On June 25, 1965, the defendant, Moses Wedlow, was issued a summons by a Detroit police officer for loitering on a public sidewalk. The referee found defеndant guilty under Detroit City Ordinance 780 (§ 58-1-10 of the Detroit City Code). Upon de novo review by Detroit Recorder’s Court, defendant was again found guilty.
Défendant appeals оn evidentiary and • constitutional grounds.
Defendant first contends that the testimony offered by the police officer was insufficient to sustain convictiоn -of loitering under ordinance 78G which provides:
“It shall be unlawful for any person to loiter on any street, sidewalk, overpass or public plaсe. For the purpose of this article, loitering is defined as the act of standing or idling in or about any street, sidewalk, overpass or public plаce so as to hinder or impede or tend to hinder Or impede the passage of pedestrians or vehicles.”
In examining the settled recоrd as stipulated by the parties pursuant to OCR 1963, 705.19, we find the following facts were established by the officer’s testimony: the area where the offense оccurred was a busy one; defendant and another man were impeding pedestrian traffic on the sidewalk and causing pedestrians to walk around them; defendant did not move, extend his arms, or make any other overt *137 move; the officer warned defendant to move' to another location about 30 minutes before issuance of the summons.
Since defendant has stipulated that evidence was produced that he was on a public sidewalk and that he impeded the passage of pedestrians, contrary to his contention we find the officer’s testimony sufficient to supрort a conviction under the ordinance.
Defendant also contends that ordinance 78(31 is unconstitutional under the due process clausе of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and under Article 1, § 17 of the Michigan Constitution. The American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan filed a brief amicus curiae in support of this contention.
As part of the due process contention, defendant first argues that ordinance 78G is unconstitutional because it was enacted for an unlawful purpose, i.e., illegal search. However, as there is no indication that an illegal search was conducted in this case, and no indication that illеgal searches have resulted from this ordinance, this contention is not properly before this Court.
Defendant and the American Civil Liberties Union оf Michigan further attack the loitering ordinance as unconstitutional, claiming it is vague and over-broad. In
City of Detroit
v.
Bowden
(1967),
In
Shuttlesworth
v.
City of Birmingham
(1965),
*138 “It shall be unlawful for any person or any number of persons to so stand, loitеr or walk upon any street or sidewalk in the city as to obstruct free passage over, on or along said street or sidewalk. It shall also be unlаwful for any person to stand or loiter upon any street or sidewalk of the city after having been requested by any police officer to move on.”
In analyzing this ordinance, the United States Supreme Court stated that the ordinance as literally read sets forth two separate and disjunсtive offenses. According to the Court, the second sentence of the ordinance literally sets forth an offense complete in itself аnd as such is unconstitutional because a person may stand on a public sidewalk in Birmingham only at the whim of a police officer. It was upon this рossible literal construction of the second sentence by the trial court that the Supreme Court reversed Shuttlesworth’s conviction and remаnded to the Alabama Court of Appeals.
Despite the above literal construction, the Court noted that following the Shuttlesworth trial but before appeal to the Alabama Court of Appeals, the Alabama Court of Appeals, in Middlebrooks v. City of Birmingham (1964), 42 Ala App 525 (170 So 2d 424), expressly narrowed the cоnstruction of the Birmingham ordinance. Under this narrowed construction, mere refusal to move on after a police officer’s request is not suffiсient to support the offense. Rather there must also be a showing that the accused obstructed free passage. The Supreme Court аpproved this narrow construction by Alabama courts saying that under such a construction the ordinance would not be unconstitutional.
In comparing the' Detroit city ordinance with the Birmingham ordinance as narrowly construed, we find loitering to be sufficiently well defined in the *139 Detroit ordinance so as to limit application to those persons who arе obstructing free passage of pedestrians. The ordinance does not prohibit standing on a sidewalk, but only standing on a sidewalk so as to hinder оr impede pedestrian traffic. Thus the Detroit loitering ordinance achieves its obvious regulatory purpose of keeping sidewalks clear and is not unconstitutionally broad or vague.
In
Cox v. Louisiana
(1965),
“The constitutional guarantee of liberty implies the existence of an organized society maintaining public order, without which liberty itself would he lost in the excesses of anarchy. The control of travel on the streets is a clear example of governmental responsibility to insure this necessary order. A restriction in that relation, designed to promote the public convenience in the interest of all, and not susceptible to аbuses of discriminatory application, cannot be disregarded.”
Similarly, in Bowden, supra, this Court recognized that a legislative body can make even innocent acts unlawful if these acts have a tendency to affect or endanger the public in connection with health, safety, morals, or general welfare. Since the ordinance in the instant case was enacted to protect the public safety, it is within the police power of thе city of Detroit. Territory of Hawaii v. Anduha (CA9, 1931), 48 F2d 171.
Defendant also contends ordinance 78Gr is unconstitutional because it authorizes police officers to use their unbridled discretion to arrest whomever they please. We disagree. The Detroit ordinance only authorizes conviction where the person loitering actually obstructs the passage of pedestrians. There *140 fore, under the Detroit ordinance, a police officer has no disсretion as to whom to arrest. While the ordinance might be unconstitutionally applied in certain situations, this is no ground for finding the ordinance itself uncоnstitutional. See Shuttlesworth, supra. Thus, if a police officer, in attempting to enforce the Detroit ordinance, arrests a person who is not actually obstructing the passage of pedestrians, conviction of that person is an unconstitutional application of the ordinance (and is in violation of the terms of the ordinance), but does not make the ordinance unconstitutional.
In the instant case, no abuse in the applicаtion of the ordinance has been shown. The police officer’s testimony clearly indicates that defendant obstructed the free passage of pedestrians on a public sidewalk. Thus, the trial court properly found defendant in violation of the ordinance.
Affirmed.
