1. This was an action against the proprietor of a hotel, for injuries alleged to have been inflicted by the manager upon the plaintiff while a guest therein. The evidence offered by the plaintiff tended to show that while the plaintiff was complaining to a clerk at the hotel’s office that the charge for a meal to which the plaintiff had just been served was excessive, the manager voluntarily responded to the complaint with opprobrious words, followed by an assault and battery upon the plaintiff. Held, that the inference was authorized that the difficulty which led to the alleged assault and battery arose out of and in connection with the business of the principal which the manager had authority to transact, and therefore that the injury was committed in the prosecution and within the scope of the proprietor’s business, as was the inference that at the time of the injury the defendant was not in the exercise of ordinary care for the safety of his guest. Civil Code (1910), § 4413; Seaboard Air-Line Railway v. Arrant, 17 Ga. App. 489 (2) (
(a) Under such circumstances and where also the jury were instructed that no liability of the defendant would arise unless the injury was inflicted
(6) Therefore the degree of oare which a hotel-keeper owes to his guests cannot in this case be decided.
2. “This not being a case where the entire injury sued for was to the peace, happiness, or feelings of the plaintiff, it was reversible error for the court to instruct the jury that they should weigh ‘ the worldly circumstances of the parties.’ Georgia Railroad v. Homer, 73 Ga. 251 (1), 257; Atlanta Consolidated Street Ry. Co. v. Hardage, 93 Ga. 457 (3) (
3. None of the other instructions were subject to the exceptions taken; and, solely for the reasons set forth in the preceding paragraph, the court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.
