Lakas v. Archambault

176 P. 180, 38 Cal. App. 365, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 198
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1868.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 176 P. 180 (Lakas v. Archambault) 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
Lakas v. Archambault, 176 P. 180, 38 Cal. App. 365, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 198 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Action to have a homestead claimed by defendant on certain twenty acres of land declared void and invalid. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, *366 and plaintiff had findings and judgment in his favor. Defendant appeals from the judgment.

The pleadings raised the single question whether or not the homestead sought to be vacated was valid.

For several years prior to the declaration of homestead by defendant he had supported and maintained his grandmother, Mrs. Jack; they had lived together on a tract of land of about 57 acres, four miles distant from the city of Stockton, of which land the twenty-acre tract in suit was a part; the house occupied by defendant at that time and other improvements were on a part of the larger tract, being 37 acres, which latter he sold some time prior to the declaration of homestead; upon the sale of this 37 acres defendant with his grandmother moved to Stockton and took up his residence in one of the flats of a building under the management of his sister-in-law, the wife of his brother, C. C. Archambault, to whom defendant paid rent for his flat. His grandmother lived with Mm there and was supported by Mm. She was over ninety years of age and feeble, sometimes bedridden for a considerable period, but “up and down,” as described by witnesses. Defendant was a “meat-cutter” by occupation. He moved into town, as he testified, because he “had bad luck, didn’t make no money and my health was bad and I had a chance to work in town and to be where my work was.” . Defendant was engaged in the pursuit of his trade after moving to Stockton and up to the time he' made the declaration of homestead and also thereafter. On April 22, 1915, plaintiff levied a writ of attachment against the said twenty-acre tract, and soon thereafter defendant commenced the construction of a dwelling-house thereon, which was substantially completed by the 1st of May, and on the first Sunday in May, 1915, defendant with his grandmother moved to this house and occupied it for about five weeks, when they returned to the apartment formerly occupied by them in Stockton, and defendant continued the pursuit of Ms trade as meat-cutter. During their stay in the house on the twenty-acre tract defendant went to town daily, except Sunday, to work at Ms trade as meat-cutter, taking his morning and evening meals at this house and his luncheon in town.' At the time he removed to tlie twenty-acre tract defendant took with him the furniture and housekeeping utensils with which he had been housekeeping in said flat and his own., and *367 his grandmother’s wearing apparel. Three sacks of coal at one time and two sacks at another time and some wood were sent out for use in the coolc-stove. The house was a one-story building twenty feet long and ten feet wide, consisting of one room in which the occupants lived. “The sides of the house were plain lumber, surfaced lumber, and the cracks were battened—battening, they call it. There are four windows in the house and two doors. The interior was plain boards and uprights that they were nailed to, and a roof. Tongue and grooved flooring and place for stove. No partition in it at all; just one room.”

One Blankenship had a verbal cropping contract or lease of this land with defendant by which defendant was entitled to one-half of the crops, the lease embracing the entire twenty acres. • Blankenship helped defendant to build the house, hauled the wood and coal to it, and, some time after defendant moved back to his flat, occupied and eared for the house defendant had built on the premises. Blankenship had previously occupied a house situated on adjoining land, the twenty-acre tract having no improvements on it.

It is contended by plaintiff that because of this existing lease or cropping contract defendant could not establish a homestead on the premises. We do not find it necessary to consider this point.

„ The foregoing facts are undisputed. Witness Kirkins, proprietor of a restaurant in Stockton where defendant occasionally took a meal, testified that about the time plaintiff sued out his attachment against defendant, the latter told witness about it, and in the presence of defendant’s brother there was some talk of securing plaintiff by giving him a mortgage on the premises involved. He was asked as to any further conversation and replied: “Well, then, when they leave I don’t know nothing about it, except I remember now he tell me they are going to give Mm the mortgage. That is all I know about it. So next morning George Archambault come to the place again and eat the breakfast. I ask him how he get along. He tell me, ‘I don’t think I am going to give him any mortgage. I think I can beat it,’ he says, ‘without giving any mortgage.’ That is all. Any time I see him I tell him, ‘How you get along V He says, ‘I got pretty nice lawyer, I think he pull me through all right.’ I tell nothing else. That is all. All we were talMng about that I *368 know. I always tell Mm, ‘How you get along?’ That is all. He tell me he think he £et along all right, he think lie going to beat the case—the note—whatever it is. Of course, Arehambault a friend of mine, just as Lakas. I know Arehambault more than I do Lakas, I am willing to tell the truth. That is all I can say. I don’t know what they do after that. . . . Q. Do you remember any further conversation that took place at all? A. Oh, yes, I remember the time he told me he was going to make the application for the homestead. That he could do. I didn’t know what homestead meant, myself, to tell you the truth. He says he make a homestead. I said, ‘What you going to do? What homestead that mean?’ He says, ‘Well, I am going to move out and make a homestead and live there. So, if I live there thirty days,’ he says, ‘then they won’t bother me—Lakas won’t bother me with his note, I declare a homestead.’ So right after—oh, about two weeks, come to a little place my brother used to own. I work there. I said, ‘How you get along?’ . He said, ‘I get along all right.’ Because I had kind of trouble myself, and I ask Mm how he make his homestead. He says, ‘Well, I make it—if you stay there thirty days, it will be just the same, you can declare a homestead.’ I said, ‘How you go out and live in it?’ He said, ‘I have bedsteads, couple quilts,’ whatever it is, he said, ‘that is all you need.’ I said, ‘If you live in the place, if a person live in the place, you think they can bother them?’ He said, ‘No, they can’t bother them. You are all right.’ That is about all we were talking about. Of course, my talking, I don’t remember well different exactly. That is all he was talking. I always try to fix it up between Lakas and George. I was try very hard, telling them the best way do not get in trouble.”

Plaintiff called defendant as his witness, who testified to many of the facts above narrated. He was asked if he paid rent for the flat he had rented from Mrs. Arehambault for the month that he was out at his ranch and answered that he did not. He was asked on cross-examination why he removed from the homestead and answered: “My grandmother was sick, you see. It was impossible for me to get anybody, and I didn’t want to impose on good nature myself.” He was asked who looked after her when she was sick. “A. Mrs. Yettner [a near neighbor] was there every day, and Bill *369 Blankenship was there more or less, and that was all. . . . The Court: Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P. 180, 38 Cal. App. 365, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakas-v-archambault-calctapp-1918.