11 Ga. App. 811 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
The petition for certiorari in this case recites that the accused was tried in the mayor’s court upon a charge of “disorderly conduct.” The answer of the mayor sets forth that the defendant was charged with “the offense of disorderly conduct, violating that portion of the section of the city ordinance, defining disorderly conduct, which prohibits any one from assembling in the city for the purpose and with the intent of gaming,” but that no ordinance was put in evidence, as no point was made on the ordinance, and there was no occasion to introduce it in evidence. The
A city may properly punish for assembling for the purpose of violating the laws of the State against gaming, but, in order to do so, it must have an ordinance expressly making this act an offense against the city. A city could no more say that merely assembling for the purpose of violating a State law would be disorderly conduct than it could say that mere preparation to commit any other crime would be disorderly conduct and be punishable as such. If the City of Jackson has an ordinance which expressly makes it an offense against the city to assemble for the purpose of gambling, then, under the evidence as set forth in the answer of the mayor in this case, the accused was guilty and could properly be punished. But since it appears from the major’s answer that the accused was charged with the offense of disorderly conduct, and the evidence demanded a finding that he was not guilty of disorderly conduct, the conviction was unauthorized. We recognize, of course, that the expression “disorderly conduct” would include a variety of acts, and generally it would be a question for the magistrate to say whether or not the particular act complained of was comprehended within the expression “disorderly conduct;” but where it affirmatively appears that the accused merely sat by a table in a perfectly quiet and peaceable manner, without disturbing anybody, simply for the purpose of engaging in a game of cards, we do not think the magistrate could properly find that he was guilty of disorderly conduct.
Generally, “disorderly conduct” means some act which tends to a breach of the peace, or at least to disturb that portion of the public which may see or hear the conduct claimed to have been disorderly. Nothing of that sort having been shown in the present case, we are of the opinion that the conviction can not stand. Kahn v. Macon, 95 Ga. 419 (22 S. E. 641); Keck v. Gainesville, 98 Ga. 423 (25 S. E. 559).