Thе plaintiff Yerardi’s Moody Street Restaurant and Lounge, Inc. (Yerardi), the holder of an all-alcoholic beverages license with a closing time of 1:00 a.m., petitioned the board of selectmen of Randolph (board), the local licensing *297 authority, to “extend” the closing time to 2:00 a.m. After hearing, the board denied the petition. Yerardi then brought the present action to annul the board’s decision. A judge of the Superior Court upheld the board. We reverse and remand so that the board may reconsider the petition in the light of this opinion.
Statement. Although not so designated by the parties, this action should be understood to be a civil action in the nature of certiorari as contemplated by G. L. c. 249, § 4, with the function of bringing up the action of the board for such judicial review as may be available. The record here consisted of the minutes of the relevant board hearings together with certain supplemental affidavits. The board moved to dismiss. Treating the motion as one for summary judgment, the judge allowed it. Following are the facts disclosed of record.
In August, 1980, Yerardi applied for a transfer of the instant license from Creative Dining Concepts, Inc., to itself. The board considered the application at meetings on August 25 and September 8, 1980. It was represented that there had been problems with the licensee over the past year or two; after-hours drinking and parking were mentioned. Would there be adequate control under the new management? Some assurances were given on this point. The town’s chief of police did not object to the proposed transfer. After discussion, the board, by a vote of 2-1, approved the transfer but with the condition that the 2:00 a.m. closing enjoyed by the transferor be changed to 1:00 A.M.
Yerardi appealed to the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission (ABCC), attacking the 1:00 a.m. condition on the transfer, and also brought an ancillary action against ABCC and the board in the Superior Court in Norfolk County. Yerardi failed at the ABCC, and the action was dismissed by stipulation of thе parties on April 16, 1981.
On August 10, 1981, the board considered and denied an application by Yerardi to extend the closing hour to 2:00 a.m. Yerardi sought review of the decision by the ABCC but that *298 body wrote that it had no jurisdiction. 2 Again, on April 12, 1982, the local board heard an application to extend. The board afforded a hearing. On analogy, it seems, to the procedure upon аn application for an original license (see c. 138, § 15A), it required Yerardi to publish notice and to give notice to abutters of the hearing. 3 On that occasion, Yerardi by its counsel pointed out, and there was no contradiction, that four other licensees in the vicinity, whose situations in relevant respects were similar to Yerardi’s, held 2:00 a.m. licenses; 4 that Yerardi’s experience in the way of calls for police assistance compared favorably with the others’; and that the town’s chief of police and safety officer did not object to the proposed extension. There was indication, further, that some Yerardi customers, upon leaving the place around 1:00 a.m., went to the other competing locations to continue drinking.
As opposed to Yerardi’s submission, one or more speakers expressed the feeling that 2:00 a.m. closings should be pushed back. In that connection, Yerardi showed as part of the materials on the summary judgment motions that, on dates subsequent tо the board’s decision of April 12, 1982, denying an extension for Yerardi, the board voted down a proposal for a general roll back to 1:00 a.m., and approved a transfer of a 2:00 a.m. license held by one of the four licensees mentioned without imposing a cut to 1:00 a.m.
The board’s decision on April 12 by a 3-2 vote to deny Yerardi’s application was not accompanied by a statement of reasons. However, an affidavit of December 20, 1982, by the three selectmen, submitted on the motions, stated that they “individually and collectively had in mind” the following: At the time of the 1980 transfer of license, Yerardi raised no *299 objection to the 1:00 a.m. closing; 5 over the last two years on the South Shore there had bеen “a great deal of media coverage and citizen reaction to accidents and deaths” from drunken driving; some municipalities had rolled back closing hours and others were considering doing so. The affidavit also stated: “These are not all of our reasons.”
Statutory background.
By G. L. c. 138, § 12, sixth par., as appearing in St. 1977, c. 929, § 2,
6
questions of closing hours in the period 11:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. are committed to the local licensing authorities; the ABCC was right in disclaiming jurisdiction, compare
Casa Loma, Inc.
v.
Alcoholic Beverages Control Commn.,
Judge’s position. In ruling for the board, the judge wrote that there was no legal requirement that Yerardi be accorded any hearing on its applicatiоn. He also said that the record on the hearing that had been held was sufficient to support the board’s decision as being neither arbitrary nor capricious, even though he, the judge, might think the evidence preponderated in Yerardi’s favor.
Analysis. A
“civil action in the nature of certiorari” pursuant to G. L. c. 249, § 4, serves to “correct errоrs” in administrative proceedings by means of judicial review where such oversight is not otherwise provided by statute. See
Reading
v.
Attorney General,
In the present case, we have to consider whether there is cause to believe that the agency, by gross illogic, has arbitrarily singled out an individual for unequal and perhaps invidious treatment. The judge below did not deal with the specifics.
Yerardi established in the record that its situation was similar to that of its competitors in the vicinity who were enjoying 2:00 a.m. closings. Nor could it be said that the board was phasing out these closings as licenses were transferred: a transfer was voted without a roll back, and another proposal to adopt a 1:00 a.m. over-all closing failed of adoption. The affidavit stating what the members “had in mind” hardly explains their decision of Yerardi’s case; and the statement that the reasons set out were “not all of our reasons” teases a court without enlightening it.
