Murray v. Hagens

143 So. 505
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1932
DocketNo. 996.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 143 So. 505 (Murray v. Hagens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Hagens, 143 So. 505 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

Plaintiffs are suing defendant for $125.53, the alleged value of clothing and jewelry stolen from a room taken by them at the Victor Hotel, at Melville, La., owned by defendant and operated by him and his wife.

Article 2965, Oiv. Code, upon which this demand is grounded, reads, as follows: “An innkeeper is responsible as depositary for the effects brought by travelers who lodge at his house; the deposit of such effects is considered as a necessary deposit.”

The following articles 2966 and 2967, Civ. Code, provide for the responsibility of the innkeeper for the effects brought by travelers, though not intrusted to his personal care if delivered to his servant or employee, and whether stolen by his servants, agents, or strangers going and coming in the inn.

Article 2968, Civ. Code, requires every landlord or keeper of a public inn or hotel to have, for his protection, a chest or safe for the deposit of valuable articles belonging to his guests or customers, ete. (Italics ours.)

Civil Code, art. 3232, reads: “Those are called innkeepers, who keep a tavern or hotel, and make a business of lodging travelers.”

The defendant and his wife were running the Victor Hotel at Melville, where the regular charges to travelers were $2.50 per day for fare with room, without bath, and $3.50 with bath. Evidently defendant was an innkeeper.

“The term travelers,” says article 3235, Civil Code, “applies to strangers and such as being transiently in a place where they have no domicile, take their board and lodging.”

A guest is a person entertained for pay at an inn, tavern, or hotel upon the general undertdking of the keeper of the house. Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia.

In defining innkeepers, article 3232, Civ. Code, refers to them indiscriminately as those who keep taverns or hotels. A tavern is a public house where food is provided for travelers and guests. Century Dictionary. Obviously, an inn or hotel is a public house where guests are given fare and lodging or fare without lodging, at stipulated rates. This is evidently the meaning intended to be conveyed by Civil Code, art. 3235, where, in referring to travelers, it says they are those who are transiently in a place where they have no domicile, “take their board and lodging at an inn.” Such are unquestionably guests; the word “traveler” being used instead of “guest” in article 3235, above cited. The words “travelers” and “guests” are used as synonyms in the Code on this subject which appear in article 2968, where the chest is demanded of the innkeeper for valuables belonging to “his guests or customers.” The word “customer” means a buyer, purchaser, patron. As used in that article, it means, as we construe it, a buyer of the fare at an inn or one who gives it his patronage for board and lodging, the usual business of an innkeeper or hotel manager.

Counsel for plaintiffs, in their supplemental brief, refer to articles 2968, 2969, Civil Code, saying that the words “landlord” and “innkeepers” are used interchangeably, and, from that fact, deduce the conclusion that the framers of our Code intended to impose a liability upon all members of the landlord class, indiscriminately, except where the tenant has complete and exclusive control of the tenement. A landlord is ordinarily referred to as the owner of a tenement to whom the tenant pays rent. In such cases the tenants are lessees or renters from the owner, and their rights and obligations are governed by other provisions of the Code, which have no connection with the present contention.

The landlord is also defined as the master or proprietor of an inn, of a lodging or boarding house. The Encyclopedia Dictionary; Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia.

It is in that sense, as we understand the Code, that the words “landlord or innkeeper” are used in articles 2968, 2969, Civil Code.

*507 This feature of the case is brought into the discussion because, as we will show from the evidence, plaintiffs were never the guests of the defendant within the meaning of articles 3235, 2065, 2966, 2967 of the Civil Code, so as to impose liability on defendant for the effects spirited away from plaintiffs’ room ■ during their temporary absence.

Plaintiffs had rented a room in a wing of the Victor Hotel, were tenants under their contract, and hence not entitled to the protection of their effects as guests or travelers under the provisions of the Code, which treat of that subject. Obviously, ‘if they were guests, plaintiffs would be entitled to the value of the stolen effects, but, as they were not, as will appear from the evidence in the case to which we will now refer, they have no right to the relief sought.

The contract in question was entered into between Mrs. Hagens, defendant’s wife, and Mrs. Murray, who first applied to Mrs. Ha-gens, stating she had heard she had a part of a house for rent, whereupon Mrs. Hagens took her across the street from the hotel, and showed her two rooms in another house with stove and bed which she offered to rent at $10 a month. This was not accepted by Mrs. Murray, who thereafter rented two rooms in the wing of the hotel at $3.50 per week. One of the rooms was to be occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Murray, and the other, in which was a stove, was to be used as a kitchenette. Mrs. Murray, under the agreement, was to do her own cooking, make her own bed, and furnish the linen. The old stove was removed from the room and a new one was installed, which indicates that it had been used as a kitchenette prior to that time. The two rooms, one of which was rented with a kitchenette to plaintiffs, form part of the main building of the hotel, but are not a desirable place for guests of the hotel, as was testified to by Mr. Hagens, because they had to go through the dining room or go around the hotel. For that reason, he says, the rooms to be used as kitchenettes were built for light housekeeping. It is true that the room rented to plaintiffs and the other had previously been used as hotel rooms, but it is shown that, since ’ the flood that overflowed that part of the country in 1927, they had been used as light housekeeping apartments.

It is shown that the maid in the hotel never went in plaintiffs’ room nor any employee or servant of the defendant. It is admitted that plaintiffs bought their groceries and cooked their own meals, that Mrs. Murray made her own bed, and evidently attended herself to the upkeep of the rooms. Hence it is obvious that she did not expect, and was certainly not entitled to, any as- . sistance from the servants of the hotel. Reference is made by plaintiffs’ counsel to their use of the garage, baths in the hotel, and the lobby.

Mrs. Murray testifies that she had use of the garage. Mrs. Hagens sayS, when Mrs. Murray took the rooms, she asked her if they might use the- garage and that she said they could. This explanation by Mrs. Hagens is- not contradicted. As to the lobby, it is shown that its use was extended to all the roomers and even to strangers who happened to come to the hotel. Mrs. Hagens explains that the privileges thus allowed to the plaintiffs were extended as courtesies, which, we think, was the case, judging from the contract between the parties, under which plaintiffs had the exclusive control of the room occupied by them, and the adjoining kitchenette.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-hagens-lactapp-1932.