Davenport v. District of Columbia

61 A.2d 486, 1948 D.C. App. LEXIS 188
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 21, 1948
DocketNo. 628
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 61 A.2d 486 (Davenport v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davenport v. District of Columbia, 61 A.2d 486, 1948 D.C. App. LEXIS 188 (D.C. 1948).

Opinion

CLAGETT, Associate Judge.

Appellant Davenport was convicted of vagrancy and sentenced to serve 90 days in jail. He has appealed, assigning as error the finding of guilt by the trial court, tire admission of certain evidence, and the failure to quash the arrest. He further contends that the entire proceedings constituted double jeopardy within the meaning of the federal Constitution, Amendment 5.

The District of Columbia vagrancy statute 1 is divided into nine subsections, each of which states a different course of conduct or way of life which if followed constitutes the offender a vagrant. Davenport was charged under subsection 3, defining as a vagrant: “Any person leading an immoral or profligate life who has no lawful employment and who has no lawful means of support realized from a lawful occupation or source.”

Nine different witnesses testified as to Davenport’s conduct between May 11 and December 17, 1947, the period covered by the information. A sergeant of the Union Station police testified that he observed Davenport at the Station during the entire [488]*488period on an average of about four times every week, mostly at night, and had seen him sell whiskey at the Station without a license. A 15-year-old girl testified that at 7:30 a. m. one morning at the Station he made indecent remarks to her, offered her money to commit an immoral act and, when she rejected his advances hit her with a towel. A United States park policeman told of observing Davenport peeping into a window of a girls’ dormitory in west Potomac Park. A woman described how appellant had entered a clearly marked ladies’ rest room and embarrassed her while she was using the room. A 16-year-old school girl testified that Davenport had approached her in a telephone booth at the Union Station and offered her money to commit an immoral act. Davenport’s language quoted by the two girls as having been addressed t(» them can only be described as lewd and indecent. Another Union Station officer described seeing Davenport approach two soldiers in the Union Station concourse and that Davenport had sold them liquor from a supply he kept in a locker at the Station. He also said that he had observed Davenport “lots of times in the afternoon and evening and nighttime around the Union Station.” A metropolitan police officer, who had served a warrant on Davenport for selling liquor without a license, testified he had observed Davenport at various times in the daytime and late at night at the Station. Another Station employee testified he had observed him frequently “roaming around” the Union Station talking to soldiers and that when questioned as to what he was doing at the Station had given such answers as “I have to make some money to pay my fine next week”; “I am resting”; “I have been swimming”; “I am selling liquor cheaper than the drug store”; “I am nervous and can’t sleep.” Another Station policeman enumerated approximately 25 different occasions during September and October 1947, mostly after midnight and as late as 5:30 a. m., when he had talked with Davenport at the Station. When questioned Davenport gave such explanations for his presence as “I am selling liquor”; “I am in the liquor business”; “I am on a sight-seeing trip”; “I came to get some sleep”; “I came for a coke”; “I am not doing anything”; “I came for a shave” (at 4:30 a. m.) ; “I am going to Hollywood.” On one of those occasions this officer arrested Davenport for drinking liquor in public.

Davenport himself testified that in the summer months he made money as a caddy at a local country club; that he bought and sold rings and watches, mostly at the Union Station. He also stated that he had sold whiskey in the Union Station for the past four or five months, adding “That’s the way I make my living.” He also said that he had made money playing cards, and, when asked by his own counsel what he was doing at the time of trial, he stated he was “working in gambling houses.” He had no records or other evidence to support his statements regarding his alleged caddying activities and his answers to questions about the golf course showed lack of familiarity with its layout. He produced no license to deal in secondhand personal property nor records of such transactions as are required by the District of Columbia police regulations.

Webster’s Dictionary 2 defines “profligate” as “completely given up to dissipation and licentiousness; broken down in morals and decency.” It has been said that “ ‘Immorality’ is not necessarily confined to matters sexual in their nature; it may be that which is contra bonos mores; or not moral, inconsistent with rectitude, purity, or good morals; contrary to conscience or moral law; wicked; vicious; licentious, as, an immoral man or deed. Its synonyms are: Corrupt, indecent, depraved, dissolute; and its antonyms are: Decent, upright, good, right. * * * ”3 We have no doubt that the evidence furnished ample support for the finding of the trial court that Davenport came within these definitions and thus was leading an immoral or profligate life.

Appellant urges, however, that the government did not prove the other element [489]*489of the offense, namely, that he had no lawful employment and no lawful means of support realized from a lawful occupation or source. But under the circumstances and since the other element of the offense was proven, the negative evidence adduced showing the illegality of Davenport’s principal source of income clearly was sufficient to shift to him the burden of going forward with the proof. The burden was upon him to establish, and not upon the government to disprove, legitimacy of employment.4 We must hold that the trial court was justified in ruling that he had failed to sustain this burden.

Appellant next urges that, since he was arrested upon a warrant charging disorderly conduct and the charge of vagrancy was later placed against him, his motion to quash the arrest should have been granted. This contention is answered by the well settled rule that a court will not inquire into the manner in which an accused is brought before it.5 The arrest was admittedly a legal one, but it is argued that the alteration in the grounds from warrant to information is a fatal error which deprived the court of jurisdiction. Such is not the law. The validity of a warrant is not to be compared with the validity of an indictment; even a false arrest does not necessarily deprive a court of jurisdiction.6 A fortiori the mere irregularity of trying the accused on a charge different from that for which he was validly arrested is no defense to the latter charge.7

Since a substantial part of the testimony as to Davenport’s habits and conduct in the Station was given by employees of the terminal, it is argued that these witnesses are biased and that their testimony should have been excluded. Appellant’s counsel also contends that even if this testimony was validly admitted that his right of cross-examination was unduly restricted.

The early English theory was that any person having a pecuniary interest, in the outcome of a case, including the parties, was so biased as to be unworthy of belief and his testimony was excluded. This theory has long' since been discarded and bias or interest goes only to the weight of the testimony rather than its competency.8 Appellant’s other point, however, requires more consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A.2d 486, 1948 D.C. App. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1948.