Accordingly we think the board ought to reconsider Yerardi’s application. By no means are we saying that the board should find for Yerardi. It may well be, for example, that a combina *302 tian оf “unreviewable policy considerations” with reasons that the board members did not disclose will amply justify their negative decision. The question is open on remand.
Hearings: We add a word about the judge’s remark that there was no legal requirement that Yerardi be given a hearing. The statute, indeed, did not call for a hearing, and that omission may be said to be in some significant contrast with the provision for hearings where business hours are reduced. Still, looking only to practicalities, the board was well advised to allow Yerardi a hearing: this for the plain reason that arbitrariness or caprice is the more readily found by a court in an agency decision where the individual affeсted has not been given a chance to have its say. Thus the judicial review contemplated by the certiorari action of G. L. c. 249, § 4, suggests to agencies that hearings should be allowed even when the governing statutes remain silent on the point. The general observation to be made is that judicial review, as accorded by such a statute as G. L. c. 249, § 4, naturally draws with it the advisability if not the necessity of some appropriate hearing. Just so, the agency involved in the Caswell case, supra, afforded a hearing although the pertinent statute (G. L. c. 140, § 177A: license for video games) did not in terms require it, and the phenomenon is probably quite common.
If the question of hearing is approached hеad on, rather than as an incident of judicial review, a case can be made with some show of strength that in a confrontation like Yerardi’s the individual is entitled to a hearing. In various aspects of licensing — for instance, grant and revocation of license — procedural due process, constitutionally guaranteed, has bеen seen to require a hearing. See
Konstantopoulos
v.
Whately,
The claim to a hearing, however, need not be pressed to a constitutional limit. In this Commonwealth the right to a hearing where government exerts power upon an individual in a matter of consequence has been related, on occasion, nоt strictly to the Constitution, but to an ethic that pervades our legal system. See
Milligan
v.
Board of Reg. in Pharmacy,
Turning to the procedure that is appropriate at a hearing before the board in Yerardi’s case, we can say that it need not respond to a rigid formula or the evidentiary niceties found in
*304
a courtroom.
11
It should tend toward the adjudicatory rather that the regulatory model because the object of the exercise is not to fоrmulate a general rule of governance, but to reach a decision in a particular case in the light of the loose substantive standard established by statute. Yerardi did not complain of the procedure that was actually followed in the hearing afforded to it by the board. We add that, where the board denies relief to the individual, it would do well to state its reasons at or near the time of decision. Cf.
Caswell,
Conclusion. The summary judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded to the Superior Court, there to be returned to the board for reconsideration of its decision, with liberty to receive further evidence. Thereafter, if necessary, further proceedings consistent with this opinion will be had in the Suрerior Court.
So ordered.
Notes
ABCC took the same position in respect to the board’s second denial of an extension mentioned below.
Yerardi has argued that § 15A covers an application to extend closing hours, but the language of § 15A does not support this view.
At one point in the record there is an intimation that there were five other liсensees in the vicinity of which four, whose situations were similar to Yerardi’s, had 2:00 a.m. closings.
But, as noted, Yerardi did attempt an attack upon this condition of the transfer. Also, it was open to Yerardi to contend that its performance after the transfer improved upon its predecessor’s and warranted an extension to 2:00 a.m.
“The hоurs during which sales of such alcoholic beverages may be made by any licensee as aforesaid shall be fixed by the local licensing authorities either generally or specially for each licensee; provided, that no such sale shall be made on any secular day between the hours of two and eight o’clock antemeridian and that, except as provided in section thirty-three [sales on Sundays and holidays], no such licensee shall be barred from making such sales on any such day after eleven o’clock antemeridian and before eleven o’clock postmeridian, . . . and provided further, that any such licensee and his employees shall not be prohibited from being upon such premises at any time for the purpose of cleaning, making emergency repairs to, or providing security for, such premises or preparing food for the day’s business or opening or closing the business in an orderly manner. The licensing authority shall not decrease the hours during which sales of such alcoholic beverages may be made by any licensee until after a public hearing concerning the public need for such decrease; provided, that any licensee affected by such change shall be given two weeks notice of such public hearing.... ”
The absence of an express statutory requirement of a hearing is cited in Caswell apparently as a factor looking to an “arbitrary-or-capricious” test as the appropriate standard of review (at 878). And see the discussion of hearings under the caption below.
“[U]nless that discretion is exercised in a manner that is arbitrary or capricious or is based on improper or unlawful сonsiderations, the policy determined by the local board is substantially immune from judicial review.”
Hornsby, supra,
dealt with the denial, without assigned reason, of an application for a license to open a retail liquor store. Tuttle, C. J., wrote that it was a constitutional deprivation to deny the applicant a hearing with procedural sаfeguards where she asserted that she satisfied all requirements for the license and had been denied it on a basis of “ward courtesy” (licensing authority bowed to desires of aldermen of ward in which store was located). Further, it would offend equal protection to refuse licenses to one group when others obtained licenses in similar circumstances. In these respects it did not matter that the State had extensive powers of regulation of the liquor trade (at 609-610). Cf.
Ewing
v.
Regents of Univ. of Michigan,
This less conventional, “intrinsic” (as contrasted with “instrumental”) idea of procedural due process is probably more spacious than the current conception of the United States Supreme Court. See
Kulas
v.
Personnel Commn. of N.H.,
See Friendly, Some Kind of Hearing, 123 U. Pa.L. Rev. 1267 (1975).
