Goldstein v. Healy

201 P. 462, 187 Cal. 206, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 348
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1921
DocketS. F. No. 9414.
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 201 P. 462 (Goldstein v. Healy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldstein v. Healy, 201 P. 462, 187 Cal. 206, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 348 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

SHURTLEFF, J.

Plaintiff in his second amended complaint alleged that at the time of the commencement of the action he was a minor under the age of twenty-one years, and that Ben Goldstein was the duly appointed, qualified, and acting guardian of his person and estate; “that on or about the fifth day of July, 1919, the defendants [there being one fictitious defendant] . . . were conducting and maintaining at Monte Rio, in the county of Sonoma, state of California, a summer resort and hotel for the accommodation of the public. . . . That as a part of the said summer resort and hotel and as living quarters for its guests and their invitees the defendants maintained a tent set upon a wooden platform.” That to prevent persons occupying, visiting, or being upon said platform from falling therefrom, and to protect persons who were thereon, the defendants erected, placed, and maintained on the outer edge thereof, “a railing made of wood about three inches to four inches in diameter,” which railing was “fastened upon the said platform about three or four feet above the floor of the said platform by means of timbers and braces.” That said railing at all the times in the amended complaint mentioned, *209 “consisted of decomposed and rotten wood . . . negligently and carelessly maintained in said condition by the said defendants, all of which was unknown to the said plaintiff. . . . That on or about the fifth day of July, 1919, the plaintiff herein was present upon the said platform at the invitation and request of a guest of the said hotel and summer resort, to whom the tent on the said platform had been assigned by the said defendants as living quarters; and that while on said platform as aforesaid and while standing on said platform talking to the said guest of defendants and with his back to said railing around the said platform as hereinbefore described, and relying upon said railing as aforesaid as protection against falling over ■ and off from the said platform the said plaintiff rested his hands lightly upon the said railing as aforesaid, and thereupon and by reason of the said rottenness and decomposition of the said wood of which the said railing consisted as aforesaid, and by reason of the carelessness and negligence of the defendants in so maintaining said railing, and not otherwise, the said railing gave way and broke, thereby precipitating and causing the plaintiff to fall off the said platform and to the ground below, a distance of about twenty feet and causing the plaintiff to strike upon his head and body.” It is further alleged that plaintiff, by reason of his alleged fall, sustained certain enumerated physical injuries, incurred numerous specified expenses, and lost one month’s salary. The prayer of the complaint is for five thousand dollars damages.

As we have said, there was one fictitious defendant who was never served, and for that reason, following the briefs, we will hereafter use the singular number.

The foregoing is a comprehensive statement of the allegations of the amended complaint which are material to this inquiry. To this complaint defendant, Healy, demurred generally upon the ground that it failed to state a cause of action, and specially that it was ambiguous and uncertain in that it was not alleged therein, and could not be ascertained therefrom, whether the decomposed and rotten condition of the railing “was apparent and patent, or concealed and latent”; “what caused said railing to give way and break”; “for what purpose was plaintiff present on said platform,” or at whose invitation; what caused plaintiff *210 to fall from the platform, or to fall upon or against the railing, or how “the giving way and breaking of the railing caused plaintiff to fall.”

The demurrer was sustained without leave to amend, and judgment entered' in favor of defendant for costs. It is from this judgment that this appeal is prosecuted.

[1] While it is well settled that a demurrer admits the truth of all facts that are well pleaded in the complaint, it does not, however, confess any omitted circumstance which is indispensable to the cause of action upon which it is based, or essential to remedy an allegation specially challenged for uncertainty or ambiguity. [2] All that is required of a plaintiff, even as against a special demurrer, is that he set forth in his complaint the essential facts of his case with reasonable precision and with particularity sufficiently specific to acquaint the defendant of the nature, source, and extent of his cause of action.

A few general observations touching the relations of the parties and their corresponding duties and liabilities, as disclosed by the amended complaint, will conduce to a clearer understanding of the questions to be determined.

[3] A guest of an inn or hotel may be defined as one who receives accommodations or entertainment therein, usually for compensation. (Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Lowe, 28 Neb. 239, [26 Am. St. Rep. 325, 6 L. R. A. 809, 44 N. W. 226]; Manning v. Wells, 28 Tenn. 746, [51 Am. Dec. 688]; Schouler’s Bailments and Carriers, 3d ed., 282.) While this definition seems simple of application, it is, nevertheless, not always easy to determine whether the person claiming such relation is in fact a guest within its meaning, but no such difficulty arises here, for it is clear from the complaint that plaintiff was not upon the hotel property of defendant in that capacity. The allegation of the complaint is that'plaintiff was upon the platform, from which he fell, “at the invitation and request of a guest of the said hotel.” Plaintiff makes no claim whatever in his pleading that he in any manner, as a guest, availed himself of the accommodations which the hotel afforded. [4] He states he was at the defendant’s inn in response to an invitation of a guest, who, we hold, in extending such invitation, was clearly acting within his rights, for, in the absence of a regulation or agreement to the contrary, a guest of a hotel may, as a *211 matter of right, under such reasonable restrictions and regulations as the management may impose, invite unobjectionable persons to visit him at the inn for lawful purposes and at proper times. It is common knowledge that this right is universally accorded guests of hotels, and that it is a necessary public convenience. It is more than a privilege; it is, as we have said, a right which cannot be withheld except for good cause, as long as the relation of innkeeper and guest continues; it is one of the accommodations of the service which a hotel gives its patrons. [5] To all such invitees, and such was the status of plaintiff, the innkeeper owes the duty of at all times maintaining his hotel premises in a reasonably safe condition, and of exercising reasonable care to protect them while in the hotel and in the part thereof open to the public, from personal injury through his negligence. But this duty does not obtain in eases where the injury to the invitee was due to a patent defect, or .structural insecurity in the hotel premises or its equipment, so that, in the instant case, if the alleged “rotten and decomposed” condition of the railing was patent, the plaintiff cannot recover. As said by Hawley, District Judge, in Ten Broeck v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 P. 462, 187 Cal. 206, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldstein-v-healy-cal-1921.