A state statute authorizing a Board to grant certificates of
registration to qualified persons as certified public accountants,
and empowering it, upon notice and hearing, to cancel any
registration so granted for unprofessional conduct of the
certificate holder, but leaving the individual free to.practice
accountancy without procuring a certificate and after a certificate
granted has been cancelled,
held not violative of the due
process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment or the provision of the
Constitution against
ex post facto laws in the case of one
who, having obtained such a certificate, sought to enjoin the Board
from hearing charges looking to its revocation upon the ground that
the statute conferred arbitrary power by not defining more
specifically the cause for revocation and that the Board had
promulgated no definitive rules. P.
263 U. S.
397.
208 Ala. 185 affirmed.
Error to a decree of the Supreme Court of Alabama affirming a
decree which dismissed a bill to enjoin a state Board and its
members from hearing charges preferred against the plaintiff
looking to the revocation of his certificate as a public
accountant, and to enjoin the other defendants, who had made the
charges, from prosecuting them. The section of the Alabama statute
governing the proceedings before the Board is set forth below.
[
Footnote 1]
Page 263 U. S. 395
.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
By a statute of the state, a Board denominated the "Board of
Public Accountancy" was created. The Board has authority to examine
applicants for certificates or licenses to practice the business or
calling of public accountant and to issue certificates to those
whom the Board deems qualified.
The Board is given power to cancel the certificate granted "for
any unprofessional conduct of the holder of such certificate, or
for other sufficient cause" upon written notice of 20 days and a
hearing thereon. The defendants in error Alvidge, Edson, and Rosson
constitute the Board.
Complaint was made against plaintiff in error by the other
defendants in error who are public accountants and a day set for
hearing, and notice thereof given to plaintiff in error as required
by the statute.
He appeared at the time appointed, but subsequently brought this
suit, praying that the Board and its members be enjoined and
restrained from hearing the charges preferred against him, or from
making or entering any order revoking or attempting to revoke the
certificate issued to him, or from interfering in any way with the
practice of his profession as such certified public accountant. It
was also prayed that the other defendants in error be enjoined from
prosecuting the charges that they had preferred.
A temporary restraining order was issued and an order to show
cause why it should not be made permanent.
The bill was dismissed on demurrer for want of equity, and, on
appeal to the supreme court, the decree was
Page 263 U. S. 396
affirmed. The chief justice of the court then granted this writ
of error.
The ground of it and the reliance here is expressed in several
ways, that the statute of the state is in conflict with the
Constitution of the state, and also in conflict with the
Constitution of the United States, the latter in that it (the
statute) deprives plaintiff in error of his property without due
process of law and subjects him to an
ex post facto
law
The bill is very long. Its important facts are as follows:
plaintiff in error had "by experience and assiduous attention to
his duties built up a large and lucrative business." Upon the
appointment of the Board, he applied for and was issued a
certificate after standing the tests and examinations prescribed,
and since that time he has been practicing his profession as a
certified public accountant
The Board has never adopted any code or promulgated any rules or
definition of what is or is not professional conduct, or what is
sufficient cause for the revocation of a certificate.
He appeared before the Board at the day appointed for the
hearing of the charges against him, and was informed by the Board
that there were no rules in effect to govern or control the
hearing, and evidence would be received with some liberality. The
hearing was continued until January 26, 1922, and plaintiff in
error notified to be back on that day for the purpose of being
tried.
It is nowhere averred in the charges against him that anything
that he had done was wrongful or unlawful, the only allegation
being that the alleged acts complained of were surreptitious.
The acts are enumerated, and it is expressly denied that he was
guilty of anything wrongful, surreptitious, or unlawful.
It is further averred that the Board has prejudged his acts, and
that the determination by the Board as to
Page 263 U. S. 397
whether his certificate should be revoked rests wholly within
the arbitrary, uncontrolled, and unappealable judgment of the
Board.
The unconstitutionality of the act is averred both under the
state and federal Constitutions.
The contention that the statute and the powers it confers upon
the Board and the manner of their exercise are in derogation of the
Constitution of the state is decisively decided against by the
opinion of the supreme court of the state, and we may say that
there is persuasion in the reasoning of the court against the
contention that the statute is in conflict with the Constitution of
the United States -- that is, that the statute is in effect an
ex post facto law, or, if enforced against him, will
deprive him of his property without due process of law.
The opinion of the court sustained the Board, its powers, and
the manner of executing them, but refrained from expressing an
opinion of the right or remedy of plaintiff in error. It said:
"It is not necessary or proper for this court to now decide what
remedy, if any, would be available to the appellant [plaintiff in
error] if his certificate or license should be improperly or
illegally revoked or cancelled."
In other words, the court declined to anticipate the action of
the Board; it decided only that, if the state had the power to
confer a certificate on the plaintiff in error through the Board,
it had the power, through the Board, to take it away, or to
prescribe the terms and conditions upon which it might be
forfeited. And the court further said that the appeal was without
equity, since neither the trial court nor it could know in advance
of the hearing that the Board would sustain the charge
The reasoning is conclusive. The procurement of a certificate
was deemed of value by plaintiff in error. It was the confirmation
of his reputation, giving to it the
Page 263 U. S. 398
sanction of an official investigation and judgment. He knew the
condition of its issue -- knew that the conduct that secured it was
a condition of its retention, that, for inconstancy of merit, it
could be forfeited, and forfeited if it had been improvidently
granted or procured by concealment or deception, and necessarily
so, or the certificate would be a means of pretense.
Plaintiff in error puts some stress upon the absence of rules by
the Board, urging that the statute is in conflict with the
Constitution of the United States because it purports to authorize
the revocation of a certificate "without defining or determining in
advance what grounds or facts or acts shall be sufficient cause for
such revocation." Such absence permits, it is asserted, arbitrary
action. We cannot yield to that assertion, or assume that the Board
will be impelled to action by other than a sense of duty or render
judgment except upon convincing evidence introduced in a regular
way, with opportunity of rebuttal. We certainly cannot restrain the
Board upon the possibility of contrary action. Official bodies
would be of no use as instruments of government if they could be
prevented from action by the supposition of wrongful action.
This Court and other courts have decided that a license or
certificate may be required of a physician surgeon, dentist,
lawyer, or school teacher.
Douglas v. Noble, 261 U.
S. 165, has pertinent comment upon the power of the
legislature in that regard. The supreme court in the present case
construed the statute as not so exacting of public accountants. In
other words, it was decided that the indicated professions require
a license or certificate, but that a public accountant requires
none, and it was decided that a public accountant gets no right of
business from the grant of a certificate -- he loses no right of
business by its cancellation.
The statute is not, nor are the proceedings before the Board,
such as plaintiff in error conceives them. The
Page 263 U. S. 399
cases he cites are therefore not pertinent, and need no review.
[
Footnote 2]
The motion to affirm must be granted.
So ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
"That the Alabama state Board of Public Accountancy may revoke
any certificate issued under this act, or may cancel the
registration of any certificate registered under this act, for any
unprofessional conduct of the holder of such certificate, or for
other sufficient cause, provided that written notice shall have
been mailed to the holder of such certificate twenty days before
any hearing thereon stating the cause for such contemplated action
and appointing a day for a full hearing thereon by said Board, and
provided further that no certificate issued under this act shall be
revoked until such hearing shall have been heard."
Acts 1919, p. 126, § 7.
[
Footnote 2]
Hill v. Wallace, 259 U. S. 44;
Booth v. Illinois, 184 U. S. 425,
184 U. S. 428;
Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U. S. 578;
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Dodge, 246 U.
S. 357;
Adams v. Tanner, 244 U.
S. 590. Some state cases were cited.