Knodle v. Waikiki Gateway Hotel, Inc.

742 P.2d 377, 69 Haw. 376, 1987 Haw. LEXIS 96
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1987
DocketNO. 9392
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 742 P.2d 377 (Knodle v. Waikiki Gateway Hotel, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knodle v. Waikiki Gateway Hotel, Inc., 742 P.2d 377, 69 Haw. 376, 1987 Haw. LEXIS 96 (haw 1987).

Opinion

*380 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

NAKAMURA, J.

Linda Kay Knodle, a flight attendant then employed by Continental Air Lines, Inc., was murdered by George Patrick Murphy on November 26, 1974 in the Waikiki Gateway Hotel. John Knodle, her father, suing on his own behalf and as the administrator of her estate, brought a multi-count tort action in the Circuit Court of the First Circuit against Murphy, Continental Air Lines, and the hotel, its owners, and its operators. After default was entered against Murphy and summary judgment was awarded to Continental Air Lines, 1 the negligence claims against the remaining defendants were tried before a jury. The jury, on interrogatories propounded by the trial judge, returned a special verdict finding Waikiki Gateway Hotel Associates, Hyatt Corporation, Continental-Kalakaua Hotel Corp., and Northridge Industries, Inc., the hotel’s owners and operators, each “had a duty to take reasonable measures to safeguard Linda Kay Knodle from the foreseeable criminal acts of third parties,” but none of them “breached that duty.” The plaintiff appeals from the judgment that followed, urging the trial judge erred by not permitting “evidence of all reported criminal activity at and near the hotel” to be admitted at trial, by improperly instructing the jury “on proximate causation and foreseeability,” and by not granting “judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, at the least, a new trial.”

We are satisfied from a careful review of the record that the trial judge’s rulings on the admissibility of evidence of “reported criminal activity at and near the hotel” were correct. But after reading the court’s instructions, we conclude the judge committed reversible error, as the plaintiff avers, in instructing the jury that “[a]n act is reasonably foreseeable if it appears to have been ordi *381 nary or usual under all the circumstances.” 2 We are convinced the judge’s charge to the jury did not provide “such explanation and instruction concerning the matter ... submitted as [was] necessary to enable the jury to make its findings” in other respects too. Hawaii Rules of Civil Procedure (HRCP) 49(a).

I.

A.

Linda Knodle arrived in Honolulu on the fateful day at about 2:00 a.m. on a Continental Air Lines flight from Guam. She was not one of the attendants assigned to duty on the flight; she was “riding on a pass given by her employer and going back to Chicago” for the Thanksgiving holiday. Shortly after the plane landed, the two flight attendants who “worked” the flight left the airport in a taxicab to go to the Waikiki Gateway Hotel, where Continental’s flight crews were housed during “layovers” in Honolulu. Linda Knodle could not leave with them because she was detained in Customs. She caught a ride later with several Continental pilots and reached the hotel shortly before 5:00 a.m.

When they arrived, the pilots carried Linda Knodle’s bags into the lobby. She went to the front desk where she was greeted by the Assistant Manager and the Night Auditor, both of whom she knew from previous stays at the hotel. She then asked the Night Auditor to place a telephone call to the pilot who had been the Captain of the flight from Guam. After a half-hour conversation with the Captain, in which they talked about the possibility of having a party on his boat but decided not to, Ms. Knodle resumed her conversation with the two hotel employees. The pilots with whom she rode to the hotel were gone, having left earlier upon learning the Captain was reluctant to host a party.

Ms. Knodle then started to fill out a guest registration card. But before she finished, she asked the Assistant Manager about the two *382 attendants on the flight from Guam and the rooms they were occupying. Upon learning one was in a room with two beds, she asked for a key to the room, Room 1006. The Assistant Manager handed her a key to the tenth-floor room and tore up the registration card. Ms. Knodle then carried two pieces of her luggage to one of the hotel’s three elevators and went back to fetch the remaining bags.

Meanwhile, George Murphy came into the lobby, walked to the elevators, and entered the one in which Ms. Knodle had placed her bags. The Assistant Manager saw this and yelled, “[h]old the elevator.” Murphy held the door open while Ms. Knodle picked up the rest of her luggage and entered the elevator. The door then closed, and the elevator ascended to the upper floors. The two employees at the front desk resumed what they had been doing earlier.

At about 6:30 a.m., the Night Auditor was informed by a guest who was checking out that there was “some extra luggage [in] the elevator.” The Auditor removed the bags from the elevator and took them to the front desk. When he examined the luggage tags, he realized the bags belonged to Ms. Knodle. He discussed the matter with the Assistant Manager, but they decided not to disturb her because they assumed she was asleep in her room.

A maintenance man who came to work at 7:00 a.m. found the key to a tenth-floor guest room later on in a fourth-floor hallway. He “noticed ... the key didn’t belong on that floor,” asked the first guest he saw whether the guest had misplaced the key to his room, and “took the key downstairs to the clerk’s counter” thereafter, telling the desk clerk “I found the key on the fourth floor.”

Shortly after 9:00 a.m., Linda Knodle’s body was discovered in a restroom adjoining the laundry room on the fourth floor. A guest came upon Ms. Knodle’s inert form, assumed she was ill, and called the Manager, informing him that “someone is ill in the bathroom.” The Manager responded to the call, but discovered she was dead. She had been strangled to death by George Patrick Murphy sometime between 5:15 a.m. and 9:00 a.m.

B.

John Knodle filed suit on November 24, 1976, nearly two years after the lamentable occurrence. His first complaint named Mur *383 phy, Waikiki Gateway Hotel, Inc. and John Does 1 through 20 as defendants and alleged, inter alia, that Murphy “brutally assaulted and murdered [Linda Kay Knodle] on the premises of the Waikiki Gateway Hotel” and Waikiki Gateway Hotel, Inc. and Does 1 through 5 did not “provide safe accommodations for... Linda Kay Knodle” and “adequate security to protect [her] from the unreasonable risk of physical harm.” Continental Air Lines and the owners and operators of the hotel were identified subsequently as the originálly unidentifiable defendants.

The plaintiff proceeded to trial against the hotel’s owners and operators after conducting extensive discovery and twice amending his complaint. The claims tried were: “(1) That the defendants were negligent; and (2) That the defendants acted wantonly and with reckless disregard for the safety of Linda Knodle.” The jury found the defendants had breached no duty owing to Linda Knodle, and John Knodle appeals from the judgment entered on the verdict returned by the jury.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
742 P.2d 377, 69 Haw. 376, 1987 Haw. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knodle-v-waikiki-gateway-hotel-inc-haw-1987.