K.S.K. Jewelry Co., Inc., a New York Corporation v. Chicago Sheraton Corporation, an Illinois Corporation

283 F.2d 8
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 21, 1960
Docket12931_1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 283 F.2d 8 (K.S.K. Jewelry Co., Inc., a New York Corporation v. Chicago Sheraton Corporation, an Illinois Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K.S.K. Jewelry Co., Inc., a New York Corporation v. Chicago Sheraton Corporation, an Illinois Corporation, 283 F.2d 8 (7th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

CASTLE, Circuit Judge.

E.S.E. Jewelry Co., Inc., plaintiff-ap-pellee, brought this diversity action *9 against Chicago Sheraton Corporation, defendant-appellant, operator of a Chicago, Illinois, hotel, to recover damages for the loss of two sample cases containing jewelry which plaintiff’s president-salesman, a guest at defendant’s hotel, delivered to defendant for safe keeping. The District Court, after trial without a jury, found and concluded that the loss or mis-delivery of the cases was the result of defendant’s negligence, that the fair market value of the cases and contents was $25,688.50, and entered judgment for the plaintiff for such amount and costs. Defendant appealed.

The contested issues on appeal are:

(1) Whether the proviso to Section 3 of the Illinois Inn Keepers Act (Ill.Rev. Stat.1957, Ch. 71, Section 3) as a matter of law precludes recovery by the plaintiff.

(2) Whether as a matter of law contributory negligence of the plaintiff barred recovery.

(3) Whether there is any credible evidence to support the District Court’s findings as to the contents of the sample cases and any competent and material evidence to support the finding of fair market value.

Inasmuch as our resolution of the first issue is dispositive of defendant’s appeal it is unnecessary that we consider the other issues or set forth any of the evidence bearing on the issue of damages.

Plaintiff is a New York manufacturer of jewelry. Its president, Irving Krit-zer, came to Chicago on a selling mission on October 17, 1956, and was registered in, received as a guest, and assigned to a room in a hotel operated by defendant. Kritzer brought with him to the hotel two sample cases containing jewelry manufactured by plaintiff and four packets of uncut diamonds. The value of the cases and contents was alleged by plaintiff to be $25,688.50. Kritzer also carried a hand bag containing personal effects. Kritzer was then approached by defendant’s employee, Venturi, who in the regular course of his employment as a “bell boy” offered to assist him to his room. Kritzer asked Venturi to place the two sample cases in the hotel’s vault. Venturi asked Kritzer whether the cases were valuable, who replied that they were. Venturi then said that the hotel did not maintain a vault large enough to accommodate cases of the size carried by Kritzer, but that he could place them in a locked checkroom which the hotel maintained for such purposes, to which Kritzer agreed. Venturi then procured a key from behind the registration desk, and he and Kritzer proceeded to the locked checkroom, which Venturi entered by means of the key. He placed an identification tag on each of the sample cases and then tore off a stub from each and gave them to Kritzer, who placed them in his pocket.

During the evening of October 17, 1956, a stranger approached another of defendant’s “bell boys”, one McGuire, and handed McGuire a claim check and asked that he be given the bag to which it referred. McGuire then procured the key from behind the registration desk and proceeded to the checkroom with the stranger, which they both entered. After delivering’ the bag represented by the stranger’s claim check, the stranger while in the checkroom pointed to Krit-zer’s sample cases and asked McGuire that they also be given to him. McGuire, told the stranger that he was not permitted to deliver them without surrender of the claim checks therefor, at which point the stranger stated that he would go and get them, and departed. McGuire thereupon, without first obtaining the surrender of the claim checks, and without the authority from or the knowledge or acquiescence of Kritzer, but upon the direction of his superior, the “Bell Captain”, removed Kritzer’s two sample eases from the security of the locked checkroom and carried them to the “Bell Captain’s” desk, some distance from the checkroom, which was then completely unattended, and left them there unguarded, with the original identification tags still tied to each of them, while he proceeded to the street entrance to the hotel with another guest. On his *10 way back from the hotel entrance McGuire saw the stranger, referred to earlier, carrying Kritzer’s two sample cases, and without determining whether the claim checks therefor had been surrendered as required, proceeded with the stranger to the street entrance to the hotel where he assisted him into a cab with Kritzer’s sample cases.

Neither the sample cases nor their contents were ever returned to plaintiff by defendant or any one else.

Illinois was the situs of the transaction and its law governs. In Illinois the common law liability of an innkeeper has been modified and limited by statute. The title of the Illinois Statute, “An Act for the protection of inn keepers” is indicative of its subject matter and purpose. The pertinent section of the statute, as it read at the time of the occurrence here involved is found in Ill. Rev.Stat.1957, Ch. 71, Sec. 3. Another section of the same Act (Section 1) which, however, has no application in the instant case contains provisions limiting the amount of recovery in certain situations but under which the innkeeper is always liable for loss occurring through his negligence. Section 1 relates to cases where the hotel provides a safe for the safe keeping of certain types of valuables of guests. It embraces “money, jewelry and other valuables” and has been described by the Illinois Supreme Court as referring to “money, jewelry and articles of great value in small compass, for whose safe keeping a safe would be a usual and suitable repository, as distinguished from baggage in the ordinary sense”. Blake v. DeJonghe Hotel Co., 260 Ill. 348, 353, 103 N.E. 225, 227.

Section 3 of the Act applies to baggage — trunks, valises, bags or similar receptacles. The pertinent portion of the section provides:

“ * * * and no hotel proprietor shall be liable for the loss of, or injury to, such baggage or other article of property of his guest, unless the same shall have been actually delivered by such guest to such hotel proprietor or to his servants for safe keeping, and a check or receipt demanded therefor to evidence such delivery; and in the event any such baggage so checked shall be lost or injured, said hotel proprietor shall not be liable for such loss or injury in excess of the following amounts, respectively:
Trunks and contents ........ $150
Valises and traveling cases and contents.......... 50
Boxes, parcels and packages and contents.......... 10
All other miscellaneous effects, including wearing apparel and personal belongings ... 50

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Bluebook (online)
283 F.2d 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ksk-jewelry-co-inc-a-new-york-corporation-v-chicago-sheraton-ca7-1960.