Burton v. Drake Hotel Co.

237 Ill. App. 76, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 148
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 11, 1925
DocketGen. No. 29,885
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 237 Ill. App. 76 (Burton v. Drake Hotel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burton v. Drake Hotel Co., 237 Ill. App. 76, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 148 (Ill. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matchett

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in this case is an innkeeper and at the time of the transaction in question (April 14, 1920) operated the Blackstone Hotel, located at the comer of Seventh street and Michigan avenue in Chicago.

It cost about three million dollars to build and furnish this hotel, which offered unusual accommodations to the traveling public. The charge for its rooms varied from $4 to $16 a day, and in connection with the hotel and as a part of the hotel business it conducted three restaurants.

The plaintiff was a resident of New York, and at this particular time was returning by train from a visit to California. He was accompanied by a friend, Mr. Lorillard. The evidence indicates that plaintiff was a man of considerable means, being one of two brothers who inherited an estate of about nine million dollars.

On plaintiff’s arrival in Chicágo he and his friend took a taxicab and were driven to the defendant hotel. Plaintiff had been in Chicago on prior occasions, when he had been a guest at this hotel. He, however, states that at this particular time he was induced to go there by the suggestion of Mr. Lorillard that they should “go to the Blackstone and get a room where we could clean up after the trip.”

Plaintiff had two traveling bags with him, a large patent leather suit case and a dull leather grip. Upon arrival they were met by one of defendant’s servants, named Jennings, to whom the bags were delivered. These bags were not placed in the regular check room but outside that inclosure in the hotel lobby. Jennings then delivered a check for the baggage to plaintiff, who was standing in the lobby. Plaintiff then gave his hat and coat to another employee of defendant and went into the main dining room, where he had lunch, for which he paid. After lunch he handed the check which he had received to a boy and told him to bring the bags to a taxicab. Twenty minutes thereafter the boy came to the taxicab and said he could not find the bags. Plaintiff then went into the hotel to search for the baggage. He looked first in the check room and found that the whole aisle between the check room and the elevators was crowded with bags that had been checked. He reported his loss to the manager and gave to him a description and list of the contents of the bags.

In the evening plaintiff went back to the hotel for dinner and again inquired about the baggage, but it had not been discovered.

Plaintiff placed a value of more than $2,000 on the bags and contents, which consisted in part of a Sulka silk crepe bathrobe, for which he paid $300; a set of pearl and diamond cuff links valued at $400; five monogrammed Scotch linen handkerchiefs which cost $5 apiece; and a set of jewel jade and gold cuff links inherited from his father, which he says were worth anywhere from $150 to $2,000 apiece.

Plaintiff was accustomed to wear the kind of clothing contained in the bags and suit cases, and he was accustomed to travel about the country and to stop at hotels in different cities. He says he went to the Blackstone Hotel on this particular trip because it was represented to him to be the best hotel in Chicago. He had on prior occasions given lunch and dinner parties at the Blackstone, and had taken meals there on every occasion when he visited the city.

The defendant hotel was provided with a vault in which valuables might be stored. Cards were placed in every room in the hotel giving notice of the existence of this vault, but there is no evidence that plaintiff had actual notice of its existence. There was a check room in the hotel for the purpose of taking care of all baggage.

• The evidence shows without contradiction that the defendant investigated the character and general reputation of all its employees before hiring them. It •employed a chief of police, whose duty it was to size up the general conditions and “give the once-over to everybody that came in — to see what they were loitering around the hotel for.”

The chief of police of the defendant company testified that he discovered a pair of silk pajamas which answered to the description that plaintiff gave him of a part of the contents of the bag. The pajamas Were found in a room at 2128 South State street by one Garten, a sergeant of police of the City of Chicago. The sergeant was taken to the place where these pajamas were found by one Wagner, who on June 27, 1920, was arrested in the lobby of the Congress hotel on suspicion that he was a hotel burglar. There is no claim that any other part of the baggage delivered to defendant has ever been found.

The facts so appearing and the cause being tried by the court without a jury, the trial judge was of the opinion that plaintiff could not recover, and a finding to that effect was entered and judgment rendered thereon.

The first matter in dispute is whether, on the evidence, plaintiff was a guest of the defendant hotel company at the time his baggage was lost. The question is important as determining the rule by which the liability of defendant must be determined. If plaintiff was a guest, then defendant’s liability, if any, is that of an innkeeper. If he was not a guest, then the liability, if any, is that of a gratuitous bailee.

It appears the courts of this State have not thus far defined “a. guest” within the meaning of the law applicable to Innkeepers.

In 32 Corpus Juris, 533, cited by both parties, a guest is defined as “a transient person who resorts to and is received at an inn for the purpose of obtaining the accommodations which it purports to afford. * * *” That authority also says: “A person cannot become a guest of a hotel unless he procures some accommodations. However, the accommodation necessary to be procured by a person in order to constitute him a guest may consist of any form of entertainment or refreshment which the innkeeper publicly professes to serve; it is sufficient if he takes lodgings only, or food without lodgings. * * *”

The defendant cites Gastenhofer v. Clair, 10 Daly (N. Y.) 265, on this point. That was a case where the plaintiff (a resident of the City of New York) was invited by his uncle (a guest at the defendant’s hotel in the same city) to dine with him at the hotel. Upon going to the hotel the plaintiff did not find his uncle, and after some search went into a dining room, where he had dinner. As he came out from dinner he met his uncle and was taken by him to dinner in another dining room. On going into this room the plaintiff left his overcoat on a chair near a rack in an • outside room, where there was no attendant. The overcoat was lost. The dinner which plaintiff took was at first charged to him but subsequently to his uncle, who paid for it.

It was held that the relation of innkeeper and guest did not exist and that the defendant was not liable. The ground of that decision was that there must be at least two parties to every contract. The court said that a person could not make himself a guest without the innkeeper’s assent, and that assent could not be obtained by slipping into the dining room of a hotel and ordering a dinner of a waiter who had no discretion in the matter and who brought what was ordered, under the belief that the person served was in the dining room by permission of the innkeeper.

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Bluebook (online)
237 Ill. App. 76, 1925 Ill. App. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-v-drake-hotel-co-illappct-1925.