136 Mo. App. 475 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This is an action based upon the defendant’s liability as an innkeeper. The plaintiff was a bartender in Kansas City, but was unemployed at the time of the occurrence in question. He was a married man and was living in said city. About June 10, 1907, his Avife went on a visit to Indiana and during a part of the time of her absence plaintiff stayed at night at what was known as the Centropolis Hotel and took most of his meals there. The defendant was the lessee and proprietor of said hotel, which was conducted upon both the . American and European plans. That is to say,- a person stopping- at the hotel could do so at so much per day for a room and meals, which is what is called' the American plan; but he could also be accommodated, if he chose, by paying for a room and buying his meals at the hotel or elsewhere, to suit his taste and convenience, which is what is called the European plan.
At the time plaintiff made the deposit of the money á clerk of the defendant by the name of Williams was on duty and was the person who received the package and gave in return the slip of writing mentioned. It was shown that plaintiff asked Williams to put the package in the safe kept for the security of
The judgment was for the plaintiff and the defendant appealed. The attorneys of the respective parties have argued the cause with much ability and at great length, but, as we view it, there seems to be but two main questions for our determination. It must be conceded as a preliminary, that the law is that an innkeeper is liable for the loss of valuables left in his charge by his guest for safe-keeping while the relation of innkeeper and guest continues.
The first question is, was the plaintiff at the time he made the deposit of his money a guest of defendant’s hotel. The St. Louis Court of Appeals defines a guest as follows, “'A guest is a transient person, who resorts to, and is received at, an inn for the purpose of obtaining the accommodations which it purports to afford.” [Overstreet v. Moser, 88 Mo. App. 72.] In some instances, a guest is defined as a traveler or wayfarer. “Anyone away from home receiving the accommodations of an inn as a traveler is a guest, and enti
From the foregoing, we believe the rule as stated in Overstreet v. Moser, supra, is a proper definition of what it takes to' constitute a guest, and that the testimony shows that the plainiff was a guest of the defendant’s hotel when he registered and paid for his lodging, and we think it immaterial whether he became such upon the American or European custom.
It is reasonably clear that when the plaintiff surrendered- the key to his room at six o’clock p. m. of June 17th and left without returning he ceased to he a guest of the inn. The fact that he had paid for his room for twenty-four hours, which would carry the time up to midnight, is of no significance in determining the question of whether he was a guest of the inn, if before the expiration of that time he had left the inn without any intention of returning to it. The fact that he did not intend to return and did not in fact do so, it seemd to us, is conclusive on that question. Therefore, instruction numbered III, given for plantiff, to the effect that he continued to be a guest of the inn until the time expired for which he had paid for the accommodation of the hotel, was erroneous and misleading, as the jury might well have concluded from the language used that he was to be considered a guest for so long as he had paid for the use of the room. We cannot conceive how one could be considered the guest of an inn with
We are persuaded that the plaintiff as a matter of fact did not make the deposit for its security while .he might be defendant’s guest, but that he deposited it on call or until he should be ready to make his visit to Indiana. The evidence seems to be conclusive on this phase of the case. He had been carrying the money around on his person for about a week previous, had it with him when he went to bed on the night of June 16, deposited it on the following morning and made no inquiry or call for it until three weeks afterward. A man under such circumstances would not likely have made the deposit as a matter of security while a guest of the inn.
Viewing the case in all its aspects, we fell compelled to hold -that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.