Giles v. Fauntleroy

13 Md. 126 | Md. | 1859

Eccleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

This is an action on the case, instituted in the Court of Common Pleas for Baltimore city, by the appellee against the appellant, to recover the value of a trunk and its contents, ah leged to have been lost whilst the plaintiff was a guest at the defendant’s inn.

The declaration contains two counts, each charging the defendant as an inn-keeper.

The plea is not guilty.

At the trial it was admitted that the plaintiff lodged, as a guest, at the hotel of the defendant^ that the articles enumerated in the list annexed to the agreement were in the plaintiff’s trunk at the time the same was alleged to have been broken open, and that the value of said articles is the value set opposite to them, respectively, in said list.

The list alluded to contained—

1 Prime case surg. instruments, - |30.00
1 Tonsil cutter, - 5.00
1 Large sized Colt’s pistol, - 30.00
1 Dozen silver tea spoons, - - 15.00
1 Pocket bible, gold clasp, - 2.50
1 Travelling trunk, - 5.00

And sundry articles of clothing, list being $102.55. The amount of the whole

A witness named Gwinn testifies, that on or about the 17th of April 1855, as the agent of the plaintiff, he called upon the defendant in relation to the loss of the plaintiff’s trunk, when he stated that it had been delivered to Barnum’s porter, according to the usage of the house. And that if there was any loss, he, defendant, would hold Barnum’s porter answerable for it. This conversation was about a month after the trunk had been lost. Some weeks afterwards, whilst passing the hotel, the defendant’s clerk called the witness in and showed him a black leather trunk, and asked him if it belonged to the plaintiff. He could not identify it.

The plaintiff also proved by Harback, that during the mouth of March 1855, the witness was the clerk in the office of the hotel kept by the defendant, on Baltimore street, and that *133from the 14th day of said month, until the morning of the 17th, the plaintiff was a guest in said house.

Upon cross-examination this witness states, that on the morning of the 17th day of March 1855, before 12 o’clock, M., the plaintiff called at the office, and told witness that he intended to leave, and then paid his bill up to that time, and that what he paid for the room entitled him to its use for the entire day. When the bill was thus paid, the plaintiff requested witness to keep his trunk for him “until 4 o’clock, P. M., in the afternoon of said day, and then have it sent to the steamer Virginia, or Gladiator,” witness does not remember ■which, but that they both belonged to the same line. The plaintiff left with the witness twenty-five cents to pay the porter, and then left the said hotel and did not return again. Sometime after the plaintiff had left, witness sent word to Barnum’s porter to call at 4 o’clock for said trunk, there being no regular porter connected with said hotel, and it being the custom of the house to employ said porter when baggage was to be taken away.' At 4 o’clock the porter called and witness had the trunk brought down by servants and delivered to him, and told him to take it to the steamer which the plaintiff had named; witness cannot now recollect whether it was to be taken to the steamer Virginia or Gladiator, but is certain, that at the time he directed the porter to carry it to the right boat, and gave the porter twenty-five cents, the sum which the plaintiff had left with him to pay the porter. This witness further states, that when he caused the trunk to be delivered to the porter, he believes that it contained all the articles mentioned in the schedule filed by the plaintiff in this cause, and that none of them were lost while the trunk was in the hotel. He did not particularly examine the trank when brought down, but saw it and was near it, and thinks it was in order. He saw no marks of its having been opened. That when the witness Gwinn called about the loss of the trunk, the defendant, on being informed of its loss, sent for the said porter and told him that it must be found; that after some time the trunk was found in the office of the Norfolk boats, in this city, broken open and the contents stolen, and was, in that condition, brought by said porter to the defendant’s house.

*134The plaintiff also proved by Mr. Cassin, that before the present action was brought, he, as attorney for the plaintiff, called upon the defendant in relation to the loss of the trunk, when the defendant said to witness, that there was the trunk, pointing at a trunk lying there; the defendant made no further offer to deliver it, nor did witness demand its delivery.

The defendant then gave in evidence the following as the rules of his hotel, at the time when the plaintiff was a guest:

“Rules of Giles’ Hotel.
“1st. Lock and bolt your door on retiring, and on leaving your room lock your door and leave the key at the office. This course the proprietor has adopted for safety, and hopes it will be strictly observed, as he will not be responsible for any loss, except when given to him or his clerk for safe keeping.
“Terms of lodging 50 cts. perday.
“2nd. Parties or families can be furnished with private par-lours at an extra charge.
“3rd. Any person taking a room will be charged by the day, until notice shall be given at the office of vacating the same.
“4th. All meals served in chambers will be charged extra, except in cases of sickness. t
“5th. Persons wishing to have clothes washed will give notice of the same at the office, the number of pieces, and at what time they will be wanted.
“6th. Persons intending to leave by the steamboats, cars, or other conveyances, will be pleased to give notice at the office in time for their bills to be ready, and the porter in attendance to convey their baggage.
“7th. Permanent boarders will be expected to settle their bills weekly.
“8th. Gaming of every kind prohibited.
“9th. A regular watch will be maintained during the night to admit travellers, furnish them with beds, and protect the establishment.
“The proprietor, ever anxious to promote and add to the comfort of his guests, will take it as a great favor to be informed of any inattention or neglect in any department of the establishment.”

