82 N.J.L. 366 | N.J. | 1912
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The prosecutrix in certiorari was convicted by a police justice of the town of Boonton upon a complaint charging her with a violation of section 1 of an ordinance of said town entitled “An ordinance to prevent vice and immorality and to preserve public peace and good order, and for other purposes.”
This section provides, among other things, “that any person or persons who shall in any street, railroad depot, public place or elsewhere, within the town of Boonton, * * * or make use of obscene language or profanity shall be subject to a fine.”
The complaint, in substance, charges that the prosecutrix did violate section 1 of the said ordinance by making use of obscene language and profanity at the side of her front porch in her yard, on Old Boonton road, in the town of Boonton, by calling the complainant: (Here follows the obscene and profane language alleged to have been used by the prosecutrix.)
It will be perceived that this complaint does not charge that the obscene language or profanity was used in a public place. It fails to charge that the language denounced by the ordinance was used in any of the places specified by the ordinance. The obvious aim of the ordinance is to prevent the use of profane or obscene language on the public streets or in the public places of the town.
A reasonable interpretation to be given to the word “elsewhere” in the ordinance, under the maxim noscitur a sociis, would be that it included any other public place of like character as those specified in the ordinance and which preceded it. Livermore v. Board of Freeholders of Camden, 2 Vroom 507; State v. Herring, 41 Id. 34.
It was necessary to the validity of the complaint that it should show upon its face that the place where the profane and obscene language was used was a public place. Por it is the public character of the place where the obscene or profane language is used which makes the use of such language an offence within the meaning of the ordinance. The complaint fails in this regard. It is therefore fatally defective. The record of conviction is also fatally defective. The police Justice found the prosecutrix guilty of using profane and obscene language in violation of section 1 of the ordinance of the town of Boonton. It does not set out the obscene or profane words for the use of which the prosecutrix was found guilty, nor the time or place, when and where the same were used. The failure to do this is fatal to the validity of the conviction. Handlin ads. State, 1 Harr. 96; Keeler v. Milledge, 4 Zab. 142; Buck v. Danzenbecker, 8 Vroom 359; Hoeberg v. Newton, 20 Id. 617; Salter v. Bayonne, 30 Id. 128; Atlantic City v. Turner, 38 Id. 520; State v. Regan, Id. 106; Orange v. McGonnell, 42 Id. 418.
The proceedings under review must be set aside, with costs.