The defendant had been charged with the violation of Section 26.10(c) of the Ordinances of the City of Kansas City Missouri, which is as follows:
“Any person who, with intent to provoke a breach of the peace or whereby a breach of the peace may be occasioned, commits any of the following acts shall be deemed to have committed the offense of disorderly conduct: .... (c) Congregates with others on a public street and refuses to move on when ordered by the police.”
During the first two weeks of September in 1970, there were many fights between groups of black and white students in the vicinity of East High School in Kansas City, Missouri. During this time, Kansas City police had been patrolling the area *456 and trying to keep peace by keeping the school children moving as they left the school so as to prevent them from congregating in groups. On September 18, 1970, at about 3:30 in the afternoon, about 150 whites had gathered at 20th and Van Brunt Streets and about 25 to 40 blacks had gathered at 20th and Denver. The police officers arrested five students just as school let out and waited on the street for the paddy wagon to arrive. When it arrived a group congregated around them. After placing the five in the paddy wagon, the officers directed the group to move on. When all of them failed to move on, Officer Baker directly requested one young girl to move on, and when she failed to do so, he arrested her and started to put her in the police car. The defendant arrived on the scene at this time. He recognized the girl as a friend of a friend. When the officer attempted to put this girl in the police car, the defendant came up to the other side of the open car door, within six to eight inches of the officer, and began to tell him he could not arrest the girl and that she had not done anything. The officer told him to move on, but he continued to stand there and tell the officer he could not arrest the girl. There were 25 to 40 people there at this time. Officer Baker then arrested the defendant. While in the process of placing him in the paddy wagon, the girl escaped. The defendant’s version of this episode is substantially the same, except that he and his witnesses testified that Officer Baker never told the defendant to move on. The case was tried to the court on appeal from the municipal court, and the judge found the order to move on was given and the defendant was guilty and he was fined the sum of twenty dollars.
Appellant-defendant first contends on appeal that this ordinance under which he was convicted is invalid and unconstitutional under the due process clauses of the 14th Amendment of the United States Constitution and Section 10 of Article 1 of the Missouri Constitution, V.A.M.S., 1945, because: (A) It is vague in that proper notice is not provided to the public as to what activity is prohibited or required and fails to provide standards by which a judge or jury might determine guilt; (B) it is overly broad in that it unconstitutionally infringes, abridges and restricts defendant’s right to freedom of speech, right to peaceably assemble and right to freedom of association.
Since this appeal involves the construction of the Constitution of the United States and of this state, jurisdiction is in this court. Article V, Section 3 of the Missouri Constitution.
It is apparent from a reading of the ordinance, supra, that it conveys a sufficiently defined warning as to the proscribed conduct when measured by common understanding and practices within the guidelines for determining whether a statute or ordinance is unconstitutionally vague as set out in State v. Crawford,
Defendant has cited many cases from the United States Supreme Court and other federal courts supporting his proposition that vague and overly broad laws are unconstitutional. Cox v. Louisiana,
From this case and others cited below we have determined that any statute or ordinance providing for punishment for a breach of the peace is unconstitutionally broad and vague if by its terms a person could be punished for exercising his right to freedom of speech and assembly as protected by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution and guaranteed by the 14th Amendment. Terminello v. Chicago,
Whether such a statute or ordinance is overly broad or sufficiently narrow depends upon the definition of the term “breach of the peace” by the appellate court of the appropriate state. Thus, in Cox v. Louisiana, supra,
The term “breach of the peace,” not having been defined in the Kansas City ordinance in question, we look to the deci *458 sions of the appellate courts in this state to see how the term has been defined. If it has been too broadly defined, then the ordinance must fall. However, if it has been narrowly defined, and thus not vague and indefinite and it does not impinge on constitutionally protected rights, it shall stand. Unfortunately, neither party has provided us with any assistance on this vital point. Defendant apparently assumed that breach of the peace in Missouri meant the same as it did in Louisiana, Georgia, South Carolina, Chicago and Kentucky, according to the cases cited above. The city contended that such laws as the ordinance in question are a proper exercise of the police power to maintain public order. And so they may be, but only if they do not infringe upon constitutionally protected expression.
