Court Opinion

ID: 6601509
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:08:04.570806+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:01.930432
License: Public Domain

DixoN, O. J.
It was submitted to the jury to determine whether the defendants were partners, or not, at the time the money in question was stolen ; and they were instructed that if no partnership existed, then their verdict should be for the defendants. The jury returned a verdict against the defendants, and hence must have found that the defendants were partners at the time of the loss. It is now insisted that there was no sufficient evidence to sustain this finding. It appears to us that, upon the testimony of the defendant Cyril Cardinal and his witness Carr alone, the verdict cannot be said to have been wholly unsustained by evidence. The jury might have found *125from tbe statements of those witnesses, that tbe bargain was completed and tbe partnership in existence before tbe hour of tbe day on which the plaintiff lost bis money. Cardinal said about four o’clock in tbe afternoon; but,Carr, who drew the contract, thought it was made in the forenoon. The jury may have considered Carr correct,, and, so determining, their verdict cannot be said to have been unfounded. We thus find that the verdict was not without evidence to support it, even though ■we reject the testimony of the witness Young, as incompetent or insufficient, for the reason that it was proof of partnership by common reputation merely.
The overruling of the motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence was not an abuse of the discretionary power vested in the circuit court. Such motions are received with great caution. Conradt v. Sixbee, 20 Wis., 888. They are regarded with suspicion and disfavor. Edmiston v. Garrison, 18 id., 594, 608. The reasons for such regard are stated in the case last cited ;• and the affidavits upon which this motion was founded state no facts to obviate those reasons. They state nothing to rebut the presumption of intentional omission or unpardonable negligence in not having discovered the contract so as to have used it in evidence on the trial. Mr. Richardson says that “ the defendants and their counsel first discovered the date of the instrument after the cause had been submitted to the jury; ” and the defendant Cyril Cardinal deposes that he “ could not find it in time to be used on the trial of said action.” This is all the explanation contained in the affidavits.- Not one word is said to show that any effort or diligence was used to find the contract before trial, or to show where, under what circumstances, or by what means, it was found afterwards. The application was properly rejected, under the rule laid down in Edmiston v. Garrison.
The action was one which would have formerly been denominated case, on the common liability of an innkeeper by the rules of the common law, or, as known and spoken of in Eng*126land, by the custom of the realm, for the loss of money -which the plaintiff brought with him to the inn of the defendants. As such action, it presented no new or unsettled question — no point not easily resplved by reference to the authorities. The nature and extent of such liability are so well known that it is unnecessary to refer to them here, except in general terms. The innkeeper must answer in damages for the loss or injury of all goods, money and baggage of his guest, brought within his inn, and delivered into his charge and custody, according to the usage of travelers and innkeepers. It is not necessary, however, that the goods be expressly put into the charge of the innkeeper, or that his custody be exclusive, in order that he may be held responsible. The guest may retain personal custody of his goods within the inn, as of his trunk and its contents, his wearing apparel and other articles, in his room, his money and his watch in his pockets, and any jewelry or valuables carried or worn about his person, without discharging the innkeeper from responsibility. Goods, money and baggage so in the custody of the guest are likewise considered in the custody of the innkeepej-, and subject to that uncommon care which he is bound to exercise respecting the effects of his guest.
Nor is the guest required to prove that his goods have been lost by the negligence of the innkeeper. Proof of the loss by the guest while at the inn is presumptive evidence of negligence on the part of the innkeeper or of his domestics. It is the duty of the innkeeper to provide honest servants and keep honest inmates, and to exercise exact care and vigilance over all persons who may come into his house, whether as guests or otherwise. By the common law he is responsible not only for the acts of his servants and domestics, but also for the acts of other guests. The reason for this stringent rule has been well stated by Sir William Jones. He says: “ Rigorous as this rule may seem, and hard as it may actually be in one or two particular instances, it is founded on the great principle of public utility, to which all private considerations ought to yield. *127Eor travelers, who must be numerous in a rich and commercial country, are obliged to rely almost implicitly on the good faith of innkeepers, whose education and morals are none of the best, and who might have frequent opportunities of associating with ruffians and pilferers, while the injured guest would seldom or never obtain legal proof of such combinations, or even of their negligence, if no actual fraud had been committed by them.” Jones on Bailments, 95, 96.
The circumstances which excuse the innkeeper and relieve him from liability, are few in number, and likewise well understood. He may show that the loss was attributable to the personal negligence of the guest himself, or occasioned by inevitable casualty, or by superior force. He is not liable if it was caused by the act of God or the public enemy, or by the conduct of the guest, or by the acts or misconduct of his servants, or of the companions whom he brought with him. Beyond these the common law admits no excuse and affords no immunity to the innkeeper for the loss of goods happening to a guest within his inn, so long as the guest is a sojourner merely, abiding in and using and occupying the inn as a place of rest and for lodging and entertainment. An innkeeper is not bound by law to find show rooms or sales rooms for his guests in which to expose or sell their goods, but only suitable lodging rooms and lodging; and if the guests use their rooms for the purposes of such exposition or sale, this also constitutes an exception to the general liability of the innkeeper, and he will not be held responsible for the loss of such goods.
With these general principles in view, the questions present- ■ ed in this case are not difficult of determination. The exceptions taken upon the trial were but two in number, and arose upon the refusal of the court to grant two requests to instruct, made by the defendants.
