205 Ky. 51 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Appellee McClellan was lessee of the Palmer Hotel in Paducah and was operating it for the benefit of the trade in December, 1921, at a time when appellant Mrs. B. Bnrgaiter alleges she was injured by a fall on the second floor hall of the building while on her way to the room which she was occupying as a guest of the hotel and from which fall, she avers, she suffered great pain and injury and for which she seeks in this action to recover damages. The Palmer Hotel was also made a party defendant below but was later .dismissed. Of this action there is no complaint. A trial upon the merits as between Mrs. Burgauer and the lessee McClellan resulted in a verdict for defendant McClellan and she appeals.
With respect to her injury and how it came about appellant alleged in her petition that “while walking along the hallway or corridor of the Palmer Hotel mentioned, on the second floor thereof, where her room was and where she had a right to be in the daytime on December 1st, 1921, she was without fault on her part thrown suddenly and violently to the floor by reason and because of the wrongful, careless and negligent acts of the defendants, their agents, servants and employes who had removed the linoleum and carpeting from the bathrooms and hallways or corridors of said hotel, and rolled and placed and left same or some of it in said hallway and at a place where the guests thereof, including plaintiff, were required and had a right to be in passing and using said hallway; and further by causing and permitting said hallway and corridor, at said point where the linoleum or carpeting was, to be and remain dark, and where it and other obstructions were left, by said wrongful, negligent and careless acts on the part of the defendants and each of them, and that of their employes. Plaintiff
In addition to a traverse of the material averments of the petition the appellee McClellan pleaded contributory negligence. At the conclusion of the evidence appellee McCllelan moved for a directed verdict in his favor, but this motion was overruled. The appellant then offered two instructions, which the court-rejected, and of this she now complains. The first instruction, No. 100, is in substance as follows:
“The plaintiff was a guest of the defendant, Palmer Hotel, operated by W. H. McClellan, and it was the duty of the defendant, McClellan, to provide the plaintiff hs guest thereof with a passage or hallway for travel to and from her room thereat, properly lighted and free from obstructions; and if you believe from the evidence that the defendant failed to provide a passway free from obstructions, or one not properly lighted, and by reason of such failure and as a direct and proximate .result thereof the*54 plaintiff without fault on her part stumbled and was caused to fall and was injured thereby, the law is for the plaintiff, Mrs. Burgauer.”
The other instruction offered by appellant, No. 200, was one upon the measure of damages and is .rather •lengthy, and need not be copied here, for we are of opinion that the one given by the court is in substance the same as that offered by appellant upon that subject.
Although the court refused instruction No. 100, which we have given in substance, it gave an instruction in substance the same.
“The court instructs the jury that it was the duty of the defendant, W. H. McClellan, in the operation of the Palmer Hotel, to use ordinary care to provide plaintiff, as a guest thereof, with a passage or hallway, for travel to and from her room,'properly lighted and free of obstructions, and if you shall believe from the evidence in this case that the defendant failed to do either of these things, and by reason of such” failure and as the direct and proximate result thereof, the plaintiff fell and received the injuries complained of, then the law is for the plaintiff and you will so find; but unless you so believe you will find for the defendant.”
It appears to us that the court gave to the jury the law of the case in a very succinct and direct way, clear and free from confusion. It is the duty of an innkeeper, as was McClellan, to exercise ordinary care to have and keep the hallways and pasageways of his hotel reasonably well lighted and free of obstructions so that guests may pass to and from their rooms and other places about the hotel in safety. The keeper of such a place, however, is not an insurer of the safety of his guests, his responsibility being limited to the exercise of reasonable care. 14 R. C. L., p. 509; Hayward v. Merrill, 34 Am. Rep. 229; Lyttle v. Denny, 128 A. S. R. 814; Weeks v. McNulty, 43 L. R. A. 185; McCracken v. Meyers, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 290, and notes; Ritter v. Norman, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 657, and notes.
The evidence for appellant, Mrs. Burgauer, tended to show that rolls of linoleum and carpeting were placed in the hallway of the hotel by the servants of appellee, McClellan, and that in passing to her room she stumbled and fell over the same because the hall was not sufficiently lighted and she could not see the obstruction.
Appellant also insists that the judgment is erroneous because the court on motion of appellee struck from her petition an averment concerning her board bill at the hotel- after her injury and which she claims was not a just charge against her. It was not a matter directly connected with the injury or the action for damages, but merely incidental thereto. The questions involved could not properly have been litigated in this case for personal injury. The court did not, therefore, err in striking- it from the petition. 'If appellee McClellan attempts to enforce his claim for board against the, appellant she may then, by way of defense, present her side of the controversy concerning the hotel bill and obtain all the relief to which she may be entitled.
For the reasons indicated the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.