Harlan v. Schulze

94 P. 379, 7 Cal. App. 287, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 248
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 3, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 405.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 94 P. 379 (Harlan v. Schulze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harlan v. Schulze, 94 P. 379, 7 Cal. App. 287, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 248 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Action to quiet title. The land in controversy is a certain lot situated in the town of Dixon, Solano county. The complaint is in the ordinary form of an action to quiet title. Defendant denies the averments of the complaint and avers that at the time the action was commenced he was the owner ip. fee of the premises. It is further averred that on November 3, 1904, one Josephine Quick was the owner of the land, and on that day conveyed the same to Albert Manning, who on November 9, 1904, conveyed the same to defendant. The answer then sets forth that plaintiff claims title through a deed dated December 2, 1905, from said Jose *289 phine Quick and William Quick, her husband; avers that Josephine Quick, on October 5, 1901, filed “a pretended declaration of homestead which declaration is claimed by pla.int.iff to be a valid homestead declaration”; that plaintiff took said deed with notice of said deed to said Manning; that at the time said pretended homestead was filed “the house upon said premises was not suitable for the dwelling of a family and was not a dwelling, but was a place of business, to wit, a house of prostitution.”

The court made the following findings of fact: That at the commencement of the suit plaintiff was not the owner of the premises; that at that time defendant was the owner in fee thereof; that said Josephine Quick was the owner in fee simple of the land on November 3, 1905, and on that day conveyed the same to said Manning, who sold and conveyed the same to defendant on November 9, 1905; that plaintiff claims title under deed, dated December 2, 1905, “made by William Quick and Josephine Quick, husband and wife”; that at the time of its execution plaintiff had actual notice of the previous grants by Josephine Quick to Manning and by Manning to defendant; that on October 4, 1901, said Josephine “executed and acknowledged in proper form, and on October 5, 1901, recorded ... a declaration of homestead on said real property”; that at that time “she was a married woman and was the wife of William Quick, the only other member of the family, and was residing upon the said real property, but her family did not then reside upon said real property and that the following recital in said declaration of homestead was untrue, to wit: ‘I do now, at the time of making this declaration, actually reside with my family on the land and premises hereinafter described’; and that all other recitals contained in said declaration of homestead were true.” The court further found that, at the time of the execution of the homestead, October 4, 1901, “in physical character, the dwelling-house situated on said real property was capable of being used as a human habitation and residence and was actually so used by said Josephine Quick on said October 4, 1901, but was incapable of being a home, by reason of being a house of prostitution ; and that by reason of the carrying on of said unlawful business of prostitution in said dwelling-house, the before described declaration of homestead executed on October 4, 1901, *290 was of no force or effect, and was invalid and void.” For like reason the court found that the house on the premises “was not suitable for the dwelling of a family and was not such dwelling,” but “was a house of prostitution.”

As conclusions of law the court found that said premises could not, on October 5, 1901, be selected as a homestead and the declaration of homestead was void, and that plaintiff is entitled to no relief. Judgment was thereupon entered for defendant, from which plaintiff appeals on bill of exceptions.

All the findings of fact adverse to plaintiff are challenged for insufficiency of facts to support them. The undisputed evidence was that at the time the homestead was declared the fee simple title to the lot was in Josephine Quick; that she and her husband first rented the property and were living on it when her husband bought it and the deed was made to Mrs. Quick; that she was then the wife of William Quick and that they both resided at that time on the premises; that the husband worked away from his home at times for different persons in the neighborhood, but made the premises his home and had no other; that the family consisted of Quick and his wife. A copy of the homestead declaration is in the record and conforms in all respects to the requirements of the statute and on its face is valid. The declaration, among other things, stated: “I declare that I have not heretofore made a declaration of homestead; and I declare that my husband has not heretofore made a declaration of homestead; and I, therefore, make this declaration for the joint benefit of myself and husband.”

Mrs. Quick testified: “There were three buildings upon this property; a house; a woodshed and a closet. In the house there were four rooms; Mrs. Crandall, my servant, made a bedroom out of the front room, next to that was a sitting-room, then my bedroom and then a kitchen. Those were all the rooms in the house. They were used by each one of us as part of our home at that time. I resided there; that was the only home I had. My husband resided there at that time. He worked on the electric light line; sometimes he went away from Dixon to his work, at other times he worked around near Dixon. All the rooms were convenient for use by Mr. Quick and myself as a home.” The property cost originally $125 and was estimated in the homestead declaration to be worth *291 $300. Defendant testified that he paid Manning $200 for it. The evidence that the house was used as a house of prostitution was mostly hearsay and circumstantial, and was based upon the character of the people going to and coming from the plane and the character of women occasionally seen there. There was no evidence that women resided in the house and were engaged with Mrs. Quick in carrying on the business of prostitution, or that any persons resided there other than as testified by Mrs. Quick. One of the witnesses testified: “I do not know whether it was a place of business or merely the rendezvous of people.” Another witness testified: “I don’t know of my own knowledge that the business of prostitution was going on in there, but from others; I concluded so from the fact that certain men from around town were going there.” Defendant testified: “Mrs. Quick was living in that house across the street from me; it seemed to be her home so far as I knew; it was capable of being used as a residence, and was at that time the home of this woman.” Much of the testimony related to the character of the house some time after the homestead was declared.

Appellant makes the point that his objection to the testimony introduced to prove prostitution by common reputation should have been sustained and that section 315 of the Penal Code, as amended in 1905, which permits the keeping of a house of ill-fame to be proved by common repute, is not retroactive and did not warrant the introduction of such proof of acts occurring long prior to the amendment; that the section did not make reputation competent proof of the use of a house for the purposes of prostitution; that while the “ill-fame” (or evil notoriety) of a house may be shown by hearsay, the use of the house for prostitution must be established as a fact. (Citing State v. Haberle, 72 Iowa, 138, [33 N. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 P. 379, 7 Cal. App. 287, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harlan-v-schulze-calctapp-1908.