State v. Butterworth

139 A. 161, 104 N.J.L. 43, 1927 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 400
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 1, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 139 A. 161 (State v. Butterworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Butterworth, 139 A. 161, 104 N.J.L. 43, 1927 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 400 (N.J. 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Black, J.

The defendants, eight in number, were indicted for holding an unlawful .assembly. The trial before Judge Delaney, without a jury in the Passaic Special Sessions, resulted in their conviction. A writ of error was issued out of this court to review the judgments of conviction. Five assign *44 ments of error were filed, the substance of which are that the defendants were convicted without evidence and should have been acquitted.

One of the defendants, Butterworth, was permitted to be asked by the state, on cross-examination, if he had a permit to hold a meeting at- the City Hall Plaza and whether he had not been accustomed to obtain oral permits from the chief of police to hold meetings on street corners in the city of Paterson. These- latter are not argued in the appellants’ brief. The facts on which the convictions were based are set. out in the bill of exceptions sent up with the writ of error.. The defendants were arrested on October 6th, 1924, between seven and eight o’clock in the evening, at the City Hall Plaza, in Paterson. There was and had been since August 1st, 1924, an industrial strike among the workers in the silk mills of the-city. A procession of persons marched along Market street in twos from the Market street headquarters of the Associated Silk Workers to the Citjr Hall Plaza, a distance of a block and a half. They were followed by an increasing number of onlookers. The procession was led by two young women-bearing an American flag, behind them walked the defendants John C. Butterworth, Eoger H. Baldwin and Perris-Drecka. Hone of the other defendants were identified by witnesses for the state, as taking part in the procession. •

When the procession approached the plaza, the number of persons in and about the plaza rapidly increased, until the same totaled, at the maximum number, fifteen hundred or two thousand. There were hurrahs and acclamations from among the crowd about the plaza, on the approach of the-flag and the procession.

On September 26th, 1924, and continuously thereafter until and including October 6th, 1924, the strikers were prevented from holding their mass meetings in Turn Hall by order of the chief of police of the city.

A police officer read the Eiot act or proclamation. Two- or three police officers were brushed against by the procession. A young police officer, who had been on the police-force three or four months, testified he was afraid until the original ten or twelve police officers were reinforced by such *45 ■additions as made their number about forty. Officer Love testified the crowd put him in fear. When the police officers had increased to about forty in number, they at once began to disperse the crowd, in the course of so doing, they met with opposition. Persons offering resistance were the defendants Basil Effsa, Braceo Katale, Kerrill Konzer, David Uitkin, George Cabbrizza and others.

The arrests of the defendants were followed by indictments by the Passaic county grand jury for an unlawful assembly. The indictment is of an offense at common law, declared to be a misdemeanor by section 215 of the Crimes act. Comp. Stat., p. 1811; Pat. L., p. 220, § 68. The sufficiency of the indictment has not been attacked. It was not necessary for the state to prove all the allegations therein set out. The purpose of the meeting, as set out in printed posters openly distributed and exhibited in the city of Paterson, three or four days immediately preceding the meeting, October 6th, 1924, was to protest against the alleged unlawful acts and ■supposed oppression of the police, in excluding the strikers from Turn Hall and in preventing the continuing of their daily meetings therein. Such is some of the dominant testimony contained in the record of the case. Tested by the legal rules applicable, were the convictions of the defendants justified?

The main, if not the only question, therefore, relates to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the charge laid in the indictment.

An unlawful assembly at common law has been defined in the reported cases and by text-book writers of recognized authority, thus:

Unlawful assembly in general — an unlawful assembly has been defined to be an assembly of three or more persons with intent either to commit a crime by open force or to carry out any common purpose, lawful or unlawful, in such a manner as to give firm and courageous persons in the neighborhood of the assembly reasonable grounds to apprehend a breach of the peace in consequence of it. 2 Brill Cyc. Cr. L. 1588, § 1007. Cited with approval in Reg. v. Cunninghame, 16 Cox Cr. C. 420, 427.

*46 Professor Wharton in his 3 Cr. L. (11th ed.) 2050, § 1851, defines an unlawful assembly thus: Persons lawfully assembled may become an unlawful assembty, if they conduct themselves with a common purpose in such a manner as-would have made 'their assembling unlawful if they had assembled in that manner for that purpose; and this has been héld to be the case with disorder got up suddenly, though concertedly, at a town meeting, and at a social assembling for dancing. In determining the question of terror,, it has been said 'that the jury are to consider whether natural and firm men, in charge of families, would have under the’ circumstances cause for anxiety; and in testing this it is-necessary to take into account the hour at which the parties meet, the language used by them, and the acts done. An .unlawful assembly does not .in itself involve any overt act. If overt acts of violence are attempted the offense is a riot.

The Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in the case of Bonneville v. State, 53 Wis. 680, 684, speaking through Mr. Justice Orton, said, at common law an assembly became unlawful alone by the manner of it, as by such circumstances of terror as tended to endanger the public peace and excite fear, alarm and consternation among the people; and there need be no common purpose of such assembly, except such as might be implied by assembling in such manner, and which might be either lawful or unlawful.

Attended with circumstances calculated to excite alarm, an assembly is unlawful. Reg. v. Neale, 9 Car. & P. 431; 38 Eng. Com. L. 178. The temper of the meeting must be considered. Reg. v. Vincent, 9 Car. & P. 9, 93; 38 Eng. Com. L. 48, 118.

Other authorities to the same effect are 39 Cyc. 831, where the cases are collected. Bish. Cr. L. (9th ed.), 908, § 1256; Blade’s L. Dict. (2d ed.) 1187; Hawk. P. C. C. I., § 334 (2); Bouv. L. Dict. (3d ed.) 3376; 4 Words and Phrases 1079.

Prom these authorities it is clear that an intention to commit a crime by force or an unlawful purpose are not essential ingredients of an unlawful assembty at common *47 law. This is an answer to the argument of the plaintiffs in error for a reversal of the judgments.

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Related

Bonneville v. State
11 N.W. 427 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1882)

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Bluebook (online)
139 A. 161, 104 N.J.L. 43, 1927 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-butterworth-nj-1927.