Cohen v. Manuel

40 L.R.A. 491, 39 A. 1030, 91 Me. 274, 1898 Me. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 22, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 40 L.R.A. 491 (Cohen v. Manuel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohen v. Manuel, 40 L.R.A. 491, 39 A. 1030, 91 Me. 274, 1898 Me. LEXIS 23 (Me. 1898).

Opinion

Savage, J.

This is an action on the case, wherein the plaintiff claims to recover of the defendant, an alleged innkeeper’, for the loss of his goods while he was a guest at the defendant’s inn. The plaintiff was a pedler and stopped at the defendant’s inn, and while his peddle-cart was in the defendant’s stable, it was broken open and the goods in question were stolen therefrom. By their verdict for the plaintiff, the jury, under instructions to which no exceptions were taken, have settled that the defendant was an innkeeper, that the plaintiff was a traveler, and a guest at the defendant’s inn, and that the goods were lost while the plaintiff was defendant’s guest.

The defendant contends that the plaintiff being a pedler, and [276]*276the goods lost having been merchandise' carried' by him for the purpose of sale, is not entitled to recover unless he shows affirmatively that he was licensed as a pedler under the provisions of the Public Laws of 1889, c. 298; the defendant also contends that under the circumstances of the case, he is liable, if at all, only as bailee, and not as innkeeper.

I. The defendant’s bill of exceptions states that “there was evidence tending to show that at the time of the loss, the plaintiff was traveling from town to town, and from place to place in the town of Brownville, selling said goods and chattels, in violation of section 1, chapter 298, of the Public Laws of 1889, unless the plaintiff had a license from the secretary of state so to do. There was no evidence from either plaintiff or defendant as to whether the defendant had a license or not.”

The defendant requested the presiding justice to instruct the jury that “ an innkeeper is not liable for the loss of merchandise carried by a pedler for the purpose of sale, who stops at said inn, unless such pedler has a license to peddle under the laws of the state.” This instruction was refused.

There was no evidence in the case that the plaintiff did have or did not have a license, and the defendant claims that the burden to show a license was on the plaintiff. But we do not consider or decide this question, because if, as we hold, the want of a license does not preclude the plaintiff from recovering, the matter of the burden of proof is immaterial.

We think that the plaintiff is not debarred from maintaining this action, though he may have had no license as a pedler.

The defendant relies upon the principles stated in Lord v. Chadbourne, 42 Maine, 429; Mohney v. Cook, 26 Pa. St. 342, (67 Am. Dec. 419,) and other cases. It is true, in the language of Lord v. Chadbourne, supra, that “the common law will afford no aid to a party whose claims can be successfully enforced only-by a violation of its principles, or in direct contravention of a statutory enactment.” It is true, in the language of Mohney v. Cook, supra, that “there are cases wherein an injured party will be remediless, because of his own fault, even when the [277]*277fault does not contribute to tbe accident. A vessel engaged in the slave trade, piracy or smuggling and injured by another, or the keeper of a gambling house injured in his business by a neighboring nuisance, could have no remedy. Not, however, because the persons are out of the protection of the law for these offenses, nor because their illegal business brought them to the place of danger; but because their business itself, with all its instruments, is outlawed. Prohibited contracts, prohibited trades, prohibited things receive no protection.” Among such prohibited contracts is the sale of intoxicating liquor intended for illegal sale in this state. Wasserboehr v. Boulier, 84 Maine, 165; the sale of hay pressed and baled and not branded; Buxton v. Hamblen, 32 Maine, 448; the sale of lumber not surveyed and marked, Richmond v. Foss, 77 Maine, 590 ; the sale of hoops not culled, Durgin v. Dyer, 68 Maine, 143.

All such sales are expressly, or by implication, forbidden by law. So a party has been held remediless who seeks to enforce a contract made on Sunday. Towle v. Larrabee, 26 Maine, 464. And he who suffers an injury arising from his violation of the Sunday law, so-called, is equally without remedy. Wheelden v. Lyford, 84 Maine, 114.

The language in Lord v. Chadbourne, and in Mohney v. Cook, above cited, is a correct statement of a general proposition. How inapplicable it is to the case at bar can easily be seen when we look at the questions which were decided in these cases. In the former, the precise question decided was that under the provisions of the statute of 1851, c. 211, § 16, no action whatever could be maintained for intoxicating liquors or their value. Intoxicating liquors were thus practically outlawed. Trespass against a wrong doer even could not be maintained. But when the statute was modified the rule was modified accordingly, and it was thereafter held that trespass would lie for the unauthorized conversion of intoxicating liquors, even though they were intended for illegal sale in this State. Hamilton v. Goding, 55 Maine, 419; Bliss v. Winslow, 80 Maine, 274; Adams v. McGlinchy, 66 Maine, 474. In Mohney v. Cook, supra, the question actually decided was that a party who [278]*278erects an obstruction in a navigable stream, and thereby occasions an injury to another, cannot, in an action for such injury, set up as a defense, that the plaintiff was unlawfully engaged in worldly employment on Sunday, when the injury occurred.

It will be seen in the illustrations which we have given, that a remedy has been refused, because the plaintiff’s right of action was directly connected with, or grew out of, a violation of law. But it is not unlawful for a pedler, with or without license, to put up at an inn. The plaintiff did not lodge at the defendant’s inn as a pedler, but as an individual. As a property owner merely he intrusted his property to the defendant’s safe keeping. It was not unlawful for him to eat, drink and be sheltered in an inn, nor to deliver, or offer to deliver, his money and other property to the innkeeper for safe custody. If his property consisted of merchandise carried by him for the purpose of sale, without a license, in violation of law, it was none the less property. A pedler may lawfully care for and protect his property. If he exposes it for sale, or sells it, without license, he may be fined. No penalty attaches to the merchandise itself. It cannot be seized or forfeited. It is neither contraband nor outlawed. The rights and liabilities which exist between the innkeeper and his guest, who is a pedler, are created by law, and grow out of the relation between them, and are in no degree dependent upon the purpose of the owner to sell the goods at some future time, without license. It is, therefore, the opinion of the court that even if the plaintiff had no license to peddle, that fact would not constitute a defense to this action, and that the requested instruction was properly refused.

II. The evidence tended to show that the defendant’s stable, where the plaintiff’s peddle-cart was kept, was a livery stable, unconnected with the inn, and known by the plaintiff to be so. The defendant directed the plaintiff to take his horse and cart to the stable. The plaintiff did so, and there put them into the care of the defendant’s hostler.

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Bluebook (online)
40 L.R.A. 491, 39 A. 1030, 91 Me. 274, 1898 Me. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-manuel-me-1898.