Wilkins v. Earle

McCunn, J., dissenting.

I confess to having considered this case anxiously, and I may say, with more than ordinary attention and research, for the reason that the -chief-justice has seriously changed his first views in the premises; and, also, from having great reluctance in putting forward my views in opposition to two of the learned justices of this court; yet I have been unable to bring my mind to the same conclusions as those recently entertained and promulgated as the opinion of the court in this case at general term.

There is but one important question in this case, and that question is, whether Mr. Earle, as innkeeper, is liable, under the circumstances, for the large amount of money deposited with him by plaintiff?

[After stating the facts of the case his honor continued as follows:]

The simple and only question in the case is whether, under the circumstances, Mr. Earle, the defendant, is liable in law as innkeeper to the plaintiff for the entire amount of $20,000, so received by him and deposited in his safe, or only liable for enough to cover travelling expenses—to wit, $1,000 ? I am clearly of opinion that he is liable to the plaintiff to the full extent of $20,000, with interest; and my conclusions to that effect have been strengthened and confirmed by the fact that all the cases in the English and American books, for nearly the last three hundred years, go, beyond a doubt, to establish the fact of his entire liability, for not one solitary case can be found sustaining the theory of a limited responsibility.

Indeed, the learned chief-justice admits that all the cases cited in his opinion go to show that, to a certain extent, innkeepers are liable, but says we are at sea about the extent of the liability ; and cites a number of cases, all of which, I am *201compelled to say, are unlike the one at bar. According to my understanding of these eases, the innkeeper is clearly liable; but the chief-justice maintains that none of those cases fixes or limits the extent of the liability. I think they all fix the liability to any amount the traveller may have with him in the inn. It is a well-established principle, that in the amount charged for the keep and board of the traveller, the innkeeper receives the consideration for the safe keeping of his guest, his •goods, and his money (2 Kent's Com., 7 ed., 758; Lane a. Cotton, 12 Mod., 483, 487; The Berkshire Woollen Co. a. Proctor, 7 Cushing, 417 ; Mason a. Thompson, 9 Pick., 280 ; Bennett a. Mellor, 5 Term R., 273); and this principle runs through all the cases to the present time.

The common law fixes an implied contract between the innkeeper and his guest. The innkeeper is to entertain and keep safely the guest, his money, and his goods. The traveller, in consideration thereof, is bound to pay the price demanded for such entertainment, and the safe-keeping of himself, his money, and goods; and the goods received at the inn are by law pledged to the innkeeper for the fulfilment of his part of the contract, and it cannot therefore be said there is no consideration passing from the traveller to his host for the risk or liability incurred by the innkeeper.

This has been an undisputed principle of law for hundreds of years past; and the question that now arises is, does the statute of 1855 change this principle ? The act simply says, there is to be a safe in this inn, under the absolute, especial, and immediate control of the innkeeper, his agents, and servants, and unless the guest deposits his money in that safe, the innkeeper is not responsible; and the rule of law is clear, that if the guest does deposit his money in that safe, the innkeeper is certainly liable to protect him against the theft of himself or servants. Any other rule of law would place the traveller at the mercy of a dishonest innkeeper and his dishonest servants, without a remedy; and public policy calls for the inflexible enforcement of such a rule of law, although, occasion ally it may work harshly. It must be conceded, that before the law of 1855 was enacted, if a guest came to an inn, and took to his room $20,000, and the innkeeper’s servants or agents broke in. and robbed the guest, the innkeeper was held liable, and surely if *202the law of 1855 compels the guest to place that money under the absolute and immediate control of the innkeeper and his dishonest servant, he is doubly responsible, because, if this , trap of a safe had not been there, the traveller might have protected his money, in his room, with his own means of protection. The act, undoubtedly, was to relieve the innkeeper from responsibility, where the guest was robbed of his money or goods, while they were in the room. I therefore hold, that where the guest complies with the law of 1855, as in this case, the innkeeper should be held to a more strict accountability than he was before the law was passed. This being so, it is quite clear that the same principle that would make him liable for $10 would make him liable for $10,000. If this were not the rule, how absurd it would be to compel a traveller, under the act of 1855, to hand an innkeeper $20,000 for safe-keeping, and have the innkeeper say next morning, that he received that amount from him, put it in his safe, but it was lost through'his negligence, and he could only give $1,000 instead of the $20,000. That is precisely this case.

