Hundley v. Milner Hotel Management Co.

114 F. Supp. 206, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3945
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedJuly 21, 1953
DocketCiv. No. 661
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 114 F. Supp. 206 (Hundley v. Milner Hotel Management Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hundley v. Milner Hotel Management Co., 114 F. Supp. 206, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3945 (W.D. Ky. 1953).

Opinion

SHELBOURNE, Chief Judge.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Gertrude Hundley, sued Milner Hotels and C. F. Madden for false imprisonment and wrongful eviction. The jury returned a verdict in her favor and assessed damages as $1,754.

Defendant Milner Hotels was awarded $75 on its counterclaim for rent and storage charges.

Defendants move for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial on the following grounds

1. There was no wrongful eviction.

2. There was no substantial evidence that Madden (the hotel manager) imprisoned Mrs. Hundley.

3. The verdict was excessive.

4. A verdict against Milner for wrongful imprisonment cannot be sustained because Madden had no authority to lock in. Mrs. Hundley.

The other grounds for relief mentioned in the motion for judgment, or, in the alternative, for a new trial should be regarded as waived.

The above grounds will be considered in the order listed.

Questions Presented

There was no wrongful eviction.

This contention seems to be without merit, although the Court may have erred in charging the jury that a forcible detain-er action is a requisite to a legal eviction. See Burford v. Krause, D.C.D.C., 89 F. Supp. 818, where the Court said there inay be a right of reentry without a lawsuit.

However, the error, if there was one, is immaterial, in view of the fact that Milner in fact had no right of reentry with or without legal action.

A. The character of Mrs. Hundley’s occupancy

Was Mrs. Hundley a tenant or a guest?

[208]*208These facts support a finding that she was a tenant:

1. Her rooms were not furnished by Milner but <by herself.
2. Milner did not furnish maid service.

3. She used her rooms for housekeeping; could and did prepare meals in them.

4. She was not a transient.
5. On occasion she did minor decorating and repairing.
6. She paid for her accommodations monthly.

These facts support a finding that she was a guest:

1. Her quarters were in the Earle Hotel, where all the rooms except one other set were occupied by transients.

2. The hotel kept a key to her premises.
3. The hotel made some repairs in the premises.

4. Mrs. -Hundley had access to her rooms through a public hall and the lobby of the hotel.

5. Milner supplied electricity, water, and heat.

Both parties have cited numerous authorities for their respective contentions, but Kentucky law governs, and the parties have not cited convincing Kentucky authority.

The Court of Appeals has spoken of “the almost indistinguishable line separating the relationship of innkeeper and guest from that of landlord and boarder.” Goodyear T. & R. Company v. Altamont Springs Hotel Company, 206 Ky. 494, 497, 267 S.W. 555, 556.

The general distinction between tenant and guest is stated as follows in 32 C.J. Innkeepers, § 3, pp. 529-530.

“In legal contemplation, neither an apartment hotel nor a lodging house, nor a boarding 'house is an inn, even though a register is kept and the word ‘hotel’ appears on its stationery. The distinction between a hotel or inn and a boarding house or lodging house is that the former is for the accommodation of all persons who choose to come and who are in a condition fit to be received, without any prior or express agreement as to duration of their stay, while the latter is for the accommodation of such persons as the proprietor chooses to receive under an express contract, for a certain period of time and at a certain rate. There is nothing inconsistent or unusual, however, in a house of public entertainment having a double character, being simultaneously a boarding house and cm inn. With respect to those who occupy rooms and are entertained on a special contract, it may be a boarding house; and in respect to transient persons, who without a stipulated contract remain from day to day, it is an inn. * * * (Emphasis supplied.) See also, 43 C.J.S., Innkeepers, § 1.

Under this statement of the general law, Mrs. Hundley may or may not have been a tenant, but she was not a guest. The relationship of innkeeper and guest did not exist between Milner and her. This means that Milner did not possess, as to Mrs. Hundley, the summary remedies which ancient common law and present day statutes give an innkeeper.

B. What was the nature of Mrs. Hundley’s occupancy?

She had lived in the hotel for a number of years but had no written contract with Milner. During the time preceding April 15, 1952, she had occupied her premises under an oral agreement whereby she paid $25 per month in advance on or before the fifteenth of each month. This-arrangement constituted her a tenant from month to month. Pack v. Feuchtenberger, 232 Ky. 267, 270, 22 S.W.2d 914, 916.

“A distinction must be made between a letting from month to month and a letting for the term of one month, sometimes called, in our opinions, a letting by the month.” J. W. Reccius & Bros. v. Columbia Finance & Trust Company, 120 Ky. 478, 86 S.W. 1113, 27 Ky.Law Rep. 880.
“The latter is a letting for a fixed definite term, that is for one month. Under the statutes, Sec. 2296, where a tenant has a lease for less than a year terminable on a certain day, it is his [209]*209duty to surrender the premises on that day, and no notice is necessary in order for the landlord to recover possession of the premises. The reason for this is obvious, since the day of the termination is known both by the landlord and the tenant and each can govern himself accordingly. Where, however, the case is from month to month, a notice of the election to terminate the lease is necessary.”

Tiffany, Landlord and Tenant, Sec. 14c; 35 C.J. 1116, 51 C.J.S., Landlord & Tenant, § 150. The reason for this rule is equally obvious since a lease from month to month is a lease for an indeterminate period with monthly rental reserved. Tiffany, Landlord and Tenant, Sec. 14C; 35 C.J. 1106, 51 C.J.S, Landlord and Tenant, § 146. And in order that the parties to the lease may fairly govern themselves, it is necessary that each should have some notice when the other intends to bring the lease to an end. Therefore, when the lease is from month to month, a month’s notice to terminate the lease is necessary. 35 C.J. 1116; 51 C.J.S., Landlord and Tenant, § 150. Tiffany, Landlord & Tenant, Secs. 14C, 196C.

The notice in writing which Milner sent Mrs. Hundley on March 6, 1952, was not a notice to quit; it was a notice that Milner intended to raise her rent to $50 per month beginning April 15, 1952. It created an obligation in Mrs. Hundley to give a thirty-day notice to quit Milner if she intended not to continue her tenancy at the increased rent.

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