97 Neb. 820 | Neb. | 1915
Appellee, Emil J. Strahl, January 22, 1911, became a guest at the Millard Hotel in Omaha; the hotel being owned fey appellant, Borne Miller. The building was five stories high, and had more than fifty rooms, and was not of fire proof construction. Appellee was assigned to room 404, which was on the fourth floor of said hotel, and retired about 10:30 p. M. During the night a fire occurred in the hotel, and appellee undertook to escape by means of a rope fire, escape, and in doing so suffered bodily in
There was a trial to a jury, and a verdict of $6,500 for appellee, and appellant brings the cause here for review.
The evidence discloses that appellee went to his room on the fourth floor of the hotel about 10:30 p. M.; that he awoke about 3:30 a. m., and about five minutes thereafter he detected the odor of smoke; that he arose and turned on the electric light, opened the door, and took down the telephone receiver and asked the office where the fire was, but received no response; he then dressed and went to the elevator shaft, feeling his way along the walls; that the smoke was so thick he could not see the light in the hall; that when he reached the elevator it was not running, but he heard some one holler, “Take the stairway;”, that he did not know the location of the stairway, and returned to his room, tried to telephone the office, but received no response, untangled the rope fire escape, threw it out of the window, and tried to go down hand over hand. He testified that he had looked over this fire escape the evening before, and commented to himself, “Well, in case of a fire, a fellow would have a fat chance of getting down on that rope, it is so thin;” that it was equipped with a metal piece to regulate the speed of descent, but that this metal piece would not work, and that he slid down the rope, finally landing on a platform below, and sustained the injuries of which he complains.
His wife and son testified that they visited the room the next morning, and that the rope was very thin. They describe it as being like “a window cord,” and the son claims to have thrown the rope out of the window, and that it did not reach within several feet of the platform below, on which the appellee fell. Appellant offered in evidence a five-eighths inch hemp rope fire escape, equipped Avith a patented metallic appliance to facilitate its use; the rope being of sufficient length to reach from appellee’s room to the landing below. Appellee denies that this is the rope fire escape which was in his room the night of the fire,
It is undisputed, that the smell of smoke was detected by one of the employees in the hotel about 1:30 a. m., and' ■that later a guest called the attention of the' night clerk to the smell of smoke; that the clerk did nothing further than to look into the cuspidor to see if paper, or some like combustible matter, might be burning there. And this was two hours before the appellee awoke to find the halls filled with smoke. These facts, together with the testimony relating to the fire gongs, fire escape, and the general conduct of appellant’s agents, were all properly submitted to-the jury.
Exceptions are taken to the instructions of the court,, and it is insisted by appellant that no common law liability rests upon an innkeeper to protect his guests from injury by fire, and that the act of 1883 relating to innkeepers contravenes both the state and federal constitutions, in that it deprives the innkeeper of life, liberty and property without due process of law. These points we do not think are well taken. The weight of authority upholds-the doctrine of a common law liability. The hotel keeper is under obligation to protect his-guests from danger when it is reasonably within his power so 'to do. Clancy v. Barker, 71 Neb. 83. Section 3104, Rev. St. 1913, the act complained of, reads as follows: “In hotels or lodging houses containing more than fifty rooms, and being four or more stories high, the proprietor or lessee of each hotel or lodging house shall employ and keep at least one competent watchman, whose duty it shall be to keep watch and guard in such hotel or lodging house against fire, and to give warning in case a fire should break out. Such watchman shall be on duty between the hours of 9 o’clock p. m. and 6 o’clock A. m., and in case of fire he shall instantly awaken each guest and all other persons therein, and inform them of such fire." A large alarm bell or gong shall be placed on each floor or story, to be used to alarm the inmates of such hotel or lodging house in case of fire therein. It shall be the duty of every proprietor, or keeper
Exceptions were taken to the instructions given by the court; but the instructions appear to be based upon the evidence, and, taken as a whole, no prejudicial error is disclosed.
The question of contributory negligence was properly submitted. The jury were told that, if “failure of the plaintiff to exercise the care that a man of ordinary prudence would have exercised in the circumstances was the proximate cause of the alleged injury, then the defendant is not liable, * * * even though you might also find that the defendant was negligent in not discovering the fire earlier, or in not notifying the plaintiff promptly of its existence.”
Affirmed.