86 N.J.L. 133 | N.J. | 1914
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The main question presented for solution by this record is whether the indictment, based on section 5a of the Crimes act (Comp. Stat, p. 1744), upon which the plaintiff in error was tried, convicted and sentenced, charges any of the criminal offences denounced by that section.
The section reads: “Any person who shall, in public or private, by speech, writing, printing or by any other mode or
The indictment contains three counts. The first count charges that the plaintiff in error “being a wicked, malicious and evil-disposed person, and contriving and intending the peace of this state to disturb, and to bring the government of the city of Paterson, a municipality recognized by the laws of this state, into great hatred and contempt, did in public attempt to incite, abet, promote and encourage the citizens of said state, residing in the said city of Paterson, to hostility and opposition to the said government of the said city of Paterson, in this state, by writing, printing, publishing and causing to be written, printed and published, in a certain public newspaper called The Weekly Issue/ certain scandalous and malicious words of the tenor following: /Police Chief Bimson Overrides Constitution. Chief of Police and his Strike Breaking Force Brutally Attack Peaceful Strikers/ /Bimson, the boss strike breaker/ The police of Paterson, headed by their brave Chief Bimson, having taken charge of Paterson, and are running things to suit themselves. The halls of striking mill workers are raided, their meetings broken up and helpless men, women and children are brutally clubbed, cuffed and manhandled right on the streets. The mill workers of Paterson struck against the four-loom system which is grinding out their health and lives. They peacefully .walk out of the mills.and quit work. For doing this terrible thing the police of Paterson, .at the behest of the silk manufacturers, rushed at the defenseless workers like a bunch of drunken Cossacks and savagely attacked them. Outside of barbarous Mexico and Russia, there are. few places that have witnessed such police brutality and lawlessness. Paterson .was once famous as the City of the Reds, the home of anarchists. These anarchists talked a whole lot and made
“ ‘Suppose the manufacturers locked out the workers and closed then factories until the workers were almost starved to death. Would the police of Paterson rush into the rooms of the Silk Manufacturers’ Association, break up their meetings and crack the .fat skulls of the manufacturers? Not so as you could notice it. Why? Because money talks. And money owns the city of Paterson, including the police,’ and thereby he, the said Alexander Scott (plaintiff in error), then and ■there wickedly, unlawfully and maliciously attempted to encourage hostility and opposition to the government of the city of Paterson, contrary to the form of the statute,” &c.
The second count is almost exactly like the first, differing therefrom only in this particular, that the acts are charged to have been committed in private, by the plaintiff in error, instead of in public.
The third count is practically like the first and second, with the exception that it charges the incitement, abetting, &c., to have been committed by a different method, namely, “by circulating and causing to he circulated a certain public newspaper called ‘The Weekly issue,’ in which was printed certain scandalous and malicious words,” &c.
It is no doubt true, as has been elaborately argued by counsel for plaintiff in error, that the statute, of which the paragraph above quoted is a component part and solely involved in the consideration of the validity of the indictment and subsequent proceedings thereon, was the resultant product of feverish and political excitement caused by the assassination of the late President MelCinle}^. If so, the rule is applicable that courts, in interpreting such a statute, will pay due regard to the conditions and circumstances existing at the time it was brought into life in order- to get at its true meaning and purpose. As Blackstone tersely expresses it, in laying down rules for the- interpretation of statutes, due regard must be had to the old law, the mischief and the remedy. And we must not lose sight of the fact that the great danger in enacting statutes under the stress of great public excitement and pressure, is that such legislation is very apt to reflect the crude and undigested sentiment of a public upheaval at the cost of encroachments on constitutional rights. It has been argued, by counsel for plaintiff in error, that the statute is in violation of that paragraph of the state constitution which provides: “Every person may freely speak, write and pub
A plain reading of the paragraph of the statute makes it clear that it intended to include two classes of cases — first, where the subversion and destruction of any and all government by force was either in public or private, by speech, writing, printing or by any other mode or means advocated; second, where an attempt is made by speech, writing, printing, or in any other way, to incite, abet, promote or encourage hostility or opposition to any and all government.
It is on the latter clause of the paragraph of this statute that the indictment is attempted to be supported.
What the legislature aimed at is fully expressed by the term “any and all government.” It intended to suppress the advocacy of anarchy. The obvious meaning of the language “to
The vice of anarchy is not so much in the belief of a state or condition of society where there is no law or supreme power, but- rather in the promotion and encouragement of disobedience to and contempt of existing laws; such disobedience and contempt constituted in themselves indictable offences at common law.
The newspaper article, which was made the ground work of the indictment, is couched in hot and intemperate language, and is obviously a most caustic and scathing arraignment of the police department and force of the city ot' Paterson; and does, among other things, charge the officials administering the governmental affairs of the city with being corrupt and venal. Although it may be that the article is libelous, and the author and publisher thereof subject to indictment for libel, it cannot be fairly said that it, either in tone or spirit, advocates hostility or opposition to any and all government. At the most, it evinces a deep animosity against the city government of Paterson, for alleged maladministration in governmental affairs, but beyond that it does not go. And that is not enough to bring it within the language or spirit of the section of the Crimes act invoked in this case. The indictment is palpably without any legal force. The trial judge should either have quashed it or directed a verdict of acquittal.
The judgment will be reversed.