*135The plaintiff then prayed the court to instruct the jury, “(hat if they shall find .from the evidence, that the defendant kept a house in the city of Baltimore, where persons were provided with food and lodging, for money, and that the plaintiff was a guest in said house, and that he had with him, at the time, in the house, the trunk and articles of value claimed by him, and that the defendant did not deliver said trunk and its contents to the plaintiff, but that, the same was lost or stolen by the negligence or mistake of the defendant, or his agent or servant, whether in said house or while being conveyed by the defendant, or his servant or agent, to any other place where the defendant had undertaken to deliver them, that then the plaintiff is entitled to recover.”

Which prayer being granted by the court, the defendant excepted, and this constitutes his first bill of exceptions.

The defendant then prayed the court to grant the following 'instruction: “That if the jury shall find from the evidence, that the defendant was a regularly licensed hotel keeper, in the city of Baltimore, and that on the 14th day of March 1855, the said plaintiff became the guest of the said defendant, and continued his guest until the 17th day of said month; and shall further find, that on the morning of said last mentioned day, the said plaintiff gave notice to the agent of the defendant, that he intended to leave said hotel, and paid his bill to said agent, and at said time requested the said agent to have his trunk sent to the steamer Virginia, or Gladiator, and left with him twenty-five cents, the fee to be paid for the porterage of said trunk, and that the said agent, in accordance with said request, did deliver to a porter the said trunk, with direction to carry the same to said steamer, and gave the porter the said fee therefor; and shall also find, that at the time when said trank was delivered as aforesaid, to said porter, it had not been broken open, but that the contents mentioned in the sched-ule were in the same trunk, at the time it left the hotel, the said plaintiff is not entitled to recover, even although they may find, that the said trunk was subsequently broken open and the contents stolen, provided they further find, that said loss was not occasioned by any collusion or fraud on the part of the said defendant or his agents.”

*136This instruction the court refused to give, to which refusal the defendant excepted, and this is the ground of his second bill of exceptions.

. The jury gave a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $102.55, on which judgment was rendered, and the defendant appealed.

The defendant contends: “That the plaintiff having, on the morning of the 17th March 1855, given notice to the agent of the defendant of his intention to quit the inn, and also at the time of said notice, having paid his bill, his relation as a guest was destroyed; and that the defendant is not liable in this action for any loss that may have subsequently occurred.”

It is also contended by the defendant: “That the plaintiff having declared specially against the defendant as an innkeeper, it was not competent for the court to instruct the jury, under the pleadings, that if they found a collateral undertaking on the part of the defendant, whereby he undertook to deliver the plaintiff’s goods at a place without the inn, that the defendant was liable in this action npon such undertaking.”

It will be seen, however, that, by this appeal, we are only called upon-to revise the decisions of the court below, in grant-» ing the plaintiff’s prayer and refusing that of the defendant.And neither of these prayers points or refers to the pleadings,' Whether they were decided correctly or not, must, therefore, depend, not upon the state of the pleadings, but upon the evidence to which they alone make reference. Dorsey vs. Dashiell, 1 Md. Rep., 207, and the cases therein referred to on the same subject.

From the testimony of the clerk, in connection with the rules of the house, it appears to have been the usage of the hotel to send the baggage of guests to steamboats or railroad cars by a particular porter, when there was such baggage to be sent. It is also in proof, that on the 17th of March, before 12 o’clock, M., the plaintiff paid his bill, which payment entitled him to the use of the room for the entire day) that he then informed the clerk -lie intended leaving, aud requested the clerk to send his baggage, at 4 o’clock in the afternoon of the same day, to a particular steamer; and at the time of making this request, the plaintiff left twenty-five cents to pay *137for the porterage of the trunk. The further testimony of the clerk is, that at 4 o’clock on the 17th of March, the trunk was delivered to the porter usually employed for such purpose, with instructions to cany it to the steamer directed by the piaintilF, and 25 cents were paid to the porter. Some weeks afterwards the trunk-was found broken open and the contents stolen. When found it was at the ofiice of the Norfolk boats in Baltimore, and there is no proof that it ever was at the steamer directed by the plaintiff.

