100 N.E. 413 | NY | 1912
The defendant was convicted of the misdemeanor of keeping a disorderly house. A careful examination of the record shows that there is evidence to sustain the conviction and the merits of the case will not be considered in this opinion.
The appellant insists that there were three classes of testimony received upon the trial subject to her objections and exception, and that the receipt of each class of such testimony was seriously prejudicial to the defendant.
Questions were asked of witnesses as to what they observed, and in answer thereto evidence was received of certain occurrences, in the presence of the defendant, at the house in controversy; and of the number and sex of persons who, in the presence of the defendant, from time to time, both day and night, passed through an alleged grocery store, situated in a room next to the street on the first floor of the house, to and from a sitting room or kitchen and a bedroom in the rear thereof. The evidence was direct, pertinent upon the question as to whether the crime had been committed, and competent. (People v. Jones,
A witness was asked and allowed to answer a question as to the general character and reputation of the house in question. The term "disorderly house," in connection with other terms, is construed by subdivision 9 of section 3 of the Penal Law, as follows: "The terms `reputed house of prostitution or assignation,' `house of prostitution,' `house of ill-fame or assignation,' `disorderly house,' include all premises which by common fame or *600 report are used for purposes of prostitution or assignation." The construction of the term "disorderly house" in the statute as quoted is not exclusive of the provisions of section 1146. It has, however (if not without it), made testimony of the common fame or report of a house competent.
Wigmore, in his work on Evidence (Vol. 1, § 78), says: "If it distinctly appears in the statute that the repute of the house is the essential criminal fact, so that merely to keep a house of that reputation is the offence, then the reputation is a fact in issue, and the reputation may be shown, irrespective of the actual character or use of the house. But if the actual character or use of the house is also or alone an element of the crime, then the question of the use or reputation is an evidentiary one,i.e., whether reputation, as an exception to the hearsay rule, may be used to evidence the character."
As the question of the common fame or report of a house has been made competent by statute, it is unnecessary to discuss the further question whether such evidence would be competent apart from the quoted provision of the statute. The appellant cites as authority for her contention that evidence of the general reputation of the house should not have been admitted, the cases of People v. Mauch (24 How. Pr. 276) and People v.Calabrese,
The third question raised by the appellant in this case is that the court improperly admitted testimony relating to the character of the women who frequented said house. Such testimony is competent and for many years has been generally admitted by the courts for the purpose of showing the reputation and character of the house itself. (People v. Hulett, 15 N.Y. Supp. 630;Harwood v. People,
The judgment of conviction should be affirmed.
CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY, HAIGHT, VANN, WERNER and COLLIN, JJ., concur.
Judgment of conviction affirmed.