Gilbert v. Peck

121 P. 315, 162 Cal. 54, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 493
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1912
DocketL.A. No. 2738.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 121 P. 315 (Gilbert v. Peck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbert v. Peck, 121 P. 315, 162 Cal. 54, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 493 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

The action was brought against four defendants to recover damages for the unlawful taking and withholding of personal property belonging to the plaintiff. At the trial there was a dismissal as to all the defendants except George H. Peck. The plaintiff had a verdict against him in the sum of twenty-two hundred dollars. Prom the judgment *56 entered on this verdict and from an order denying his motion for a new trial Peck appeals.

It appears in the record, without dispute, that in April, 1909, Peck, who was the owner of a three-story building in San Pedro, rented the third floor and a part of the second floor of the building to plaintiff at a monthly rental of seventy-five dollars. The tenancy was from month to month, running from the first to the last day of each calendar month. Plaintiff went into possession, and remained in possession until August, 1909. The rent for May and June was paid by her. She had, in the premises, a piano and certain furniture, as well as some jewelry and a certificate of deposit for five thousand dollars. On the thirteenth day of August, while the plaintiff was absent from San Pedro, and the premises were unoccupied, the defendant Peck, through his agents, entered the premises and removed therefrom the personal property above described. The furniture and piano were stored in a warehouse where, some days later, they were destroyed by fire. The jewelry and the certificate of deposit were ultimately restored to the plaintiff.

By her amended complaint the plaintiff alleged that the defendant, notwithstanding a demand for the return of the property, refused to return the same. She also charged oppression and malice, as a foundation for a claim for punitive damages. The jury returned, in addition to its general verdict, a special finding that the value of the furniture and the piano destroyed by fire was twelve hundred dollars, leaving the balance of one thousand dollars to be accounted for as punitive damages.

The defense was based on the ground that the plaintiff was using the premises as a house of prostitution. That she had so used them for a time was admitted. It was and is claimed by the appellant that such use of his property constituted a nuisance which he had a right to abate by taking possession of the rented premises and removing the plaintiff’s property therefrom. Among the errors assigned is the refusal of the trial court to give to the jury various instructions embodying this theory. But such alleged refusal cannot be considered here. There is no reference to the instructions in question in the substantive or narrative part of the bill. All that appears is a series of declarations, in the specification of errors, to the *57 effect that “the court erred in refusing to give the jury instruction II (and other numbers) offered on behalf of defendant, as follows:” (quoting the alleged instruction). Such a record does not afford evidence that the instructions in question were requested or refused. (Goldman v. Bashore, 80 Cal. 146, [22 Pac. 82]; Ferrier v. Ferrier, 64 Cal. 23, [27 Pac. 960] ; Estate of Higgins, 156 Cal. 257, [104 Pac. 6].)

But this somewhat technical consideration is of no great importance here, since the propositions of law underlying the instructions claimed to have been refused are presented for decision on the defendant’s exceptions to instructions shown to have been given by the court. Instruction IV was as follows: “It appearing without dispute here that at the time of the removal of plaintiff’s property therefrom, the premises were not used for the purposes which she admits she had theretofore used them, there was not, then, at the time of such removal, in existence a nuisance which could justify the defendant or his agent in summarily removing plaintiff’s property from the premises.” If the facts were as stated by the court, we think there can be no criticism of the rule of law declared. The mere occupancy of the premises by the plaintiff and the presence therein of her household effects did not constitute a nuisance. The nuisance, if there was one, was created by the use of the premises for immoral purposes. When that use ceased there was no longer any ground for claiming that a nuisance was being maintained. Whether or not the past misconduct of the plaintiff would have authorized the defendant to terminate the tenancy by proper legal procedure is a question not presented here. No such attempt was made.' A notice to quit was served on plaintiff on July 7th, long before the defendant,, as he claims, had any knowledge of the use to which the premises were being put. It was not put upon the ground of such use. As a notice of intention to terminate the lease, under either section 789 or section 1946 of the Civil Code, it was served too late to bring the plaintiff’s tenancy to an end prior to the time of the entry complained of.

The record shows that the court was fully justified in stating as an undisputed fact that at the time of the removal of plaintiff’s goods she was no longer using the premises for purposes of prostitution. It appeared that she had gone into possession in April, 1909. That she at once commenced to *58 maintain a house of ill-fame was admitted. In August, 1909, she began to make preparations to move to Coalinga, where she intended to open a similar establishment. On August 3, 1909, she went to Coalinga to secure a location, returning on the 6th. During this absence she left a maid and one other person in charge of the premises. On the 9th she again departed for Coalinga, and on this occasion left the premises unoccupied, locking the door. They were so unoccupied until the 13th, when the defendant’s agents entered and removed the plaintiff's property. These facts being uncontradicted, it appeared that, at the time of the taking of her property, the plaintiff had discontinued her unlawful use of the premises, and it necessarily followed, as declared by the court, that the defendant was not justified in removing her effects. Such removal was at his risk, and the destruction of the goods by fire threw the loss upon him.

Complaint is made of instruction II, in which the court told the jury, among other things, that plaintiff’s use of the premises for immoral purposes terminated her possession under the lease, and rendered her a tenant at will. It may be questioned whether this was an entirely accurate definition of her status. But in view of the established fact that the unlawful use of the premises had ceased, the instruction cannot have been prejudicial to the appellant. The past unlawful use of the premises did not in the absence of notice, demand, or other action on the part of the lessor evidencing an intent to claim a forfeiture, terminate the tenant’s right of possession so as to justify a forcible entry and invasion of her property rights during the term of the hiring. (Almy v. Greene, 13 R. I. 350; 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d ed., pp. 379, 380.) If she was rightfully in possession it is not material whether she was correctly described as a tenant at will. Instruction II further declared that plaintiff’s use of the premises for immoral purposes would not justify the defendant in going upon the premises during plaintiff’s temporary absence and removing her effects therefrom.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 P. 315, 162 Cal. 54, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-peck-cal-1912.