59 P. 111 | Ariz. | 1899
This action was brought by the appellant, Mary R. Haft, in the district court, against the appellee, J. C. Adams, to recover the sum of $6,452 and interest thereon on account of certain jewelry and diamonds alleged to have been lost by the appellant while stopping at his hotel as a guest for hire, and while she was temporarily absent from her sleeping-room. The case was tried to a jury, and at the close of the evidence for the plaintiff the court, on motion of counsel for defendant, instructed the jury the bring in a verdict for the defendant; to which ruling the counsel for plaintiff excepted. On a verdict for the defendant, the court entered judgment in accordance therewith. From the judgment and the order denying a motion for a new trial, plaintiff appeals.
The evidence in the case furnished by the testimony of the plaintiff and her witnesses was to the effect that plaintiff and her adopted son came from Frankfort, Kentucky, to Phcenix, in the latter part of 1896; that defendant in that year erected and furnished the Hotel Adams in Phoenix; that the adopted son of the plaintiff had, in July, 1896, written the defendant, Adams, on behalf of himself and plaintiff, for rooms and permanent board in the Hotel Adams when finished, and suggested that plaintiff would prefer shipping her own furniture to furnish her rooms, and asked for terms accordingly. On plaintiff’s arrival in Phoenix before the completion of the Hotel Adams, she visited the hotel, in company with the defendant, and selected the rooms she desired to occupy; selected the furniture with which, in addition to her own furniture, she desired to have them furnished, and before she took the rooms made a bargain that she should pay one hundred and thirty-five dollars per month, to be paid monthly, and to include board, service, and provisions; that she and her adopted son afterwards entered the hotel and occupied the rooms in question (at the contract price of one hundred and thirty-five dollars per month) from December 5th—the date of the opening of the hotel—until about the 30th of July the following year; that on the 1st of February, during her
The motion for a peremptory instruction to tbe jury to return a verdict for the defendant is substantially the same as tbe common-law demurrer to tbe evidence. It admits the truth of every ultimate fact which tbe evidence tends to prove. “Tbe proper practice in such ease under tbe Arizona statutes is by an instruction to tbe jury. “When it appears to tbe trial court tbat upon tbe ease made by plaintiff’s evidence, all taken as true, tbe defendant is not liable; tbat, tak
It is urged by appellant that whether plaintiff was a guest or a boarder is an ultimate fact, to be deduced from the probative facts as given in the testimony, and that as to whether,, in fact, the plaintiff was a guest or a boarder is always a question of fact for the jury. Woollen Co. v. Proctor, 7 Cush. 417, and Magee v. Improvement Co., 98 Cal. 678, 35 Am. St. Rep. 199, 33 Pac. 772. All the cases cited in support of this proposition are those in which the relations of innkeeper and guest had been originally assumed by the parties, and the defendant had introduced evidence to show that these relations had ceased, and the plaintiff had lost his status as a guest, and had become a boarder. The question then presented—whether a person once received as a guest at a hotel
Sloan, J., and Davis, J., concur.