4 Wash. 593 | Wash. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The information charges the defendant with the crime of burglary in entering, in the night time, the dwelling house of Walter Bradley, with intent to commit a felony therein.
It appears from the evidence that the building in which the crime is alleged to have been committed was a hotel and boarding house, in the town of Kent, King county, known as the Central House, kept by one Pillman, who did not reside in the house, but lived some distance away in his own private dwelling; thatBradley was an unmarried man, and a resident of Kent, and for some time prior to the commission of the alleged offense, had occupied a room in the building at the head of the common stairway, for which he paid Pillman a weekly rental in advance; that he kept his
It is contended by the learned counsel for the defendant that there isa fatal variance between the testimony and the averments of the information as to the ownership of the room in question. He strenuously insists that Bradley was a mere guest at the hotel, and that the room occupied by him should have been laid in the information as the dwelling house of Pillman. While not denying that, at common law, the chamber of the guest at an inn is the dwelling house, or mansion house, of the innkeeper, the learned counsel for the state insist that the relation of landlord and guest did not exist in this instance; that Bradley was not a guest at the Central House, and that, therefore, the rule as to guests is not applicable.
A guest is defined as “ a traveler who lodges at an inn or tavern with the consent of the keeper.” Black’s Law Dictionary, title, “Guest.” But while a guest isa traveler, it is not necessary that he should come from another state or country, or from any distant place. Any person going from his own home, whatever the distance may be, and applying for and receiving accommodations at a hotel, is a traveler, and therefore a guest. Walling v. Potter, 35 Conn. 183. But “ if a person comes upon a special contract to board and sojourn at an inn, he is not in the sense of the law a guest, but is deemed a boarder.” Hursh v. Byers, 29 Mo. 470. See also Shoecraft v. Bailey, 25 Iowa, 553; Lusk v. Belote, 22 Minn. 468.
From the foregoing decisions, and many others which
“According to the strict common law rule, where the chamber of a guest at an inn is forced open and his goods stolen, the burglary must be laid in the dwelling house of the, landlord, and in all cases where the occupier has the transient use merely, and no interest in the apartments he occupies, it is the same. But, if the lodgers lease their apartments for definite periods, the old rule ceases to be applicable, and the apartment may be laid as the tenant’s dwelling.” 1 Whart. Crim. Law (9th ed.), § 802.
Even under the “strict common law rule” the chambers in colleges and inns of court were held to be the dwellings of the occupants so far as their burglarious entry is con-, cerned, and the same rule applied to chambers hired by one person in the house of another for lodgings for a definite
The further point is made by appellant that the information is insufficient in not allegingthat the building charged to have been burglariously entered was within the body of the county. But we think the objection is not well taken. The burglarious entry of the house is alleged to have been made in King county, and that is a sufficient averment that the house was within the body of that county.
"We think the defendant had a fair trial, and was rightfully convicted on the evidence, and the judgment of the court below is, therefore, affirmed.
Dunbak, Scott, Hoyt and Stiles, JJ., concur.