Andrews v. Southwestern Hotel Co.

44 S.W.2d 675, 184 Ark. 982, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 326
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 14, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 44 S.W.2d 675 (Andrews v. Southwestern Hotel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Southwestern Hotel Co., 44 S.W.2d 675, 184 Ark. 982, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 326 (Ark. 1931).

Opinion

Butler, J.

The Goldman Hotel is one of the leading hotels in Fort Smith, Arkansas. It has no garage for the accommodation of automobiles of its guests, but usually notifies a nearby garage of the arrival of such cars which are desired to be stored, such notice being given by an electric bell connected with the garage from the clerk’s office and operated by a push button. No one had access to this push button except the clerk on duty and the telephone operator at the hotel. When a guest arrived with a car which was desired to be stored, it was the custom to notify the garage by means of the push button, and it would send one of its employees to- the hotel for the ear. None of the employees of the hotel had any authority to transport automobiles of guests to the garage, and the bell boys (bell hops) were expressly forbidden from doing this, and it was ground for discharge for any one of them to violate this rule.

Judge Thomas G. Andrews, appellant here, is a resident of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. On June 30, 1930, he left that city in his automobile, accompanied by his wife and mother, on a journey to one of the Carolinas, and on that trip reached Fort Smith at about 10 o ’clock at night, and drove to the front door of the Goldman Hotel on its driveway and there stopped, He and his companions alighted and went into the hotel leaving the hey in the transmission (ignition). Judge Andrews went to the desk of the hotel where he registered himself and his companions as guests. One of the bell boys took the car, ostensibly to carry it to the garage of Yantis & Harper just around the corner from the hotel. The appellant went to his room and was notified about eleven o’clock that night that the automobile had been found practically destroyed at a point in the city about a mile from the hotel. No one was in the car when it was found, but there was a coat in it belonging to the bell boy. This bell boy has never been seen in Fort Smith since that time. Judge Andrews carried insurance upon his automobile covering such instances as this with the Fidelity Union Casualty Company. On being notified on the following day, the insurance company authorized Judge Andrews to purchase a new car, which he did,.and assigned in part his claim for damage against the hotel company to the insurance company.

Suit was brought for damage to the car, and from an adverse verdict the plaintiffs have appealed.

There is no question as to the amount of damage, the only question being that of liability. After the verdict was returned in the court below, the plaintiffs moved the court for a judgment in their favor for the amount of the damage, notwithstanding' the verdict, and, on the motion being overruled, a motion for a new trial was duly filed alleging, among other things, that upon the undisputed evidence the plaintiffs are entitled to a verdict in their favor.

It is insisted here that the court should have rendered judgment for the plaintiffs, notwithstanding the .verdict in the court below, and that this court ought now to reverse the .judgment of the trial court and render a verdict here for the amount of plaintiff’s claim. They base their contention oh.the theory that the car at the time it was taken by the bell boy was infra hospitium, and that the rule- announced in 2 Parsons on Contracts, at page 158, approved by this court in the case of Pettit v. Thomas, 103 Ark. 593, 148 S. W. 501, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 122, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 726, is applicable to the instant case and establishes liability on the undisputed facts. That rule, referring to an innkeeper’s duty to his guest, is as follows: “He is an insurer of the safety of whatever baggage or other things he receives into his inn for his guest, whether in fact negligent in their keeping or not, except against the two overwhelming forces termed the acts of God or of the public enemy. For example, if they are stolen or burned without the fault of either the guest or the landlord, the latter must be liable for them.”

This rule was abolished by act No. 217 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1913, now found in Crawford & Moses’ Digest in §§ 5564-5573, both inclusive. In Turner v. Weitzel, 136 Ark. 503, 207 S. W. 39, this court, referring to the case of Pettit v. Thomas, supra, said: “That case was decided in the year 1912, but since that time the law on that subject has undergone a material change by the enactment of the act of March 29, 1913. (Act No. 217, supra.) * * * It makes the keeper of a hotel liable as a bailee for hire and abrogates the common-law liability as insurer. * * * The law requires ordinary care and diligence on the part of the bailee and makes him responsible only for ordinary neglect. And this is the extent of his duty and liability, even though he may be so interested in the property as to make him a bailee for hire. In such case the bailee is liable only for negligence; and such negligence must be proved by the party seeking to make him responsible therefor. The mere loss of the property does not ordinarily fix a liability for the loss upon him, but it must be further shown that said loss arose by reason of his negligence.” See also Huckins Hotels v. Smith, 151 Ark. 167, 235 S. W. 787; New York Hotel Co. v. Palmer, 158 Ark. 598, 251 S. W. 34; Fant v. Arlington Hotel Co., 170 Ark. 440, 280 S. W. 20.

It is insisted by the appellants, however, that the statute becomes applicable only when a copy of § 1 of said act is posted within the hotel in the manner prescribed by that section, and that this compliance on the part of the innkeeper must be affirmatively shown before the benefit of the act may be invoked. That section relates only to the safeguarding of valuables of small bulk, such as money, personal ornaments, negotiable or valuable papers and bullion, to be kept within a safe or in the sleeping room used by guests and has no relation whatever to the safe care of automobiles. The court therefore did not err in its refusal to grant the motion of the appellants in the respects mentioned.

Besides, liability is not sought to be established in this case upon any statutory or common-law duty resting upon the innkeeper. The cause of action declared upon is an express agreement of bailment. Boiled down, the complaint alleges that the plaintiff, Judge Andrews, after registering as the guest of the hotel, made inquiry of the clerk on duty as to whether or not a garage was nearby where his car could be stored in safety. The clerk informed him that there was such a garage, and thereupon the plaintiff asked if some of the employees of the hotel would take charge of the automobile, and the clerk authorized and directed a negro man in the employ of the hotel to take the automobile and place it in the nearby garage. Acting- on the invitation of the defendant and' its employees, the plaintiff delivered the car to the negro to be taken to the garage, and the defendant, through its servants, officers, clerk and employees, assumed and took upon itself the duty and obligation to store said automobile in a safe garage.

The testimony adduced by the plaintiffs tended to establish these allegations, but this testimony was disputed by that of the clerk who, while admitting that Judge Andrews inquired about a safe garage in which his car might be stored and that he gave him the information requested, and that he did not communicate with the garage, denied that he told Judge Andrews that any one of the negro employees who happened to be bell boys would take the car to the garage.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W.2d 675, 184 Ark. 982, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-southwestern-hotel-co-ark-1931.