Bidlake v. Shirley Hotel Company

292 P.2d 749, 133 Colo. 166, 1956 Colo. LEXIS 290
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 23, 1956
Docket17741
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 292 P.2d 749 (Bidlake v. Shirley Hotel Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bidlake v. Shirley Hotel Company, 292 P.2d 749, 133 Colo. 166, 1956 Colo. LEXIS 290 (Colo. 1956).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Alter

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Richard F. Bidlake began an action against Shirley Hotel Company, a corporation, to recover the sum of $764.62 allegedly due him by reason of damages to his automobile and loss of personal property while a guest of defendant’s hotel. Upon trial to the court and at the conclusion of all of the evidence, judgment was entered in favor of defendant. Plaintiff is here by writ of error seeking a reversal of this judgment.

The complaint contains two causes of action (claims) and upon trial the first thereof was by plaintiff dismissed, so that we are here concerned with the second cause of action (claim) only.

In the second claim it is alleged that defendant is a Colorado corporation engaged in operating the Shirley-Savoy Hotel in Denver, and that as a part of its hotel business it provides storage for automobiles of its guests, receiving the same at the entrance of its hotel. Further, that on April 26, 1950, plaintiff delivered to defendant his automobile and the contents thereof to be by it safely and securely kept for plaintiff and returned to him upon his request therefor. Further, that on the 27th day of April, 1950, when plaintiff requested the return of his automobile and its contents, it was found that the contents had been abstracted and the automobile had been damaged, all through defendant’s carelessness and negligence with the resulting damages.

Defendant filed its third party complaint, naming therein as third party defendant Larry Rummerfield, who at all times mentioned in plaintiff’s complaint was defendant’s employee engaged as its night porter. At the *168 time of the trial defendant’s third party complaint was dismissed for reasons that are wholly immaterial here, and neither plaintiff nor defendant make any contention that by so doing the court prejudiced their rights.

Defendant, for answer to the plaintiff’s second claim, denies that it provides storage for the automobiles of its guests; denies that on the 26th day of April, 1950, plaintiff delivered his automobile and the contents thereof to defendant to be safely and securely kept for him and redelivered at his request; denies on information and belief that thereafter and on April 27, 1950, plaintiff requested redelivery of his automobile and the contents and denies that through its negligence and carelessness to discharge its duty with respect to the automobile and contents, and through the negligence and improper conduct of defendant and its servants, the automobile was damaged and the contents thereof lost.

For a third defense to plaintiff’s second claim, defendant alleges that it is informed and believes and upon such information and belief states the fact to be that on April 26, 1950, while plaintiff was a guest at defendant’s hotel, one Rummerfield took plaintiff’s automobile for the purpose of delivering the same to a garage and converted the same to his own use, and, as a result thereof, it was damaged as in the complaint alleged, all without authority from defendant.

The evidence necessary for our consideration in determining this case is practically undisputed. Plaintiff became defendant’s guest on or about the 26th of April, 1950, and as he drove to the entrance to the hotel preparatory to registering, he affirmatively answered the employee’s question that he desired his car stored. He delivered the keys of his car to Larry Rummerfield, an employee of the hotel, engaged as a night porter. Plaintiff’s automobile was delivered to Rummerfield for the purpose of having it stored, but instead of so doing Rummerfield used it for a “joy-ride” and damaged the car; upon it being recovered, valuable personal property in *169 the glove compartment had been abstracted. The Shirley Garage, in which plaintiff’s automobile was to have been stored, was independently operated and located in the immediate vicinity of defendant’s hotel.

Defendant’s evidence was to the effect that its manager had instructed an employee, who was supervisor of certain subordinate employees of whom Rummerfield was one, that no one of them, except the supervisor and the doorman, should ever drive or move a customer’s automobile except in an emergency, and in event of an emergency only the supervisor and the doorman were authorized to move the guest’s automobile. The Shirley Garage was to provide shag-boys for the pick-up and delivery of all guests’ automobiles. The hotel manager testified that it was not the custom in Denver to permit porters or bellhops to drive automobiles of guests arriving by automobile.

Rummerfield did not testify, but the hotel manager testified as to the procedure which was followed when a guest driving an automobile arrived at the hotel.

“The guest would drive up in front of the hotel, the doorman would greet the guest and ask if he — what he would like to have done with his car. At that time, if he said he would like to have it put in the garage, the Shirley Garage was called, and they picked it up and stored it for him. * * * The mechanical procedure was that if the guest said he wanted the car stored, the doorman would take the keys from him and give him the claim-check from the garage, call the garage, and when the shag-boy came over the doorman would surrender the keys and the claim-check to the shag-boy from the garage.

“Q. Then, when the door-keeper has asked the guest, as you described it, whether he wanted to store the car, and the guest answers ‘yes,’ what actually does the doorkeeper do?

“A. He requests the keys be left in the car; he gets a *170 claim-check from the porters’ headquarters desk, notes the name of the guest on the check, phones the garage where they have an extension phone to the garage, and asks that — requests that they send a shag-boy after it. When the shag-boy arrives, he is given the keys and the claim-check — the stub. The claim-check, I suppose, would be part the guest keeps. And the other half is given to the shag-boy from the garage.”

Defendant’s doorman, who was on duty during April 26, but had left for the day prior to the arrival of plaintiff, was called to testify and stated in answer to a question:

“Sir, if a customer drives in front of the hotel, after his bag has been taken care of, he might ask about his car, and I would say that we have facilities that I might call and have your car picked up; or, ‘you can take it yourself and have it parked’; * * * Then I ask for his keys, and I call by telephone — there is a direct line to the garage that the hotel used — for a shag-boy to come and pick it up. Q. That’s right. And according to what you have said, you asked them if they wanted you to take care of the car and see if it was to be taken to the garage, is that- right?
“A. That’s right.”

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Bluebook (online)
292 P.2d 749, 133 Colo. 166, 1956 Colo. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bidlake-v-shirley-hotel-company-colo-1956.