This is an appeal from a judgment for defendant given after a trial before a justice without a jury in the Municipal Court in the city of Rew York.'
The plaintiff, the father of a pianist making a concert tour in this country, made the defendant’s hotel in the city of Rew York his headquarters while residing temporarily in said city. On the 18th of Rovember, 1901, the plaintiff paid his bill, gave up his room and departed, leaving his baggage, consisting of some trunks and one valise, in the charge of an employee of the defendant, as the plaintiff states, by direction of the defendant’s representative, at the office of the hotel, but this is denied by defendant. In the plaintiff’s absence, a party presented a forged order at the office of the hotel for the plaintiff’s valise, which order was honored, and the valise delivered.' The party who presented this order was known to the clerk at the office, as he had dined with the plaintiff on a number of occasions, and had frequently been seen in plaintiff’s society about the hotel. The defendant had not seen plaintiff’s signature, did not obtain it from his register, and was not familiar with it. Such, briefly, are the undisputed facts of the' case.
The first question to be determined is, whether at the time of the loss a relationship of innkeeper and guest existed between plaintiff and defendant. The trial justice correctly decided that such relationship did not exist. Even if it be admitted what seemed to be a fact, that the plaintiff intended to return to the hotel, his sojourn, nevertheless, had for the time being terminated, and there was no enforcible agreement for the resumption of the pre-existing relationship upon plaintiff’s return to Rew York. The plaintiff had ceased to be a guest of the defendant, and the *788defendant could not be held liable as innkeeper. Wintermute v. Clarke, 5 Sandf. 242; Grinnell v. Cook, 3 Hill, 485.
In other jurisdictions, under circumstances very similar to those of the present case, it has been decided that the hotel-keeper was free from liability. O’Brien v. Vail, 22 Fla. 627; Hays v. Turner, 2 Iowa, 214; Miller v. Peeples, 60 Miss. 819.
What, then, was the relationship which existed between the plaintiff and defendant, so far as the plaintiff’s baggage was concerned, after plaintiff had ceased to be a guest? It was that of bailee, and as defendant had not nor was not to receive compensation for the storage of the baggage, it being done purely as an accommodation to the plaintiff, the defendant was a gratuitous bailee, and as such he owed to plaintiff simply slight care and can be held only for gross negligence. The trial justice has found that the plaintiff has not shown gross negligence on defendant’s part, and that' finding is not unwarranted by the evidence.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Freedman, P. J., concurs.