Court Opinion

ID: 7173096
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:28:29.677638+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:15:48.029038
License: Public Domain

O’NIELL, O. J.
(dissenting.) I do not find a preponderance of evidence in favor of the plaintiff in this ease. However much we may defer to the good judgment of juries on questions of fact, in civil cases, the Constitution commands us to exercise our own judgment of the evidence in such cases.
Erom the size of the verdict, I have no doubt that the jury believed that the house officer, or house detective, as he is called, was guilty of the insulting and bulldozing conduct described in plaintiff’s petition and in her testimony and that of her husband. But the jury’s verdict in that respect has been virtually set aside by the majority opinion of this court, discounting the verdict 90 per cent.
Plaintiff’s testimony was corroborated only by that of her husband, who is plaintiff in another action against this hotel company, for damages for his own account. With due respect, we must consider whether any witness is interested. The testimony of these *1015two witnesses, of the insulting conduct of the house officer, I say with respect, is highly improbable; and it is contradicted in part by the night clerk, and in full by the night watchman, and by the house officer himself. As practical men, we are not prone to believe that a- house officer or detective, or any other employee, of any hotel of good repute, would, either willfully or carelessly, insult any guest of the hotel. The presumption is very strong the other way, for it is founded upon the reliable doctrine of self-preservation. The evidence in this case shows affirmatively, and it is not disputed, that the house officer who stands' accused of this grossly insulting and unnatural conduct, for which the plaintiff here claims damages, is a courteous man, and does not drink intoxicants at all. As practical men, we judges know that no man other than a very intemperate man would be guilty of such conduct as the plaintiff and her husband have ascribed to the house officer in this case. And we know that the proprietors of respectable hotels, as a rule, do not hire intemperate men for house officers. In this case, the good reputation of the house officer, being undisputed, and being not at all consistent with the conduct that has been ascribed to him, ought to count for all that a good reputation is ever worth.
The testimony of the house officer and of the night watchman, that plaintiff was not subject to any insult on the occasion complained of, is corroborated by the acknowledged fact that plaintiff did not complain, and that her husband did not complain, to any one, either that night or the next morning. In fact, the first complaint that was ever made was the filing of this suit for damages, nearly a year after the occurrence.
The evidence leaves no doubt in my mind that plaintiff would not have suffered any embarrassment whatever if her husband had not lost his temper, or had been reasonable, when the house officer knocked at his door and asked about his having a woman in the room, as the officer had a right to do, under the circumstances. The mistake that caused the officer to inquire about the woman in the room was her husband’s mistake, in failing to inform the night clerk of the circumstances under which she and her husband were occupying another m.an’s room.
I respectfully dissent from the statement in the majority opinion in this case that a hotel register is kept solely for the benefit and convenience of the hotel proprietor. A hotel register ■ is as necessary to protect a guest in his exclusive right to occupy a particular room, as it is necessary tó protect the proprietor in his right tc collect what the guest owes-for occupying the room.
The circumstances under which the plaintiff and her husband occupied a room in the Monteleone Hotel without being registered there are not disputed. They called at the hotel, to register as guests, at about 2:30 p. m. on the day of the occurrence complained of; but the house was full. As they were leaving the hotel lobby, they met their friend, Mr. Bradley, and, after exchanging greetings, informed him of their disappointment. Bradley kindly offered them the use of his room temporarily, or until the hotel Could accommodate them. Whether Bradley instructed the clerk to give them his key, or got 'the key himself and handed it to them, is a matter of no importance. They were given the key and went to Bradley’s room, No. 235, and remained there about 30 minutes. Then they returned the key to the clerk at the desk and left the hotel. They returned to the hotel later in the afternoon, between 5 and 6 o’clock. Plaintiff’s husband then went to the desk, asked the clerk whether there was yet a vacant room; andi being Informed that there was not, asked for and was given the key to room 235. He and his wife, and a lady friend whom they had taken to the room on the first occasion, went again to the room and re*1017mained there 20 or 30 minutes. Then they went out to a railroad station; and, the lady friend having departed, plaintiff and her husband returned to the hotel at or about 9 p. m. Plaintiff’s husband again asked for and obtained the key to room 235 and they went to the room. In the meantime, that is, at .7 p. m., there had been a change of room clerks. The night clerk who gave plaintiff’s husband the key to room 235 did not ask for an identification or make any inquiry as to the man’s right to have the key. The night clerk had not been informed that Mr. Moody had already used Mr. Bradley’s room that day, or that the latter had consented that Mr. and Mrs. Moody might use his room. Bradley had not checked out of the room. For all that the night clerk knew, the man to whom he handed the key to room 235 was Bradley himself. The clerk did not know that the man to whom he gave the key was accompanied by a lady. The day clerk, from whom plaintiff’s husband got the key in the afternoon, was not obliged to tell the night clerk that Bradley had consented that Mr. and Mrs; Moody might use his room. The day clerk had no reason to suppose that plaintiff and her husband would call for the key again. If any one was at fault for the night clerk’s ignorance of the understanding between Bradley and Mr. and Mrs. Moody, it was Mr. Moody. He knew that he was not registered as a guest of the' hotel; and he knew that the night clerk was not the clerk who had given him the key to Bradley’s room that afternoon. He had no right to suppose that the night clerk, or the night watchman, or the house officer or detective, or any other employee of a hotel of that size, would either know or take it for granted that he (Mr. Moody) and his wife, had the right to occupy a room that was assigned to some one else on the hotel register. When Mr. Moody got the key from the night clerk, it was Mr. Moody’s duty to inform the clerk that Mr. Bradley had consented that he (Mr. Moody) and his wife might occupy Mr. Bradley’s-room.
