Metzler v. Terminal Hotel Co.

GOODE, J.

Tkis plaintiff became a transient guest at tke Terminal Hotel in tke city of St. Louis, an establishment conducted by defendant. He registered and was assigned a room and afterwards ckecked kis valise at tke office. On presenting tke ckeck for tke return of tke valise, it could not be; found and never was. Tkis action was instituted for a conversion of tke property and to recover tke value of it and its contents from defendant in the capacity of innkeeper. Tke only defense invoked is tliat defendant was not an innkeeper or subject to tke extraordinary liability of one. Tke defendant furnisked in its establiskment .lodging to transient guests for a fixed sckedule of rates, but no meals. In tke same building and on tke second floor, is a dining room or restaurant, conducted by another proprietoi*, and communicating with defendant’s part of tke building through a large archway. Tkis dining room is a convenient place for defendant’s guests to take meals. Blaintiff ate kis dinner there on tke evening ke arrived and kis breakfast tke next morning, not knowing whether defendant furnisked tke meals or some one else. He said ke walked from tke hotel office into tke dining room through tke archway. Both establish*413ments are part of the large building known as the Union Station, which extends across two blocks. Because defendant furnished no meals to guests and does not conduct the contiguous restaurant, it is said not to have kept an inn in the ancient sense of the word, namely, a house where both food and lodging are furnished to travelers. [Cromwell v. Stevens, 2 Daily (N. Y.) 16.] Counsel for defendant says the policy of the courts is not to extend the extraordinary common law liability of innkeepers to persons not technically such, like the proprietors of boarding houses and restaurants, or in favor of constant as well as transient guests of a hotel; and many cases supporting these restrictions of liability are collected in his brief. We cite the following: Blum v. Pullman Pal. Car Co., 1 Flipp. (U. S.) 500; Beal v. Posey, 72 Ala. 323; Straus v. County Hotel, etc., Co., 12 Q. B. D. 27; Carter v. Hobbs, 12 Mich. 52; Walling v. Potter, 35 Conn. 183; Curtis v. Murphy, 63 Wis. 4; Chamberlain v. Masterson, 26 Ala. 371. Counsel argues the liability of innkeepers was established in centuries when travel in England was attended with great- danger to life and property from highwaymen, and when the hosts of wayside inns often colluded with these robbers to despoil guests; that as the conditions of travel have changed the reason of the old law has vanished and, therefore, it ought to be enforced reluctantly and confined to the case of innkeepers in the original meaning of the term. This argument proceeds on only part of the policy underlying the liability of innkeepers and the policy is more fully set forth in the opinion in Hulett v. Swift, 33 N. Y. 571, 99 Am. St. R. 578.

“This custom, like that- in the kindred case of the common carrier, had its origin in considerations of public policy. It was essential in the interest of the realm that every facility should be furnished for secure and convenient intercourse between different portions of the kingdom. The safeguards of which the law gave *414assurance to the wayfarer, were akin to those which invested each English home with the legal security of a castle. The traveler was peculiarly exposed to depredation and fraud; he was compelled to repose confidence in a host, who was subject to constant temptation, and favored with peculiar opportunities, if he chose to betray his trust. The innkeeper was at liberty to fix his own compensation, and enforce summary payment; his lien, then, as now, fastened upon the goods of his guest from the time they came to his custody. The care of the property was usually committed to servants, over whom the guest had no control and who had no interest in its preservation, unless their employer was held responsible for its safety. In case of depredation by collusion, or of injury or destruction, by neglect, the stranger would, of necessity, be at every possible disadvantage; he would be without the means either of proving guilt or of detecting it. The witnesses to whom he must resort for information, if not accessories to the injury, would ordinarily be in the interest of the innkeeper. The sufferer would be deprived, by the very wrong of which he complained, of the means of remaining to ascertain and enforce his rights,andredresswould be wellnigh hopeless, but for the rule of law casting the loss on the party intrusted with the custody of the property, and paid for keeping it safely.

