38 Wash. 409 | Wash. | 1905
This is an action in replevin, brought by the respondent against the appellant, to recover the possession of two sample cases and one box, each containing samples of boots and shoes, such as are usually carried by a traveling salesman of a wholesale dealer in such merchandise. The respondent recovered judgment in the court below, and this appeal is prosecuted therefrom.
From the record it appears, that the appellant is the proprietor and manager of two hotels, in the city of Serattta, known as the Hotel Stevens and the Hotel Seattle; that on July 1, 1902, one A. 11. Somerfield, who was then in the employ of the respondent as a traveling salesman, together with his wife, .engaged a room at the Hotel Stevens, at the agreed price of $30.00 per month, and that he continued to occupy the same from that time until October 25, 1902; and that, while Somerfield was- stopping at the Hotel Stevens, he engaged a sample room at
The foregoing facts are undisputed. The court, however, in addition thereto-, found that the appellant, at the time it received Somerfield as a guest, had knowledge that this property was the property of the respondent, and this finding is challenged by the appellant as not supported by the evidence-. But we think the clear weight of the evidence is with the finding. In fact, no other conclusion can be drawn from the testimony of the- appellant’s officers themselves. They each admit an extensive acquaintance with traveling salesmen, and their methods of doing business, and say that they never knew of an instance in which a traveling salesman of a wholesale- house owned the samples that he carried. This, it is true, may not be evidence that these officers- knew who had title to the property in this particular instance, but it does show
The statute regulating the liens of hotel keepers, innkeepers, etc., is as follows:
“Hereafter all hotel keepers., inn keepers, lodging house keepers, and boarding house keepers in this- state shall have a lien upon- the baggage, property, or other valuables of their guests, lodgers, or boarders brought into such hotel, inn, lodging house, or boarding house by such guests, lodgers, or boarders, for the proper charges, due from such guests, lodgers, or boarders for their accommodation, board, or lodging, and such other extras as are furnished at their request, and shall have the right to retain in their possession such baggage, property, or other valuables until such charges are fully paid, and to sell such baggage, property, or other valuables for the payment of such charges in the manner provided in the next succeeding section of this chapter.” Bal. Code, § 5975.
The appellant argues that, under this section, the hotel keeper’s lien attaches to all property the guest brings into the hotel, regardless of whom the title to- the same may rest in, or of the fact that the hotel keeper knows who holds such title, provided the property is in the rightful possession of the guest, and subjected to his. care. To support its contention the appellant cites, Schouler, Bailments and Carriers, § 326, and Manning v. Hollenbeck, 27 Wis. 202. These authorities maintain that a.t common law an innkeeper had a lien upon the property of his guest, to secure his reasonable charges, even where- the innkeeper knew that the property belonged to a third person, and that the guest himself had only a bailee’s interest therein, provided that the innkeeper received the property on the faith of the innkeeping relation. Whether this is
But the question is not material here. The appellant’s rights are to be measured by the statute; and not by the common law rule. At common law there was no lien on the part of an innkeeper for such accommodations as the appellant furnished to Somerfield. An innkeeper was allowed a lien at common law only where he furnished accommodations to a guest proper—that is, one “entertained from day to day, as it were, coming and going as he pleases, being transient, and having no bargain for a fixed time”— but was not allowed a lien for furnishing accommodations to a mere lodger, as Somerfield was in this instance.
Turning to the statute, it will be observed that a lien is given to hotel keepers “upon the baggage, property, or other valuables of their guests, . . .” It is not extended to- the property of third persons, even though such property be brought into the hotel by the guest, and the hotel keeper be ignorant of its true ownership. It may be that were the property such as a guest ordinarily carries, and the hotel keeper entertained him on the faith of such property, in ignorance of its true ownership, that the lien would attach, but this is as far as the rule could extend. There can be no lien under the statute where the hotel keeper knows that the property in possession of the guest is not the guest’s property, but is the property of a third person.
The cases generally, where like and similar statutes have been construed, lay down the foregoing rule. In McClain v. Williams, 11 S. D. 227, 76 N. W. 930, 74 Am. St. 791, 49 L. R. A. 610, it was held that a statute giving
In Torrey & Co. v. McClellan, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 371, 43 S. W. 64, it was held that a statute reading as follows:
“Proprietors of hotels and boarding-houses shall have a specific lien upon all property or baggage deposited with them for the amount of the charges against them or their owners, if guests at such hotels and boarding-houses,”
did not give a hotel keeper a lien on samples canned by a traveling salesman, belonging to his employer, for the bill of the salesman incurred for board and lodging at the claimant’s hotel.
In Wyckoff v. Southern Hotel Co., 24 Mo. App. 382, it was held that a statute giving an innkeeper a lien on the “baggage and other valuables of the guest-,” did not give a lien upon goods of a third person, taken to the inn by the guest.
The only other case called to- our attention involving this question where a statute was construed is Brown Shoe Co. v. Hunt, supra. It was there held that a statute giving to innkeepers a lien on all property “belonging to, or under the control of their guests,” was sufficiently broad to include samples brought to a hotel by a traveling salesman, although the innkeeper knew, at the time he re>ceived the salesman as a guest, that the samples did not belong to- him, but belonged to- his employer; the court hold
The conclusion reached renders it unnecessary to discuss the other errors assigned. The judgment is affirmed.