Appellant, found by officers at 4:25 a.m. sitting on a bench at
a bus stop, was charged with violating a Florida vagrancy law
making it a misdemeanor to be found "wandering or strolling around
from place to place without any lawful purpose or object." An
officer testified concerning information which appellant had
supplied, including the fact that he was on probation which had a
10 p.m. curfew and his whereabouts before arriving at the bus stop,
where appellant said he had waited for a bus for some three hours.
The record does not show how he got to the bus stop. Appellant's
motion for a directed verdict was denied, the defense presented no
evidence, appellant was convicted, and the Florida Supreme Court
affirmed.
Held: The fact that appellant was out long after the
curfew hour of his probation may be held to establish the no
"lawful purpose or object" ingredient of the offense, but the
judgment cannot stand, since there was no evidence establishing the
"wandering or strolling" ingredient.
Thompson v.
Louisville, 362 U. S. 199.
202 So. 2d
852, reversed.
PER CURIAM.
Appellant was charged with violating a Florida vagrancy statute,
Fla.Stat. § 856.02, which makes it a misdemeanor to be found
"wandering or strolling around from place to place without any
lawful purpose or object."
Officer Havens testified that he and Officer Carani were
patrolling the Bird Road area of Dade County at about 4:25 a.m.
when they saw appellant seated on a bench at a bus stop. The
officers stopped and asked him why
Page 391 U. S. 597
he was there. He replied that he was waiting for a bus. Havens
told him that the last Bird Road bus had run at 11 p.m., and that
buses did not resume service until 7 a.m. Havens then asked him
where he had been. He said he had been to a theatre (which was
about two miles away), and afterwards had gone to the house of his
girlfriend, Joyce, who lived near the theatre.
On Havens' request, appellant supplied identification which
showed he was age 18 and lived in that area of the county.
Havens then asked him if he had ever been in trouble with the
law. He replied that he was on probation from a breaking and
entering charge and had a 10 p.m. curfew. He was then asked to
account for his whereabouts from 11 p.m. to 4:30 a.m. He explained
that he got out of the movie about 10:30 or 10:45, went to Joyce's
house, and after leaving her place, and reaching the bus stop had
waited some three hours for a bus. The officers did not discuss
with appellant the means or manner by which he got to the bus stop
from the theatre and Joyce's house, and the record does not supply
that information. Appellant apparently had phoned for a cab after
waiting on the bench two or three hours for a bus. Havens asked
appellant how much money he had on his person. Appellant said he
had 70� or 80�. Havens told appellant this was not
enough cab fare to get to appellant's residence. It was then that
he was arrested.
The area where appellant was arrested is a mixed
residential-business area with several stores, including a store,
open 24 hours a day, directly across from where appellant sat on
the bench. That store was well lighted. Where appellant sat was not
lighted. Officer Carani added that there was a cab stand nearby
(some 1,200 feet away), but that no cabs were seen in the area by
him at the time appellant was interrogated.
Page 391 U. S. 598
Appellant, who waived a trial by jury, moved for directed
verdict, arguing there was no proof that he wandered, no proof of
absence of lawful purpose and no proof that a bus would not soon
have come to the bus stop.
The motion was denied, the defense presented no evidence,
appellant was convicted, and he was placed on probation for a year.
The Florida Supreme Court affirmed. The case is here by appeal.
*
The prosecution emphasized that appellant had failed to account
for any "lawful purpose" during the time he sat on the bench for
some three hours. The burden, however, is on the State to prove
that an accused has committed an act bringing him within a criminal
statute. The essential ingredients of the crime charged were
"wandering or strolling around from place to place without any
lawful purpose or object." The fact that he was on probation with a
10 p.m. curfew and out long after that hour may be held to
establish that ingredient of the crime of no "lawful purpose or
object." But he was not wandering, or strolling, only sitting. The
bench where he sat was made for sitting and he was using it for
that purpose in the precise place where the bench had been placed.
And he had sat there for some hours. We therefore conclude that so
far as the "wandering or strolling" ingredient of the crime is
concerned, the record is lacking in any evidence to support the
judgment. In line with
Thompson v. Louisville,
362 U. S. 199, and
without reaching
Page 391 U. S. 599
other constitutional questions that are tendered, we must
therefore grant the motion for leave to proceed in form.a pauperis
and reverse the judgment below.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE STEWART would dismiss the
appeal.
* The judgment of the Florida Supreme Court from which this
appeal is taken was entered October 4, 1967. Appellant's notice of
appeal, filed December 30, 1967, was timely under Rule 11(1) of the
Rules of this Court. The appeal was not docketed until 56 days
after the time provided in Rule 13(1) expired. This defect,
however, is not jurisdictional.
Pittsburgh Towing Co. v.
Mississippi Valley Barge Line Co., 385 U. S.
32.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN joins,
dissenting.
Florida's courts have obviously interpreted their statute to
permit a showing that a defendant was on a park bench at 4:25 a.m.
"without any lawful purpose or object" to establish a
prima
facie case that the defendant was "wandering or strolling
around" without lawful purpose. Most inhabitants of park benches
reach their bench by wandering or strolling. So interpreting the
statute, constitutionally sufficient amounts of evidence were
presented.
The Court does not reach the claim appellant makes here, that
Florida's statute offends the Constitution because it is vague.
That claim is substantial, and I would note probable jurisdiction
and set the case for oral argument.