The information charges the defendant with being a common prostitute who has no lawful employment to maintain nerself and then says “ Vagrant, 887, Code, Sub. 4.” Apparently the charge against the defendant was a violation of section 887, subdivision 4e, the applicable portion of which provides as follows: “ The following persons are - vagrants * " *
Under this it Was incumbent on the people to pro1"- (1) that the defendant was a common prostitute; (2) that she had no legal employment whereby to maintain herself; and the question arises as to whether there was any evidence which would justify the judge in finding these two facts.
The only evidence on the part of the people was that of two police officers who testified that they went to 131 Eleventh street in the city of Niagara Falls about nine p. m., that there was a back door up stairs opening into the hallway of the second story of the place, that they looked through the keyhole of this door and saw a woman coming from a bedroom to a toilet next to this door carrying a basin of water, that there were a number of men in the room known as the dance hall which it appears was up stairs but just where with reference to this bedroom does not appear, that they then went to the front of the place, went into the barroom, asked the bartender to allow them to go up stairs, went up stairs finding about twenty men up there but no women, that they thereupon left returning about ten forty-five p. m., again went to the back door, looked through this keyhole, saw two men, two women and a large number of men, that one of them went around to the front door and the other entered by the back door and in the ','"ice had found the defendant there, “ that she was not drinking or doing anything but standing there,” and that she was dressed in a white shirt waist, black skirt and had slippers on, that one of them arrested her, she put on her hat and shoes and was taken to the station. Each officer also testified that the place in question had the reputation of being a disorderly house.
These evidentiary facts are insufficient to prove either of the two ultimate facts which it was necessary for the people to establish before the defendant could be convicted. A de
Inasmuch as the district attorney claims that this was a bad place and the defendant undoubtedly guilty, I shall order a new trial to the end that the people may establish the defendant’s guilt by competent evideiice, if they can.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered in County Court.