Brin v. Sidenstucker

8 N.W.2d 423, 232 Iowa 1258
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 9, 1943
DocketNo. 46155.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 N.W.2d 423 (Brin v. Sidenstucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brin v. Sidenstucker, 8 N.W.2d 423, 232 Iowa 1258 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

*1259 Bliss, J.

On June 25, 1940, Sylven Berg became a permanent guest in a hotel operated by the defendants in the town of Jewell. He both roomed and boarded at the hotel. While he was such a guest, and on December 23, 1940, he married, and he and his wife continued to board and room at the hotel. A few weeks prior to his marriage, Berg, upon hearing that a certain unfurnished room in the hotel was to be vacated on January 1, 1941, entered into an agreement with the defendants to rent the room as soon as it was available, at a rental of $20 a month, payable monthly. The room was vacated shortly after January 1, 1941, and Berg took possession of it on the morning of January 15, 1941, by moving into the room certain furniture and furnishings which he had acquired from the plaintiff on January 4, 1941, under a written lease or conditional sales contract. This instrument was not executed by both vendor and vendee as provided in section 10016, Code, 1939. Berg, only, executed and acknowledged its execution. He did both on January 4, 1941. It was filed for record in the -office of the recorder of Hamilton county at 10 a. m. January 14, 1941, and indexed' in the current book of chattel mortgages. This property, as described in the petition and the lease or conditional sales contract, and the prices thereof, were as follows:

1 Mahogany Vanity, Chest, Bed, Bench, 1 set of Lamps $124.50

1 Nite Stand __ 10.95

1 Spring 11.95

1 Slumberwell Matt. 19.75

2 27x54 Bugs 7.90

1 Green Studio 39.00

1 Chair to Match 21.00

1 Bocker & Ottoman 34.75

1 Walnut Buffet, 1 T 40y2 Table, 6 Walnut Brown Leather Chairs 94.00

$363.80

The room was not furnished in any manner when it was rented. It had neither toilet, laundry facilities, nor cooking-equipment. The defendants had no furnished apartments. Berg and his wife occupied the room which they had rented and *1260 furnished until August 16, 1941. During all of this time, up to July 10, 1941, they boarded at the defendants’ hotel. On August 1, 1941, because of the nonpayment of the rent for the room and of money for their board, Berg and wife were dispossessed of the room. Defendants retained possession of the furniture and furnishings. The total combined charges against Berg and wife from June 25, 1940, to August 16, 1941, were $497.25. On this indebtedness Berg had paid $255, which the parties agreed should be credited upon the oldest charges. The balance of $242.25 was all for charges made after the renting of the room. Of this balance $140 was for room rent for seven months.

By the terms of the conditional sales contract the title and ownership of the property sold remained in the vendor until the purchase price was paid, and for specified breaches of the contract, or whenever the vendor might choose to do so, the. vendor could repossess himself of the property. No part of the purchase price was ever paid. It was agreed that the defendants had no knowledge of either the existence of the contract or the filing of it for record until the writ of replevin was served on October 3, 1941.

In answer to plaintiff’s petition for a writ of replevin and for damages,- the defendants alleged the relationship of hotel-keeper and guest which existed between them and the Bergs, the furnishing of the board, lodging, etc. above noted,’ the nonpayment therefor, the bringing into the hotel of the property replevined, and its detention by virtue of the innkeeper’s lien of defendants. They also alleged that neither of them had any proper notice of any conditional sale or lease, and that any such instrument was not executed as required by section 10016, Code, 1939.

The trial court rendered judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s petition at his cost and ordering the replevined property to be restored to the defendants. In its judgment the court said:

“I infer from the record that defendant’s hotel is an ordinary, standard small town hotel, engaged primarily if not entirely in furnishing accommodations for transients. I think without a doubt it is a ‘hotel’ within the meaning of Section *1261 10348; that the defendant is a ‘hotel keeper’, that Sylven Berg and his wife were ‘guests’, and that the property in question was ‘baggage’, within the definitioris of said section. This being so, defendant would be entitled to a hotel keeper’s lien on all said furniture, under Section 10349, for the unpaid bill aforesaid.

‘ ‘ The furniture in question, however,- had 'been purchased by Berg from the plaintiff on January 4th, 1941, under a conditional sales contract, or so-called lease, which was filed for record on January 14th, 1941, the contract appearing in evidence as Exhibit ‘B’. Unfortunately for plaintiff this contract was not signed by him as vendor as required by Section 10016. Under this section the vendor’s signature is a prerequisite to its validity as against, a creditor without notice; and in this case it appears that defendant had no notice or knowledge of Exhibit ‘B’ or the lien claimed thereunder by plaintiff. It follows, as I think, that Exhibit ‘B’ cannot affect the landlord’s lien of the defendant.”

The cause was submitted to. the trial court on a stipulation of the facts. The only issues below and the only, issues before this court are those of law.

I. Did the appellees have a hotelkeeper’s lien on this property under the provisions of chapter 458, Code, 1939? If they had no such lien, the judgment appealed from should be reversed. It is our conclusion that the appellees had no such lien. The appellees, in their answer, based their right to hold and to subject the property to the payment of their claim solely upon their innkeeper’s lien. It was on such lien, or rather the statutory hotelkeeper’s lien, and lack of notice of any right of the appellant, that the tidal court based its judgment. The same grounds, for affirmance of the judgment, are urged upon this court. No contention has at any time been made of any rights on the part of the appellees because of any landlord’s lien.

Appellant assigns as error the decision of the trial court that the appellees had a hotelkeeper’s lien upon this property. It is his contention that the relationship between the appellees and the Bergs, with respect to this unfurnished room, was that *1262 of lessor and lessee, or landlord and tenant, and not that of hotelkeeper and guest.

Whatever lien as hotelkeepers which the appellees may-have against this property is given them by chapter 458, of the Code of 1939. The following sections are in this chapter:

“10348 Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter:

“1. ‘Hotel’ shall include inn, rooming house, and eating house, or any structure where rooms or board are furnished, whether to permanent or transient occupants.

“2. ‘Hotelkeeper’ shall mean a person who owns or operates a hotel.

“3. ‘Guest’ shall include boarder and patron, or any legal occupant of any hotel as herein defined.

“4.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.W.2d 423, 232 Iowa 1258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brin-v-sidenstucker-iowa-1943.