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63 Cent. L.J. 467 (1906)
Disturbing the Peace

handle is hein.journals/cntrlwj63 and id is 473 raw text is: CENTRAL LAW JOURNAL.

right to sell the property upon the Idea that there
bad been a default in making payment of its just
-demands. The sale of the property, pending the
negotiations with respect to fixing the amount
which the consignor would be called on to pay,
was a conversion. That this conversion was
brought about through a misunderstanding on
the part of some of the company's officials as to
the true status of the matter cannot affect the
question of the company's liability; It, at least,
was bound to know how the matter stood and is
responsible for the wrongful acts of its officers in
disposing of the property at auction sale. It may
be that it was the right of the company to plead
that it acted in good faith and through the mis-
take of some of its officers or servants, and for
this reason should be allowed to set off against
the plaintiff's claim such lawful charges as the
plaintiff would have been under a duty to pay be-
fore getting possession of the shipment. But no
such plea was filed, no evidence was submitted as
to the amount of the charges which the company
was entitled to collect, and the sole contention
urged upon the trial was that the company was
not liable in any amount to the plaintiff. This
being true, the admitted value of the property
was the only measure by which the plaintiff's re-
covery could be fixed; and ruling only upon the
single question presented for our determination,
viz., whether or not a conversion of the property
was shown, we hold that the trial judge arrived
at a proper solution of this question.
DISTURBING THE PEACE.*
I. INTRODUCTION.
A. Confusion as to the Meaninmg of the Term-I.
Definitions of Authors.-A disturbing the peace
or a breach of the peace, as it is more com-
monly called, is one of the few legal phrases
which neither authors nor judges have carefully
analyzed. Some writers have regarded the term
as -generic, including a number of other well-
defined crimes. Thus, in one of the more recent
works, it is said: The, term 'breach of the
peace' is generic and includes all violations of
public peace or order, or acts tending to the dis-
* While the present dean of the law department of
the University of Missouri was editor of the CENTRAL
LAW JOURNAL, he received numerous requests from
practitioners for an article on -'Disturbing the
Peace. For some reason, however, he was unable to
comply with these requests before the end of his edi-
torial work and the assumption of his duties as a
teacher of law. Although many years have passed
since he made the change, he has not forgotten the
demand for investigation in this seemingly unexplored
field of our criminal jurisprudence. This year, there-
fore, he assigned the subject to the senior class of the
department of law, of which he is dean, as the basis
of competition for the Edward Thompson prize,
and the winning essay was written by Mr. Kelsey.

turbance thereof. I Other writers look upon the
phrase as denoting a sort of residuary clause of
our criminal code. .To quote from a standard
authority, a breach of the peace includes violent
disturbances of public peace or order, actual,
constructive, or apprehended, not constituting
any other distinct offense.12
II. THE SUBSTANTIVE LAW OF THE SUBJECT.
A. A Division Based Upon Blackstone's Classifi-
cation.-An analysis of the decisions shows that
breaches of the peace may be divided into two
classes: First, those crimes which Blackstone
characterizes as offenses against the public
peace,83 in which terror is the gravamen of the
charge; second, crimes which he calls offenses
against the public police and bases upon the
broad, indefinite principle that the individuals
of the state, like members of a well-governed
family, are bound to conform their general be-
havior to the rules of propriety * * * and to
be decent, industrious, and inoffensive in their
respective stations.4 In a word, then, a disturb-
ance of the peace as it exists in American law to-
day, is the result of a partial conjunction of these
two common law sources.    Starting with this
fundamental division, we are next to consider the
subject in greater detail.
(.) Terror an Element of the Offense.-First,
then, let us   consider a   disturbing  the
peace, which is the direct off-shoot of the old
common-law conception that terror is the gist of
the offense. Following Blackstone's classifica-
tionb again, this branch of the discussion divides
itself into two parts: actual breaches of the
peace and the so-called constructive breaches.
It will appear from a further discussion that an
actual breach of the peace is determined by its
actual effect; while a constructive breach is de-
termined by its probable effect.
(a) An Actual Breach of the Peace, Defined, Ex-
plained, and Examples Given.-Viewed from the
standpoint now under consideration, an actual
breach of the peace may be defined as any act or
conductwhich puts persons of ordinary firmness
in the immediate viinity thereof in fear of bodily
harm.6 This definition only intends td indicate
in a general way the principles involved; a cor-
rect idea of the offense can be obtained only by
examining the cases which have been decided.
Violence need not be inflicted upon any one, for
I 5 Cyc. 1024, Breach of the Peace. See also 4Ain
& Eng. Ency. Law (2d Ed.), 903.
2 Am. Dig. (Century Ed.), scope note, p. 970.
8 4 BI. Com. 142, ft.
4 4 BI. Com. 162, see. 5.
24 BI. Com. 142 (intro. par.)
6 State v. Coffin (Vt.), 23 Atl. Rep. 632; State v. Al-
exander, 7 Rich. (S. C.) 5; Fisher v. State, 78 Ga. 258;
State v. Benedict, 11 Vt. 2a6; State v. Riggs, 22 Vt.
321. More than half the urecedents of indictments for
offenses against the peace given by Chitty in his
Criminal Law, conclude to the terror of the quiet
and peaceable subjects of our lord, the now king.'
See Chitty Crim. Law, Vol. 2, p. 485.

Vol. 63

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