11 N.Y. Crim. 129 | New York Court of General Session of the Peace | 1895
Carlo Casegeanda, the defendant, was, by the city magistrate, adjudged guilty of a violation ^f section 33 of the corporation ordinances of 1880, in that he obstructed the sidewalk with a boot-blacking stand; and from such judgment and' conviction he appeals. Several grounds of error are assigned by the appellant, but only one of them is necessary to a consideration of the case as presented by the return. The complainant, as captain of the police, was thus examined:
“Q. Are you familiar with section 33 of the city ordinance? A. 1 have a copy here of the amended ordinance of 1884. (Copy of ordinance offered in evidence. Objected to on the ground that the ordinance now offered in evidence is not properly certified, as required by section 941 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Objection overruled. Exception.)”,
If there was something denominated an ordinance offered in evidence, the return does not show what the ordinance was; and, if the defendant was convicted of a misdemeanor for violating an ordinance, and there was no evidence of the declarations or the mandates or the prohibitions of that ordinance, of what could he be convicted of violating? An ordinance is not '
Judgment reversed.
NOTE ON “PROOF OF CITY ORDINANCE.”
<■ Production of copy of ordinance by city clerk, with certificate of passage, record and publication attached, is, in absence of objection, sufficient proof of ordinance. People v. Wilson, 41 S. R. 765.