12 N.Y. Crim. 294 | New York County Courts | 1897
The defendant, Joseph Garabed, was, on the 25th day of November, 1896, arrested under a warrant, upon the application of the authorities of the village of Greenport, N. Y. charged with the violation of a village ordinance, which reads substantially as follows:
“ All person or persons are prohibited to go about or remain on any streets or sidewalks in said village, beating any drum or tambourine, or making any noise with any instrument for any purpose whatever, without the written permission of the president of the village. Any person violating this ordinance shall be subject to penalty of five dollars for each offense.’’
The information upon which the warrant was based states that the alleged violation occurred on November 23, 1896, and therefore two days elapsed between the alleged violation and the arrest under the warrant. After several adjournments the defendant was duly tried, and on December 1st adjudged guilty by the justice, and fined $5, in default of which hé was committed to the county jail for a term not to exceed 10 days. The defendant was duly allowed an appeal to this court. A careful reading of the evidence shows that the ordinance in question was openly, flagrantly, and defiantly violated by the defendant, and no question is raised by the attorney for the appellant in any way denying that the ordinance was legally passed, and duly posted and published, according to the statute'in such cases made and provided. It is conceded that the village of Greenport is incorporated under the general village act passed in 1870. We will take up and consider the reasons assigned by the defendant’s counsel for a reversal of the judgment in the order in which they were presented in the argument.
It is first claimed by the defendant that village ordinances imposing only. a penalty for violation cannot be enforced by criminal proceedings. To sustain this proposition, the case of Fuller v. Redding, reported in 16 Misc. Rep. 634, 39 N. Y. Supp. 109, is cited. In this case the defendant was arrested under a warrant six days after the alleged violation for riding upon a bicycle upon the sidewalk in the village of Otego, in this state. An ordinance had been duly passed by the village trustees, prohibiting the riding upon the sidewalks by any persons under penalty of one dollar. The
The second point presented by the appellant is that, in the case at bar, neither the warrant nor the information alleged that the defendant had willfully and unlawfully done the act complained of, 1 am of the opinion that it was not necessary to state in the information or warrant that the offense was committed willfully or unlawfully, as the defendant was charged with neither a felony nor a misdemeanor. It is true that a village board of trustees cannot create or define crimes, and that the legislature alone has power to constitute acts or omissions as criminal offenses; but the trustees certainly have power to pass ordinances such as the ordinance in question, and, as the defendant was arrested for a violation of an ordinance, and not for an alleged crime or misdemeanor, I am of the opinion that both the information and the warrant are correct in this case.
The third point raised by the appellant is that the commitment was void, the defendant claiming that under section 484 of the Code of Criminal Procedure the imprisonment of the defendant cannot exceed one day for every dollar of the fine. I do not think this section applies in the case at bar. The defendant, having been fined the extent of the penalty, viz. five dollars, is punishable under chapter 385, § 1, Laws 1875, and which provides that when a person is arrested without a warrant, and brought before a justice of the peace for the violation of the ordinance, the “magistrate shall proceed forthwith to hear, try and determine the complaint or charge on which such person is so arrested, and such person shall, upon conviction by the justice, be fined by said magistrate in accordance with any ordinance or by-law of the village, * * * and imprisonment in the county jail until such fine be paid, not exceeding ten days.”
The fourth question raised by the defendant is that the village ordinance in question, under which the defendant was arrested, is unconstitutional. I fail to see, under the cases cited by the learned counsel for the appellant, wherein there is any unconstitutionality
Judgment affirmed.