Citation Numbers: 165 N.J. Super. 161, 397 A.2d 1107, 1979 N.J. Super. LEXIS 550
Filed Date: 1/16/1979
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The appellant juvenile was engaged in a loud verbal altercation with the driver of a pickup truck who was attempting to enter the parking area of a commercial mall when appellant was standing in or walking past the entrance. Hearing the disturbance, local police intervened and, when one of them asked him what the problem was, appellant, according to the State’s evidence in the juvenile delinquency proceedings below, became belligerent and yelled loudly that it “was none of [the officer’s] fucking business.” He continued arguing with the driver, whereupon. one of the officers took his elbow to lead him aside. Appellant screamed at them to “take [their] fucking hands off him or he would kick their white asses” (appellant was a 17-year-old black). This was repeated to the point that a small group of shoppers gathered to watch and listen. The police attempted to remove appellant by police patrol
Appellant was charged with three acts of juvenile delinquency labelled “disorderly,” with specification of “2A: 170-29” and “2A :170-26” as the statutes offended had the acts been committed by an adult. Substantively, the charges wore of using loud and offensive language and of two acts of “assault and battery on a police officer * * one being the spitting and the other the kicking. The statutes cited constitute as disorderly conduct, respectively, the offenses of uttering loud and offensive language in a public place and of assault or assault and battery.
One of the grounds of appeal here assigned is the grant by the trial judge of the State’s motion prior to the hearing to amend the complaint to charge two acts of assault and battery on a police officer, in violation of N. J. S. A. 2A :90-4, which constitutes that offense a high misdemeanor as contrasted with the disorderly persons offenses originally charged. The court in granting the amendment indicated it was relying upon an appellate decision which it understood to hold that there was no such disorderly persons offense as assault and battery when the victim of the offense was a policeman and that such conduct constituted only the indictable crime proscribed by N. J. S. A. 2A:90-4. The decision alluded to is State v. Moran, 136 N. J. Super. 188 (App. Div. 1975), aff’d 73 N. J. 79 (1977).
Defendant was found guilty of delinquency on all charges after offering purportedly exculpatory testimony, including the fact that he had been called “nigger” by the truck driver, and he was given concurrent indeterminate sentences at Yardville.
I
We deal first with the amendment to charge the indictable offense of assault and battery on a police officer. Pre
We are in disagreement with the trial court’s holding that the act of assault and battery on one who at the time is a police officer is, if committed by an adult, subject to prosecution only as the high misdemeanor ordained by N. J. S. A. 2A:90-4 and not as a disorderly persons offense. The court’s ruling was based on language contained in State v. Moran, supra, 136 N. J. Super. at 192. However the view expressed in Morcm is at variance with and without consideration of the contrary doctrine expressed by the Supreme Court in State v. States, 44 N. J. 285, 291-292 (1965). In States defendant sought to have an assault and battery complaint dismissed in municipal court on the theory that since the alleged assault was upon a municipal police officer it was mandatory to charge under N. J. S. A. 2A :90-4, thereby entitling him to a jury trial in County or Superior Court. 44 N. J. at 291. The Supreme Court, in rejecting the contention, stated that
The mere fact that two statutes overlap in prohibiting the same act does not mean that the later law automatically repeals the earlier one pro tanto, or that an alleged offender can only he prosecuted for the more serious offense. Repeals by implication are not favored and it is a cardinal rule of statutory construction that both laws should he given effect if reasonably possible. It is not sufficient merely to show that a subsequent act covers some of the cases*167 encompassed by the earlier one. The legislative intention to repeal must be manifest; the language must admit of no other reasonable interpretation. State v. Fary, supra [16 N. J. 317] ; Swede v. City of Clifton, 22 N. J. 303, 317 (1956).
