2 Conn. Cir. Ct. 372 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1963
Both defendants, following their conviction of being present at dancing on Sunday in violation of § 53-300 of the General Statutes, appealed, assigning as error that § 53-300, as it relates to the crime charged, is unconstitutional. The grounds upon which they rely are, first, that the statute is vague and fails to warn of the aets it purports to restrict and, secondly, that it presumes a violation without requiring an intent. After the state had rested, the defendants moved for dismissal on those grounds and, on being overruled, excepted and took their appeal. Neither defendant testified or offered any evidence in defense. The constitutionality of a statute involving the crime charged can be raised by a demurrer. State v. McKee, 73 Conn. 18, 24. Upon the overruling of the demurrers, the defendants could have refused to plead over, let judgment enter and appeal, and on such appeal raise the identical questions they now present. However, they elected a trial and now appeal from the resulting judgments, assigning
The defendants were charged with violating $ 53-300, the pertinent part of which provides: “Any person who is present at any concert of music, dancing or other public diversion on Sunday or on the evening thereof, except as permitted by this section, shall be fined . . . .” In the early morning of Sunday, June 16, 1963, an officer of the Hartford police department was at the Hofbrau Restaurant in the city of Hartford. The Hofbrau is a restaurant-grill combination and has a liquor license. The officer talked with the defendant Romano, the proprietor, and informed him, “If you have dancing, Mr. Romano, someone is going to get arrested.” Romano said, “Well, we’re going to have dancing,” and then he walked away. There was a band present, consisting of four or five pieces. At approximately 1:40 a.m. dancing ensued and some ten people were observed dancing on a dance floor, including the defendant Clair L. Moráis, who was dancing with her husband.
The defendants concede that if the statute is held to be constitutional as it relates to the errors raised,
The defendants further contend that “concert of music” as used in the statute modifies the word “dancing,” thereby prohibiting concerts of dance music and not dancing. The comma appearing between “concert of music” and “dancing,” though not decisive, does indicate a separation of the operation of these two elements. A comma has been defined as: “1. A mark of punctuation used to indicate a slight separation of sentence elements .... 2. A slight pause.” Webster, New World Dictionary (Coll. Ed.). The language of the sentence, if read in view of this construction, clearly indicates that the intent was to separate “concert of music” from “dancing.” “Furthermore, [i]t is the commonly accepted rule that, where more than two words are intended to be connected by the same conjunction,, that conjunction is usually omitted except between the last two. See illustration in Fowler, Modern
The defendants also contend that “this statute creates a criminal act without the necessity of criminal intent” and is therefore unconstitutional. “It is quite true that guilty knowledge, or evil or guilty intent, is, speaking generally, an essential element of crimes at common law; but it is also true that in very many statutory crimes guilty knowledge or intent is not an essential element. . . . It is for the legislature to determine whether the legality or illegality of a given act shall depend upon the knowledge or the ignorance of the doer; and it thus becomes a question of construction in such cases whether guilty knowledge or guilty intent constitutes an element of the statutory crime.” State v. Nussenholtz, 76 Conn. 92, 95, 96. “ ‘There are many statutes in the nature of police regulations for the protection of the morals of the community . . . under which, either because it is
There is no error.
In this opinion Kinmonth and Kosicki, Js., concurred.