Coquelet v. Union Hotel Co.

115 A. 813, 139 Md. 544, 1921 Md. LEXIS 186
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 1, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 115 A. 813 (Coquelet v. Union Hotel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coquelet v. Union Hotel Co., 115 A. 813, 139 Md. 544, 1921 Md. LEXIS 186 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In June, 1919, Henriette Coquelet went from Washington to the City of Baltimore with her husband, Lieutenant Henri Coquelet. The trip was one of recreation. The lieutenant had been seriously wounded in the world war, besides having been exposed to shell shock on several occasions. He was at the time in exceedingly poor health as the result of this experience and, though in some way attached to the French Embassy in Washington, was hardly in a condition to perform any duties involving close application.

The afternoon was spent in Baltimore and in the evening Lieutenant and Madame Coquelet visited a moving picture show somewhere apparently in the center of the city. At the conclusion of the show, Lieutenant Coquelet was feeling badly and attributed it to lack of nourishment, and accordingly the couple strolled up the street past the Caswell Hotel, which was operated by the Union Hotel Company, where they dropped into the grill room for supper.

Before the supper was over Lieutenant Coquelet found himself feeling worse, and proposed to his wife that they remain in Baltimore over night, to which she assented. He accordingly left the table, went to the office of the hotel, and registered as Henri Coquelet and wife. Having registered, he inquired the price of rooms, was told the price of the rooms and, according to the testimony of Madame Coquelet, was told, after the clerk had learned that they had no baggage, that they could not be accommodated at the hotel with a room. He returned to the grill room, where he reported the substance of the interview he had just had to his wife, and at the conclusion of their repast both of them entered the office, and Madame Coquelet went to the clerk in charge, F. G, *546 Murray, and asked for the reason that they were refused lodging for the night.

According to Madame Ooquelet’s own testimony, she was attired in a “fluffy French dress and picture hat and some other things,” and the clerk declined to give any reason for his refusal to give them a room and, upon her insistence for a reason, asked if he thought they were not married. To this he made no response, but invited them to leave, and by her own testimony she “assumed” that the reason of it was that he had doubt as to their being married.

She inquired for the manager of the hotel, and Mr. Busick, the assistant manager of the company, having charge of this particular hotel, coming in about that time, the conversation was continued with him, and he declined to recede from the position which had been taken by Mr. Murray. Thereupon Lieutenant and Madame Coquelet left the Caswell and went to another hotel, and a few days later Madame Coquelet instituted the present action against the hotel company.

The testimony on behalf of the hotel company discloses some variations from that given by Madame Coquelet, but hardly of a sufficiently serious character to call for more than this passing comment.

At the trial of the case, eight bills of exceptions were reserved, seven of which related to rulings upon evidence, and the eighth to the ruling of the court upon the prayers.

At the time of the filing of the declaration and the amended declaration, demurrers were interposed. The demurrers to the first and second counts were overruled, and that to the third sustained. The burden of the third count of the declaration was that, ffie act of the defendant was malicious, as forming a basis for a finding of punitive damages.

Ordinarily a case stated in the language of thisi third count would have so far justified the finding as to have made the count good, and if there had been any evidence to sustain the theory of the plaintiffs on the question of malice, it would have been necessary to hold that, in sustaining the *547 demurrer to this count, the court committed an error. When, however, the evidence is examined, there is nothing in any manner to hear out the allegation of malice, and consequently no reversible error can be predicated upon the action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer, since it would have presented merely an error without injury. The exceptions upon the questions of evidence are in a very similar position. Thus the question asked of the plaintiff by her counsel upon re-examination, objection to which was sustained by the court, was: “Counsel on the other side asked whether there was any hostility on the part of the clerk after you had engaged him in conversation. Was there actual hostility, could you tell that hisi remarks were hostile from his tone ?”

By this the plaintiff was asked to state whether there was any hostility manifested toward her by the hotel clerk, not in what he said, but in the tone in which he said it. This method of proving malice is very close to the border line^ for, as was said in Beeler v. Jackson, 64 Md. 589, “The plaintiff is bound to prove the existence of malice as the real motive of the defendant’s language, but it is not necessary to prove that there was personal spite or ill-will toward the plaintiff. * * * Evidence of any act or circumstances tending to show the want of good faith may be offered to show the existence of malice.”

So far as the plaintiff was concerned, there was no language used by the clerk, Murray, or by Mr. Busick, which was in itself necessarily slander. It is perfectly true that to accuse any woman, whether married or unmarried, of unchastity, is slanderous, but no such accusation, by the plaintiff’s evidence, was made, except as she assumed it to have been intended by the tone of the employee with whom she was talking, and this is entirely too remote upon which to predicate a recovery of punitive damages.

This aspect of the case, namely malice, was elaborately considered in the case of Brinsfield v. Howeth, 107 Md. 284, wherein was repeated that which has been the long recognized *548 rule in this State, that words are to be construed in the plain, popular sense in which people would naturally understand them, or if there were extrinsic circumstances by reason of which a different meaning was understood by the hearers at the time that the words were uttered, these facts should be alleged by the way of inducement; that the innuendo cannot enlarge the natural and ordinary meaning of the words.

Thus far nothing has been said of the testimony offered on behalf of the defense. By that testimony, no such conversation as that narrated by Madame Coquelet took place with the clerk, Murray, and she, in describing her conversation with Mr. Busick, does not seem to make any point of anything improper either in the language, tone or manner of Mr. Busick. The plaintiff further testified that for the purpose of identifying herself, free from any imputation, she presented her card to Mr. Murray and, while Murray denies this, yet his testimony upon that point is not as conclusive as upon most others, but as she “assumed” that her conduct was impugned from Murray’s tone rather than from anything he said, and as her testimony fails to show that the conversation was! overheard by anyone, this discrepancy in the testimony amounts to but very little in this case.

This brings us to a consideration of the prayers.

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Bluebook (online)
115 A. 813, 139 Md. 544, 1921 Md. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coquelet-v-union-hotel-co-md-1921.