Coker v. Fort Smith

258 S.W. 388, 162 Ark. 567, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 203
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 388 (Coker v. Fort Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coker v. Fort Smith, 258 S.W. 388, 162 Ark. 567, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 203 (Ark. 1924).

Opinions

Smith, J.

Appellant was tried and fined in the municipal court of Fort Smith on a charge of “being on the street with a prostitute. ’ ’ He appealed to the circuit court, and, on his trial there, was again found guilty and fined, and has appealed to this court.

At his trial in the Circuit court an instruction was given, over his objection and exception, which reads as follows: “1. The court instructs the jury that, if you find from the evidence that the defendant, Troy Coker, in the city of Fort Smith, and within one year next before the bringing of this suit, being a male person over the age of fourteen years, was seen riding or walking, in the daytime or night, within the city limits, without there being any necessity therefor, with a woman known or generally reputed to be a prostitute or lewd woman, then you should convict the defendant.”

This instruction appears to. have been warranted under the ordinance of the city which appellant was charged with having violated. It reads as follows: “It shall be deemed a misdemeanor to do, or cause to be done, any of the following acts, and any person convicted thereof shall be fined not less than five nor more than twenty-five dollars: To keep a house of ill-fame or assignation house, to permit any house owned by him, her or them, or under his, her or their control, to be kept for the purpose of prostitution; to be an inmate of a house of ill-fame, or to be found in such house' for lewd purposes; or for any woman of the town or any prostitute to walk the streets after nine o’clock at night, .without having any lawful business or without any necessity therefor, or at any time to solicit any person on the street, or in any public place, to accompany them or to meet them at any place for the purposes of prostitution; or for any male person over the age of fourteen years, who shall be seen riding or walking, in the daytime or at night, within the city limits, without there being any necessity therefor, with any woman known or generally reputed to be a prostitute or lewd woman. ’ ’

The part of the ordinance which appellant is charged with having violated is the last clause thereof. By his appeal he questions its validity.

The facts upon which the conviction was had are briefly these: Appellant was seen, near midnight, in an automobile with a woman who bore the reputation of being a prostitute. He drove the car in one direction, and,' after a short detour, drove it down the same street in the opposite direction. The officers stopped the car, searched it for whiskey, but found none. Appellant was then arrested upon the charge stated. In his own defense he testified that he met the woman at a party, and was merely carrying her home.

It may be said that it was clearly within the power of the city council to enact most of the provisions of this ordinance, and their validity is not affected by what is hereinafter decided. Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, § 538; Dillon’s Municipal Corporations (5th ed.), vol. 2, § 647; McQuillin’s Municipal Corporations, vol. 2, § 816, and supplementary volume 7, § 816.

But the question for decision is whether the clause reading “or for any male person over the age of fourteen years, who shall be seen riding or walking, in the daytime or at night, within the city limits, without there being any necessity therefor, with any woman known or generally reputed to be a prostitute or lewd woman,” is valid.

There are an almost infinite number of cases dealing with the authority of municipal corporations to enact ordinances of this character, and, after an examination of many of the cases collected in the annotated cases cited in the note to § 151 of the article on Municipal Corporations in 19 R. C. L., p. 844, we find the holding of these cases is there correctly summarized into a general statement of the power of the municipalities in the enactment of such ordinances. It is there said: “A municipal corporation, under a general delegation of power, may enact ordinances to prohibit the keeping of houses of ill-fame and to punish the keepers thereof, and to punish any person found in or frequenting a disorderly house, leaving him to show, as a defense, if he can, that he was lawfully or innocently in the house. So also an ordinance forbidding owners of houses from renting them to others for the purpose of prostitution, or with knowledge that they were to be so used, is valid, and á municipal corporation may prohibit prostitutes from walking streets at night, except in case of reasonable necessity. Municipal regulations for the suppression of prostitution must, however, be reasonable. Ordinances have been held unreasonable, and consequently void, which declare that the owner or occupant of a house or room who permits' single acts of illicit sexual intercourse shall be deemed guilty of keeping a house of ill fame, or which forbid any prostitute to reside in or stay in any house or room within the city, and forbid the renting of any such premises to a prostitute, without regard to its use, or which make it unlawful for any person to associate or converse with a prostitute upon any of the streets of the city, by day or by night, regardless of the subject and occasion of the conversation, or which punish as a crime the mere pres.ence within or return to the corporate limits of a, prostitute. The decisions in these cases fully establish the invalidity of ordinances which amount to an outlawry, or a denial of the right to life and liberty to any class of women, however abandoned, except so far as it may be in punishment of a specific offense. That is to say, women cannot be denied the right1 to occupy property and engage in lawful business by reason of any general bad character. But they may be subject to such police regulations as are reasonably necessary. So also the provisions' for enforcing the regulations must be reasonable.”

Among the annotated cases cited, in the note is onr own case of Paralee v. Camden (which will be again referred to), 4 Am. St. Repts. 35.

One of the best considered cases is that of Dunn v. Commonwealth, 88. Am. St. R. 344, 105 Ky. 834, 49 S. W. 813. In that case an ordinance which prohibited prostitutes from being on the streets of the city between the hours of 7 p. m. and 4 o ’clock a. m. following, except in instances of reasonable necessity, was upheld as a valid exercise of the police power. The court said that the council had, no doubt, ascertained that the hours during which prostitutes were excluded from the streets was the favorite time for their business, and was therefore a proper ordinance to suppress the traffic whereby they earned their livelihood. The court further said: “We think this is a reasonable restraint, and it does not unreasonably abridge their personal liberty. By the terms of the ordinance they are allowed to go upon the streets if there is reasonable necessity for it. During the fifteen hours of the twenty-four these habitual offenders against the moral, social, and penal laws are permitted to go wherever they please upon the streets and alleys of the city, which affords them ample opportunity for healthful exercise, and of attending to their reasonable wants.”

A very recent case on the subject is that of Ex parte Cannon, 250 S. W. 429, decided by the Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 388, 162 Ark. 567, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coker-v-fort-smith-ark-1924.