172 N.E. 485 | NY | 1930
The defendant stands convicted of maintaining a public nuisance in the city of New York.
At the northwest corner of One Hundred and Eighty-third street and St. Nicholas avenue, a caterer, the Paramount Mansion Company, occupies a three-story *247 building for the uses of its business. The defendant is the manager. There are dances, weddings and other entertainments, one on each story, beginning in the evening and continuing till dawn. The sounds of revelry by night, to the accompaniment of drums and brasses, assail the quiet of the vicinage. Neighbors in the apartment houses to the right and to the left describe the tumult and the shouting with the disturbance of their sleep. A neighbor across the street bears witness to the same effect. A traveler on the highway heard the noise a block away. The district is a populous one in which many have their homes.
By the Penal Law of the State, an act which "annoys, injures or endangers the comfort, repose, health or safety of any considerable number of persons" is declared to be "a public nuisance," and punishable as a crime (Penal Law, § 1530, subd. 1). The definition corresponds to the distinction between public and private nuisances as it stood at common law (People v.Kings County Iron Foundry,
Long ago it was adjudged that one dwelling in a city who with the aid of a speaking trumpet made great noises in the night time to the disturbance of the neighborhood, must answer to the King (Rex v. Smith, [1726] 2 Strange, 704). The precedent is not one to be hastily renounced in days when trumpets have a power unknown to a simpler age. Public also was the nuisance where works were so conducted that the air became impregnated with "noisome stinks and smells" (Rex v. White, [1757] 1 Burrows, 333).
We have gone back to early days, but not for dearth of modern instances.
A piggery so maintained that "the occupation of the neighboring houses and passage over the adjacent highways" became "disagreeable, or worse" was stigmatized by HOLMES, J., as an indictable offense with copious references to precedents of early times and modern (Commonwealth v. Perry,
SHAW, Ch. J., thought the like of a fat rendering factory defiling the surrounding air. (Commonwealth v. Brown, 13 Metc. 365.)
The ruling was the same, and pronounced by the same court, when the annoyance was a public outcry (Commonwealth v. Smith, 6 Cush. 80; Commonwealth v. Oaks,
The organs of smell and hearing, assailed by sounds and odors too pungent to be borne, have been ever favored of the law (cf.Bohan v. Port Jervis Gaslight Co.
We think the area of this tumult, the range of its disturbing power, is wide enough to bring it within the category of an offense to the community, or so the triers of the facts might find. Here is something more than an interference with a single dwelling or even two or three. Here is tumult so great, if the witnesses are to be credited, as to be a plague to a whole neighborhood.
The judgment should be affirmed.
POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.