I do not know how the clerks who hand out the room keys to the guests in large-hotels identify the guests and avoid the mistake of giving a key to one who is not entitled to it. I imagine it would cause much embarrassment if the key clerks should require the guests to be identified every time-one of them asks for the key to his room. For that reason, I suppose that the - key clerks in the large hotels must rely upon their judgment of the honesty of the men who ask for keys to t*heir rooms. That is what the night clerk of the Monteleone. Hotel did in this instance. He' .took it for granted that the man who asked for the key to room 235 had-a right to have it. If the clerk thought fast, and if he looked at the register before handing out the key, he thought, quite naturally, that the man’s name was Bradley.
My opinion is that the situation was handled not ruthlessly but discreetly, by the night clerk and the house officer or detective, when the watchman discovered and reported that there was a woman in room 235. The reason. why the night watchman was attracted by the lady’s voice is that room 235 was in a part of the hotel where, as a rule, men only were assigned to rooms. When the watchman reported the matter to the night clerk, he examined the register and found 'that a' man alone, named Bradley, was assigned to room 235. The clerk called the house officer and requested him to go and verify the watchman’s report. The officer went up into the corridor, in front of room 235, and heard the lady’s voice in the room. The officer did not then knock on the door, or make his presence known to the occupants of the room. He returned to the lobby and informed the clerk, that the watchman’s report was true. The clerk then .had the operator at the switchboard to ring room 235, but did not receive a prompt answer. He then directed the *1019house officer to go to the room and investigate. The officer and the watchman went to the room together, and the officer knocked on the door. Plaintiff was then in bed. Her husband was sitting in the room, reading or writing. 1-Ie answered the knock by asking who was there. The officer replied that it was he, the house officer. Plaintiff’s husband then opened the door and asked what the officer wanted. The latter replied that he had come to inquire about the lady being in the room without being registered. Plaintiff and her husband say that the officer used the word “woman.” He and the watchman say thafc he said “lady.” That would be a matter of some importance if the officer had been acquainted "with Mr. and Mrs. Moody; but he did not khow them, and was not bound to know at his peril that they were a married couple. All that the officer knew, in that respect, was that the lady was in a room where she was not registered; and the officer had the right to inquire of the man in the room by what right the woman was there. ■ The situation was naturally embarrassing to Mr. and Mrs. Moody. But that was not the officer’s fault. Mr. Moody became very indignant and attempted to slam the door in the officer’s face.' The latter placed his foot in the way, with his toe braced against the edge of the door and his heel against the casing, and held the door in that position, while he talked to Mr. Moody. As soon as Mr. Moody said that he and his wife were occupying Mr. Bradley’s room, the officer requested that Mr. Moody should go down to the office and register. He also suggested that Mr. Moody ring the night clerk and explain the matter to him. After some objection and discussion on Mr. Moody’s part, he did ring the night clerk, and, at the latter’s request, went down to the office and registered; and then, without further complaint, he returned to the room, and he and Mrs. Moody spent the night there.
It is admitted that the discussion between Mr. Moody and the officer, at the door of the room, was not heard by any one except Mr. and Mrs. Moody and the house officer and night watchman. The latter stood out in the corridor near the officer during the discussion. He corroborated the officer’s statement that he was not armed. They and the night clerk testified that Mrs. Moody did not use the ‘telephone during the discussion between the officer and her husband. The officer and the watchman testified that they did not see Mrs. Moody get out of bed, or see her at all; and, as no one could know as well as they ¿new whether they did.or did not see her ih the room, I have no reason to doubt their statement that they did not see her.
If the night clerk had refused to take Mr. Moody’s word for it, that the lady occupying the room with him was his wife, and that they had permission from Mr. Bradley to occupy his room, and if, on Mr. Moody’s being unable to be identified at that hour of the night, the clerk had ordered him and Mrs. Moody out of the room, it might be said that the clerk was too severe. But it seems to me that the clerk did all that could reasonably be expected of a hotel clerk, when he took the word of a stranger that he and the lady, occupying a room where they -were not registered, had permission from the man to whom the room had been assigned, to sleep in his room.
And let me say, in this connection, that the testimony of Mr. Bradley, although it was taken at the instance of the plaintiff, was not at all favorable to her case. Having related the circumstances under which he had allowed the plaintiff and her husband to use his room, he said:
“From what I have stated, the house detective had no way of knowing whether or not Mr. and Mrs. Moody were guests of the Monteleone.”
I believe that whatever mistake was made by the hotel clerk, or by the house detective, in this instance, was a pardonable mistake. *1021Mr. and Mrs. Moody must have thought so, too, at the time, or they would have complained to the management, and would have demanded an apology, before they departed from the hotel. I am not in favor of allowing damages for a pardonable mistake, when the injury complained of cannot be measured in dollars and cents and the condemnation therefore would be very much like an infliction of punishment. I do not know how the management of the large hotels can maintain their respectability if they cannot with1 impunity inquire into the right of a strange man and woman to occupy a room where another man is íegistered as a guest of the hotel.