Wilson v. Loustalot

193 P.2d 127, 85 Cal. App. 2d 316, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 912
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1948
DocketCiv. 3719
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 193 P.2d 127 (Wilson v. Loustalot) 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
Wilson v. Loustalot, 193 P.2d 127, 85 Cal. App. 2d 316, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 912 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment, order denying a new trial and an order denying application of plaintiff to disqualify Honorable Warren Stockton, as judge of the Superior Court of Kern County.

Plaintiff now concedes that the latter two orders are not appealable and that the attempted appeal therefrom should be dismissed. (Code. Civ. Proc., §§ 936, 963.)

Count 1 of .the complaint alleges that defendant John E. Loustalot, as Sheriff of Kern County, deputized Harvey Jordan, who, with defendant Thomas Shatwell, did, on May 12, 1945, at 10 p. m., without a warrant, forceably break into plaintiff’s house and falsely arrested and imprisoned him to his general and special damage. Exemplary damages were asked.

Count 2 impleads defendant, United States Fidelity' & Guaranty Company, the surety upon the sheriff’s official bond.

Defendants admitted that the deputy acted officially and traversed the false arrest, imprisonment and damage, but in a separate defense alleged that plaintiff illegally entered Shat-well’s residence and that he arrested and imprisoned him because plaintiff assaulted him with a deadly weapon. The jury returned a verdict for defendants.

Plaintiff’s motion for new trial, in addition to the claim of insufficiency of the evidence and errors of law, assigned misconduct of the defendants, the jury and the trial judge, whose qualification to hear the same was challenged in a statement heard and denied by another judge.

*319 Plaintiff, aged 68 years, owned 38 acres of land near Bakersfield. A duplex constructed of two parallel "boxcars, inter-spaced by two middle rooms, was covered by a gabled roof. Plaintiff used the rear center room for storage and occupied the southerly three-room apartment. The Shatwells occupied the north three-room apartment and the front center room. A door on each side of the front center room opened into the respective apartments. In 1942, plaintiff, by written lease, leased to one Olveira for a cash rental, the farm and house, and expressly reserved a small part of the land and the “five south rooms,” which includes the two middle rooms above mentioned. Upon the execution of the first lease defendant Shatwell, an employee of the tenant, moved into the north apartment and continued to occupy those premises with his wife and six small children. At the same time or a short time later the Shatwells moved into the front middle room, in which room some of the children kept their clothes and also slept, under some claimed agreement with plaintiff. In 1944, before the expiration of the above lease, Olveira executed a new written lease of the same acreage, for the lessee’s “sole and proper use and benefit,” on a crop percentage basis. No mention is made in this new lease of any reservation to the plaintiff of the duplex or any portion thereof. Late in 1944, plaintiff orally crop-leased the premises for the year 1945 to one Neves, who testified that he was to get the north one-half of the house; that it was his understanding that he was to have the same house and the same deal Olveira had before he rented the property from plaintiff and that plaintiff was to have one-fifth of the rental from that portion of the premises. He testified that he charged Shatwell $20 per month for rental of the premises and took it out of his wages; that about one week before May 12th, 1945, plaintiff talked to him about wanting Shatwell “moved out of there”; that he told plaintiff he had the right to the north one-half of the house and plaintiff said he didn’t care whether he did or not, he still wanted them out of there and “off the place”; that he told plaintiff he would not move them and plaintiff said he “would take the matter up himself.”

Plaintiff denied the tenancy relationship of the middle room and claimed that he permitted Shatwell to put a roof over that room and fix it up for his children to sleep in with the proviso that he could use it until such time as he would want to use it himself and that ‘‘ any time, day or night, that *320 I wanted that room, that I would expect him to vacate.” He claimed that about one week before May 12th he found some of his shrubbery destroyed and asked Shatwell to surrender the middle room and that he refused; that on May 12th, about 8:30 p. m. he climbed through the window into that middle room while the Shatwell family were dining in their apartment, nailed one board across the top and one across the bottom of the door leading to that apartment and then he retired to his apartment. Shatwell called the sheriff. Deputies Jordan and Kayes responded. He told them of plaintiff’s action in nailing the door. The deputies went around to plaintiff’s apartment and attempted to raise plaintiff by conversation and by pounding, but he failed to answer. They “hollered—told Wilson they were from the sheriff’s office, they wanted to talk with him.” They were dressed in uniform with deputy sheriff’s shields on their caps and a star on each of their coats. Observing no activity and recognizing no response to their calls, the officers went into Shatwell’s apartment. Shatwell furnished them with a small pinch bar which Jordan used in prying open the door into the middle room. When the door was finally opened plaintiff was standing on the opposite side of it clad in his B.V.D.’s with a .45 Colt’s revolver trained on the door and pointed directly at Jordan. Plaintiff said to Jordan: “I will kill you,” and Jordan told him two or three times to drop the gun. One witness testified that he did not hear Jordan tell him before the door was pried open that he was a deputy sheriff, but Jordan was “talking loud enough so he knew he was from the sheriff’s office.” Plaintiff admitted holding the gun with both hands and pointed at Jordan because “it has got quite a kick when it fires”; that he said nothing to Jordan because “the loaded gun spoke louder than words. ’ ’ Deputy Sheriff Jordan placed plaintiff under arrest, and took him to jail “as is.”

Later, the officers returned to his apartment, at plaintiff’s request, and obtained his clothes for him and other personal effects. Plaintiff was incarcerated until the following day, Sunday, when he made bail. May 14th, Jordan swore to a criminal complaint charging plaintiff with assault with a deadly weapon. A preliminary examination resulted in holding the plaintiff to answer on that charge.

It is plaintiff’s argument that there is no evidence to support the implied finding of the jury that plaintiff’s arrest and imprisonment without a warrant was justified by any conduct of plaintiff; that the evidence indubitably shows that, as to *321 the middle room, no other relationship than that of licensor and licensee existed between plaintiff and defendant Shatwell; that said license was revocable at plaintiff’s pleasure, and when the latter notified the former and his employer of its termination, plaintiff was entitled to repossess the room without legal process; that it was clear that he did not breach the peace; that in admittedly breaking into plaintiff’s home without a warrant or other lawful authority, defendants were at least guilty of a misdemeanor; that any necessary force may be used to protect from wrongful injury the person or property of one’s self, citing Civil Code, section 50; Penal Code, sections 146 and 236; and such cases as People v. Ross, 19 Cal.App. 469, 474 [126 P. 375] ; Meyer

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Bluebook (online)
193 P.2d 127, 85 Cal. App. 2d 316, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-loustalot-calctapp-1948.