The first request related to the character of the plaintiff as a person receiving lodging and refreshment at the inn — whether he was a guest or not. The plaintiff was not a neighbor or *128friend of the defendants coming to their inn, but a traveler. He was a passsenger or wayfaring man, who resided at a distant place, and who sought the public house kept by the defendants for temporary lodging and entertainment. Of these facts the proofs leave no doubt. He came to the house, and asked one of the defendants if they took boarders, and was answered, “ Yes.” He enquired the price of board by the week, and was informed, and was thereupon received into the house. His intention was to remain only for three or four days, but of that no communication was made to the defendants. Upon these facts the defendants requested the court to charge the jury, “ That if the jury shall find, from the evidence, that the plaintiff was stopping at the hotel of the defendants, at the time of the loss of the money and property in question, under an agreement to board by the week, he was not a guest but a boarder, and the common law liability of an innkeeper for the property of his guest does not apply.”
The point upon which the request turned was, that if the plaintiff entered the hotel under an agreement to board by the ,week, he was but'a boarder and not a guest, and therefore the liability of an innkeeper did not attach. The court was asked to hold as matter of law, that agreeing for board by the week deprived the plaintiff of the character of a guest, and transformed him into a boarder. As matter of law, the court could not say so ; or if it had, it would have been error. ■ It is well settled that if a person goes to an inn as a wayfarer and a traveler, and the innkeeper receives him into his inn as such, he becomes the innkeeper’s guest, and the relation of landlord and guest, with all its rights and liabilities, is instantly established between them. Neither the length of time that a man remains at an inn, nor any agreement he may make as to the price of board per day or per week, deprives him of his character as a traveler and a guest, provided he retains his status as a traveler in other respects. Berkshire Woolen Co. v. Proctor, 7 Cush., 417; Hall v. Pike, 100 Mass., 495; Pinkerton v. Woodward, 83 *129Cal., 557; Norcross v. Norcross, 53 Me., 168. It was a question of fact to be found by tbe jury upon all tbe evidence, and not one of law to be determined by tbe court, whether tbe plaintiff was a boarder and not a guest.
Had a proper request been prepared, directing the attention of tbe jury to the evidence in that particular, and informing them that it was for them to decide whether under the circumstances the plaintiff was received by the defendants as a guest and the relation of landlord and guest existed between them, no doubt such request would have been granted. Had the court refused a request of that kind, it would doubtless have been error. I
The other request which was denied, was in these words: “ That if the jury shall find, from the evidence, that the money and property in question was upon the person and under the exclusive control of the plaintiff at the time of the loss, the defendants are not liable.”
It will be observed from the statement of general principles above made, that this request was incorrect. Possession of money upon the person of the guest does not constitute such exclusive control and custody on his part as will exonerate the innkeeper, unless under certain peculiar circumstances. It has been held at common law, that if, after notice from the innkeeper that a safe was provided for money, and that he would not be responsible for its loss unless deposited therein, the traveler retains his money in his own possession or in his room, and it is stolen or lost, the innkeeper will not be liable. The decision was put upon tbe ground of negligence in the guest. The retention of his money by the plaintiff upon his own person did not excuse the defendants, unless the negligence or misconduct of the plaintiff induced the loss.
It is likewise contended that the evidence disclosed such gross negligence on the part of the plaintiff that he ought not to have recovered, and that the verdict was against evidence. It was formerly supposed that only gross negligence on the part *130of the guest would prevent a recovery, but it is now settled that a want of ordinary care contributing to the loss will have that effect. Some strong facts and circumstances tending to prove negligence on the part of the plaintiff were shown; but the question was fairly submitted to the jury,, and they have found in his favor. The effort was to show that he was intoxicated when he retired to his room, about eleven o’clock in the day, and that he was negligent in not finding the key in his door, and in not locking the door. In Galye's Case, 8 Coke, 32, 1 Smith’s Leading Cases [*194], it was resolved, as a proposition of law, to be “nO excuse for the innkeeper that he delivered the guest the key of the chamber in which he lodged, and that he left the chamber door open” This would hardly be accepted or held as matter of law now-a-days, and indeed is not, but is a question of fact for the jury. It is for the jury to say whether such conduct on the part of the guest constitutes negligence or not, under the circumstances. Negligence in cases of this nature, as in all others, is one of fact for the jury, unless the evidence is too plain and positive to admit of doubt or controversy, when the court will be justified in taking the case into its own hands and directing a verdict. We cannot say, in view of^the very stringent liability of innkeepers, and of the authorities, that the court would have been justified in doing so in this case, and hence can not disturb the verdict as being against the evidence. If drunk, the plaintiff might still have claimed the protection of his host, as did Falstaff, when he fell asleep “ behind the arras,” and might say with him : “Shall I not take mine ease in mine inn, but I shall have my pocket picked? ” which seems to be a further proof, not noticed by the advocates of that theory, that Shakespeare was a lawyer, and therefore that Bacon wrote Shakespeare.
A third request refused related to the liability of the defendants as partners, which, if admitted to have been correct in law, has now become immaterial, since the jury have found that the *131partnership existed at the time the money was lost, and was not entered into afterwards, as assumed in the request
By the Court — Judgment affirmed.