State v. . Black

The defendant was convicted in the police court of Asheville for keeping a disorderly house, and appealed to the Superior Court. Upon a trial denovo he was found guilty by a jury and sentenced to twenty-two months' imprisonment. He presses but one ground of appeal in his brief, which is that, by the charter of Asheville (Private Laws 1901, ch. 100, sec. 77), keeping a disorderly house in that city is a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine not exceeding fifty dollars or imprisonment not exceeding thirty days.

If this exception were well taken, the defendant would not be entitled to a new trial, but to be remanded for resentence in conformity to law. S. v. Lawrence, 81 N.C. 522; S. v. Crowell, 116 N.C. (867) 1052; S. v. Austin, 121 N.C. 622.

If this had been an ordinance of the city it would be void, because it covers the same acts as are a misdemeanor at common law and punishable under the criminal law of the State. S. v. McCoy (from Asheville),116 N.C. 1059, and cases there cited.

The offense for which the defendant was tried is an offense at common law and has not been repealed. The charter of Asheville (section 77 of chapter 100, Private Laws 1901) does not purport to repeal it. Its object was evidently to make it an offense against the city, in addition to being an offense against the general law of the State. Doubtless the idea was that it might thus be dealt with more promptly and efficiently than in the Superior Court, where the jurisdiction then lay. But there are no words in said section 77 indicating an intention to repeal it as a common-law offense within the limits of Asheville. It remained, as before, a common-law offense throughout the State. The defendant was tried and convicted under the common law. The above section (77), if valid, was not pleaded below or replied on either by the State or the defendant, and its validity is not presented.

No error.

Cited: S. v. Cherry, 154 N.C. 627. *Page 712