Milner Hotels, Inc. v. Brent

43 So. 2d 654, 207 Miss. 892, 14 A.L.R. 2d 710, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 400
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1949
DocketNo. 37259.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 43 So. 2d 654 (Milner Hotels, Inc. v. Brent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milner Hotels, Inc. v. Brent, 43 So. 2d 654, 207 Miss. 892, 14 A.L.R. 2d 710, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 400 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

*897 Montgomery, J.

Mrs. Eva Brent, the appellee, sued appellants, Milner Hotels, Inc., a Mississippi corporation, H. B. Lemonds, Milner Hotel Management Company, a foreign corporation, and Milner Hotels, Inc., also a foreign corporation, who were engaged in the hotel business at Vicksburg, Mississippi, under the name of the Earle Hotel, for an alleged injury, alleged tp have been received by her while a guest at said hotel, and charged to have been caused by the fault of appellants. There was a judgment in the lower court against all of the appellants in the amount of $2,550.00, and from this judgment Milner Hotels, Inc., alone, appeals.

The assignment of error alleges only two grounds of error, which are, (1) the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that appellee was entitled to nominal damages only and not entitled to punitive damages; and (2) the court erred in allowing appellee to testify with reference to a conversation between her and Mr. Lemonds which took place three weeks after the occurrence out of which the suit arose.

It will be observed that the appellants have not assigned as error that the verdict of the jury was against the weight of the evidence; consequently this court is required to accept the version of the incident given by appellee and her witnesses and accepted by the jury. Hercules Power Co. v. Thompson, 201 Miss. 608, 29 So. (2d) 823.

Mrs. Brent charged, and her testimony tended to show, that on November 1, 1947 she was occupying Boom 327 at the Earle Hotel, in Vicksburg, along with her husband *898 and her seven-year-old daughter, and that they were required to pay rental for said lodgings at least one week in advance and that said rent had been so paid for the period up to and including checking-out time, on November 2, 1947; that nevertheless at approximately 12:00 noon on Saturday, November 1, 1947, appellee tendered the defendant, Lemonds, the manager of said hotel, the sum of money necessary to be paid and an additional one week’s rental in advance, but that the said manager refused to accept the sum without stating any reason whatsoever for such refusal but said, in a loud and angry voice, “We do not want you here”; that all of ■ the statements aforesaid were delivered by said Lemonds in a loud and angry manner in' the lobby of the said Earle Hotel, and were overheard by all the numerous persons present at such time and place.; that subsequently at 2:30 p.-m., plaintiff was advised that her small daughter, Betty Grill Brent, had been’ locked out of and was unable to get into said room; that upon immediate investigation plaintiff' discovered that said room had been locked and all door knobs had been removed from the entrances thereto; that plaintiff and her family had received no notice to vacate said lodging, and that she and her daughter were entitled to the -unrestricted right of use and enjoyment of said room and appurtenant accommodations and that no just cause existed for this denial and for the discourteous and insulting-conduct of said defendant; that on said date at such time the weather wás cold, wet, and unfavorable,. and plaintiff’s husband was out of town, and these facts-were known to the defendant; that this conduct on the part of -the manager of the hotel caused her to suffer great discomfort, embarrassment and mental distress, and damage to her reputation for honesty and decency; that -thereafter, on November 4, 1947, she . returned to the hotel to procure the clothing and effects in said room, and permission so' to do- was refused by said Lemonds unless *899 and until she paid an additional $11.40 rent, which she refused to do, but the clothing and effects were delivered to her on the nest day, November 5th, without the payment of such additional rent.

The appellee further testified that she had a conversation with the defendant, Lemonds, on the 20th day of November 1947, and that in that conversation Lemonds stated that he was sorry the way everything happened and requested appellee not to blame him, because it was an order given to him by his employers when he left Detroit to take over the manager’s job at the hotel, and that he had then been ordered to get rid of everybody connected with Mrs. Lavecchia’s lawsuit, and that the appellee had been a witness for Mrs. Lavecchia in that lawsuit. • -

The first assignment of error was to 'the effect that the appellee was entitled to only nominal damages and was not entitled, to recover punitive damages. It is well established law in this state that the elements allowing punitive damages are: (1) a wrongful act, (2) intentionally performed, (3) gross disregard of rights, and (4) wilfullness.

This principle was clearly laid down in Illinois Central R. Co. v. Ramsay, 157 Miss. 83, 127 So. 725, 726, where the court said: “To authorize the infliction of punitive damages, the wrongful, act complained of must either be intentional, or re suit,.'from such gross disregard of the rights of the complaining party as amounts to willfulness on the .part of the wrongdoer. ”

In Hadad v. Lockeby, 176 Miss. 660, 169 So. 691, 693, the court said: ‘ ‘ Punitive damages may be recovered, not only for a willful and intentional wrong, but for' such gross and reckless negligence- as is equivalent, to such a wrong, since an act. done /in... spirit of wantonness and recklessness is oftentimes., just as harmful as if prompted by malice.”

*900 The question raised here by the appellant has been decided by this court adversely to its contention in the case of Arky v. Leitch, 131 Miss. 14, 94 So. 855. There Mrs. Leiteh and her friend, Mrs. Ward, engaged a room with a private bath, at Hotel Meridian, to be occupied by them during a meeting of the Eastern Star, at Meridian. The hotel operator failed and refused to give them the use of a room with a private bath but assigned them to a room with a connecting bath, by reason of which they suffered great inconvenience and embarrassment by having their bathroom entered by someone from the other room connected therewith. They laid their grievances before the hotel’s office man, who treated them in an offensive and insulting manner, and thereupon they paid their bill and went to another hotel. Thereafter Mrs. Leiteh sued the hotel operators for damages. The only actual damage received by them was an annoyance and inconvenience, but the testimony tended to establish willfullness or gross inattention to duty on the part of appellants. The court permitted the case to go to the jury on the question of actual and punitive damages, and the jury returned a verdict allowing both actual and punitive damages, and, on appeal, this court permitted the verdict to stand.

In the case at bar, the wrongful act was the angry words, “We do not want you here”; the arbitrary act of locking the room; the refusal of the clothing; the vengeful spirit designed to “get rid of Mrs. Brent”, all in willful and violent disregard of Mrs. Brent’s rights. These acts were intentionally performed and are shown by the proof to have been ratified by the supervisor, or joined in by both the manager and the supervisor. Mrs. Brent’s rent had been paid through the day on which this language occurred, and this action by the hotel management was in gross disregard of her rights.

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Bluebook (online)
43 So. 2d 654, 207 Miss. 892, 14 A.L.R. 2d 710, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milner-hotels-inc-v-brent-miss-1949.