122 N.E.2d 20 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1954
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by the city of Toledo on questions of law from a judgment of the Municipal Court of Toledo sustaining a demurrer and dismissing an affidavit charging that the defendant "did, at 2 N. Erie Street in the city of Toledo, Ohio, sell, offer for sale and did exhibit a device or article, to wit: a rubber device commonly known as a condom, intended for the prevention of conception, the same being contrary to Section 17-10-8 of the Municiple [sic] Code for the city of Toledo, Ohio."
Although no provision is made for an appeal from a judgment adverse to a municipality in Chapter 2953 of the Revised Code (Section 13459-1 et seq., General Code), such an appeal is authorized to be taken either to the Common Pleas Court or the Court of Appeals by Section
In determining this appeal, this court takes judicial notice of the ordinance of the city under which the charge is brought.Orose v. Hodge Drive-It-Yourself Co.,
Ordinance 17-10-8 reads as follows:
1. "Whoever sells, lends, gives away, exhibits, or offers to sell, lend, give away or exhibit, or publishes or offers to publish or has in his possession for such purpose, an obscene, lewd, or lascivious book, pamphlet, writing, advertisement, circular, print, picture, photograph, drawing, representation, figure, image, cast, instrument or article of an indecent or immoral nature, or a drug, medicine, article or thing intendedfor the prevention of conception or for causing an abortion, or advertises any of them for sale or writes, prints or causes to be written, or printed a card, book, pamphlet, advertisement, or notice giving information when, where, how, of whom or by what means any of such articles or things can be purchased or obtained, or manufactures, draws, prints or makes such articles or things, or sells, gives away or shows to a minor, a book, pamphlet, magazine, newspaper story, paper or other paper devoted to the publication or principally made up of criminal news, police reports, or accounts of criminal deeds, or pictures and stories of immoral *358 deeds, lust or crime, or exhibits upon a street or highway or in a place which may be within the view of a minor, any of such books, papers or pictures, shall be fined not less than fifty dollars ($50.00) nor more than five hundred dollars ($500.00) or imprisoned not more than six months, or both." (Italics supplied.)
2. "This section shall not affect the publication of standard medical books, or regular practitioners of medicine, or druggists in their legitimate business."
The grounds of the demurrer are:
1. That the facts stated in the affidavit do not constitute an offense against the ordinances of the city of Toledo or the laws of Ohio.
2. That the ordinance is unconstitutional, arbitrary and capricious, and seeks to establish an unreasonable classification of persons who may sell condoms solely for the purpose of creating a monopoly.
The unconstitutionality of a statute or ordinance upon which the charge is brought may be raised by demurrer on the ground that the statute is unconstitutional on its face. But the well-established canon of construction that every reasonable presumption be indulged in favor of the constitutionality of a statute applies to the power of municipalities to adopt and enforce such local regulations under the police power as are not in conflict with general laws. Leis v. Cleveland Ry. Co.,
The demurrer admits the truth of well-pleaded allegations of the affidavit (State v. Peters,
Defendant is charged with selling, offering for sale and exhibiting an article known as a condom intended for the prevention of conception. The ordinance prohibits the selling, offering for sale or exhibiting an article or thing intended for the prevention of conception. The complaint, therefore, upon its face, states a valid cause of action under the ordinance.
Except for the penalty, the ordinance at the time of its adoption was copied almost verbatim from Section 13035, General Code, which at the time of the adoption of the ordinance did not include knowledge as an element of the offense. (In the interest of raising revenue municipalities are too often prone to re-enact statutory penalties.) In 1943 (120 Ohio Laws, 230), Section 13035, General Code, was amended in several respects and provided that whoever knowingly sells, etc., but the ordinance has not been subsequently amended to conform to the 1943 amendment.
