Thе action was under the Red-light Abatement Act (Stats. 1913, p. 20) and resulted in. a judgment of abatement as a nuisance of certain buildings used for prostitution in the city of Tracy, in the county of San Joaquin. The appeal is here upon the judgment-roll alone and we can see no merit whatevеr in the position of appellants.
As to her it may be said, in addition, that she has no ground for complaint, since her proрerty was not sold, as might have been done under the evidence. It was ordered removed from the building, but this is a necessary incident to the judgment clоsing the building for a year, and the result was really more favorable to her than she had the right to expect.
It is claimed that the court failed to find upon “material allegations of the answer. ’ ’ The specification is too indefinite to demand particular notice. However, we find no
material allegation
that did not receive attention in the findings. Moreover, if there be any such allegation, “it must be presumed, in the absence of a contrary showing in the record, that there was no evidence which would have sustained a finding in their favor on such issue.”
(Coats
v.
Coats,
The only other objection wоrthy of notice is that the court, “after having already acquitted the occupant of the building, Jessie Green, of the charge of maintaining а nuisance then proceeded in the same action to find her guilty of the same charge and inflicted upon her the penalty of such unwarranted conviction, to-wit, eviction from the accused building, confiscation of her lease and removal of all her personal property therefrom . . . contrary to the express mandates of amendments V and VI of the constitution of the United States of America.”
This objection erroneously assumes that the court acquitted said Green of the charge of maintaining a nuisance. The fact is that the court fоund “that said Jessie Green is the owner of the furniture, fixtures and musical instruments and other movable property situated in said building, and that the same are used in conducting, maintaining, aiding and abetting said nuisance.” It is true, as already seen, that for some undisclosed reason the action as to her wаs dismissed, but this was after she had her day in court and the opportunity to defend the action. The dismissal was apparently an unwarranted favor grаnted to her and saved her the payment of costs of suit.
That said amendments have no application to the ease is quite apparent. The only provision therein that could possibly be regarded as bearing upon the controversy is the one prohibiting the taking of onе’s property “without due process of law.”
But she was afforded the benefit of every privilege that the law contemplates, and it was оnly after full hearing *186 that the court concluded that said nuisance existed and was being maintained by the defendants.
Of course, there can be nо question that the state has authority to provide for the abatement of nuisances, whether they exist by the fault of individuals or not. (Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 7th ed., p. 849.)
It may be added that our supreme court has held that the sixth amendment to the constitution of the United States has no application to proceedings in our state courts.
(People
v.
Nolan,
We can see no merit in the claim of appellants and the judgment is affirmed.
Finch, P. J., and Hart, J., concurred.
