22 Haw. 204 | Haw. | 1914
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
The defendant was convicted in the district court on the charge of using vulgar, profane and obscene language in a public place in violation of section 3188 R. L., was fined five dollars without costs, and has appealed to this court on the question of law whether the words “you big fat Buffalo, you damn son of a bitch,” addressed by one woman to another, during the course of a quarrel, constitute an offense under the statute. The statute forbids the use of “vulgar, profane or obscene language * * * in any public place.” No question as to duplicity in the complaint has been raised, and therefore it may be regarded that only one offense has been charged. (Swearingen v. United States, 161 U. S. 446.) The question calls for an interpretation of the statute.
The words involved are defined by Webster, in part, as follows: Vulgar: low, coarse, offensive to good taste or refined feelings. Obscene: filthy, offensive to chastity or modesty. Profane: treating sacred things with contempt; disrespect, irreverence. Bitch : “The female of the canine kind * *; opprobriously, a woman, especially a lewd woman.”
In libel and slander, suits it has been held that the word “bitch,” when applied to a woman, does not necessarily import whoredom in any of its forms. (Schurick v. Kollman, 50 Ind.
Judgment affirmed.