State v. . Hunter

11 S.E. 386, 106 N.C. 796
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 386 (State v. . Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Hunter, 11 S.E. 386, 106 N.C. 796 (N.C. 1890).

Opinion

Avery, J.

after stating the facts: In the case of State v. Freeman, 86 N. C., 683, the Court distinctly recognized the right of a police officer to arrest without warrant, not only for felonies, riots and breaches of the peace, but for violations of a city or town by law prohibiting nuisances, and which the municipality has the power to make, when the offence is committed in his presence. The Code, §3820, *799 makes, it a misdemeanor to violate any valid city or town ordinance.

The city law, relied upon by the defendant to justify the arrest, is not very happily and clearly expressed. The first section offered (number 348) makes the graveness of the offence created by, it consist in the failure on the part of the persons, who, by assembling in sufficient numbers in the streets, have caused an obstruction “ to disperse upon notice by any officer, or any member of the police.” According to the defendant’s own account of the transaction, the prosecutor Bennett and four or five others were standing in front of Powell & Snyder’s store, when they were asked, politely, not to obstruct the sidewalk, and all of the others immediately went away, leaving Bennett alone. Bennett then said, “There’s room,” whereupon the defendant, after the prosecutor had been requested three times “to move,” and had not done so, arrested him. A man cannot be guilty of a nuisance by merely standing still on a sidewalk and refusing to move at the command of a policeman. Even under the phraseology of the ordinance he was not guilty, if the failure to “disperse” was essential to constitute guilt. An obstruction may be removed and a crowd dispersed if all save one go off in different directions and he stands his ground. The act of one person halting on the streets for a reasonable time without misbehaving himself in any way is not such a nuisance as the city has a right to forbid by its laws under the general power delegated to it. Cooley Const. Linn, star p. 200. The section referred to imposes a fine of ten dollars for a violation, and if its provisions are within the purview of the powers granted to the corporation, the violation was also a misdemeanor. The other ordinance (Rule 15) is not materially different as to what it professes to prohibit and prevent, but it is amenable to objection as legislation ultra vires, in that, instead of' a fine, it imposes the punishment of imprisonment in the station-house, to be *800 inflicted at the discretion of an officer without a previous preliminary examination. Not only is the right of municipalities to make by-laws restricted to the express legislative grant of authority given in the charters, or contained in the general laws defining the rights, duties and powrers of all such corporations, but they are subject to the limitations contained in the Constitution of the United States and that of the State in which they may be situated. Cooley’s Const. Lim., star pp. 198 and 199.

The second ordinance relied upon for the protection of the officer (Rule 15) is clearly in violation of the Constitution (Art. 1, §§ 12, 13 and 17), in providing that a person may be arrested because he refuses to “move on,” and (in the opinion of the officer, who is left to judge of his conduct) “unreasonably persists in remaining so as to incommode others passing,” and can be taken, without -warrant or hearing, to the station-house. Under this law he may be deprived of his liberty’' and sent to a dungeon, not only without trial, but without even a preliminary examination, or an opportunity to give bail for his appearance at an investigation to be had in future, because, in the opinion of a policeman, he consumes an unreasonable time in exchanging greetings with two friends whom he meets upon the sidewalk of the city. In the case of Judson v. Peardon, 16 Minnesota, 431, defendant justified in an action, brought against him to recover damages for arresting the plaintiff under an ordinance of the city of St. Paul, which provided that any one who refused, without sufficient excuse, to obey any order or direction given at a fire by a person duly authorized to order or direct, should pay a fine not exceeding fifty dollars, and that “any member of the Common Council or any fire warden may arrest and detain such person till the fire is extinguished.” The Court held that the clause permitting the arrest and detention during the fire was unconstitutional and void, and that if the plaintiff had violated any valid *801 city ordinance, he might have been arrested without warrant. This case has been cited with approval by both Cooley and Dillon. Cooley’s Const. Lim., star p. 201. p. 245, note 3; Dillon on Gotp., sec. 414, note.

It was held also that an ordinance providing for the destruction of property as a nuisance, without a judicial hearing, was void under a section in the Constitution of Illinois, substantially the same as that already cited from our own organic law (Art. 1, sec. 17). Dorst v. People, 51 Ill., 285.

The by-law, distinguished as Rule 15, is unconstitutional and void. If the other section is sufficiently intelligible to be enforced under a strict construction of its language in any conceivable case, it is certain that the conduct of the prosecutor in failing “ to disperse,” after his comrades had deserted him, did not, according to defendant’s own account of the transaction, subject him to liability either for the penalty prescribed or to indictment under the general law making it a misdemeanor to violate a town ordinance.

The charter of the city (eh. 111, secs. 26, 27 and 59, Private Laws of 1883) gave the city Marshal the powers as a peace officer of the Sheriff or constables of th’e County of Buncombe, and to both the Marshal and a policeman the authority to moke arrests—

“1. Whenever he shall have in hand a warrant, duly issued b}’’ the Mayor of the city of Asheville or a Justice of the Peace of the county of Buncombe.

“ 2. Whenever any misdemeanor or violation of any ordinance has been committed, and he has reasonable cause to believe that the suspected party may make his escape before a warrant can be obtained.”

The power to arrest without warrant is, in express terms, confined to two classes of cases — where he sees an offence committed, or where he knows it has been committed, and *802 has reasonable ground to apprehend an escape. The latter provision enlarges his authorit}’’ beyond that of a Sheriff or Constable, but upon condition that the ordinance has certainly been violated.

Judge Dillon, in his work on Municipal Corporations (Yol. 1, §211), says: “ Charters authorizing municipal officers to make arrests upon view and without process, are to be viewed in connection with the general statutes of the State, and being in derogation of liberty are strictly construed.” Petersfield v. Vickers, 3 Coldw. (Term.), 205; While v. Kent, 11 Ohio S., 550.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 386, 106 N.C. 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hunter-nc-1890.