The defendants are charged with violation of subdivision 2 of section 722 of the Penal Law of the State of New York. The defendants, with a number of others, were parading on a sidewalk on the grounds of the New York World’s Fair 1939, Incorporated, in front of premises occupied in part by the Exposition Grounds Catering Company who conducts a restaurant there under the name of “ Brass Rail Restaurant.” A number of these defendants wore white jerseys on which were steniciled in green letters “ Brass Rail on Strike;” the others wore in the lapels of their coats a placard approximately three inches by three inches stating that the employees of the Brass Rail Restaurant were on strike. The defendants were walking three or four abreast, the distance of approximately five hundred feet on one street and two hundred feet on another street.
There is no testimony that they used insulting remarks, or conducted themselves in a manner which might tend to annoy persons in the vicinity. At the time that this was going on there were a large number of persons on the grounds of the fair. It is conceded that the defendants on entering the World’s Fair grounds paid the usual price of admission and received admission tickets therefor and were on the premises legally. The World’s Fair police asked the defendants to decease from picketing and remove themselves from the fair grounds and offered to refund to the defendants the price of their admission tickets. The defendants refused to stop picketing or to leave and refused to accept the refund of their admission ticket, whereupon the defendants were arrested by the World’s Fair police.
The property where this took place is Owned by the city of New York and has been leased to the New York World’s Fair 1939 Incorporated, which is a membership corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York, which corporation has full charge of said premises and is empowered by the State of New York to have their own police force. The entire premises occupied by the fair is fenced in and no one is admitted except through entrance gates either on paying price of admission or by having an official pass.
It is my belief that if this picketing had been on a public thoroughfare instead of on the World’s Fair grounds, there would be no disorderly conduct as the pickets were orderly and the picketing legal. The question therefor arises as to whether the defendants had the right to picket on the property leased by the New York World’s Fair 1939 Incorporated.
The request of the World’s Fair police was reasonable and as the court said in the Galpern case “ a refusal to obey such order can be justified only where the circumstances show conclusively that the police officer’s direction was purely arbitrary and was not calculated in any way to promote the public order.”
It is, therefor, my opinion that the defendants are guilty of disorderly conduct in that upon being ordered to remove themselves from the premises occupied by the New York World’s Fair 1939 Incorporated, refused to do so.