Buck v. Del City Apartments, Inc.

1967 OK 81, 431 P.2d 360
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 28, 1967
Docket41165
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 1967 OK 81 (Buck v. Del City Apartments, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buck v. Del City Apartments, Inc., 1967 OK 81, 431 P.2d 360 (Okla. 1967).

Opinion

McINERNEY, Justice.

This was a consolidated action by husband and wife. Recovery was sought for her injury, his loss of consortium and for medical expenses. The injury which occasioned the litigation happened January 6, 1960, at the premises in Del City operated as “Del Motel”. The wife fell after she slipped on ice upon the steps in front of the cabin she and her husband were occupying. The trial ended in judgment sustaining a demurrer to plaintiffs’ evidence.

Our task here is to decide whether the wife, when injured, was on the premises as a tenant or as a guest of the motel; to define, on the basis of the status found to exist, the applicable duty owed to her; and to determine if the evidence, when measured by the standard of care properly to be applied, shows the breach of any legal duty owed to her.

The place where the accident occurred consists of a number of small cabins, each having a separate front entrance with a porch and two concrete steps leading from it to a short walkway. Access to each cabin may be gained through the main walkway on the property. Operated under a state license “as a hotel or motel”, the premises are situated “in the forty some-odd hundred block on Southeast 29th Street”. There is a large sign in front which identifies the property as the Del Motel. At the entrance to it there is an office at which prospective patrons register. At the time of the injury the property was managed, supervised and attended to by the two individual defendants. They held it under a lease from the corporate defendant “for the operation of a motel”. Accommodations offered to the public were on a daily basis. Maid service was available. Except for a two-week vacation trip, plaintiffs had lived at the Del Motel since November 17, 1959, the date their home burned *363 down. They occupied an entire cabin, paying for its use on a weekly basis.

Plaintiffs assert the wife, when injured, was a guest at the motel. To a guest, they claim, the innkeeper owes a “high” degree of care in maintaining the hotel premises for their safe use. Cited as authority for this statement of the law is our decision in Mayo Hotel Co. v. Danciger, 143 Okl. 196, 288 P. 309. In the alternative, plaintiffs urge that if the wife was not a guest, but a tenant, her injury took place upon that portion of the premises characterized as “common approaches or passageways”. These portions, plaintiffs insist, the landlord is under a duty to maintain in a reasonably safe condition for the use of his tenants. In support of this argument we are cited to Price v. Smith, Okl., 373 P.2d 242, 244.

Defendants counter that the wife’s injury occurred while she was descending from the porch to the short walkway in front of the cabin. This area, they claim, was “under plaintiffs’ exclusive control” as the sole occupants of the cabin, and there the defendants owed no legal duty to her. Invoked to buttress this contention is the familiar rule that, absent fraud, concealment, deceit or an express covenant of warranty of fitness for human habitation, the landlord is not liable to a tenant (or to the members of his family) for injuries due to the defective condition or faulty construction of the demised premises, where by the terms of the lease the control over such premises passed “entirely and exclusively” to the tenant. See Godbey v. Barton, 184 Okl. 237, 86 P.2d 621, 622.

The relation of landlord and tenant cannot arise without a contract, express or implied, “granting” to the tenant the “exclusive possession” of property for a specified term. The exclusive possession so granted is an indispensable ingredient of an “estate”. Not every physical occupant of land has an estate in it. For example, one who occupies a seat, even a reserved one, at the theatre or elsewhere, holds merely a license, not an estate. Tenancy does necessarily create an estate in its holder, but the duration thereof may, of course, greatly vary; it may be for years, at will or from period to period. Howard v. Manning, 79 Okl. 165, 192 P. 358, 12 A.L.R. 819.

The chief distinction between a tenant and an innkeeper’s guest lies in the element of possession. A tenant is deemed to have exclusive legal possession of the demised premises and stands responsible for their care and condition. A guest, on the other hand, has merely a right to the use of the premises while the innkeeper retains his control over them, is responsible for the necessary care and attention and retains the right of access for such purpose. Modern law tends to regard as a guest anyone who is a patron of the inn as such, and receives the same treatment as that accorded to short-term guests. Leon v. Kitchen Bros. Hotel Co., 134 Neb. 137, 277 N.W. 823, 115 A.L.R. 1078; Cottmire v. 181 East Lake Shore Drive Hotel Corp., 330 Ill.App. 549, 71 N.E.2d 823; See, Tenant, Lodger and Guest, 64 Yale L.J. 391, 396.

The status of a patron upon the premises as a tenant or as a guest is to be determined, inter alia, from the terms of the contract between the parties; the character of the premises; the nature of the business operated upon them; the extent of control or supervision maintained by the proprietor or possessor over the premises; the manner the premises are operated; the character of the part occupied by the patron; and the character of use to which the premises are generally adapted and devoted. Marden v. Radford, 229 Mo.App. 789, 84 S.W.2d 947.

The operation and management of the property as a motel under a license from the state and its advertising as a motel by the display of a highway sign afford a proper basis for the inference that the patron of the establishment is a guest. Marden v. Radford, supra. One who maintains a motel for the purpose of furnishing lodging accommodations to the public sustains to *364 his' occupants the relation of innkeeper. Crockett v. Troyk, Tex.Civ.App., 78 S.W.2d 1012; 29 Am.Jur., Innkeepers, Sec. 28, p. 26.

Neither the length of the stay nor the fact that payment for the accommodation is made at a fixed rate per week rather than per day and that for the time the hotel may be the patron’s only home precludes him from occupying the status of a guest in relation to the hotel establishment. Levesque v. Columbia Hotel, 141 Me. 393, 44 A.2d 728; Driskill Hotel Co. v. Anderson, Tex.Civ.App., 19 S.W.2d 216; Hart v. Mills Hotel Trust, 144 Misc. 121, 258 N.Y.S. 417; 29 Am.Jur., Innkeepers, Sec. 21, p. 21.

From the uncontroverted facts in the record, measured by the legal test to be employed, it is manifest that the injured wife’s status in relation to the motelkeepers was that of guest and innkeeper.

At common law the innkeeper was not an insurer of his guests’ personal safety upon the premises, although by the prevailing view he was liable as an insurer of all personal goods of a guest brought within the inn (unless the loss happened by the act of God or a public enemy, or by the fault or negligence of the guest himself). 43 C.J.S. Innkeepers § 22, p. 1173; 43 C.J.S. Innkeepers § 15, p. 1156.

The Oklahoma law of innkeeper’s liability for goods of the guest varies but slightly from the common-law norm. 15 O.S.1961, Sec.

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Bluebook (online)
1967 OK 81, 431 P.2d 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buck-v-del-city-apartments-inc-okla-1967.