The common law creates the contract between the traveller and his host. The statute of 1855 defines more clearly the duties of the parties; and if the guest neglects to comply with his part of the statute, by placing his money in the safe and it . is stolen, it is his loss alone. But if the innkeeper assumes the risk, by taking the money in his safe-keeping, his liability to such guest is rendered positive and certain; and the consideration is the large sum demanded for the guest’s keeping, together with the lien the innkeeper has on such money and goods until such keeping is paid.

It is contended for, in the opinion of the court, that it would be unjust for a traveller to bring in any amount of money or valuables to an inn, and, without notice, make the innkeeper liable. The simple answer to that proposition is this: That this is not a case of that kind. Here the innkeeper had the money placed in his safe-keeping, and had sufficient notice of the contents of the package—such a notice as satisfied him— and he thereupon éntered into the obligation of taking care of the money for the consideration of the guest stopping at his inn; and the common law says, the defendant shall be responsible for the loss, especially if that loss takes place from the *203negligence of servants of the defendant. If this rule was not the proper one, how easily an innkeeper could conspire with his servants and rob his guests ; whereas,' the innkeeper at all times has a perfect security against his guests, by simply asking . the guest what aré the contents of the package, and if he finds it too large, by refusing to receive it. The guest, however, has no such safeguard against the dishonesty of innkeepers and their servants, if this old rule of common law is to be abolished.

As to the question of notice, I hold that it is not necessary at common law that the guest should notify the innkeeper of the amount of money. The question of negligence cannot come up, for the innkeeper is liable without reference to any degree of care or negligence on his part. Chancellor Kent holds that it is not necessary to prove negligence in an innkeeper—the innkeeper is liable as an insurer of the property and moneys of his guest, and this liability is founded on the principle of public utility, to which all private considerations ought to yield. (2 Kent's Com., 7 ed., 760, and cases there cited.)

It is, therefore, at common law, unnecessary that the guest should notify the innkeeper of the particular amount of property ór money left with him; and it is no argument against the innkeeper’s liability to say, that if the guest had notified him of the particular amount of money hé was leaving with him, in such a case the innkeeper would have exercised greater care, as the innkeeper is liable without reference to any degree of care or negligence on his part.

The statute of 1855 requires that a safe must be kept in which a guest may deposit his money. This increases public confidence and security to guests; and it must be presumed, therefore, that the Legislature intended that guests would be influenced by this increased confidence, and avail themselves of the additional security. It cannot be justly said, that $3 per day is not adequate to the risk, because if not adequate they must make the contract with the guest, for a larger consideration ; and second, by analogy to the risk that insurance companies take, the very small premiums they receive, and the enormous losses they frequently sustain, it may be said that the consideration of $3 per day is large. But to return to the question of notice on the part of the guest. The learned *204■chief-justice, in his able opinion, denies the sufficiency of the notice given by the plaintiff to the defendants of the contents of the package, when it was intrusted to the defendant for deposit in his safe, and says, that V a notice, to be sufficient to release the plaintiff from the imputation of negligence, should be not only of the kind of property, but its value.” When the package containing the money was handed to the defendant’s agent at the office, to be deposited in the safe, the defendant, by his agent, asked the plaintiff “what it contained?” the plaintiff answered, “Money.” This description and notice were then satisfactory to the defendant, and the package was so marked.

The description satisfied defendant then—he asked for no other, but with that description took charge of the “ money.” I think he should now be estopped from saying the notice was not sufficient; the contrary doctrine would lead to great frauds.

If the notice was insufficient, and was not a satisfactory compliance with the statute on the part of the plaintiff, and did “impute negligence to the plaintiff,” then, I am unable to see on what theory the plaintiff could recover any thing at all. I am unable to see why the notice should be insufficient to allow the plaintiff to recover all the money received by the defendant on the notice, but sufficient to allow him to recover a part. If the notice was insufficient under the statute (and if the question of notice is in any way controlling),. then the plaintiff should not have recovered any thing; but it being conceded that he should recover at least one thousand dollar’s and costs, I think from that concession alone it follows he should recover the whole of his loss. I am clear that the notice to the defendant, of the contents of the package intrusted to and received by him, was, under the circumstances of this case, .sufficient.

It has been urged by the counsel for the defence, and a con - elusion to that effect has been drawn in the leading opinion of the court, that the cause is analogous to that of the common carrier. I do not entertain any such conclusion of the similarity.

