Edwards Hotel Co. v. Terry

187 So. 518, 185 Miss. 824, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 137
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1939
DocketNo. 33605.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 187 So. 518 (Edwards Hotel Co. v. Terry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards Hotel Co. v. Terry, 187 So. 518, 185 Miss. 824, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 137 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

*830 McG-ehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

As an invited guest of the Jitney-Jungle Stores and McCarty-Holman Company, the appellee attended an annual banquet and dance tendered the employees of these companies one evening at the Edwards Hotel in Jackson, when his automobile was stealthily and feloniously taken and carried away from the hotel’s free parking lot, and *831 thereafter wrecked, damaged, and rendered almost worthless by the act of a stranger who came on the parking lot from the direction of the hotel building at about 1 o’clock in the morning — the approximate hour for the closing of the entertainment — and called for the car, accurately describing it to the attendant in charge by giving him the make, model, and color, as being a 1936 model, grey Plymouth Sedan; lead the way to its location on the crowded lot; examined the license tag' number; further assured the attendant of the correctness of the identification by mentioning some dent or bent place on the car near the license tag; showed impatience and resentment because of the cautious attitude of the attendant when he tried to make sure that the car was being taken by the true owner; and who then got in it and drove away. The key had been left in the ignition, at the suggestion of the attendant, when the appellee parked the car upon his arrival at the lot about 8 o ’clock that evening, in order that it might be moved about on the parking lot, “as was frequently necessary” according to an allegation made in the declaration. This was done under a rule adopted and enforced by the “gas man” who had no connection with the appellant hotel company, except as lessee of a part of the lot where he was operating a filling station.

Except for the length of time that the attendant (who was a colored boy working on the lot only for the tips that he might receive from car owners parking there) testified that he had been assisting and directing the parking of the cars, there was but little substantial evidence, if any, that he was in fact the servant of appellant, he having stated that he received his orders and instructions mostly from a Mr. Williford, the operator of the Hines Motor Company and the filling station; and who also said that the “gas man” was the one who put him to work there. He did say, however, that the assistant manager of the hotel knew that he was working on the lot and gave him instructions merely to the extent *832 of telling him not to charge guests for parking their cars there.

However, for the purpose of this decision, we may assume that the attendant was employed as a servant of the appellant hotel company; and, from this premise, determine whether the relationship of the appellant to the appellee was that of innkeeper and guest, bailor and bailee, or landowner and invitee, so as to ascertain the degree of care required for the safekeeping of the car in question.

The declaration alleged that appellee took advantage of the parking lot “as an invitee,’’ but it also contained other allegations which, if established by the proof, would tend to create the relationship of innkeeper and guest. The proof, however, in fact disclosed that the Jitney-Jungle Stores and McCarty-Holman Company, as hosts of their employees, arranged with the hotel management for the use of the convention hall, mezzanine floor, cloakrooms and certain other facilities in connection therewith; that a separate arrangement with the U-Drive It Garage was made for the storing and safekeeping of the cars of the banquet guests on that evening; and that it was not contemplated by the hosts of the appellee that the hotel was obligated, under this contract at least, to furnish the parking space. It appears however that neither appellee, nor his wife who' was an employee of Jitney-Jungle, were advised of this, separate arrangement. He therefore had the right to park his car on the free parking lot as a guest of the' guests of the hotel, according to the usual custom and practice acquiesced in by the hotel as to anyone having-occasion to visit a guest of the hotel for any purpose.

From this it does not necessarily follow that the relation of innkeeper and guest between the hotel and appellee was created in the sense of imposing the common law liability of an innkeeper, such as made an innkeeper an insurer of the property of the guest except as to a loss occasioned by an act of God or the negligence of the *833 guest himself. That is to say, there did not exist in the case at bar those reciprocal rights and liabilities between appellant and appellee upon which the strict common law liability of innkeeper and guest could be predicated. Appellee was not responsible to appellant for the price of his plate at the banquet, nor did appellant acquire a lien upon any property of the appellee for the enforcement of its collection. Such liability for compensation to the hotel rested alone upon the hosts of appellee. Neither was the appellant required to serve appellee at the banquet as a member of the general public. None of the guests of the hotel that evening were entitled, as such, to be present at the banquet. Only those were entitled to attend who were especially invited by the Jitney-Jungle Stores and McCarty-Holman Company. It was held in the case of Amey v. Winchester, 68 N. H. 447, 39 A. 487, 39 L. R. A. 760, 73 Am. St. Rep. 614, that a guest attending a banquet, where he lost his hat, was not the guest of the operator of the inn, but was merely the guest of the club giving the banquet; that one who provided a banquet as caterer under a contract with the club, without any claim or lien for compensation against its guests, was not an innkeeper as to such guest. As opposed to the rule announced in that case, the appellee cites the more recent case of O’Malley v. Penn Athletic Club, 119 Pa. Super. 584, 181 A. 370, wherein liability was imposed upon the Penn Athletic Club which furnished a banquet at the instance of the League of the Sacred Heart, and at which banquet the plaintiff, as the guest of the League of the Sacred Heart, lost her expensive fur coat, which disappeared from the cloak-room furnished by the Penn Athletic Club as one of the facilities for use in connection with the banquet hall. A careful examination of the opinion in that case reveals however that the liability was predicated by the court upon the negligence of the athletic club, and not upon the theory that the club was an innkeeper as to the plaintiff and liable as such. Moreover, in that *834 case the club failed to satisfactorily account for the nondelivery of the coat. It does not appear whether there was a conversion of the coat by some servant or employee of the club or whether it was stolen by some third person. Its disappearance was wholly unaccounted for by any proof offered by the club, and the fact that it may have been stolen by some third person was not disclosed by the proof offered on behalf of the plaintiff, as was done in the case at bar. It was shown that the attendants at the cloak-room took special notice of the fact at the time the coat was checked that it was quite expensive and valuable; and the court held that consequently a greater care was required than would ordinarily have been required in regard to an article so checked, especially where troupers or entertainers were using the cloak-room as an ávenue of passage to and from the stage.

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Bluebook (online)
187 So. 518, 185 Miss. 824, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-hotel-co-v-terry-miss-1939.