We see no such incompatibility between the two enactments under discussion here. In order to justify invocation of L. 1962, c. 39, the conditions prescribed must be met: (a) the officer must be in uniform; (b) or exhibiting evidence of his authority; and (e) he must be acting in the performance of his duty (or presumably not acting in excess of his authority) when the alleged assault and battery on him takes place. Otherwise the offense, if any, would be a simple assault and battery under N. J. S. A. 2A:170-26, N. J. S. A. It might be also that the attack on the officer was of such an inconsequential character that the prosecuting authority would not feel justified in charging the more serious offense. Relevant practical factors as well as considerations of fair play, and the reasonsonable expectations of the Legislature and the public relating to control of the conduct proscribed, are permitted to influence the discretion of the proper authority as to the course to be followed. See State v. Currie, 41 N. J. 531 (1964) ; State v. Berry, 41 N. J. 547 (1964).
In many situations where criminal statutes overlap in prohibiting the same basic act, the proper prosecuting authortiy in the sound exercise of the discretion committed to him may proceed under either act. [44 N. J. at 291-292]
See State v. Gledhill 67 N. J. 565, 573-574 (1975).
It should be noted that the affirmance by the Supreme Court in Moran was not an approval of the dictum in the Appellate Division that a “simple” assault is absolutely and inevitably a high misdemeanor if the victim is a police officer. States is not referred to in Moran and cannot be considered to have been overruled sul silentio.
It thus being clear that simple assault and battery committed on a police officer can be treated by prosecuting authorities either as disorderly conduct or as a high misdemeanor, the real issue here is whether, under B. 5:9-3 (b), dealing with amendment of complaints in juvenile proceedings, the State had the right to have the disorderly persons offense originally charged against this juvenile converted by amendment into a high misdemeanor offense. Our conclusion is in the negative. The rule .reads:
*168 Amendment of Complaint. The Conrt may amend the complaint to correct an error in form or the description of the offense intended to be charged or to charge a lesser included offense provided that the amendment does not charge another or different offense from that alleged and the defendant will not be prejudiced thereby in his defense on the merits. The court may adjourn the hearing for such time and on such terms as it deems proper.
As to the offenses here “intended to be charged,” there can be no doubt they were expressly denominated in the complaints as “disorderly” and the statute rendering assault and battery a disorderly persons offense was cited. N. J. S. A. 2A:170-26. We further conclude that the high misdemeanor of assault on a police officer is “another or different offense from” the disorderly persons offense of simple assault and battery, albeit on a police officer, at least for purposes of amendment of a complaint of juvenile delinquency in circumstances such as those here presented. Thus the rule did not authorize the amendment. This was preeminently a case in which a characterization of the juvenile’s conduct as rising to the seriousness of a high misdemeanor would have been highly inappropriate. In the language of State v. States, supra, the police as the initial prosecuting authorities undoubtedly felt that the assaultive actions of the juvenile were “of such an inconsequential character that [they] would not feel justified in charging the more serious offense.” 44 N. J. at 291-292.
The State relies heavily on State v. Bott, 53 N. J. 391 (1969). We regard this case as inapposite. First, it dealt with amendment of an indictment, not a juvenile complaint. Second, it concerned a case where the statute cited in the original indictment had no substantive application whatever to the offense described, as construed by the court. In the present case, of course, the original complaint does encompass a known offense. Finally, the court in Bott was not construing present R. 5:9-3 (b) or even its present analogue in relation to amendments of indictments, R. 3:7-4. Uor are we persuaded of the applicability in the peculiar fact situation here presented of the other cases cited by the State.
II
Appellant contends that the language he uttered will not support guilt of N. J. S. A. 2A:170-29(1) under the constitutional criteria recognized by the Supreme Court in State v. Rosenfeld, 62 N. J. 594, 603-604 (1973). We do not agree. Under Rosenfeld and State v. Brown, 62 N. J. 588, 591 (1973), when offensive language is directed specifically to another individual or individuals and is of such a nature and uttered in such circumstances as likely to result in an immediate breach of the peace, the conduct may be considered constitutionally proscribed by N. J. S. A. 2A:170-29 (1), i. e., not protected by the Eirst Amendment. The language used by appellant and the circumstances of its use in direct reference to the police officers met the test just recited, and State v. Brown, supra, is directly in point. It is irrelevant that one of the officers testified ho was not offended by the language. The test is objective, not subjective.
The disposition on this charge is affirmed.
Modified in part and remanded, and affirmed in part, consistent with this opinion.