Municipalities are invested with authority to adopt and enforce within their limits such local police, sanitary *360
and other similar regulations "as are not in conflict with general laws." Section
A perusal of the ordinance incorporating so many phases of immoral activity would appear to violate the provision of the Toledo Charter that an ordinance shall not contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly stated in the title thereof. However, in construing a similar provision of the Ohio Constitution, it has been held that such provision is directory only. Pim v. Nicholson,
The affidavit fails to allege knowledge and intent or that the act was unlawfully committed. The accused may demur when the facts stated in the indictment do *361
not constitute an offense punishable by the laws of this state,or when the intent is not alleged and proof thereof is necessaryto make out the offense charged. Section 13439-9, General Code (Section
It is said that the view is taken in some cases that a criminal intent is not a necessary element of offenses which are merely malum prohibitum or of prohibitive statutes which cover misdemeanors in aid of the police power, where no provision is made as to intention, and if a criminal intent is not an essential element of a statutory crime it need not be proved in order to justify a conviction. In other words, it is immaterial that the defendant acted in good faith or did not know that he was violating the law. 14 American Jurisprudence, 784, Section 24; Commonwealth v. New York Cent. H. R. Rd. Co.,
"Where a statute defines an offense regardless of scienter,
and the means of knowledge are available to the accused or the act is such as to impose a duty (in the interest of the public weal) upon the offender at his peril to ascertain the fact of violation, knowledge is not an essential element to support conviction; but under a charge of violating a statute which does not by its terms include scienter as an element of the offense, where the means of knowledge or the circumstances are such that the accused is not bound at his peril to know the fact and obey the law, proof of knowledge of the fact is essential to support a conviction." State v. Williams,
Ordinance 17-10-8 may fall within the classification of regulatory acts not requiring scienter but mere omission of any mention of intent from ordinance 17-10-8 is not to be construed as eliminating that element from the offense denounced. There is inherent in the phraseology of the ordinance the element of specific intent on the part of the seller-accused that the article was sold for the purpose of preventing conception, and mere proof that the article sold is capable of preventing conception is insufficient to support a conviction. *363
The affidavit substantially follows the language of the ordinance. In section 2, the ordinance recognizes that contraceptives may be used for a lawful as well as an unlawful purpose. Although the phrase, "intended for the prevention of conception," refers to the article or thing intended for the prevention of conception, nevertheless in the light of the fact that contraceptives may be used for a lawful purpose, there is inherent in the definition of the offense that the seller must have known that the article was intended to be used for an unlawful purpose. In Massachusetts, the sale of articles for the prevention of conception is absolutely prohibited without any exception or exemption. Commonwealth v. Gardner,
In Davis v. United States,
In the prosecution of a druggist for violation of a liquor law, it was not sufficient to charge that he sold intoxicating liquor upon a written prescription and that the sale was not made by him in good faith for medicinal purposes, without alleging that it was known to him that the liquor would be used for other than the purpose the prescription called for.Rowland v. State (1908), 18 C. C. (N.S.), 598, 33 C. D., 245 (affirmed without opinion
An affidavit charging the accused with violation of a Sunday closing ordinance was held insufficient for failing to charge knowledge and criminal intent, and the judgment of conviction was reversed and the defendant discharged. Daugherty v.Village of Dennison (1898), 11 C. C. (N.S.), 13, 12 C. D., 776 (affirmed without opinion
The primary function of an indictment, information or affidavit charging an offense is to apprise the accused of the offense of which he is charged, and the Rowland, Daugherty, andGoldsmith cases were decided prior to the enactment of Section 13437-4, General Code, in 1929. But the Supreme Court has declared that although the liberal provisions of the Criminal Code (Section 13437-4 et seq., General Code) should be recognized and applied in a proper case, if a vital and material element identifying or characterizing an offense is omitted from an indictment, the indictment is insufficient to charge an offense. Harris *365
v. State,
Having reached the conclusion that proof of intent is necessary to make out the offense charged, in my opinion it was incumbent upon the city to allege in the affidavit such intent as required by Section
Judgment affirmed.
CONN, J., concurs.
DEEDS, J., concurs in the judgment of affirmance.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the affirmance of the judgment of the trial court. However, I wish to make a brief observation.
The issue raised on the record is the sufficiency of the affidavit to charge an offense. In the well-considered opinion of Judge Fess, it is pointed out that the affidavit states an offense under the ordinance. With this conclusion, I am not in accord. It is my opinion that in the light of the exceptions in the ordinance, giving the contraband article a lawful status, the affidavit must contain an averment that the act charged as constituting an offense was unlawful, or averments of the same import, from which the unlawfulness of the act condemned may be reasonably inferred.
In considering the sufficiency of the affidavit, my primary concern does not embrace what the proof may show as to the character of the surrounding facts and circumstances. *366
The Code of Criminal Procedure specifically provides that short forms of charging offenses may be used. Section
A criminal act contains two essentials, the act and the intent. While an averment of intent, or guilty knowledge, may be omitted from the charge laid against a defendant, the unlawful character of the act may not be omitted in stating the offense.
Criminal intent, whether specific or general, may be shown by the surrounding facts and circumstances. When an act is shown to have been done knowingly, and such act is unlawful, the law presumes a criminal intent from such unlawful act. State v.Huffman,
If the foregoing premise be correct, the conclusion is imperative that the affidavit does not state an offense under the ordinance. *367