“The considerations of public policy in which the rule had its origin forbid any relaxation of its rigor. The number of travelers was few, when this custom was established for their protection. The growth of commerce and increased facilities of communication have so multiplied the class for whose security it was designed, that its abrogation would be the removal of a safeguard against fraud, in which almost every citizen has an immediate interest. The rule is in the highest degree remedial. No public interest would be promoted by changing the legal effect of the implied contract be*415tween tbe host and. tbe guest and relieving tbe former from bis common-law liability.”

If that judicial exposition of tbe matter is sound, tbe peculiar responsibility of innkeepers bas been imposed for various considerations, including tbeir special privileges in respect of fixing tbeir rates, enforcing summary payment from guests and enjoying tbe security of a lien on tbe goods of guests. Though in tbe olden day English inns perhaps always furnished both food and lodging to wayfarers, and therefore an innkeeper came to be designated as a person furnishing entertainment of both kinds, tbe reason why he was held to an unusual liability for tbe goods of tbe guests bad nothing to do with tbe furnishing of food, and the fact that many modern hotels do not furnish it, is no argument in principle against imposing tbe same liability on tbeir proprietors, but we concede it is an argument that such proprietors are not innkeepers. Suffice to say as fan as public policy is concerned, every sound reason for enforcing tbe full responsibility of innkeepers obtains with as much strength against the keepers of hotels who accept transient guests as lodgers only, as against those who entertain with both lodging and food. And if this responsibility ought to be remitted in some measure, the duty is legislative, not judicial. To all appearances defendant’s establishment was a fully equipped inn or hotel where both lodging and meals could be procured by a guest. It took no measures to advise guests to the contrary and no doubt derived patronage from the fact that a restaurant was at hand and seemingly appurtenant. Persons stopping in the hotel would have the right to presume defendant was acting as an innkeeper. This ruling we think, is in accord with decisions which have 'dealt with the question., [Johnson v. Chadbourne, 89 Minn. 310; Nelson v. Johnson, 116 N. W. 828; Holstein v. Phillips, 59 N. E. (N. C.) 1037; Bullock v. Adair, 63 Ill. App. 13; Krohn v. Sweeney, 2 Daily (N. Y.) 200; Bunn v. Johnson, 77 N. Y. 599; Common*416wealth v. Weatherbee, 101 Mass. 214.] It is commonly understood a place of transient resort like defendant’s is a hotel or inn, and our statutes touching- inns and innkeepers point to the like legislative opinion. The innkeepers’ lien is extended by article 3, chapter 47 to “hotels, inns and boarding-house keepers.” Places like defendant’s are not boarding-houses, and unless they are inns, are entitled to no lien on the baggage and valuables of guests. The purpose of the various statutes touching inns would be defeated in a measure if we were to hold establishments which furnished lodging- hut not food to all transient guests who apply for it, could have no lien. Section 7508 says an iron safe shall be kept by every innkeeper in his inn for the custody of jewelry and precious articles, and that such articles shall he left for deposit in the safe if their owners would hold the proprietor for a loss of them. Section 7580 in the chapter (116) relating to innkeepers, says every person who shall obtain board or lodging in a hotel or hoarding-house by means of a trick, etc., shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. The words of said section imply that an establishment which furnishes board or lodging, as well as one furnishing both, is a hotel. Yielding to defendant’s contention would render this section inapplicable to hotels where only lodging is furnished to transients; a manifestly absurd result, because no reason can be thought of why the Legislature should require the precaution in a hotel which furnishes meals and lodging, and not in one which furnishes lodging only. The conditions of modern travel and the customs of the people have insensibly altered the significance of the words “inn” and “innkeeper,” a ad, indeed, those words have been nearly displaced in common use by the term “hotel,” which means a place where transient guests are admitted to lodge, as well as one where they are fed and lodged. “Hotel” and “inn” are now used interchangeably in statutes and decisions, and until the legislature deems it' wise to *417relieve hotel proprietors of tbe common-law liability of innkeepers, they should be held to it by the courts.

The judgment is affirmed.

All concur.