6 B. Mon 21 45 Ky. 21

Smith vs Commonwealth.

Error to the Lexington City Court.

Indictment.

Case 7.

The charges in the indielment.

The opinions of witnesses that a house is a_ nuisance as it is kept, is incom*22petent, upon one g^ngCanuisance]

*21 Nuisances. Penal offences. Indictments.

Sept. 19.

Chief Justice Ewing

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an indictment in the City Court of Lexington, against Smith, for keeping a disorderly house. The indictment charges, that Smith on a certain day, “and on divers other days and times, between that day and the taking of this inquisition, with force and arms, in the City aforesaid, unlawfully did keep and maintain a common, ill-governed and disorderly house, and in the said house, for the lucre and gain of him, the said Richard Smith, certain persons, as well men as women, of evil fame and name, and of dishonest conversation, then and on said other days and times, there unlawfully and willingly, did cause and procure to frequent and come together, and the said men and women, in the said house of him, the said Richard Smith, at unlawful times, as well in the night as in the day, then and on the other times and days, there to be and remain, drinking, tipling, cursing, swearing and otherwise misbehaving themselves, unlawfully did permit, and yet doth permit, to the great damage and common nuisance of all good citizens, and against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.”

Upon the trial, the jury found the defendant guilty, and assessed his fine to the Commonwealth to $400, and his motion for a new trial being overruled, he has appeal*22ed to this Court. The Court erred in allowing the wifinesses to give their opinions that the defendant’s house was a nuisance, and in many of the instructions given M behalf of the Commonwealth, and refused, at the instance of the defendant, for which the judgment must be reversed. Butin as much as there is a radical defect in the proof to sustain the indictment as found, we deem it unnecessary to point out these errors.

This indictment is deemed substantially good, whether it apply to free white persons or slaves.

But the proof establishes the fact, that the persons who were assembled at the defendant’s house, (a grocery,) from time to time, were slaves, and free persons of color. And giving to the proof its full force, the jury might have inferred from, it, that slaves and free persons of color, were in the habit of being assembled at the defendant’s grocery, on Sabbath days and at other times, in numbers unauthorized by law, and that said Smith traded with them, and sold and gave liquor to them, without the authority of their masters, as well to drink at the grocery, as to carry off and drink elsewhere, and that they were habitually allowed and encouraged to remain tipling and drinking, at the said grocery. But the •testimony does not establish that they were in the habit of cursing, swearing and making a noise, to the annoyance and disturbance of the neighbors, but the contrary appears by the proof.

We do not doubt that the facts proven, or those which, may be rationally inferred from the proof, constituted the house a disorderly house. The keeping of a grocery, at which that class of the community are habitually allowed to assemble, and buy whiskey and tiple and drink at pleasure, is calculated to corrupt their morals, to tempt them to petty larcenies, by way of procuring the means necessary to buy, to lead them to dissipation, insubordination and vice, and obstruct the good government, well being and harmony of society. A house in which such practices are encouraged and indulged, though no cursing or swearing or noise is made whereby the neighbors are disturbed, is a public annoyance, and may properly be denominated a public nuisance. Nor is it rendered less *23a public nuisance, from the fact that statutes have prescribed specific penalties for trading with, or selling or giving liquor to slaves, without the permission of their owners, or permitting more than a prescribed number to assemble. These statutes apply to single offences, and their enactment evidence the opinion of the Legislature, as to the effects the prohibited acts may have upon the well being of the public.

The habitual practice of a punishable of-fence, tho’ punishable by pecuniary penalty, may nevertheless constitute a house in which they are practised, a public nuisance, for which an indictment will lie.

Keeping a house at which spirituous liquor is habitually sold to slaves, is an indictable offence, notwithstanding each act of sell*24ingmay subject the offender to a pecuniary penalty‘

*23The habitual perpetration of the prohibited offences in a house kept for the purpose, constitutes the house a public nuisance, as it tends, in a greater degree to the spread of the evil which was intended to be prohibited by these enactments. There is a specific penalty for fornication and adultery. Yet it is an offence and a much higher grade of offence to keep a baudy house, or a house where those practices are indulged. And though the single of-fence may be punished by a specific fine, the keeping of a house where those offences are habitually encouraged and indulged, is an offence of a much higher grade, and is punishable as such, by an indictment at common law. So the keeping of a grocery, where practices, by a certain class of the community, are habitually indulged, which have been prohibited by the legislature, as of evil tendency to'the public, must be deemed a public nuisance.

But the peaceable and habitual assembling of white persons, in the sa'me or any other number, at the grocery for the same purposes, and who even indulged in the same practises as those proven against the slaves, it is believed would not constitute the house a public nuisance, as such assemblies and indulgences would not be of the same evil consequences to the public, and are not prohibited by law, unless the sale of liquors by retail, and the tipling and drinking in the house, should constitute it a tipling house, in which case there is a prescribed statutory penalty for keeping such a house, which is commensurate with the evil, and covers the entire offence.

If such assemblies and practices of slaves in the said house will constitute it a disorderly house, and similar assemblies and practices of white persons will not, it would follow that an indictment to be sustainable, should distinguish and charge that they were slaves that assembled. *24There being no such specification in the indictment before us, it cannot be sustained upon the proof adduced,

Combs <Sf Shy for plaintiff: Cates, Attorney General, for Commonwealth.

But upon the return of the cause, inasmuch as other 1 proofs may be offered, showing that the assemblies at said grocery were attended with cursing, swearing and other

like misbehavior, to the disturbance of the peace of the neighborhood, which is embraced in the general charges of the indictment, and would constitute a disorderly house, whether the assemblies were composed of whites or blacks, all that can be done upon reversal, is to directa new trial and further proceedings.

The judgment of the City Court is therefore reversed, and cause remanded, that a new trial may be granted, and further proceedings had.

Smith v. Commonwealth
6 B. Mon 21 45 Ky. 21

Case Details

Name
Smith v. Commonwealth
Decision Date
Sep 19, 1845
Citations

6 B. Mon 21

45 Ky. 21

Jurisdiction
Kentucky

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