86 Ala. 601 | Ala. | 1888
Section 4031 of the Code provides that “Any person .... who, in the presence or hearing of any female, uses abusive, insulting or obscene language, must, on conviction, be fined not more than two hundred dollars, and may also be imprisoned in the county jail, or sentenced to hard labor for the county, for not more than six months.” Under this statute, it is the jury’s duty to assess the fine (Code, § 4499); and the judge may, in his discretion,
Under that part of the statute we are considering, whether its purpose be to prevent breaches of the-peace, or to shield the sensibilities of women, it is manifest that the evil from the violation of it, and the culpability of the defendant charged with such violation, would be less, where the language denounced by the statute is used in the presence of a female whose sensibilities are known to the defendant to have been blunted to the point of habitual indulgence on her own part, in abuse, insult and obscenity, than if she were pure of speech, and always, considerate in expression. Like considerations would' apply, where it is shown, not that the general habit of the woman was to use abusive, insulting, or obscene language, but that she was given to the use of it, playfully or otherwise, in her associations with the defendant; and evidence of either of these classes should be admitted, to enable the court and jury to discharge their discretionary functions as to the amount of thp punishment intelligently,
The legislative purpose was to make it a crime to use the language denounced in the statute, in the presence of any woman, under any circumstances. This purpose is clearly expressed. To deny the protection of the act to any female, or under any state of circumstances, would be to inject an exception into the statute which its letter does not admit of, and to which its spirit is opposed. Guilt must be adjudged upon a concurrence in evidence of the statutory facts, and upon these facts, with others that go in aggravation or extenuation, the punishment is to be assessed with reference to the degree of the defendant’s culpability, as shown by the attendant circumstances.
The rulings of the-Circuit Court were not in accord with our views of the law, and the case is reversed and remanded.