48 Ga. App. 596 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
Lead Opinion
Mrs. C. H. Smith sued the Jefferson Hotel Company for damages on account of the alleged conduct of the servant and agent of the defendant toward her while she was a guest in the hotel. Both the plaintiff in error (the plaintiff in the court below) and the defendant in error, in their briefs, treated the petition as being based solely upon a breach of duty on the part of the defendant hotel company to the plaintiff as a guest, arising out of the relation of innkeeper and guest. The plaintiff’s petition sets out substantially the following case (after stating jurisdiction of the court over the defendant corporation) : that the defendant is engaged in the business of operating a hotel where guests are entertained for a consideration; that petitioner is an elderly lady and has for many years been and is now engaged in the millinery business in the City of Atlanta; that her residence is outside the corporate limits of the city and is some distance from the car-line, and, because she keeps her shop open too late on Saturday night to go this distance, she has more than once spent Saturday night at the defendant’s hotel, and was therefore known to the manager and clerks of the hotel;
The court below did not err in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition. One conducting a hotel is not under a duty to prevent the arrest of a guest of the hotel by officers of the law who are seemingly acting within their authority. There is no duty on the part of a hotel company the violation of which will make it liable in damages because it has not investigated and determined for itself whether or not such an arrest, within the apparent scope of the officers’ authority, is legal.
In Fraser v. Smith & Kelly Co., 136 Ga. 18 (70 S. E. 792), it was said: “An allegation that the master knew, or ought to have known, that the plaintiff’s fellow servants had substituted an improper and inadequate appliance for that furnished by the master charges constructive and not actual notice to the master. The sufficiency of the charge of imputed notice depends upon the pleaded allegations relied upon to show it; and when such facts are insufficient to raise such an inference, the allegation is insufficient as a charge that the master had notice that the plaintiff’s fellow servants had substituted an improper appliance for that furnished by the master and thereby rendered unsafe the plaintiff’s place of work.” In Babcock Lumber Co. v. Johnson, 120 Ga. 1030 (48 S. E. 438), it was said: “Since pleadings are to be most strictly construed against -the pleader, an allegation that the master knew or ought to
Prom the allegations in this case, there was no duty on the part of the defendant to interfere until it had knowledge that the plaintiff was not the woman wanted by the police. No facts are alleged on which to base the allegation that the clerk “well knew that your petitioner was not the party wanted by the police, or, by the exercise of even the slightest care and diligence, could have so ascertained.” Thq petition was therefore subject to the general demurrer. As we have previously said, if the hotel clerk had been given information, and from such information knew, that the plaintiff
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
I can not concur in the majority opinion. It may be stated that, as a general rule, “innkeepers are not insurers of the safety of the persons of their guests. The limit of their liaability is for the exercise of reasonable care for the safety, comfort, and entertainment of th'eir visitors.” Clancy v. Barker, 131 Fed. 161. If the officers merely asked the hotel clerk if a named woman was registered at the hotel and the clerk informed them that she was, and the officers thereupon came to the hotel and the clerk pointed out the plaintiff as the person inquired about, the defendant would not be liable for an assault by the officers in making an illegal arrest unless the defendant knew of the illegality, for he would be merely giving information to which the officers were entitled .as a matter of public policy. The hotel clerk would not be bound to make an investigation to ascertain whether the persons whom he knew to be officers of the law had a warrant for the arrest of the guest, or to find out whether the charge on which they were proceeding was one for which an arrest could be legally made. Therefore, the hotel company would not be liable for an assault by the officers of the law in making an illegal arrest unless its clerk knew of the illegality or the facts and circumstances known to him are such as to apprise a person of ordinary prudence that the arrest was unlawful. 15 A. L. R. 885. To paraphrase the language of Chief Justice Simmons in Brunswick & Western R. Co. v. Ponder, 117 Ga. 63 (43 S. E. 430, 60 L. R. A. 713, 97 Am. St. R. 152), it would never do to allow a hotel clerk to interfere with the officers of the law and prevent arrests by them merely because he did not know whether or not they were acting within their power and authority. If the hotel clerk had knowledge that the arrest was unlawful, then it would be his duty to use ordinary diligence to prevent it and protect the guest, but even in that case the defendant would not be an insurer against such arrest. If the hotel clerk had notice that the arrest was wrongful, it would be his duty to make
The allegations of the petition that “while petitioner was being carried out of the hotel one of the men told her they were officers, and that they had been sent for her and were going to take her to police station, and, although petitioner protested and told them who she was and where she lived, they replied that they knew who she was and where she lived, but that they had been sent for her and that she must go with them,” would not naturally and logically contradict her other allegations in the petition to the effect that the clerk of the hotel pointed her out to the officers, well knowing that she was not the person the officers had asked about and that the woman wanted by the officers was an entirely different woman, much younger than petitioner, having no physical resemblance to petitioner and having an entirely different name, to such an extent as to show that the officers were not relying on the information of the hotel clerk in identifying the plaintiff. The identification by the hotel clerk might have been the very reason that the officers stated that they knew who she was. I think that while the allegations of the petition that the defendant knew that the arrest was made by the officers was illegal at the time it was made, or ought to have known that the plaintiff was not the.party wanted by the officers, would add