Baines v. City of Birmingham

238 So. 2d 352, 46 Ala. App. 72, 1970 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 379
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJune 16, 1970
Docket6 Div. 6
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 238 So. 2d 352 (Baines v. City of Birmingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baines v. City of Birmingham, 238 So. 2d 352, 46 Ala. App. 72, 1970 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 379 (Ala. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

CATES, Judge.

Appeal from conviction of ordinance breach. Fine, $100.00 and 90 days in the Birmingham Jail were imposed.

The City’s complaint in the Circuit Court was as follows:

“ * * * that James Ellis Baines, Jr. within twelve months before the beginning of this prosecution on, to-wit: September 10, 1967, and within the City of Birmingham at, to-wit: Woodrow Wilson Park, a public place, did take part in an assembly which the officer then in command of Birmingham Police headquarters in City Hall, Lt. R. J. Long, had good reason to believe was an unlawful assembly, to-wit: an assembly of two or more persons who, with intent to carry out a common purpose, conducted themselves when assembled, so as; to cause persons in the neighborhood o£ such assembly to fear on reasonable grounds that the persons so assembled, including defendant, would commit a breach of the peace or provoke others to do so and further said Lt. R. J. Long had good reason to believe that it was necessary in order to prevent a breach of the peace, a disorder or a riot to regulate passage or occupancy upon such place and did so by informing said James Ellis Baines, Jr., and others taking part in said assembly that said assembly was an unlawful assembly and that said persons engaged in said assembly, including said James Ellis Baines, Jr., would have to depart and • said James Ellis Baines, Jr., after being informed that said assembly was unlawful and that he would have to depart did wilfully [74]*74and intentionally, without lawful excuse, remain on said Woodrow Wilson Park and did fail to depart after being warned to do so, contrary to and in violation of Section 14-13 of the' General City Code of Birmingham of 1964.”

Lt. Long, the ’senior police officer present, testified that there were 200 to 300 people in Woodrow Wilson Park on the afternoon in question. About fifty were clustered with Baines about the base of the 'Confederatei statue.' Surrounding them were heckle’rs. Thfere was apparent physical contact: “There was some pushing and shoving from both sides.” (R. 20)

Baines was waving a stick, offering'to .bash in the heads of some youthful hecklers. :At .one point he.passed the stick over to Walker.

After Long ordered the crowd to disperse, Baines remained even after Long’s .subsequent orders to go.

§ 14-13, supra,, reads as follows:

“Whenever the chief of police has good "'reason to believe that an unlawful assembly on a street or in a public place is in progress or is planned to be held, the chief of police, if he has good reason to believe that it is necessary to prevent a breach of the peace, a disorder or a riot, may prohibit, for the time being, persons from occupying or passing on any street or public'place where such breach of the peace, disorder or riot is threatened or is believed by the chief of police likely to . occur, and to otherwise regulate passage or occupancy upon such street and place.
“The chief of police or, in his absence, the 'officer mentioned in section 14 — 16, -"-may deputize any member of the police department to impose the prohibitions or ' regulations upon occupying or passing on streets o'r public places hereinabove provided for. No person, after being duly ■ informed of such prohibition or regulation, shall wilfully and intentionally, without lawful excuse, attempt to go after being warned not to do so, or remain on any such street or public place and fail to depart after being warned to do so. (Ord. No. 63-17, § 12.)”

Coupled therewith in the same chapter, we find § 14 — 16:

“In the absence of the chief of police from the police headquarters in the City Hall, the officer in command of headquarters in the absence of the chief of police shall have all authority conferred by any section of this chapter on the chief of police. In order to be absent within the meaning of this section, it shall not be necessary that the chief of police be absent from the city or that he be off duty. If he is not physically present in police headquarters, then that officer in command of police headquarters while the chief of police is not present therein shall have all authority conferred .by this chapter on the chief of police.

(Ord. No. 63-17, § 12.)”

( § 14 — 1 defines an assemblage as unlawful as follows:

“Unlawful assembly. An assembly which is unlawful according to the common law of England, section 407, Title 14, Code of Alabama, or any other state act or statute. * * * ”

Blackstone, citing Coke, says iv Comm. 146:

“An unlawful assembly is when three or more do assemble themselves together to do an unlawful act, ■ as to pull down enclosures, to destroy a warren- or the game therein; and part without doing it, or making any motion towards it.”

Code 1940, T. 14, § 407 reads:

“Unlawful assemblies. — If’ two or more persons meet together to commit a breach of the peace, or to do any other unlawful act, each of them shall, on conviction, be punished, at the discretion of the jury, by fine and -imprisonment in the county [75]*75jail, or hard labor for the county, for not more than six months.”

Thus § 407, supra, relaxing from “three or more” to “two or more” is in derogation1 of the common law; but only as to one. Here there were more than two persons assembled.

The city has supplemented the appellant’s statement of facts. Hence, we are entitled to glean (from the two statements of facts in the opposing briefs) the tendencies of the evidence supportive of the verdict; i. e. that appellant upon request refused to depart from the place of the gathering.

In this case appellant has assigned seven claims of error.

Assignments of error are mandatory in áppeals from convictions of ordinance breaches. Ray v. City of Prichard, 45 Ala.App. 32, 222 So.2d 345, cert. den. 396 U.S. 931, 90 S.Ct. 261, 24 L.Ed.2d 228.

The first two assignments complain of the overruling of a motion to quash the complaint and of demurrers thereto. Both these pleadings claim that § 14 — 13, quoted above, on its face proscribes free speech and public assembly and is void for vagueness. Overruling a motion to quash in a municipal case is not revisable on appeal. Thomas v. City of Eufaula, 44 Ala.App. 643, 218 So.2d 813.

Whenever, as was done here, a police officer gives a prospective unlawful assembler a reasonable opportunity to disperse, the problem of making the policeman an ad hoc judge is reduced to an examination of the lawfulness of the assembly. C. f. State v. Bulot, 175 La. 21, 142 So. 787.

Using the outline employed in Anno. 71 A.L.R.2d 875, we take up first the number proved to have made up the assembly after it became allegedly unlawful. Under whichever minimum number, i. e. two or three, there was evidence before the jury that during the' pushing and' shoving and Baines’s stick waiving there were at least three engaging in fighting or threatening to fight the hecklers.

This same evidence would support a common intent.

As to proof of a lawful assembly turning into an unlawful one, there was evidence before the jury that when Lt. 'Long first appeared the pushing and shoving was already in progress. The tumult subsided for a while then broke out again.

One Mazer came into the park and seemed to lead the hecklers, though this was after Lt.

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Related

Baines v. City of Birmingham
238 So. 2d 356 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
238 So. 2d 352, 46 Ala. App. 72, 1970 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baines-v-city-of-birmingham-alacrimapp-1970.