OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant was charged with violating Islip Town Code § 35-3 (D), which prohibits unreasonable engine noise. After a nonjury trial, District Court found defendant guilty, concluding that the People had proved beyond a reasonable doubt that on the date in question, defendant continuously operated approximately 50 bus engines for several hours beginning at 5:30 a.m. The court further found that the operation of these engines was audible beyond the real property where it originated and thereby disturbed the individual named complainant.
The Appellate Term reversed the judgment of conviction and dismissed the information, holding that “[i]t is well settled that anti-noise statutes are designed to prevent those noises which are of such a pitch as to constitute a public nuisance and a wrong against the community, and are therefore the proper subject of public prosecution. These statutes are reserved for situations that go beyond the concern of the individual to a point where they become a potential or an immediate public problem” (
Although the intermediate appellate courts have broad power to review questions of fact, as well as broad discretionary powers (see CPL 470.15), this Court, as a court of limited jurisdiction, may, with few exceptions, consider only questions of law (see NY Const, art VI, § 3 [a]; see also CPL 470.35). A
“question of law with respect to a ruling ... of a criminal court during a trial or proceeding is presented when a protest thereto was registered, by the party claiming error, at the time of such ruling ... or at any subsequent time when the court had an opportunity of effectively changing the same” (CPL 470.05 [2]).
Thus, only questions that “have been properly preserved for *407 review by appropriate motion or objection in the court of first instance[ ] may be brought before the Court of Appeals” (Karger, Powers of the New York Court of Appeals § 1:3, at 9 [3d ed rev]).
As both parties acknowledge, the validity of the Islip ordinance was not challenged before the trial court. Accordingly, the issue whether an anti-noise statute requires an element of public nuisance—as the Appellate Term concluded—is unpreserved for our review
(see
CPL 470.05 [2]). Although the Appellate Term recited that its reversal was on the law, that court necessarily decided the unpreserved issue within its interest-of-justice jurisdiction
(see People v Johnson,
The People correctly point out that a claim that an accusatory instrument is facially insufficient presents a jurisdictional question exempt from the requirement of preservation (see
People v Alejandro,
Islip Town Code § 35-3 (D) classifies as a violation the “operation, including the stationary idling, of any engine, including, but not limited to, an automobile, truck, motorcycle, motorbike, motorboat or minibike engine, so as to create a noise disturbance.” A “noise disturbance” is defined as “[t]hat level of sound which . . . [a]nnoys or disturbs a reasonable person of normal auditory sensitivities” (Islip Town Code § 35-2 [A]).
The accusatory instrument here alleged that at a specific time and place, the continuous running of defendant’s bus engines “annoyed and disturbed the undersigned complainant, a reasonable person of normal auditory sensitivities, i.e., a person of average tolerance, without any hearing enhance
*408
ment or impairment.” By its plain terms, the ordinance proscribes sound that annoys or disturbs “a” reasonable person of normal auditory sensitivities. The information thus contained allegations sufficient to establish, if true, every element of the offense as defined in the Islip Town Code. “So long as the factual allegations of an information give an accused notice sufficient to prepare a defense and are adequately detailed to prevent a defendant from being tried twice for the same offense, they should be given a fair and not overly restrictive or technical reading”
(People v Casey,
In dismissing the accusatory instrument as “defective,” the Appellate Term faulted the failure of the information to allege that the noise disturbance claimed to have been caused by defendant constituted a public nuisance. However, assuming that such a requirement exists, it arises not from the ordinance as adopted by the Islip Town Board, but from this Court’s precedent suggesting that an anti-noise statute proscribing merely private disputes may be unconstitutionally vague
(see People v New York Trap Rock Corp.,
A challenge to the constitutionality of a statute must be preserved
(see e.g. People v Davidson,
*409 Accordingly, the appeal should be dismissed.
Judges G.B. Smith, Ciparick, Rosenblatt, Graffeo, Read and R.S. Smith concur.
Appeal dismissed on the ground that the reversal by the Appellate Term was not “on the law alone or upon the law and such facts which, but for the determination of law, would not have led to reversal” (CPL 450.90 [2] [a]).
