165 A. 891 | Md. | 1933
The question here is the liability of an innkeeper for the loss of money and baggage of a guest, caused in this instance by a fire of unknown origin. It is the same question, except that the fire was in a barn attached to a hotel, presented in Cutler v.Bonney,
The plaintiff (appellant) was a guest at the appellee's hotel at Braddock Heights in Frederick County on August 12th, 1929, when, as the result of a fire which destroyed the building, she lost $125 in money, baggage, and personal effects, altogether testified to be worth $528. She brought suit against the defendant and from a judgment in its favor she takes this appeal. The plaintiff alleged in her declaration, as part of her claim for damages, personal injuries sustained by her and illness suffered as a result of the fire, but as this question is not presented by the record it is not considered here.
The only question submitted is on an exception to the refusal of the plaintiff's fourth prayer and the court's instruction which was substituted therefor, the instruction as given by the court being a repetition of the plaintiff's with an addition here italicized. The rule of law requested, as submitted by the plaintiff's prayer, was that "if the jury also believe that while such a guest the said hotel caught on fire and that the money, jewels, personal effects and baggage of the said plaintiff were destroyed, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover for said articles of money, jewels, personal effects and baggage provided the jury shall further find that such articles and money were reasonably necessary for her travel to and from said hotel and her sojourn at said hotel," to which the court added, "andprovided the jury shall further find from all of the evidencethat the fire mentioned was the result of negligence or lack ofreasonable care on the part of the defendant or its agents orservants."
The strict rule, which allowed of no exception to liability except the act of God or a public enemy, was first stated in Maryland by way of analogy, in 1815, in White v. Wagner, 4 H.
J. 373, 391, where it was said: "The common carrier, the inn-keeper, the sheriff, and others not thought material *623
to enumerate, are responsible for losses which they could not prevent. They stand liable to the owner for all losses, whether sustained by highway robbers, or others, no matter how incontrollable and irresistible may be the force with which they are assailed. The act of God, and of the public enemies, will only free them from the demand, when the loss proceeded from such act or such enemies, and then only when they are free from every exception." The case was a suit for waste by a landlord to recover from a tenant for the damage done his house by a mob. The rule of the innkeeper's liability to his guest, as stated in fourth paragraph of the opinion in Calye's Case, 8 Coke, 32, 77 Eng. Reprint, 521, 2 Smith's Leading Cases (H. W. Ed.), 194, is that "the innholder shall not be charged unless there be a default in him or his servants in the well and safekeeping and custody of their guests' goods and chattels within his common inn; for the innkeeper is bound in law to keep them safe without any stealing or purloining," and this the majority construe to mean all the goods brought within the inn, originally adopted in this state (Towson v. Havre-de-Grace Bank, 6 H. J. 47), but later modified here so as to cover only necessary money, baggage, and personal effects, a modification which 16 Am. Eng. Enc.Law (2nd Ed.), 539 says is not supported by authority, in spite of which we still hold it to be the law in this state; and the demand in this case is in accord with our decisions (Pettigrewv. Barnum,
Except for the fact that both are bailees, the common carrier's responsibility is no criterion for the responsibility of an innkeeper. Lord Coke's rule in terms applied to the damage or disappearance by theft or otherwise of all goods of the guest brought within the inn, no matter whether the landlord was acquainted with them or not, while the common carrier has the goods in his custody for a consideration, from the time the consignor parts with them until they reach their destination, and nothing, without special agreement, will excuse him except the act of God or a public enemy (Balto. O.R. Co. v. Green,
The proposition of the plaintiff is that the common law rule, in all its strictness, should be applied to a case wherein the loss of the guest's baggage and money was occasioned by an accidental fire with no evidence of the innkeeper's negligence, but, on the contrary, evidence that he was not negligent.
The defendant, while agreeing that destruction by fire is not an act of God, contends that it was the result of an inevitable accident which could not have been foreseen or by the exercise of reasonable care have been prevented by the defendant, and asks that this construction be put on a statement of law in the first appeal in Burrows v. Trieber,
Professor Beale in his book on Innkeepers and Hotels, secs. 189 and 190, with regard to the loss of a guest's goods by accidental fire, and of the presumption of negligence against innkeepers, says: "Loss by accidental fire, where the innkeeper was not negligent, charges the innkeeper or not, according to the rule adopted in the jurisdiction concerned." In a state where the stringent liability is imposed, the innkeeper is liable for a loss by accidental fire. But in jurisdictions which hold the innkeeper liable only for negligence or breach of undertaking, he is not responsible where the goods were lost by accidental fire. Whatever view is adopted, it is agreed that upon loss or injury to the goods being shown, the innkeeper is prima facie liable and the burden is upon him to prove such facts as will exonerate him.
The leading case in this country holding for liability of the innkeeper unless excused by one of the three common law causes isHulett v. Swift,
One of the leading cases holding against the application of the rule of Calye's Case, where the loss was due to an accidental fire, is Cutler v. Bonney,
The fourth prayer as submitted by the plaintiff assumes that if she shows the loss of her money, baggage, and personal effects while a guest of the defendant, that then no defense short of the act of God, a public enemy, or her own negligence will excuse it. When she establishes the relationship and her loss, she does make out a prima facie case. The rule of the common law which she invokes contemplated and insured her against a loss which might occur through the fault, negligence, or failure of duty of the innkeeper or his servants, who owed her the extraordinary care and diligence which the innkeeper's business demands. But when it appears that the loss occurred from causes which such care and diligence could not be expected to prevent, then her right to recover must depend upon their freedom from negligence or want of care.
The bill of exceptions shows that the fire which destroyed the hotel was of "unknown origin," and that evidence was offered tending to show that the defendant was not guilty of *628 negligence and the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, but none of the details of the evidence are given, so that we must rely on the facts as they are stated in the bill of exceptions and draw our conclusions accordingly. The court's instruction would have stated the plaintiff's rights and the defendant's duty correctly if it had been so framed as to put the burden on the defendant of absolving itself from any negligence or want of such care as its duty as an innkeeper demanded. As amended by the court, it required the jury to find negligence or want of reasonable care before the plaintiff was entitled to recover for the loss of her property. The plaintiff, when she showed the loss of her baggage, etc., while a guest of the hotel, had made out a prima facie case, and it was then incumbent on the defendant to show that the fire was not caused by its or its servants' negligence or want of care in order to relieve itself from liability, unless such a defense was proved by the plaintiff, upon whom the burden did not rest. According to the record there was evidence that the fire was of "unknown origin" and that the defendant was not guilty of negligence and, whatever the evidence was, these facts must be assumed from the conclusions stated in the record.
If the fourth prayer had been so amended as to put to the jury the alternative that the plaintiff would be entitled to recover unless, instead of provided, the jury should find from the evidence that the defendant had not been negligent or had not been wanting in reasonable care and diligence to prevent the fire, it would have correctly stated the law, as we view the plaintiff's right and the landlord's duty. But has the plaintiff any reason to complain? The prayer as submitted by the plaintiff is not in accord with the view of this court as to the plaintiff's right and the defendant's duty with respect to the loss of a guest's goods through an accidental fire, and, if that prayer had been granted and a verdict rendered for the plaintiff and the defendant had appealed, there would have been a reversal. As said in Gordon v. Opalecky,
The plaintiff contended that the so-called "Iron Safe Clause," Code, art. 71, secs. 5 and 6, had no application because such a safe was required in towns of five hundred or more people, and "Braddock Heights" not being incorporated, it was not a town. We agree that it does not apply, but for the reason assigned inMaltby v. Chapman,
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *630