Coe v. Ricker

101 N.E. 76, 214 Mass. 212, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1097
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 N.E. 76 (Coe v. Ricker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coe v. Ricker, 101 N.E. 76, 214 Mass. 212, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1097 (Mass. 1913).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

This is an action to recover the value of certain jewelry which had been placed by the plaintiff in the custody of the defendant, and had been lost, as she alleged, by the negligence of the defendant.

At the trial it appeared that the defendant was the proprietor of a summer boarding house called the “Silver Beach Hotel,” situated at North Falmouth in this State, and that, in accordance with a contract made several days before, the plaintiff, on August 1, 1910, went with her two children to the house to board for the whole month at the rate of $34 per week.

The evidence as to the deposit of jewelry was as follows: The plaintiff testified that, after she had been at the house about a week, “she had some talk with the defendant about her jewelry, and he said that he would put it in his safe and care for it for her. . . . She brought the jewelry to the office and the defendant’s wife took it and placed it in the defendant’s safe, as she had been instructed to do by the defendant.” The defendant testified that, between two and three weeks after the plaintiff had been at the hotel, she requested him “to put some jewelry in his safe for safe keeping, and he did so.”

The evidence as to the defendant’s course of business in receiving for safe keeping the property of his guests was as follows: The plaintiff testified that “ on at least two occasions the defendant had placed checks belonging to her in his safe; and that she [213]*213had never seen the safe.” The defendant testified that the safe was small, “perhaps two feet high . . . about twenty inches high inside. ... It was a combination safe. He bought . . . [it] ... for his own use, and never thought of the guests when he bought it. . . . He never kept anything for guests, except two, for the nine years he had been there, and . . . was never requested to put valuables in the safe by guests except on two occasions, and ... he made no charge for putting the plaintiff’s jewelry in the safe . . . [He] used the safe to keep his own money in before banking it, which he did once a week on going to Boston.”

He further testified that he was the proprietor of an “all the year round hotel” situated in Somerville in -this State; that a man boarding there came down to this summer house “perhaps two or three times . . . over Sunday;” and that once this man placed a “roll of money” in the defendant’s hands for safe keeping, and he put it in his safe.

It appeared also that by advertisements published in newspapers, by circulars and by headings on stationery furnished to the guests, the defendant called the house the Silver Beach Hotel and described himself as proprietor. But he had no innholder’s license.

At the close of the evidence the defendant asked the Chief Justice

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4 Mass. App. Div. 476 (Mass. Dist. Ct., App. Div., 1939)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 N.E. 76, 214 Mass. 212, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coe-v-ricker-mass-1913.