City of Summit v. Iarusso
City of Summit v. Iarusso
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered hy
Cosimo larusso was convicted before the police court of the city of Summit of “maintaining * * * a shop, room, or place, at 67 Park avenue, to which persons resorted for the purpose of buying arid drinking spirituous and fermented liquors, and which place was injurious to public morals” in violation of a city ordinance. The court imposed a fine of $100, and in default of payment a term of sixty days in the county jail. Oil application to the judge
The first point made for the city is that there is no constitutional legislation to support the action of the Common Pleas judge.
Two acts are applicable: that of 1895, page 764, reprinted in Comp. Stat., p. 408, under the title of "certiorari ” and that of 1908, page 442, Comp. Stat., p. 1868, being a supplement to the Criminal Procedure act. Both are attacked as infringing upon the constitutional powers of this court to act b3r the prerogative writ of certiorari; but we deem this question settled by previous adjudications; as to the act of 1895, in Stokes v. Schlacter, 66 N. J. L. 247, and as to that of 1908, in Newark v. Kazinski, 86 Id. 59. In both cases the theory of decision was that as this court retains the right of review by certiorari to the Court of Common Pleas, or to the judge of that court, as the case may be, our prerogative power is not impaired. It is urged that this is in opposition to the decision of this court in New Brunswick v. McCann, 74 N. J. L. 171. Assuming the applicability of that decision,-we are constrained to follow the later ruling in Newark v. Kazinski, supra. Cases in which the Circuit Court acts as the first court of review are to be distinguished on the ground that from that court the ease might be removed directly to the Court of Errors and Appeals and this court would be thereby deprived of its right to interpose b3r certiorari.
It is further argued that the act of 1908 is unconstitutional as not within the title of the Criminal Procedure act, because it purports to confer criminal jurisdiction on a civil court, i. e., the Court of Common Pleas. It is sufficient to say that the act designates, not the court, but the judge, as the reviewing tribunal; and as the Common Pleas judge is ex
It remains to determine whether the Common Pleas judge rightly decided that the conviction was illegal, and our conclusion is that he did. The ordinance is as follows:
“Section 6. For keeping or causing, or permitting to be kept a bouse, shop, room or place of any description in which any kind of disorder or noise is permitted or made to the alarm, annoyance or disturbance of the neighborhood, or in which persons assemble, or to which persons resort for the purpose of buying or drinking spirituous or fermented liquors or intoxicating beverages, or which house, shop, room -or place is injurious to the public health, public quiet, or public morals, or in which is kept or used any table or device of any kind upon or by which any game of chance or hazard shall he played, a fine not exceeding two hundred dollars and imprisonment in the city or county jail, not exceeding ninety days in default of the payment of such fine, to be imposed in the discretion of the said police justice or other officer of said city before whom a trial and conviction may be -had.”
The complaint charged, generally, that defendant kept a place, &c., injurious to public morals and to which persons resorted for the purpose of buying or drinking spirituous or fermented liquors, &e., and specifically that on two stated dates defendant sold certain bottled beer to complainant, which he drank on the premises, in violation of said ordinance. The evidence as embodied in the minutes of the police justice is confined to these two sales of liquor. The police justice thereupon adjudged defendant guilty of maintaining a place to 'which persons resorted to buy liquor “and which place was injurious to public morals.”
The result is that the judgment of the Common Pleas judge, vacating the conviction in the police court, will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.