53 Mass. 231 | Mass. | 1847
It was not contended, on the argument, that Hotel Square was not as much a public street and passage way, as any of the streets in East Boston; but it was contended— and this was the only exception brought to the notice of the court — that all the open streets in East Boston have been laid out by the proprietors; that they have not been laid out, or dedicated and accepted, by any legal authority, as highways or public ways; and that they cannot be regarded as lawful public streets. But the court are of opinion that this fact, if established, would afford no defence to the complaint. The case is precisely within the words of the statute. The statute does not limit its prohibition against smoking to high ways or public ways de jure; but by the terms “ street, lane or passage way,” it uses language sufficiently broad to include all open ways de facto actually used as such.
Exceptions overruled.