Aaron v. Ward

136 A.D. 818, 121 N.Y.S. 673, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 152
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 18, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 136 A.D. 818 (Aaron v. Ward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aaron v. Ward, 136 A.D. 818, 121 N.Y.S. 673, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 152 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Carr, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Municipal Court of the city of New York in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $272. The defendant is the owner of a bathing establishment at Coney Island. The plaintiff claims that she went to the defendant’s place of business and purchased a ticket which entitled her to a bathing suit, the use of a bathing house, and the privilege of bathing in the surf in front of the defendant’s premises. She states that after she bought the ticket she took her place in a line of other persons which had formed in front of a booth or cage, which the defendant maintained for the purpose of handing out bathing suits to his customers and keys to the bathing rooms. Her claim is that, when she reached the booth, another person, who was not on the line at all, asked for a bathing suit, and that a young woman employed by the defendant, and who had charge of the booth, proceeded to give out a bathing suit to the newcomer; the plaintiff states that she then remonstrated with the young woman about the favoritism shown by this' happening, and that in response thereto she was ordered out of the line by the young woman in charge of the booth and called by her a “ sheeney,” and that on her refusal to leave the line, the young woman in charge of the defendant’s booth ordered a man in the employiMent of the defendant to remove the plaintiff-from the line. According to the plaintiff’s story, this man seized hold of her roughly, and jerked her out of the line and' shook her violently several times.

She came into court on a verified complaint setting up the facts above outlined and asking for damages. The court, on conflicting evidence, found the facts as stated by the plaintiff and awarded her damages in the sum of $250 and costs. The amount paid by the plaintiff on buying the ticket was the sum of twenty-five cents. The [820]*820appellant contends that the plaintiff’s cause of action was one in tort for assault, if she had any at all, and not in contract. If the cause of action was one for assault, then the Municipal Court had no jurisdiction over it, and the judgment entered was erroneous. The verified complaint set forth an agreement on the part of the defendant to hire out a bathing suit and bathing room to the plaintiff, and to accord her. all the privileges of a bathhouse and and the sniff in front of thé premises ; it further alleges a breach of the agreement of hire, and then sets forth : That by reason of the defendant’s wrongful refusal to keep to his agreement and accord the plaintiff the privileges of his bathing house and the surf in. front of. his premises, the plaintiff was greatly injured in her feelings and suffered severe pangs of humiliation in having been forcibly removed from defendant’s bathing house and deprived of the pleasure of bathing in the surf in front of defendant’s premises,” etc.

It seems to me that the complaint is not based upon a tort, but states fully a cause of action for a breach of contract, and that the court below had power to entertain the action and make judgment therein. The appellant contends, however, that if the action be considered as one on contract, the court below proceeded on an erroneous theory as to the measure of- damages. ' His contention is that,, if there .was a breach of contract under the circumstances of this case, the plaintiff could not recover more than the sum she paid to the defendant for the bathing privileges, -namely, twenty-five cents. In Gillespie v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (178 N. Y. 347) it was held that a passenger, might recover damages from a street railroad company for insulting language used by the com ductor of a car to a woman passenger who had paid her fare and -was in process of transit, and that such damages were not limited to the amount of the fare, but should be compensatory as to the humiliation and indignity inflicted upon the passenger, and for her Injured feelings. In that case there was quite an elaborate review of all the authorities which had preceded the decision, and the liability was held to arise from a breach of a contract for carriage.

Again in Busch v. Interborough R. T. Co. (187 N. Y. 388) it was held that a passenger on a street railway might recover for a breach of-contract against the defendant carrier for - an assault and mal[821]*821treatment perpetrated upon him by the employees of the defendant while he was in the course of transit. In this particular case the judgment was rendered in the Municipal Court of the city of Mew York, and the attack made upon the judgment was precisely the same as that made in the case at bar, namely, that tlie cause of action was one in tort and not in contract, and, therefore, that the trial court granting the judgment was without jurisdiction.

In De Wolf v. Ford (193 N. Y. 397) a guest at a Mew York city hotel recovered damages against the owner of the hotel for injured feelings because of certain indignities perpetrated upon the guest at the time when she was occupying one of the rooms in the hotel by the servants and employees of the hotelkeeper. The Court of Appeals decided that the indignities in question constituted a breach of contract between the innkeeper and his guest; and that into every contract between a guest and an .innkeeper was to be read the condition that, during the use of the hotel by the guest, the innkeeper and his servants would treat the guest with all proper decency, the court saying as follows: “ One of the things which a guest for hire at a public inn has the right to insist upon is respectful and decent treatment at the hands of the innkeeper and his servants. That is an essential part of the contract whether it is express or implied. This right of the guest necessarily implies an obligation on the part of the innkeeper that neither he nor his servants will abuse or insult the guest, or indulge in any conduct or speech that may unnecessarily bring upon him physical discomfort or distress of mind. The innkeeper, it is true, is not an insurer of the safety, convenience or comfort of the> guest. But the former is bound to exercise reasonable care that neither he nor his servants shall by uncivil, harsh or cruel treatment destroy or 'minimize the comfort, convenience and peace which the latter would ordinarily enjoy if the inn were properly conducted, due' allowance being always made for the grade of the inn and the character of the accommodation which it is designed to afford.”

In regard to the measure of damages the court said: The measure of liability, if any, will be purely compensatory and not punitive, the plaintiff’s right to recover being confined to such injury to her feelings and such personal humiliation as she may have suffered.”

The real question in this case is, whether there is to be read into the [822]*822contract between this plaintiff and the defendant an obligation similar to thát of a carrier or an innkeeper. The'appellant contends that the liability of this defendant is not to be assimilated to that of a carrier or an innkeeper, but is to be determined in the same- man- . ner as that of a proprietor of a theater. .It is true that the business of keeping bathing houses for hire'is not of the same public nature as that of a common carrier or an innkeeper, and may be said to be a purely private enterprise in the same sense that the courts have held the business of a theater to be private. (People ex rel. Burnham v. Flynn, 189 N. Y. 180; Collister v. Hayman, 183 id. 250; Purcell v. Daly, 19 Abb. N. C.

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Related

Aaron v. Ward
122 N.Y.S. 1121 (Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
136 A.D. 818, 121 N.Y.S. 673, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aaron-v-ward-nyappdiv-1910.