With such proof before us, we cannot assent to the position that the defendant is not liable for any loss which occurred subsequently to the morning of the 17th of March, when the plaintiff gave notice of his intention to leave the inn, and paid his bill. For he was, in fact, entitled to the use of the room for the entire day, and his baggage was left behind, in the eare of the clerk, he undertaking to send it to the steamer, at 4 o’clock in the afternoon.

in Dickinson vs. Winchester and another, 4 Cush. Rep., 114, it appears that the keeper of a public house, in the neighborhood of a railroad station, gave public notice that he would furnish a free conveyance, to and from the cars, to all passengers, with their baggage, traveling thereby, who should eome to his house as guests, and for which purpose he employed the proprietors of certain carriages, to take ali such passengers, free of charge to them, and to convey them and tbeir baggage to his house. A traveller by the cars, to whom this arrangement was known, having employed one of the carriages, thus provided, to take him and his baggage to such public house, it was held, that if his baggage was lost or stolen through a want of due care or skill on the part of the proprietor of the carriage, or his driver, the keeper of the house would be liable therefor in assumpsit or case.

The court thought it immaterial whether the defendants were to be charged as inn-keepers, who assumed the care of the guest and his baggage at the station, instead of waiting until he came to their own door or stable, or whether they were to be considered as common carriers of persons, and .therefore responsible for passengers’ baggage. In eithe,r case,

u *138the profit to be derived, by the inn-keeper, from the entertainment of the traveller, as a guest, was held to be the consideration for the undertaking, and that such consideration formed the basis of an implied promise.

It was argued in defence, that the proprietor of the carriage, whose driver lost the trunk, was carrying on a separate employment, and therefore he, and not the defendants, were responsible for the loss. But notwithstanding this argument, the defendants were considered to be liable for the baggage lost or stolen through a want of due care or skill on the part of the proprietor of the carriage or his driver.

Under the peculiar circumstances of this case, we do not think that the liability of the defendant, for the baggage, as innkeeper, ceased when the trunk was delivered to the porter, but that the defendant continued to be responsible for any loss which resulted from the negligence or mistake of the clerk or porter.

The baggage was that of a guest, who, after paying his bill was entitled to the use of his room for the whole day. The agent of the landlord undertook to keep the trunk until 4 o’clock, and then send it to a particular steamer. And such an undertaking, it seems, was consistent with what a traveling guest had a perfect right to expect, in accordance with the rules and usage of the house

The conveniences and facilities held out to travellers, are matters which influence them in selecting hotels for their accommodation. And the profits which inkeepers derive from the entertainment of their guests, afford considerations for such undertakings as the one here alleged.

There was evidence tending to show, that instead of the trunk having been taken to the steamer directed by the plaintiff, it was carried to the office of the Norfolk boats, and there broken open and its contents stolen; and if the jury believed it to be so, they might have inferred, that the loss was occasioned by the negligence or mistake of the clerk of the hotel, or of the porter. And for each of them, as his agent, the defendant is responsible.

Notwithstanding the views which have been expressed, w© *139think the plaintiff’s prayer should not have been granted. It fully authorized the jury to understand, that if they believed the matters presented for their consideration, to be true, the plaintiff was entitled to recover for the trunk, and the whole contents thereof. And that they did so understand, is shown by the amount of the verdict. The articles contained in the trunk, however, are not, all <of them., such as can be properly considered the baggage of a traveller; and for those which are not such baggage, the defendant is riot responsible.

In Pettigrew vs. Barnum, et al., 11 Md. Rep., 449, 450, the liability of an innkeeper for a traveller’s baggage, was under consideration. And the court then said: “We do not think the term embraces merchandize or other valuables not designed for use, or personal convenience on the journey. It is not within the implied contract of the landlord, that he will be responsible for all goods which may be brought to his house, merely because they happen to be in a trunk.” It is also said: “In the present case, we find that the trunk contained silver knives, forks and spoons. For them the appellees w'ere not responsible. If a party may recover for these, why may he not for many dozens of the same articles, or for any description and amount of plate.”

According to the ruling in that case, there were articles in the trunk of the plaintiff, for which the defendant cannot be held responsible, the same not properly constituting pairs of a traveller’s baggage. These are the Colt’s pistol and the silver tea spoons. And inasmuch as there is no proof that the plaintiff was either a physician, a surgeon, or a student of medicine, we do not think he could recover for the case of surgical instruments or the tonsil cutter.

The defendant’s prayer was properly refused* tf it had been granted, the plaintiff would have been excluded from any right to recover, if the jury believed the matters therein set forth, unless they also believed, that the loss was occasioned by collusion or fraud, on the part of the defendant or his agent*

Conceding the matters stated in the prayer to be all true; and even conceding that the relation of guest ceased, when the plaintiff left the hotel, still it would have been erroneous *140to instruct the jury, that the plaintiff was not entitled to re* cover, unless they believed the loss was occasioned by collusion or fraud, on the part of the defendant or his agent.

(Decided March 10th, 1859.)

It follows from what has been said, that the judgment must be reversed and a procedendo ordered.

Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded.

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