State v. Hart

157 P.2d 72, 66 Idaho 217, 1945 Ida. LEXIS 130
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1945
DocketNo. 7187.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 157 P.2d 72 (State v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hart, 157 P.2d 72, 66 Idaho 217, 1945 Ida. LEXIS 130 (Idaho 1945).

Opinions

SUTTON, D.J.

The appellant, hereinafter referred to *220 as the defendant, was arrested at about the hour of 12:30 A. M. on December 4, 1943, by two police officers of the City of Boise and taken to the city jail where he was locked up until about the hour of ten o’clock that morning when he was taken into the Police Court where in the meantime a complaint had been filed charging him with the crime of carrying concealed weapons contrary to the ordinances of the City of Boise; whereupon he was released on bail for appearance and trial in said court on the 7th day of December, 1943. On December 7th an amended complaint having been filed charging the defendant with the crime of carrying a single concealed weapon, to-wit: A 25 cal. Colts automatic pistol, he was tried and convicted of the offense charged in said amended complaint. From this conviction and the judgment thereon he appealed to the District Court of the Third Judicial District where he was again tried and convicted, and from that conviction and the judgment entered thereon, he has appealed to this court.

The defendant does not deny his guilt — that is, he does not deny carrying the concealed weapon — but he does make several contentions in connection therewith which, if sustained, entitled him to a reversal of the judgment appealed from, the first of these contentions being that the police court did not have jurisdiction to convict him or enter the judgment upon such conviction. This contention is evidently based upon the dual proposition that the Ordinance under which defendant was sought to be charged is unconstitutional, and, further, that his arrest was unlawful in that he was arrested without a warrant in the night time for an alleged misdemeanor not committed in the presence of the arresting officer.

Section 11, Article I of the Constitution of Idaho in effect guarantees the people of the state the right to bear arms for their security and defense; but it also provides the Legislature shall regulate the exercise of such right. This court, in the case of In re Brickey, 8 Ida. 597, 70 P. 609, in discussing this constitutional provision declared that under it the Legislature has no power to prohibit a citizen from bearing arms, whether within or without the corporate limits of cities, towns and villages. It then said “The Legislature may, as expressly provided in our State Constitution, regulate the exercise of this right, but may not prohibit it. A statute prohibiting the carrying *221 of concealed deadly weapons would be a proper exercise of the police power of the State.” In the more recent case of State v. Woodward, 58 Ida. 385, 74 P. (2d) 92, 114 A.L.R. 627, the court speaking through Mr. Justice Ailshie, after quoting the Brickey case, said: “The Legislature only has the power to ‘regulate the exercise of this right’, that is, among other things, it may prohibit carrying concealed weapons, or prescribe the kind or character of arms that may or may not be kept, carried, or used, and various other things of a regulatory character.” In the exercise of that right the Legislature has prohibited the carrying concealed certain specified weapons “or any other deadly or dangerous weapon within the limits or confines of any city, town or village.” (17-3102,1.C.A.) Section 2, Article XII, of the Constitution of Idaho provides: “Any county or incorporated city or town may make and enforce, within its limite, all such local, police, sanitary and other regulations as are not in conflict with its charter or with the general laws.” Under such constitutional and statutory provisions it is generally held to be a reasonable exercise of the police power of a municipality to prohibit the carrying of concealed dangerous or deadly weapons (68 C.J. 9; Ex parte Cheney (Cal.), 27 P. 436). Therefore the ordinance of the city of Boise under which the defendant was prosecuted is not unconstitutional insofar as it prohibits the carrying of concealed dangerous or deadly weapons. And the Police Court had jurisdiction of the offense of which the defendant was charged. And since the record discloses that at'the time he appeared for trial and was tried, a formal written complaint charging him with the offense had been filed and a warrant for his arrest issued thereon, and that defendant had been arrested and released upon bail, that court also had jurisdiction of the person of the defendant. Thus the objection of the jurisdiction of the Police Court is without merit.

Defendant’s other four specifications of error we believe can be consolidated into one general proposition: that is, that defendant’s arrest was unlawful and the seizure of his gun and blackjack, sap or billy, was likewise unlawful, and that both the Police Court and the District Court erred in refusing to suppress that evidence and return it to him. In disposing of this consolidated question, it is necessary to examine at some length the facts and circumstances attending the defendant’s arrest.

*222 It appears the police officers who arrested the defendant were directed by radio from Police Headquarters to go to the Gremlin’s Roost, a so-called club in the Boise Hotel, entrance to which is from the hotel lobby, to investigate a charge that someone was swinging a billy. This they did, and on arrival encountered in the hotel lobby a number of U. S. Army officers including one Military Police Officer, two uniformed city policemen and several civilians from whom they inquired what was going on and were informed by the three Army Officers that a man in the Gremlin’s Roost had threatened them with a blackjack. Shortly thereafter the door to the club opened and one of the Army Officers said, “That’s the man there.” Whereupon City Detective Flood, who was acquainted with the defendant, recognized him and said, “Just a minute, Bill. We have had a complaint against you for threatening these men with a blackjack. Have you got it on you?”, to which the defendant answered, “Yes, in my left hip pocket.” Whereupon Officer Flood said, “We will have to_ arrest you” and according to the State’s evidence, at this juncture the defendant raised his arms at right angles to his body so that Officer Flood might obtain the blackjack, billy or sap, as it has been variously described, and as the defendant’s coat swung open it exposed a 25 cal. Colts automatic pistol in his right vest pocket which, together with the blackjack, was taken from the defendant by Officer Flood and the defendant was taken to the city jail and confined as herein before stated. At this point it should be noted there is some variation in the recital as to just what was said and when it was said between the two officers and the defendant near the door of the club, both as between the respective witnesses and as between the statements of each witness on direct and cross-examination; and the foregoing quotations disclose only one of those versions, being the testimony of Officer Flood on cross-examination.

It is admitted by the State that at the time of the arrest the officer had no warrant, no complaint had been filed, and that the arrest was made in the night time. The State, at least by failure to deny, in effect admits that in the mid-afternoon of the day previous the defendant had received an anonymous telephone call wherein he was told “to keep my nose out of the slot machine business or my' body would be found out in the brush”; that upon receipt

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P.2d 72, 66 Idaho 217, 1945 Ida. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hart-idaho-1945.