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- Loonly Laws in L.A.
-
- Against the law to ride an "ugly horse?" Illegal for a fireman to rescue a
- woman wearing a nightgown? Prohibited from walking around with an ice-cream
- cone in your pocket? Author Samuel Johnson once said, "The law is the last
- result of human wisdom acting upon human experience for the benefit of the
- public." A noble philosophy, perhaps, but Johnson's opinion is debatable at
- best.
-
- Officials who wrote some of the L.A. area's old laws appear to have acted
- for no greater purpose than a good belly laugh. But there are real reasons
- for some of these laws. For instance, those regarding horses were largely
- passed to favor and protect the horse in the late 1800s and early 1900s, when
- horses were still the primary mode of transportation. An old ordinance won't
- allow acrobats to perform on any city sidewalk in L.A. because the city
- fathers decreed acrobatics might frighten some of the local horses.
-
- Clothing laws, by and large, originated around the same time period. Laws
- dealing with women were always designed by men who were often quite
- prejudiced by today's standards in their thinking toward "the weaker sex."
- The extremely fundamentalistic attitudes of many small-town religious leaders
- often prevailed - hence, we find laws governing the wearing of corsets,
- nightgowns, shoes, and hats. Doctors practicing in Long Beach, for example,
- seem to have a special social responsibility. An unusual piece of loony
- legislation says every woman must "be found to be wearing a corset" when
- attending any public dance. A physician is required to inspect each female at
- the dance. The doctor must ascertain that the woman is, in fact, complying
- with this archaic law.
-
- Any laws having to do with Sunday were usually written and passed as the
- need arose with the intent of keeping the Sabbath holy. The church has
- enormous influence on laws pertaining to gambling, curfews for young women,
- women drinking alcoholic beverages, flirting, and even eating ice cream. In
- Bonsall, no one may read the Sunday paper while sitting in a rocking chair on
- their front porch while church services are in session.
-
- There's a strange ordinance in Covina where "A husband is not guilty of
- desertion when his wife rents his room to a boarder and crowds him out of the
- house."
-
- Drivers in Hemet should be aware that the driver of "any vehicle involved
- in an accident resulting in death...shall immediately stop...and give his
- name and address to the person struck."
-
- A true dog lover, according to City Managaer Doug Weiford, might enjoy
- living in Riverside. An old piece of legislation stops local citizens from
- "sticking out a tongue in the direction of a dog." Nor can people living in
- Ventura make "ugly faces" at dogs who are found to be "freely roaming" the
- community. Animals appear to be treated fairly in Upland but pity the poor
- owner: "It shall be unlawful for the owner or keeper of horses, mules,
- cattle, sheep, goats, and hogs to run at large." And don't bother duck
- hunting at night in Apple Valley. Ducks aren't allowed to be heard quacking
- after 10:00 p.m.
-
- Do you have difficulty flirting? You can't, according to the municipal
- code in Inglewood: "It is unlawful for any male person, within the corporate
- limits of the city of Inglewood, to wink at any female person with whom he
- is unacquainted." Beverly Hills also has an anti-flirting law. City Manager
- Ed Kreins quotes this ordinance: "No male person shall make remarks to or
- concerning, or cough or whistle at, or do any other act to attract the
- attention of any woman upon or traveling along any of the sidewalks."
-
- Males in Buena Park have an even more difficult time in this regard. They
- are specifically prohibited from "turning and looking at a woman in that way"
- on the Sabbath. If he's caught a second time, the violator has to "wear horse
- blinders" for a 24-hour period in public.
-
- Community lawmakers do sometimes have a sense of humor. According to City
- Manager Ralph Webb, Baldwin Park politcos once decreed that "No female shall
- appear in a bathing suit on any street within this community unless she is
- escorted by at least two officers or unless she be armed with a club." An
- amendment to the original ordinance reads "The provisions of this status
- shall not apply to females weighing less than 90 pounds or exceeding 200
- pounds nor shall it apply to female horses."
-
- You probably don't know that Santa Moinca has a "bean snapper" law. City
- Manager John Jalili declares: "Any person who shall in the city of Santa
- Monica use or carry concealed or unconcealed any bean snapper or like
- article, shall, upon conviction, be fined."
-
- Drivers beware when going through Los Angeles County. An early speed law
- was worded: "Speed upon county roads will be limited to 10 miles an hour
- unless the motorist sees a baliff who does not appear to have had a drink in
- 30 days, then the driver will be permitted to make what he can." And
- "Whoever operates an automobile on any public way - laid out under the
- authority of law recklessly or while under the influence of liquor shall be
- punished; thereby imposing upon the motorist the duty of finding out at his
- peril whether certain highways had been laid out recklessly or while under
- the influence of liquor before driving his car over them." You figure it
- out. In the same vein, there's a beauty from Whittier that says "Two vehicles
- which are passing each other in opposite directions shall have the right of
- way." Uh huh.