This court in 1913, in a case arising under an ordinance of the City of St. Louis, which concluded with the phrase “calculated to provoke a breach of the peace,” in defining the term breach of the peace held it to be “a generic term, and includes all violations of public peace or order, and acts tending to a disturbance thereof. It may consist of such acts as to tend to excite violent resentment.
But unless they tend to excite immediate violence
[emphasis supplied], abusive and insulting language will not constitute a breach of the peace unless so provided by statute.” City of St. Louis v. Slupsky,
This is the only case we are able to find in which the term “breach of the peace,” unlimited by the ordinance or statute using the term, was defined in Missouri. We find no cases of either this court or of a Court of Appeals holding to the contrary. Nor did we find any case where a conviction for breach of the peace was upheld when it involved expression of a constitutionally protected right. See City of Louisiana v. Bottoms,
What the Kansas City ordinance in question says, when the term “breach of the peace” is defined as it has heretofore been defined in Missouri, is that any person who with intent to incite to violence congregates with others on a public street and refuses to move on when ordered by-the police is guilty of disorderly conduct. This ordinance as so defined does not punish anyone for or deter anyone from exercising any constitutional right.
This case is similar to Feiner v. New, York,
Feiner was convicted and appealed to the United States Supreme Court on the ground that his conviction was in violation of his right of free speech. This was denied. The following from the court’s opinion at page 320,
Defendant next contends that his actions were no more than the expression of his right to freedom of speech, assembly and association and there is no proof of his intent to cause a breach of the peace. Freedom of speech does not include putting your face to within eight inches of a policeman’s face while he is in the process of making an arrest and telling him over and over that he can’t arrest this person.
Defendant argues that the proof of defendant’s intent must be such as to preclude any other reasonable hypothesis other than defendant’s guilt. This was ruled adversely to defendant’s point in State v. Deutschmann,
Intent is generally inferred from the commission of the act. A sane man ordinarily intends the usual and natural consequences of his acts. But since the intent is an essential part of the charge in this case, there is no inference of such intent from the mere acts of the defendant. However, it may be deduced or inferred from the surrounding facts and circumstances of the case. “The intent of a party in the doing of any particular act is seldom susceptible of positive and direct proof. The intent is a mere invisible resolve of the human mind, and ordinarily must be gathered from the acts and conduct of the party charged with the commission of the act.” State v. Beverly,
When the facts and circumstances are that the defendant put his face within eight inches of a police officer’s face and repeatedly told him that he couldn’t arrest this person and that she hadn’t done anything wrong, and this occurred in a crowd of people in a tense situation, and when defendant refused to move on when so ordered by the police officer, any jury or judge, as in this case, is warranted in inferring an intent to stir the crowd to violence. What else could a sane person expect under these circumstances ?
The transcript in this case shows that the defendant was charged with “Disorderly conduct by congregation (sic) with others on a public street and refusing to move on when ordered by the police, with intent to cause a breach of the peace.” *460 The words “with intent to cause a breach of the peace” are in handwriting different from that of the rest of the charge. The defendant and his attorney have filed affidavits in this court stating that the charge was amended without leave of court after the trial in municipal court and before the transcript on appeal from the municipal court was docketed with the circuit court. They also allege that the information was not read to the defendant in circuit court, and that he did not waive the reading of the information, and further, he did not enter a plea to the charge in the circuit court. The attorney for the city stated in oral argument to this court that the addition is in the handwriting of the assistant city counselor who signed the complaint and must have been done at that time. The complaint did not become an information until signed by the assistant city counselor. Neither the affidavits of the defendant and his attorney nor the oral statement of the attorney for the city in open court is evidence.
The record is clear that the defendant went to trial with an attorney on the complete charge in the circuit court without objection to the failure to be formally arraigned and without pleading to the charge. Defendant was tried as if he had been arraigned and entered a plea of not guilty; thus, the failure to read the charge to the defendant and to take his formal plea is not error. Rule 25.04, V.A. M.R.; § 546.020 RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S.; Johnson v. State,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
