
    Matter of Lambert Newkirk on habeas corpus.
    (Supreme Court, Kings Special Term,
    March, 1902.)
    Crimes — “ Disorderly conduct ”— Distinguished from “ Disorderly person.”
    There is no such offense as “ disorderly conduct ” in the Penal Code or any general statute.
    Certain provisions of the Consolidation Act (L. 1882, eh. 410), perhaps kept alive by the New York city charter of 1807, define certain ' acts as constituting disorderly conduct or disorderly conduct “ that tends to a breach of the peace,” but in order to hold a person upon such a charge the information should set out the particular acts which bring the charge within the Consolidation Act.
    The offense of being a “ disorderly person ” is defined by the statutes and is a different matter from “ disorderly conduct.”
    Issue raised by demurrer to a return to a writ of habeas corpus by the warden of the Kings County Penitentiary.
    Towns & McCrossin for relator.
    Alexander McKinny opposed.
   Gíaynor, J.:

The return is defective in saying that the relator is held after conviction under a warrant of commitment of a magistrate for “ Disorderly Conduct ”. There is no such criminal offense in the Penal Code or other general law of the state as “ disorderly conduct ”. Nor is any such offense defined in the city charter, so far as,I can find, though the phrase is loosely used there (§ 707 et seq. ). In the charter of the old city of New York, however, (Consolidation Act, L. 1882, c. 410), driving orQriding a horse through the streets faster than five miles an hour is made a criminal offense there called “disorderly conduct” (§ 1448), and in another section (§ 1458) an offense there called “ disorderly conduct that tends to a breach of the peace ” is defined to be (1) suffering an unmuzzled ferocious or vicious dog to be at large, (2) the plying of her vocation in the street by a common prostitute “to the annoyance of the inhabitants or passers by”, and (3) “ any threatening, abusive or insulting behavior with intent to provoke a breach of the peace or whereby a breach of the peace may be occasioned.” These provisions may be kept in life by section 1610 of the present charter. I am not aware of any other statutory provision creating an offense of “ disorderly conduct ”. The charge of “ disorderly conduct ” by police officers, and the holding of persons under such charge by magistrates, except in the foregoing cases, and then only when the particular acts constituting the offense are set out in the complaint or information, is an abuse and oppression, and renders the officer and the magistrate liable to an action for false imprisonment. It is a loose charge which standing alone, i. e., without a' statement of the acts alleged to constitute it, may mean anything a policeman or magistrate may wish, and has been very generally resorted to in the city of New York (where most abuses against individual rights originate), against persons who are guilty of no "criminal offense, but whom some policeman or other person wishes to annoy and oppress by arrest and imprisonment. It is unfortunate that such a loose phrase has any statutory sanction. It is dangerous, in that it affords room for false arrests and oppression, especially of those whose rights and liberties ought to be jealously guarded, namely the weak, uninfluential and friendless, whose protection should be the chief aim of government.

On looking from the return to the warrant of commitment, how- . ever, I find that the relator is therein held as being a Disorderly person ”, which is a very different thing. The statutes carefully defined who disorderly persons ” are, viz., persons who abandon their wives, fortunetellers, jugglers, certain kinds of gamblers, and the like (Code Crim. Pro. § 899; City Charter, § 686), and this commitment fully sets out the statutory dereliction which makes this relator a disorderly person, i. e., he has abandoned his wife without adequate support.

The writ is dismissed.  