H.K. Mallak, Inc. v. Fairfield FMC Corp.

33 F. Supp. 2d 748, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 557, 1999 WL 25259
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 21, 1999
Docket96-C-1207
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 33 F. Supp. 2d 748 (H.K. Mallak, Inc. v. Fairfield FMC Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H.K. Mallak, Inc. v. Fairfield FMC Corp., 33 F. Supp. 2d 748, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 557, 1999 WL 25259 (E.D. Wis. 1999).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

ADELMAN, District Judge.

In this diversity case the plaintiff, Eshagh Kashimallak, alleges that he was robbed of over $1 million in jewelry and precious gems at gunpoint in his room at the Fairfield Inn located in Brookfield, Wisconsin. He and the employer for whom he was carrying the jewelry and gems sue the hotel’s manager and operator for negligence in preventing the attack and theft.

I. THE UNDISPUTED FACTS

Kashimallak is a jewelry salesman fi-om New York whose territory includes Wisconsin. Kashimallak works for and is a part owner of plaintiff H.K. Mallak, Inc. On August 23,1995, Kashimallak, who had reserved a room prior to his arrival, checked into the Fairfield Inn in Brookfield at about 8:45 or 9:00 p.m. Prior to that date Kashimallak had stayed at the Fairfield Inn in Brookfield seven to eight times during business trips to Wisconsin. Defendant Fairfield FMC Corporation manages and operates the Fairfield Inn in Brookfield.

At the Fairfield Inn in Bi-ookfield, when a guest with a reservation checks in and gives the clerk his or her name, the clerk brings up the reservation on the computer, which lists the room type request, location preference and smoking preference. A guest is assigned a room number at that time. The clerk then completes a reservation card showing the room rate, date of departure, form of payment and room number. The guest signs the reservation card, the clerk hands the guest a plastic key card that opens the security door to the floor and the door to the guest’s room, and the clerk directs the guest to the room. A guest is not assigned a room number until he or she checks in at the front desk.

It only took two or three minutes for Kashimallak to check into the Fairfield Inn on August 23, 1995. He received a key card and at that time was assigned to room 334.

According to the Fairfield Inn’s general manager, Patricia Collins, the plastic key cards given to guests are “Ving” key cards: plastic cards about three inches by an inch and a half having holes at one end that match what is inside the door lock. Rooms are not ordinarily “rekeyed” between guests. When a guest checks out, he or she turns the cards back in; management does not change the lock.

Whenever a door is rekeyed it starts out with three keys. Between guests, the keys are kept together in the registration area such that a clerk checking a guest in can determine at that time how many key cards are there. Collins indicated at deposition that it sometimes happens that guests do not turn in their key cards when they leave. The Fairfield Inn in Brookfield has no protocol regarding any action to be taken if all three keys are not in place between guests. Instead, according to Collins, hotel policy states that only “if there were one or fewer keys, we should rekey the room or if a guest who was occupying the room feels uncomfortable, we should rekey the room at that point.” (Collins Dep. at 18.)

Room 334 had been rekeyed on August 19, 1995, after a guest in that room was evicted, so that the evicted party could not reenter the room. After the rekeying of the door lock, there were three new key cards for the room. Three individuals may have used the room between the rekeying and when Kashi-mallak checked in (see Perket Aff. at 26), and it is undisputed that at the time Kashimallak registered there were only two key cards remaining to room 334. Collins admitted at deposition that because a key was missing for room 334 there was a potential for the person with that key to be able to get back into the room. (Collins Dep. at 33.) It does not appear that Kashimallak was told of that possibility.

After he checked in, Kashimallak went directly to his room carrying two bags. One bag contained his personal items and the other bag contained jewelry. Kashimallak was also carrying jewelry in a special vest *751 hidden under his shirt. Kashimallak took the elevator to reach the third floor where his room was located. He did not see anyone on the elevator, nor did he see anyone from the time he left the elevator until the time he reached his room. Between the elevator and his room Kashimallak had to use his key card to get through a locked security door and gain access to the third floor.

Kashimallak reached room 334 and used his key card to enter. He went in, closed the door behind him and put on the chain lock, turned around, and took one step. Two masked individuals then attacked him inside the room. The two intruders punched Kashi-mallak in the head, threatened him with a gun, and robbed him of the jewelry he was carrying in the his bag and in his vest. The assailants made off with loose diamonds, bracelets, necklaces, pendants, earrings and solitaire diamonds. 1

Prior to and on August 23, 1995, the Fair-field Inn in Brookfield was in compliance with the provisions of Wis. Stat. § 254.80. Each room contained a Wisconsin Hotelkeeper’s Liability Placard, posted in compliance with section 254.80, advising and notifying guests that the hotel was not liable to any guest for loss of money, jewelry, precious metal or stones, personal ornaments or valuable papers that were not offered to the hotel for safekeeping.

The Fairfield Inn in Brookfield had many security measures in place on and before August 23,1995, in order to provide adequate protection for its guests. These measures included nightly security walks by hotel personnel to ensure that all rooms were closed and key cards were not sticking out of doors; the questioning of suspicious individuals on the premises; the assignment of room numbers only at the time of check-in; the refusal by staff to disclose other guests’ room numbers; the refusal by clerks to give out room keys without proper identification; the locking of the entire floor by a security door requiring a key card for entry; and patrolling of the hotel parking lots by the Brook-field Police Department.

The general manager of the Fairfield Inn recalled that the police had been called to the hotel twice because of a domestic dispute between a boyfriend and girlfriend and/or husband and wife, and the police were also called to the hotel to handle noise complaints.

According to the Brookfield police, the Fairfield Inn in Brookfield is located in an area with almost no erirne. Prior to August 23, 1995, the Fairfield Inn in Brookfield had no history of any armed robbery and assault of a guest and no history of any crime involving forced entry into a hotel room. Prior to August 23, 1995, the police could not recall any robberies that had occurred at any hotel or motel within the last ten years.

According to the police and police records, from January 1, 1993 through August 22, 1995, Brookfield police officers were called to the Fairfield Inn in Brookfield for two ambulance assists, one battery, one protective placement under Wis'. Stat. § 55.06(11), one false fire alarm, twelve field investigations, one fire assist, one theft and’ twenty-three vehicle lqckouts. The battery was reported on April 9,1995, by a Fairfield Inn clerk who was sprayed with pepper spray in the hotel parking lot when he approached an individual attempting to enter a vehicle.

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Related

H.K. Mallak, Inc. v. Fairfield Fmc Corp.
209 F.3d 960 (Seventh Circuit, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 F. Supp. 2d 748, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 557, 1999 WL 25259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hk-mallak-inc-v-fairfield-fmc-corp-wied-1999.