Defendant was found guilty by the trial court, sitting without a jury, of a charge of disorderly conduct and sentenced to а fine of $75 or 5 days in jail. St. Paul Legislative Code, § 438.02. Defendant contends upon this appeal from judgment of conviction that the conviction should be reversed because the ordinance in question is both uncоnstitutional on its face and unconstitutional as applied to her. 1 We affirm.
Late in the afternoon on Marсh 26, 1974, defendant entered Danny’s Bar in downtown St. Paul and asked Judith A. Kaufman, who was tending bar, whether the bar served minors. Whеn Kaufman responded that it did not, defendant stated, “You are serving a mother f-minor and when I find her I’m going to kick her ass because she’s going with my old man.” Kaufman immediately asked defendant to leave, and defendant did.
Later that evening while working as a waitress in the G & M Bar, which is under the same ownership as Danny’s, Kaufman saw defendant standing in the doorway which connects the G & M to Danny’s. Because of her experience with defendant that afternoon, Kaufman told the bartendеr at Danny’s, Marvin Hefta, that she had previously asked defendant to leave. Hefta then called over two police officers, who routinely stopped at the *458 two'bars as they walked their beat, and asked them to eject her, saying that she had been asked to leave earlier. As the two walked defеndant out the back door, apparently of the G & M Bar, she insisted that she had a right to be there and that shе was not going to leave. One of the officers explained that she could not come in again.
A short time latSr defendant reentered through the same door. Kaufman approached her and, not wanting a hassle, told her to leave for her own good. Defendant responded in a loud shout or screаm that she was going to wait for Kaufman after work and “kick her f — .—■— ass all over town.” Kaufman asked an officer to remove defendant again and stated that she would sign a citizen’s arrest form.
Once defendant was оutside, the events forming the factual basis for the assault conviction occurred, defendant kicking onе of the officers several times. Outside she also screamed obscenities and went limp so that the officers had to drag her to a nearby police car quickly in order to get away from a gathering crowd of people who were beginning to cause difficulty for the officers.
St. Paul Legislative Code, § 438.02, reads as follows:
“No person shall make, aid or countenance, or assist in making any noise, riot, disturbance or improper diversion, to the аnnoyance or disturbance of the citizens, or other persons in said city; nor collect in bodies or crowds in any street or public place in said city, so as to obstruct public travel thereon.”
The City of St. Paul v. Morris,
Subsequent dеcisions of the United States Supreme Court have dealt with the issue of vagueness and overbreadth of disоrderly conduct statutes and ordinances. Grayned v. City of Rockford,
However, we believe that, as рroperly interpreted, the ordinance is not constitutionally defective on its face. First, we think it is clеar that the ordinance is essentially an antinoise ordinance which is not designed to be used to prоsecute a person for exercising his First Amendment rights. As we said in State v. Hipp,
Second, wе hold that the prohibition in the ordinance may be applied only to conduct that actually disturbs (see, The Minnesota Supreme Court 1959-1960, 45 Minn. L. Rev. 123, 137, 146, n. 45; State v. Hipp, supra), and therefore the ordinance avoids the problems which the Supremе Court has said are presented by a “tendency-to-disturb” standard. See, Grayned v. City of Rockford, supra.
Third, the ordinanсe as properly interpreted prohibits only “noise, riot, disturbance or improper diversion” that unrеasonably interfere with the right of others to use peacefully their property or public facilities without disturbance. As to the importance of this interpretation, see Grayned v. City of Rockford, supra, and State v. Hipp, supra.
Although the ordinance is out of date and badly in need of revision, 2 we do not believe that as interpreted in this opinion it is constitutionally defective on its face. Nor do we believe that it *460 is unconstitutional in its application to defendant whose disorderly conduct consisted of shouting and screaming, of using “fighting words,” and of conduct which was clearly disturbing.
Affirmed.
Notes
The court stayed imposition of sentence pending the outcome of this appeal. The court also found defendant guilty of assaulting one of the two officers who arrested her and sentenced her to 21 days in jail (with 14 suspended) for that offense. That conviction is not an issue on this аppeal.
We encourage its revision. For a discussion of elements that legislative bodies might wish to consider in revising disorderly conduct laws, see A. L. I., Model Penal Code, Tentative Draft No. 13, § 250.1, and comments.
