clearly to preclude the applicants, although the individuals are qualified pharmacists, from the pursuit of a lawful vocation at places where they deem it advantageous for them to work. Whether there is any constitutionally valid and adequate reason for denying the permits involves the determination by the board of the facts concerning each applicant and the place in which he wishes to carry on business.
9
In such circumstances, a hearing is necessary in accordance with the principle underlying the
Goldsmith
case,
The proceeding, in any event, is adjudicatory within the meaning of Gr. L. c. 30A, § 1 (1), because opportunity for a
The result we reach carries out the broad, remedial purpose of the State Administrative Procedure Act (similar to that behind the comparable Federal statute; see
Wong Yang Sung
v.
McGrath,
3. The board relies upon several distinguishable decisions which hold, in other circumstances, that there could be no judicial review under G-. L. c. 30A, § 14, of administrative action of other boards. Two of these decisions involved applications by banks to establish branch offices. See
Natick, Trust Co.
v.
Board of Bank Incorporation,
4. "What has been said disposes of both the Milligan case and the prohibition case (fn. 1). The Superior Court had jurisdiction of the petition for review in the Milligan case and has jurisdiction of the petition which was before us in the earlier Cohen case and is still pending before the Superior Court.
In the Milligan case the board makes no argument on the merits or propriety of the final decree. See Bule 13 of the Buies for the Begulation of Practice before the Full Court (1952),
5. In Milligan vs. Board of Begistration in Pharmacy, the entry is to be “Final decree affirmed.” In Board of Begistration in Pharmacy vs. Superior Court, the entry will be “Petition dismissed. Costs are to be in the discretion of the single justice.”
So ordered,
Notes
Section 38, as so amended, reads in part, “No store shall be kept open for the transaction of the retail drug business . . . unless it is registered with, and a permit therefor has been issued by, the board, as provided in the following section; provided, that . . . [the] words [‘drug store,’ ‘pharmacy’ . . . ‘drugs’], or any of them, may, with the written permission of the board, be used with respect to a store not registered with, and not having a permit issued by, the board ... if in the town, or voting precinct thereof, where such store is located there is no store so registered and having such a permit. . . . The word ‘town’, as used in this section, shall not include city.’’
Section 39, as amended by St. 1962, e. 695, which became effective October 16, 1962, reads, “The board may, upon application . . . register a store for the transaction of the retail drug business, which store shall be independent of and separate from any business or store other than a retail drug
Annexed to the- petition for review was the complete record in another ease of similar character, to which Baker was also a party. The Milligan petition alleged that- this other case revealed a similar pattern of delay and behavior by or in behalf of the board. In that case, also, a judge of the Superior Court found that the board’s decision (with respect to another drug store location sought to be registered by Baker and a different registered pharmacist) was “arbitrary or capricious and an abuse of discretion” and in various respects not based upon substantial evidence.
It was represented that there are pending in the Superior Court petitions by Cohen and others for a writ of certiorari to review the board’s decision and for a writ of mandamus to compel certain action by the board. On the view we take, there is no occasion for considering the scope of these remedies, especially that by certiorari (see
DiMaggio
v.
Mystic Bldg. Wrecking Co. Inc.
A generally similar result has been reached in decisions of other courts. See
Standard Airlines, Inc.
v.
Civil Aeronautics Bd.
The revocation of licenses presents a somewhat analogous problem. Some recent decisions in other States have indicated that a hearing is necessary in such cases. See
Railiff
v.
Lampton,
See e.g.
Liggett Co.
v.
Baldridge,
We need not now determine whether the somewhat general and vague provisions of Q-. L. c. 112, § 39, both before or after its 1962 amendment (see § 39 at point [A] as quoted in fn. 3), provided sufficiently explicit standards for the guidance of the board. If the statute prescribed adequate statutory standards (see
Druzik
v.
Board of Health of Haverhill,