Formerly, it was held that a carrier of passengers was not answerable for baggage at all, unless a distinct price was paid *205for it. This never was the rale with innkeepers, and the reasoning, both Of the statute and common law, by which the doctrine of the liability of innkeepers, without proof of fraud or negligence, is maintained, is, that travellers are obliged to1 rely almost entirely on the good faith of innkeepers; that it would be almost impossible for them, in any case, to make out any proof of fraud or negligence in the innkeepers; and that, therefore, the public good and the safety of our large travelling community require that innkeepers should be held entirely responsible for the safe-keeping of the goods of guests; and the same reasoning would hold them alike responsible for money. Another reason why common carriers are sometimes excused for the loss of large sums of money, when packed in trunks, and so lost, is, that it is not presumed that a traveller would carry large sums of money in trunks, with his clothing, but would rather be presumed to carry such large and valuable sums of money about his person, while travelling; which latter presumption ceases when the traveller arrives at an inn, where the law provides a place of safety for such money, and where the innkeeper is held liable for any loss arising through his neglect.

This much have I reasoned, and said why this defendant should be held responsible for the loss of the money. Now, let us examine the decisions from the time of the earliest cases to the present, on the subject.

One of the earliest decisions we find reported is that of Calye’s case, tried in the Queen’s Bench, during the reign of Elizabeth (8 Coke, 33), and there it is clearly enunciated as law, that the “innkeeper is responsible .if the guest is robbed in his house;” and I find, on a careful examination of the English authorities, that such is held to be the invariable rule of law in the courts of that country to this day. In the case of Kent a. Shuckard (2 Barn. & Adolph., 803, Lord Tenterden), it was held (all the other judges concurring), that innkeepers were liable for all moneys as well as goods of a guest; and that there was no distinction between money and goods. In the case of Coggs a. Barnard (1 Smith’s Lead. Cas., 309), it is expressly held that the.innkeeper’s liability is not restricted to such sums as are required for travelling expenses; and the same rule was held by Holt, Ch. J., in the case of Lane a. Cotton (12 Mod., 487), and *206the very learned and able Judge Cowes, in the case of Cole a. Goodwin (19 Wend., 251), hold a similar doctririe, so that it cannot be said that we are at sea as to the extent of the liability of innkeepers. Since these leading cases, both the English and American cases, adjudicated upon by the most learned of men, all fix the liability of the innkeeper to any sum of money the traveller may have within his possession, and intrust to the innkeeper in the manner before specified.

Indeed, in the case of Piper a. Manny (21 Wend., 282), Chief-justice Nelson carried this doctrine so far as to hold that an innkeeper was liable for the safe-keeping of a load of goods belonging to a traveller who stopped at the inn, even though the servant of the inn designate an open space near the highway for the goods to be placed.

In the case of Towson a. Havre de Grace Bank (6 Har. & Johns., 47, 63), after stating the position that if A. sends his money by his friend, who is robbed at the inn at which he is a guest, the court says A. shall have the right of action. Bow, certainly, this money of a friend, was not for travelling expenses, it was simply a part of the money and" goods of the guest, whom the innkeeper had undertaken to entertain as his guest, and around whom the great common law of our land throws its ample protection against the frauds of innkeepers; and this safe doctrine is also promulgated in the case of Mason a. Thompson (9 Pick., 280).

The case of Bennett a. Mellor, herein cited, is a case where a guest left a sleigh-load of wheat in an outer-house belonging to the inn. The wheat was stolen, and the innkeeper was held liable. Certainly the wheat was not travelling expenses 1 And the like rule was held in case of Hallenbake a. Fish (8 Wend., 547). There the innkeeper was held responsible for the loss of a set of harness placed in a barn by the innkeeper’s man ; and in the case of Jones a. Tyler (1 Adolph. & Ellis, 522), the innkeeper was held responsible for a gig that was placed in front of the inn on the common highway.

