Hotel Commander, Inc. v. Dunn

13 Mass. App. Dec. 96
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 6, 1957
DocketNo. 4973
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Mass. App. Dec. 96 (Hotel Commander, Inc. v. Dunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hotel Commander, Inc. v. Dunn, 13 Mass. App. Dec. 96 (Mass. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

Connelly, J.

In this action of contract the plaintiff seeks to recover for use and occupation by the defendant of Apartment No. 619 in the plaintiff’s hotel for the month of September, 1935. The answer is a general denial, and also that the defendant did not have the use and occupation as alleged for the month of September, 1953, having vacated and surrendered his rooms at the end of August, 1933, that prior to September, 1953, he was a guest or lodger at the plaintiff’s hotel and was not a tenant at will, that as a guest or lodger he gave timely notice early in August, 1933, to the plaintiff of his intention to vacate his rooms by the end of August, 1933, that he did so vacate and surrender his rooms at the end of August, 1935, with the further allegation that as a guest at the plaintiff’s hotel he suffered the loss of certain articles of wearing apparel and personal baggage from his rooms of a value in excess of Fifty ($30.00) Dollars, for which loss the plaintiff as an innholder is responsible.

The plaintiff duly made the following Requests for Rulings:

1. On all the evidence the Court must find for the plaintiff.
2. On all the evidence the Court must find against the defendant.
3. A person or persons occupying premises owned by a landlord without a written lease for which the landlord receives rent payable by the month is a tenant-at-w'ill on a month to month basis.
4. A tenant-at-will in order to terminate such tenancy must give the landlord three months’ written notice of intention to terminate and if the rent reserved is payable at periods of less than three months, the time of such notice must be equal to the interval between the days of payment.
5. A tenancy-at-will is similar to a tenancy from month to month basis.
[98]*986. A tenancy-at-will is created by an express agreement or one implied from the conduct of the parties.
7. A landlord may waive legal notice of intent to terminate a tenancy-at-will without waiving rights to such legal notice of such intent to terminate on subsequent occasions.

The court made the following Findings and Rulings:

This is an action of contract whereby the plaintiff seeks to recover rent for suite No. 619 in the Hotel Commander for the month of September, 1935. The plaintiff owns and carries on its hotel business in a six story building in Cambridge. It rents rooms to transient guests and it has public dining rooms on the first floor. It also rents suites of rooms to persons whom it classifies as "permanent guests” and at the time of trial it had thirty-five "permanent guests.” All other rooms are rented or are available for transient guests of the plaintiff.
The defendant first took rooms with the plaintiff in 1952. When it was agreed with the plaintiff that he was to pay $175.00 per month, but that if he remained for a period of more than one year the rent would be "rolled back” so that he would pay $150.00 per month. The defendant did stay for one year and the rent was so "rolled back.” He was classified by the plaintiff as a "permanent guest.” On 7 March, 1954 he moved away from the hotel. The plaintiff charged him $30.00 for six days in March on a basis of $5.00 per day and he paid this plus incidental expenses (phone calls, etc.). On 10 May, 1954 he returned to the plaintiff’s hotel. At that time he took over suite No. 619. The charge made by the plaintiff for the month of May, 1954 ran from 10 May to x June, twenty-two days @ $5.00 per day totaling $110.00 plus incidental expenses which was paid by the defendant on 28 May, 1954. From [99]*991 June to October 1, 1954, the defendant continued to pay $150.00 per month plus incidentals for the suite.
The defendant was married 1 October, 1954. On 4 October, 1954 his wife came to live with him in the suite. The plaintiff increased the charge for the suite from $150.00 to $175.00 per month because two people were living there instead of one as formerly. The plaintiff’s bill rendered to the defendant for the month of October, 1954 charged the defendant for three days (1 October-4 October) on a basis of $150.00 per month $14.49 and f°r twenty-eight days (4 October-1 November) on a basis of $175.00 per month $157.92 a total of $172.41. This bill plus incidentals was paid by the defendant on 25 October, 1954.
During the occupancy of the suite by the defendant, electricity and heat were provided by the plaintiff. The suite was furnished by the plaintiff. The plaintiff provided maid service daily, cleaning, towels, bed linen and also provided for garbage disposal. Service deliveries for the defendant were made at the hotel receiving room and brought to the defendant’s suite by the plaintiff’s bellboys. Telephone service was through the plaintiff’s switchboard, the defendant paying for calls at the time he paid his bill for the suite which was rendered monthly. The plaintiff furnished silver and china for the defendant.
Admission to suite No. 619 was gained through keys furnished to the defendant by the plaintiff and also by a master key held by the plaintiff. The suite consisted of a combination bedroom-living room, dinette, kitchenette and bath. The kitchenette was a complete kitchen.
A few days before 15 August, 1955 the defendant notified the plaintiff’s manager that he was leaving the apartment on the first of September [100]*100following. On 15 August, 1955 Mr. Frank A. K. Boland, Managing Director of the plaintiff, wrote to the defendant and told him that the defendant was a tenant-at-will and that the plaintiff should receive a written notice of the defendant’s intent to terminate before the next rent date and thereafter, the tenancy would continue for one month and that if notice was given, rent would have to be paid until the first of October. On 30 August, 1953 the defendant wrote to Mr. Boland stating that he was vacating apartment No. 619 on Wednesday, 31 August, 1955; that the notice which he was so giving in no way constituted a recognition of the plaintiff’s claim that the relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant was a tenancy-at-will and specifically denying on the part of the defendant that such relationship existed.
On 31 August, 1935 the defendant moved out his possessions from the suite, turned in his key to the desk clerk and paid his last charges for incidentals during the month of August. The defendant had made no further payment to the plaintiff. The suite No. 619 remained unoccupied during the month of September, 1953.
In his answer the defendant claims that the plaintiff is liable for certain property, to wit: a clock and certain feminine underwear which disappeared from the suite occupied by the defendant. Disregarding correctness of the form of pleading in which this claim is alleged by the defendant, I find that the clock is not personal baggage and therefore the plaintiff by virtue of G. L. c. 140, §10 is not liable for its loss. In regard to the underwear, I find it was not the property of the defendant but of his wife and therefore cannot be set-off or recouped by him in this action.
[101]

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Bluebook (online)
13 Mass. App. Dec. 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotel-commander-inc-v-dunn-massdistctapp-1957.