OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant, Richard E Conti, charged with a violation of section 64-3 (B) of the Code of the City of Dunkirk, has moved for an order dismissing the information pursuant to CPL 170.35 (1) (a) on the ground that the information is not sufficient on its face; dismissing the information pursuant to CPL 170.35 (1) (c) on the ground that the ordinance is unconstitutionally vague as applied to defendant; and, in the alternative, should the court deny the dismissal applications, suppression of any and all statements attributed to defendant on the ground- that the People failed to timely serve notice upon defendant pursuant to CPL 710.30.
Chapter 64 of the Dunkirk City Code (added June 6, 2006 as Local Law No. 4-2006) is a comprehensive local law aimed at “making] every effort to protect children from sex offenders” by “establishing] residency and proximity restrictions for sex offenders” (Dunkirk City Code § 64-1 [B], [C]), and predicated upon the Council’s finding that “residency in close proximity to areas where minors are required to be present or congregate for recreation purposes pose [sic] an unacceptable level of danger”
Section 64-3 contains two subdivisions. The first prohibits a sex offender from “residing] within one thousand (1,000) feet of a public or private school, nursery school, pre-school, child care facility, playground, or park” (Dunkirk City Code § 64-3 [A]). The second provides that “[a] sex offender shall not enter into any public or private school, nursery school, pre-school, child care facility, playground, or park” (Dunkirk City Code § 64-3 [B]). At issue in this case, relative to the facial sufficiency and constitutional challenges, is the meaning of the term “school.” Neither chapter 64 nor any other relevant sections of the Dunkirk City Code define such term.
In relevant part, the information alleges that “on the 9th day of September, 2009 on or about 5:30 EM. . . . defendant did enter and remain on the property of Dunkirk Senior High School . . . at a . . . soccer game and outside of the girls bathroom, while being a registered sex offender.” According to the supporting depositions, defendant walked on a paved pathway and/or walkway, from the south end of the high school property near the baseball field north toward the football field, making several stops along the way, including near the girls’ bathroom. There is no allegation that defendant ever stepped outside of the walkway or entered the school building. However, it is alleged that a high school boys’ soccer game was in progress and that he passed along the front of the bleachers, while making his way toward Sixth Street.
Notwithstanding defendant’s failure to make the instant motions “within forty-five days after arraignment” (CPL 255.20 [1]), this court, “in the interest of justice, and for good cause shown” (CPL 255.20 [3]), and as a matter of discretion, shall “entertain and dispose of the motion on the merits” (id.). First and foremost, defendant raises “jurisdictional matters, such as an insufficient accusatory instrument, or rights of a constitutional dimension that ‘go to the very heart of the process’ ” (People v Parilla,
Dismissal of Information — Facial Sufficiency
“Under established principles of judicial restraint,” a nisi prius court should not address constitutional issues when a decision can be reached on nonconstitutional grounds (Matter of Syquia v Board of Educ. of Harpursville Cent. School Dist.,
The facial sufficiency requirements for a local criminal court information come in three parts (see People v Casey,
“[F]ailure to comply with the ‘prima facie case’ requirement for facial sufficiency ... is a jurisdictional defect” (People v Alejandro,
Here, defendant contends that the People “have sought to unlawfully expand the conduct prescribed [sic] by the statute to include entry onto school property, even though the prescribed [sic] conduct is specifically limited, by the very words enacted by the [City Council], to £ent[ry] into’ a school” (defendant’s mem of law at 5). Thus, defendant argues that the allegations of the factual part of the information, together with those of the supporting depositions, fail to comply with the “reasonable cause” and “prima facie case” requirements.
Before analyzing whether the allegations comply with the “reasonable cause” and “prima facie case” requirements insofar as the term “school” is concerned, the court notes that the accusatory part of the information is not limited to the allegation that defendant “enter[ed] into [a] public or private school,” regardless of whether the term “school” means “building” or “grounds” or both. The accusatory part of the information is no more and no less than a verbatim regurgitation of the language of Dunkirk City Code § 64-3 (B) without specifying the exact locus criminis.
