Peet v. the Roth Hotel Co.

253 N.W. 546, 191 Minn. 151, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 745
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 9, 1934
DocketNo. 29,587.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 253 N.W. 546 (Peet v. the Roth Hotel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peet v. the Roth Hotel Co., 253 N.W. 546, 191 Minn. 151, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 745 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

STONE, Justice.

After an adverse verdict, defendant moved in the alternative for judgment notwithstanding or a new trial. That motion, denied, defendant appeals.

The record is the story of a ring. Defendant operates the St. Paul Hotel in St. Paul. Mr. Ferdinand Hotz is a manufacturing jeweler. For 20 years or more he has visited St. Paul periodically on business, making his local headquarters at the St. Paul Hotel. He has long been one of its regular patrons, personally known to the management. Plaintiff’s engagement ring, a platinum piece set Avith a large cabochon sapphire surrounded by diamonds, Avas made to order by Mr. Hotz. One of its small diamonds lost, plaintiff had arranged with him to have it replaced and for that purpose was to leave it for him at the St. Paul Hotel. November 17, 1981, he was a guest there on one of his seasonal visits. About four p. m. of that day plaintiff went to the cashier’s desk of the hotel, wearing the ring. The cashier on duty was a Miss EdAvards. At this point plaintiff may as Avell tell her own story, for upon it is based the jury’s verdict. She thus testified:

*153 “I had it [the ring] on my finger and took it off my finger. The cashier — I told the cashier that it was for Mr. Ferdinand Hotz. She took out an envelope and wrote ‘Ferdinand Hotz.’ I remember spelling it to her, and then I left. I handed the ring to the cashier, and she wrote on the envelope. * * * The only instructions I remember are telling her that it was for Mr. Ferdinand Hotz, who was stopping at the hotel.”

Plaintiff’s best recollection is that Miss Edwards told her that Mr. Hotz was registered but was not in at the moment. Miss Edwards frankly admitted, as a witness, that the ring had been delivered to her. It is conceded that it was immediately lost, doubtless stolen, probably by an outsider. Miss Edwards herself is beyond suspicion. But the ring, where she placed it upon its delivery to her by plaintiff, was on her desk or counter and within easy reach of anyone standing or passing just outside her cashier’s window.

The loss was not then reported either to plaintiff or Mr. Hotz. About a month later he was again in St. Paul, and then plaintiff was advised for the first time that her ring had never reached him. Upon' inquiry at the hotel office, it was learned that it had been lost. The purpose of this action is to recover from defendant, as bailee of the ring, its reasonable value, fixed by the jury at $2,140.66. The reasonableness of that figure is not questioned.

The jury took the case under a charge that there was a bailment as a matter of law. Error is assigned upon the supposition that there was at least a question of fact whether the evidence showed the mutual assent prerequisite to the contract of bailment which is the sine qua non of plaintiff’s case. The supporting argument is put upon the cases holding that where the presence or identity of the article claimed to have been bailed is concealed from the bailee he has not assented to assume that position with its attendant obligation, and so there is no bailment. Samples v. Geary (Mo. App.) 292 S. W. 1066 (fur piece concealed in coat checked in parcel room); U. S. v. Atlantic C. L. R. Co. 206 F. 190 (cut diamonds in mail package with nothing to indicate nature of contents); Riggs v. Bank of Camas Prairie, 34 Idaho, 176, 200 P. 118, Anno. 18 *154 A. L. R. 83 (bailee oí locked box supposed to contain only “papers and other valuables” not liable for money therein of which it had no knowledge).

The claim here is not that plaintiff perpetrated fraud upon defendant but that she failed to divulge the unusual value of her ring when she left it with Miss Edwards. The latter testified that at the moment she did not realize its value. Taking both facts and their implications as favorably as we may for defendant, the stubborn truth remains that plaintiff delivered and defendant accepted the ring with its identity and at least its outward character perfectly obvious.

The mutual assent necessary to a contract may be expressed as well by conduct as by words; or it may be manifested by both. Restatement, Contracts, § 21. The latter is the case here. The expression of mutual assent is found in what passed between plaintiff and Miss Edwards. The former delivered and the latter accepted the ring to be delivered to Mr. Hotz. Below that irreducible minimum the case cannot be lowered. No decision has been cited and probably none can be found where the bailee of an article of jewelry, undeceived as to its identity, was relieved of liability because of his own erroneous underestimate of its value.

If there was mistake with legal effect worth while to defendant, it must have been of such character as to show no mutual assent and so no contract. There was no such error here. Identity of the property and all its attributes, except only its value, were as well known to defendant as to plaintiff. The case is identical in principle with Wood v. Boynton, 64 Wis. 265, 25 N. W. 42, 54 Am. R. 610. There the plaintiff had sold to defendant, for one dollar, a stone which she supposed was at best a topaz. It turned out to be an uncut diamond worth $700. Neither its true character nor value were known to either buyer or seller at the time of the sale. There being neither fraud nor mistake as to identity, the' mutual mistake as to value was held no obstacle to completion of the contract: Plaintiff was denied recovery.

The jury was instructed also that defendant was a “non-gratuitous” bailee. By that it is doubtless intended to say that the *155 bailment was “reciprocally beneficial to both parties.” 1 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed. & Supp.) § 732. Clearly, that was a correct interpretation of the proof. The ring was accepted in the ordinary course of business by defendant in rendering a usual service for a guest, and so, plainly, it was for defendant’s advantage, enough so, at least, to make the bailment as matter of law one for the benefit of both bailor and bailee.

The jury was charged also that the bailment, being for the reciprocal benefit of the parties, defendant as bailee was under duty of exercising, in respect to the subject matter, ordinary care, that is, the degree of care which an ordinarily prudent man would have exercised in the same or similar circumstances. The instruction was correct. 1 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed. & Supp.) § 732. The former distinction between bailments for the sole benefit of the bailor; those for the mutual benefit of both bailor and bailee; and those for the sole benefit of the latter, in respect to the degree of care required of the bailee in order to protect him from liability for negligence, has long since been pretty much discarded here as elsewhere. “It is evident that the so-called distinctions between slight, ordinary and gross negligence over which courts have perhaps somewhat quibbled for a hundred years, can furnish no assistance.” Elon College v. Elon B. & T. Co. 182 N. C. 298, 303, 109 S. E. 6, 17 A. L. R. 1205.

Defendant’s liability, if any, is for negligence. In that field generally the legal norm is a care commensurate to the hazard, i. e. the amount and kind of care that would be exercised by an ordinarily prudent person in the same or similar circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
253 N.W. 546, 191 Minn. 151, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peet-v-the-roth-hotel-co-minn-1934.