Mr. Justice Fletcher remarks that the principle contended for, that innkeepers are liable for such sums only as are necessary, and designed for travelling expenses by the guest, is unsupported by any authority whatever, and wholly inconsistent with the principle upon which the liability of innkeepers rests. *207And the same rule was held good by Chief-justice Bronson, in the case of Grinnell a. Cook (3 Hill, 485), and reiterated in the cage of McDonald a. Edgerton (5 Barb., 560); and see Bennett a. Mellor (5 Term R., 273). And this safe doctrine was re-enunciated in the late case of Gile a. Libby (36 Barb., 70). In the case of the Woollen Co. a. Proctor (7 Cush., 417), where an agent of the company was robbed at the inn of a large amount of money belonging to the company, it was held that a recovery was not limited to travelling expenses; and certainly the case at bar is a much stronger case in favor of the plaintiff than the one last cited, for there the agent was robbed by some outside party, of money not his own; but here the plaintiff was robbed of his own money, by one of the servants of the innkeeper. In North Carolina,' too, in the case pf Quinten a. Courtney (1 Hayw., 41), it appeared that a traveller alighting at an inn, and delivering his saddle-bags, containing a large amount of money, to a servant, did not inform the innkeeper that there was money in the bags;—the money was stolen, and the tavern-keeper was held liable. See also the case of Dwight a. Brewster (1 Pick., 50), and Taylor a. Monnot (4 Duer [in this court], 116), where a similar doctrine is maintained. And Mr. Justice Story lays down as an elementary principle a doctrine that completely meets this case. He says (at chapter 6, section 481, p. 456, of his Commentaries): “ So the innkeeper will be liable for the loss of the money, of his guest, stolen from his room, as well ate for his goods and chattels; and this liability extends to all the movable goods and money of the guest, placed within the inn, and is not confined to such articles and sums only as are necessary and designed for ordinary travelling expenses of the guest.”

But why enumerate cases? the doctrine is as old as our common law. Indeed, to hold a contrary rule, without authority or precedent, is to cast loose from the safe moorings of the old common law, rendered dear to us by the adjudications of the most learned of the bench, for centuries past, both in the old and new world; and I am satisfied that a contrary doctrine would be very evil in its effects in this great commercial community of ours, where our business men necessarily spend a large portion of their time at inns, in the pursuit of their calling.

*208This much I have said on the clearly adjudicated cases. Row, let us see what the ablest elementary writers say on the subject, and for that purpose I shall only cite a few of- the most eminent of English and American writers. Sir William Blackstone, from whom every willing student draws the true maxims of sound law, says (1 Blackst. Com., 430): “If an innkeeper’s servant robs his guest, the master is bound to restitution ;, for, as there is confidence reposed in him that he will provide honest servants, his negligence is an implied consent to the robbery." This elementary principle completely,covers the case under consideration.

Our great commentator, Chancellor Kent, in speaking of the liability of innkeepers, lays down this clear and undisputed principle: that the innkeeper is bound absolutely to keep safe the property of his guest deposited within the inn, whether the guest acquaints the innkeeper that the goods were there or not. Moreover, he says the responsibility of the innkeeper extends to all his servants, and to all goods and chattels, and all moneys of the guest placed within the inn; and he adds, that the safe custody of the goods and money of the guest is a part of the contract to feed and lodge for a suitable reward, and that it is not necessary to prove negligence in the innkeeper, for, says he, “ it is his duty to provide honest servants.” What can be plainer than this, and what can be more in consonance with common sense, as well as clear common law? and I am satisfied this doctrine will put to violence the theories that there is no consideration for the extra risk entered into by the innkeeper for keeping the money; that the consideration is the charge of the innkeepor for the entertaining and caring for his guest.

To the lawyer and scholar, the names of Sir William Blaokstone and Sir William Jones on the one side of the ocean, and Chancellor Kent and Justice Stobt on this, will be sufficient for my purposes in this case until some author or some case is cited, showing clearly that a contrary doctrine should obtain. It must follow, therefore, and I am satisfied from all my research,, that the rule of law, to wit, that the innkeeper is responsible for all moneys deposited with him, is the correct and standard rule.

This is not the first instance this vague question of travelling *209expenses has bien interposed hy innkeepers and urged by their counsel, in order to avoid their responsibility; but it has always been repelled, and it will be seen that, in many of the cases I have cited, the question has been treated and disposed of by a flat denial of such a dangerous doctrine.

The rights of parties, and such important rights as these under consideration, affecting, as they do, in their results, our whole travelling community, must be determined by sound law, handed down to us by the most eminent men, .and not by any vague, undetermined, and partial, local usage, or any dicta. A strict adherence to this principle is particularly essential, in this day, to a sound and consistent administration of justice; and a departure from such a course works great injustice—for no man could know what were his rights or his duties,*unless they are clearly defined by the precedents of the earlier times, declared by those great living lights and champions of just and wholesome law.

The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.