16 Mass. 385 | Mass. | 1820
By the Court. The indictment charges the offence to have been' committed contra formam statuti; but no statute is found to describe the offence as alleged. The statute of 1785, c. 75, <§. 6, imposes a penalty of twenty shillings for disorderly conduct in town meetings, if the offender shall, after notice from the moderator, persist in his disorderly behavior, and shall refuse or neglect to withdraw from the meeting, after being directed to do so by the moderator. The offence laid in the indictment is not within this provision. Further, all penalties imposed by that statute, not exceeding forty [ * 388 ] shillings, are to be enforced by suit * before a justice of . the peace, and a very summary process is prescribed for the purpose in the statute.
Can the indictment, then, be maintained, concluding, as it does, against the form of a statute, if the facts charged amount to an offence at common law, and are not within the purview of any statute ? The negative of this question was formerly held by the English courts ; but later decisions have been the other way, and, as we think, on good and satisfactory reasons
The remaining question is, Do the facts charged amount to an offgnce at the common law ? On this question we entertain no
Motion overruled.
[See the cases collected, 1 Saund. 135. n. 3—1 Starkie, Crim. Plead. 228-232. —Ed.]