299 N.Y. 190 | NY | 1949
This is an appeal by permission of a Judge of this court from an order of the Appellate Part of the Court of Special Sessions of the City of New York, which affirmed a judgment of conviction of the Magistrate's Court of the City of New York convicting appellant of a violation of section 21 of article III of the Rules and Regulations of the Department of Parks of the City of New York and suspending sentence therefor.
The facts are not disputed. On the night of October 1, 1948, a police officer found a number of men erecting a stand at Eastern Parkway and Utica Avenue in the borough of Brooklyn, county of Kings, city and State of New York. After the stand had been erected the defendant mounted it and began to speak. The stand had been erected on the mall which separates the center driveway and the commercial driveway of Eastern Parkway. That mall constitutes the area between the two driveways *192 mentioned and is twenty-five or thirty feet wide. Upon it there are trees, a pedestrian walk and two rows of park benches facing each other with about twenty benches in each row. There is another mall, also running east and west and also between the main driveway and the commercial driveway which carries traffic in the opposite direction. That mall also has forty benches in two rows facing each other. Each bench seats about six people so that on the two malls separated by the center or main driveway there is room on the benches for approximately four hundred eighty people. The trees in the mall have ornamental fences around them and are dedicated to deceased veterans of the past two wars.
As the defendant began to conduct his meeting some fifty people gathered at the front of the stand. The defendant described himself as "a propagandist for our political campaign" and was espousing the candidacy of one Tigart of the Socialist Labor Party. The defendant said he was the editor of the "`Weekly People'" the official newspaper of that party.
After the defendant had been speaking for five or six minutes the police officer approached and asked if he had a permit from the park department permitting him to conduct the meeting. He said he did not and was thereupon served with the summons which lead to his conviction.
The defense then established that Eastern Parkway is a busy street upon which the traffic is heavy.
The only other witness called on either side was an assistant to the assistant borough director for the department of parks in Brooklyn. It was one of his duties to issue permits for meetings. He testified without contradiction that, for the location at which the defendant spoke, there never had been a denial of a permit when application was made for one unless someone else had already applied for and obtained a permit for that location for the same period. He said that this was one of the two places in the borough of Brooklyn which was considered by the park department to be a public forum or meeting place and at which it was felt that any type of ordinary meeting could be conducted. In fact, in his brief the defendant says "This location is a place designated by the Park Department for public speaking". *193
The defendant however urges that section 21 of article III of the Rules and Regulations of the Department of Parks of the City of New York is unconstitutional and that therefore the order affirming the conviction must be reversed.
Section 21 reads as follows:
"Section 21. Meetings, Exhibitions, Parades, Racing, etc.
"No person shall erect any structures, stand or platform, hold any meeting, perform any ceremony, make a speech, address or harangue; exhibit or distribute any sign, placard, notice, declaration or appeal of any kind or description; exhibit any dramatic performance, or the performance in whole or in part of any interlude, tragedy, comedy, opera, ballet, play, farce, minstrelsy, dancing, entertainment, motion picture, public fair, circus, juggling, rope-walking, or any other acrobatics, or show of any kind or nature; or run or race any horse, or other animal, or, being in or on a vehicle, race with another vehicle or horse, whether such race be founded on any stake, bet or otherwise; in any park or upon any park street except by permit.
"No parade, drill or manoeuver of any kind shall be conducted, nor shall any procession form for parade or proceed in any park or park street without a permit."
Sanction for the foregoing regulation is found in sections 531, 532 and 534 of chapter 21 of the Charter of the City of New York. (People v. Nahman,
The judgment should be affirmed. [See
LOUGHRAN, Ch. J., LEWIS, DESMOND, DYE, FULD and BROMLEY, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.