-
- An old-fashioned piece of legislation in Hesperia outlaws dueling under
- certain circumstances: no one is allowed to duel when the opponents select
- water pistols for use as the weapons.
-
- Monrovia has a unique old wedding law. No young man can marry the girl of
- his dreams until he has "proven his manhood." How? It's quite simple; all
- the poor fellow is required to do is go out and shoot six blackbirds or three
- crows which must then be brought to his prospective father-in-law.
-
- Stay away from Compton while wearing slack with hip pockets. The city
- fathers long ago passed an ordinance banning hip pockets in all men's pants -
- it was considered to be a perfect place to hide a pint of liquor. Let's hope
- thirst doesn't become a major problem if you're a woman in Ojai. No female
- can expect to walk into a tavern and be graciously served. It's illegal for a
- woman to stand within five feet of a bar when she takes a drink in any public
- establishment serving alcoholic beverages. She's in violation of this law
- even if she only wants a glass of water!
-
- A thirsty married man, according to the law in Camarillo, could have
- serious problems. He can't purchase any form of liquor without first having
- the written consent of his loving spouse. And an old law in Gardena,
- according to City Manager Ken Landau, prohibits a woman from chewing tobacco
- without first having permission from her husband.
-
- You could be breaking the law when you're just trying to have an innocent
- night out. Boisterous adults and children can be penalized in Mailbu should
- they "laugh out loud" in a movie theater. And in Costa Mesa, citizens aren't
- allowed to enter a movie theater within four hours of eating garlic.
-
- Don't even thing of playing cards with a pregnant woman or a child on the
- curb of any street in Temecula. And according to the revised ordinances in
- Pomona, "No person shall hallo, shout, bawl, scream, use profane language,
- dance, sing, whoop, quarrel, or make any unusual noise or sound in any house
- in such a manner as to disturb the peace and quiet of the neighborhood."
-
- Fashion can be dangerous. In Norwalk, "Any person who shall wear in a
- public place any device or thing attached to her head, hair, headgear or hat,
- which device or thing is capable or lacerating the flesh of any other person
- with whom it may come in contact and which is not sufficiently guarded
- against the possibility of so doing, shall be adjudged a disorderly person."
- Watch out, fashion victims.
-
- If you've been out on the trail a bit too long and your horse is weary, be
- sure you don't let it fall asleep within the city limits of El Monte. They
- have an antiquated law in them parts that prohibits a horse from falling
- asleep in a bathtub, unless the rider is also sleeping with the horse. And if
- you own a horse in Pico Rivera, it's strictly forbidden - if you're a woman,
- attired in shorts, and you weigh over 200 pounds - to ride your horse in
- public. In Santa Ana, it's illegal to let a horse sleep in a bakery.
-
- You've got to be careful even when you're hungry. If you can't find a can
- opener, whatever you do, don't try to shoot your canned foods open with a
- revolver in Victorville. And if you're a barber in Valencia, don't dare eat
- onions between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
-
- Ice cream crops up quite a few times in the various cities' law books. In
- Chino, citizens are prohibited from carrying an ice-cream cone in their
- pocket, and in Rosemead, it's against the law to eat an ice cream in public
- with a fork.
-
- Try to stay away from Arcadia if you're planning to take your date for a
- late cup of coffee. An old ordinance prohibits "young women" from drinking a
- delicious cup of brew after 6:00 p.m. Speaking of drinking, a law in
- Bellflower actually offers a degree of protection to drunks: "A drunken man
- had as good a right to a perfect sidewalk as a sober man since he needs one a
- good deal more."
-
- Have to pay a visit to a dentist in the near future? In Irvine a patient
- is not allowed to pull a dentist's tooth. Those who partake of such frivolous
- activities can be jailed. But in Castaic, fairness seems to govern the
- thinking of former lawmakers. A dentist had better not accidentally pull the
- wrong tooth. Should this happen, the patient has the right to pull one of the
- dentist's teeth in return.
-
- These are merely a few of the unusual situations covered by ludicrous laws
- throughout the Los Angeles area. Most of these decrees were written and then
- forgotten with the swift passage of time. Relevant or ridiculous, most are
- still around today. Clergyman Henry Ward Beecher said it all when he summed
- up his view on the art of lawmaking: "We bury men when they are dead, but we
- try to embalm the dead body of laws, keeping the corpse in sight long after
- the vitality has gone. It usually takes a hundred years to make a law; and
- then, after the law had done its work, it usually takes another hundred years
- to get rid of it."
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