131 A. 537 | Pa. | 1925
The William Penn Hotel, a large twenty-story structure with two wings and courts intervening, fronts on William Penn Way in Pittsburgh; a great number of rooms overlook the street. Abe Wolk, clerk in a jewelry store, was seated in an automobile parked on the side of the street near the hotel; between nine and ten o'clock at night a pint bottle crashed through the top of the car, struck him on the head and rolled into the street. It appeared that milk bottles, jars, flower vases and grape fruit had been seen frequently on the window sills of the hotel, the management permitting the rooms to be used for light housekeeping to the extent of preparing daily at least one meal in the rooms, usually breakfast. On request, meals were served in the rooms. The plaintiff instituted suit to recover damages for the injuries sustained and charged negligence of defendant in permitting such articles as mentioned above to be placed on the window sills by the occupants of the various rooms, in not erecting guards to protect these articles from falling off the sills and failure to inspect to ascertain the condition of the property. The court below permitted a recovery and the case is now before us on appeal.
To sustain a recovery there must be some causal connection between the fall of the bottle and the acts of the proprietors of the hotel or their servants or persons for whose acts they may be held responsible. There is no *549 proof that the proprietor or his servant threw the bottle and plaintiff relies on an inference that the bottle fell from this particular building because of the presence of bottles on the window sills thereof. This, he says, is strengthened by the fact that a mark, resembling one that might have been made by a wet bottle, was noticed on a sill above where the auto stood.
The case involves a consideration of the legal relation existing between those who occupy rooms of a hotel as guests, boarders or in some other capacity, and the proprietor and the latter's responsibility for their acts. Occupancy of rooms in a hotel by others than the proprietor's family and friends is based on a contract. When a guest or boarder is assigned, for his exclusive use, a room or an apartment in a hotel, it is his living quarters or residence as a home, subject to such visitations, at reasonable times, as the proprietor or his servants may deem necessary, to maintain the rooms in fit condition, or to keep the premises under supervisory control, so that they may not become obnoxious to the proprieties of life or the law of the land. Regulations may be made to this end. These restrictions, however, are specifically effective for the protection of the house itself and its patrons; apart therefrom, the guest or boarder has an absolute right to the free enjoyment of his room or apartment without interference from anyone: Frewen v. Page, 131 N.E. (Mass.) 475. Indeed, unwarranted interference by the proprietor or his servants is a matter of serious moment to them.
Where a building is used as a hotel for the accommodation of guests, boarders, or apartment renters, the relation subsisting between the parties and the proprietor vary, and, whatever they are as between themselves, these relations may relieve the owner or proprietor entirely for the tortious acts of the occupants, committed on the premises, injuriously affecting strangers off the premises, or there may be a qualified responsibility. *550 The contract of occupancy of the various rooms by the patrons creates these various relations.
At common law, subject to certain exceptions, the occupier (and not the landlord) as between himself and the public is prima facie liable for injuries occurring to third persons on or off the premises (Thompson on Negligence, section 1154; Keely v. O'Connor,
In dealing with the responsibility of a proprietor to a stranger, when an injury occurs through an act of an occupier in no way connected with the conduct of the establishment, the owner of an apartment house, under the principles above outlined, would not be responsible for an injury occurring from the negligent condition of a tenant's window sill, or for acts committed by a tenant in the course of his occupation. Nor would the proprietor of an apartment hotel be liable for similar conditions where the occupant's use is partially for light housekeeping purposes and partly as a hotel. This rule includes some of the conditions that existed in this hotel, where the patrons were permitted to use the rooms for light housekeeping in preparing one of the daily meals in their rooms, which was part of the contract. The character of the occupancy determines the liability. These occupiers are styled permanent guests, and while the proprietor might contract against placing articles on window sills, he is not required to do so to be relieved *552 of liability; his responsibility rises no higher than that of a landlord who rents his place as an apartment house.
The perplexing question is, should this rule be extended to the transient guests who have an absolute right to the use of their rooms, barring the restrictions mentioned above. Undoubtedly, the proprietor could no more be held responsible for the consequences of his guests' wilful acts in throwing articles to the street unless he could prevent it, than he would be for the wrongful act of his servants outside the scope of employment. Nor would he be liable for the result of articles placed on the window sill falling to the street unless he knew, or had reason to know, the thing placed there was of a dangerous nature, or likely to fall to the street. The proprietor is under no duty to inspect for such articles; they do not come within the class of objects likely to get out of order by use. Nor has it been shown that guards on the windows were customary, indeed they might become, through carelessness, an instrument of great danger: Murray v. Frick,
However, as to that part of the premises occupied by the proprietor or his transient guests, care must be exercised to prevent articles being placed in a position where the laws of nature are constantly being exerted, or slight carelessness may be disastrous. In so requiring, an unnecessary or undue burden is not placed on proprietors, causing them to be answerable for the acts of others over whom possibly they have no efficient control, except dismissal from the hotel. Placing small bottles on a window sill may not be dangerous; they may become dangerous through a slight act of carelessness or a strong wind, and where a warning prohibition is posted in a conspicuous place, against such practice, it *553 may be the proprietor does his full duty — we need not so decide, — but where a transient guest places bottles or things of like nature on a window sill, the proprietor is not liable for injury through their falling until he knows or should have known of such act, and then only, if he fails to take immediate steps to remedy the danger. Beyond this he cannot be held liable for acts not detrimental in themselves to the building, the business, the patrons or anything connected therewith, but are solely acts affecting a stranger off the premises.
We have stated above that an owner or proprietor is liable to the extent of his occupancy of the premises. When the premises are occupied jointly by the landlord and others, such joint occupancy raises no presumption as to the liability of the landlord or owners for injury occurring on or from the premises. To hold landlord responsible, plaintiff was required to show, in addition to what we shall later discuss, either that the room from which the bottle fell was not occupied, hence in the landlord's possession, or that it was in the possession of a guest and the proprietor knew the bottles were on the sill. There was no evidence to show that room 722, where the mark was found, was occupied as an apartment for light housekeeping or by a guest or otherwise. This was not difficult of proof. The hotel register or other books would show it, or the party who after-wards visited the room could state whether it had the appearance of having been occupied. Notice, however, to the landlord must appear whether the room is used by a transient guest or not.
Assuming there was occupation by the landlord and he or his servants placed or knew bottles were on window sills or that liability came through guests placing them on sills of which the landlord should have known (this. is the utmost to which appellee can go), still we have no evidence to show where the bottle came from. The jury was asked to infer that it came from the hotel because other bottles were on window sills, and on one sill a small *554
round mark appeared that could have been made by a pint bottle. There were other large buildings just across the street, and the inference collides with another inference so that any answer would be a guess: Zeher v. Pittsburgh,
There is no evidence as to what caused the bottle to fall, if it fell from the hotel. Whether it was due to the wind, the act of a guest or the wanton act of some other person does not appear. The crash of the bottle on the top of the automobile was preceded by the fall of a sandwich. Was it thrown from the window, striking the bottle, causing it to fall? Zeher v. Pittsburgh, supra; Fleccia v. Atkins, supra; Salerno v. P. R. Ry. Co.,
The principle of law which governs here is that announced by this court in Joyce v. Black,
After a careful review of the record, we are satisfied that the court was in error in not directing judgment for defendant.
The judgment of the court below is reversed and judgment entered for the defendant n. o. v.