Since this court must view the facts and circumstances in the light most favorable to the People (see People v Gonzalez,
“A ‘school’ in its broadest sense may be said to include any institution devoted to instruction of any kind” (Matter of Townsend,
Based upon the canon of noscitur a sociis, “which counsels that a word is given more precise content by the neighboring words with which it is associated” (United States v Williams,
Another rule of statutory construction counsels that “[w]hen a word is susceptible of two or more significations, the meaning to be given must be determined from the context of the statute, the purpose and spirit of it, and the intention of the lawmakers” (Statutes § 235). Given the lawmakers’ stated intention of protecting children from sex offenders, particularly in areas “where minors are required to be present or congregate for recreation purposes” (Dunkirk City Code § 64-1 [D]), the court finds that the term “school” should be construed in its broadest sense. To conclude otherwise would be to countenance the absurd position that the intent of the lawmakers was to prohibit a sex offender from entering a school building, but allow such individuals to “enter school grounds and peek in the windows as long as they did not enter the building” (People’s response at 8) or allow sex offenders to sit on bleachers alongside other spectators, including young children, during the
The People’s contention, that the term “school” has been defined in federal and/or state statutes as including grounds as well as building, is without merit. The courts are loath to rely on definitions in one statute to interpret another absent specific legislative authority (see generally People v Hernandez,
Based upon the rules of construction, the spirit of the local law and the City Council’s stated intent, this court construes the term “school” as including both building and grounds.
Based upon the foregoing, the allegations of the factual part of the information, together with those of the supporting depositions, provide “reasonable cause to believe” (CPL 100.40 [1] [b]) that defendant “enter[ed] into [a] public or private school” (Dunkirk City Code § 64-3 [B]) when he traversed the school grounds by walking along a paved pathway which took him past the baseball field, football field, girls’ bathroom and the front of the bleachers. Moreover, the “[n]on-hearsay allegations . . . establish, if true, every element of the offense charged and the defendant’s commission thereof’ (CPL 100.40 [1] [c]).
Accordingly, defendant’s motion for an order dismissing the information pursuant to CPL 170.35 (1) (a) is denied.
Constitutional Challenge
State statutes, as well as local laws, “enjoy a strong presumption of constitutionality” (People v Scalza,
The “[v]agueness doctrine is an outgrowth ... of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment” (United States v Williams,
“A defendant may challenge a statute as being unconstitutionally vague on its face or as applied” (People v Stuart,
A vagueness challenge is analyzed in two parts (see Stuart,
In analyzing the first part of the two-part vagueness test, a “person of ordinary intelligence” should not have to guess at the meaning of the term “school.” On the other hand, a person of ordinary intelligence should be familiar with matters of common knowledge. Among those commonly known facts are the following: that virtually every public elementary or middle school has a playground located on school grounds and accessible to the building by one or more walkways, that schools use their grounds for soccer games and occasional “open air” classes, that students congregate on school grounds before and after classes, and that virtually every high school has one or more athletic fields, bleachers, and interconnecting walkways.
This court is not required to ignore common sense. To the contrary, the court is required to take common sense into ac
While a “person of ordinary intelligence” unschooled in the law would be oblivious to grandiloquent maxims of statutory construction, such person would have a basic understanding that the meaning of words can be ascertained from their context.
Under all the facts and circumstances, this court finds that the ordinance is sufficiently definite to put a “person of ordinary intelligence” on fair notice that the term “school” means building as well as grounds.
Turning to the second and “perhaps, the more important aspect of the vagueness doctrine” (People v Bright,
Here, the determination as to what constitutes a “school” is not left up the officer on the scene. The words “park” and “playground” send a clear message to police officers that the term “school” is not limited to the building itself, but includes the surrounding grounds and any walkways that may pass through those grounds. When the local law is read as a whole, together with the declaration of legislative purpose, officers enforcing the law are provided with a clear and objective standard. Thus, the “danger[ ] of arbitrary and discriminatory application” is absent (Stuart,
Based upon the foregoing, this court finds that the ordinance is not unconstitutionally vague as applied to defend
Motion to Preclude Statements
Although it is true that defects in the service or sufficiency of the notice are waived when defendant moves to suppress and the court denies such motion (see CPL 710.30 [3]; People v Lopez,
“CPL 710.30 is a notice statute intended to facilitate a defendant’s opportunity to challenge before trial the voluntariness of statements made by him” (People v Lopez,
Based upon the foregoing, defendant’s motion for an order precluding the People from using at trial all statements attributed to defendant as set forth in the notice of intent dated October 27, 2009 is granted.
Notes
. “[I]t is the public policy of this state to protect potential victims of a sex offender ... in limiting where such offender may go or work” (Knudsen v Lax,
. Although labeled as a motion to suppress, it is clear that defendant’s motion is actually a motion to preclude statements attributed to defendant for late service of the notice upon defendant. To deem defendant’s motion as anything other than a motion to preclude is to elevate form over substance.
. Even if the statute was impermissibly vague as applied, the allegation that defendant entered and remained on school property provides an independent basis of finding a violation of the ordinance, which is consistent with the accusatory part of the information as well as the bill of particulars, to the extent that the area through which defendant allegedly walked may also constitute a “playground” (see People v Bowe,
