Robert D. Kahn v. Hotel Ramada of Nevada D/B/A Tropicana Hotel and Country Club

799 F.2d 199, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 29984
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 10, 1986
Docket85-1739
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 799 F.2d 199 (Robert D. Kahn v. Hotel Ramada of Nevada D/B/A Tropicana Hotel and Country Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert D. Kahn v. Hotel Ramada of Nevada D/B/A Tropicana Hotel and Country Club, 799 F.2d 199, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 29984 (5th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

A part-time jewelry broker’s luggage containing jewelry and other property allegedly worth over $50,000 was taken from a baggage room at a Las Vegas hotel at which he was a guest. He appeals from a district court order dismissing his federal diversity claim for lack of jurisdictional amount on the ground that a Nevada statute limits hotel liability for stolen property to $750 in the absence of an express waiver of the limitation by the hotel. Because the Nevada statute makes the $750 maximum limit for hotel liability applicable even if the hotel has not complied with the notice requirements of the statute and even if hotel personnel have been grossly negligent, the judgment dismissing the jewelry broker’s claim is affirmed.

I.

Robert D. Kahn, a part-time jewelry broker, traveled to Las Vegas, Nevada, in August, 1983, to participate in a “21” tournament and registered at the Tropicana Hotel. Kahn brought along his personal belongings and some jewelry, which he intended to show to customers in Phoenix, Arizona, after completing the tournament. After the tournament had ended, Kahn surrendered his room and checked out of the Tropicana, but, while awaiting his departure, left his luggage, including a briefcase that contained the jewelry, with a bellman. Kahn contends that he informed the bellman that the contents of the briefcase were “important” and that he saw the bellman place the luggage and briefcase in the hotel *201 baggage room. When he returned to reclaim his luggage less than one hour later, however, Kahn was informed that it could not be located. Later, his briefcase and one valise were found on the second green of the Tropicana golf course, but both were empty. Although certain items of clothing were found in the area where the two pieces of luggage were discovered, neither the jewelry contained in the briefcase nor most of Kahn’s other property was recovered. Kahn values the missing property as worth over $50,000.

Kahn alleges that the Tropicana Hotel was guilty of negligence, gross negligence, breach of bailment, and other violations of its duties as innkeeper. After completion of discovery, the Tropicana Hotel filed a motion to dismiss based upon Nev.Rev. Stat. § 651.010 contending that the statute limits the common-law liability of innkeepers for the theft, loss, damage, or destruction of any guest’s property to $750 unless the hotel expressly waives the limitation. The district court agreed with the Tropicana’s interpretation of Nev.Rev.Stat. § 651.010 and, because diversity jurisdiction exists only for claims exceeding $10,000, dismissed Kahn’s claim for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. 1

II.

Under the common law, an innkeeper is responsible for the safety of property entrusted to his care by a guest and may exonerate himself only by showing that the loss or injury suffered by his guest resulted from an act of God or a public enemy, from the fault of the guest himself or some other person for whose acts the guest is responsible, or from some irresistable force or inevitable accident that brought about the loss without fault on the innkeeper’s part. 2 Nevada adheres to this view of the common law. 3 Like most, if not all, other states, Nevada has determined that the common law rule is too harsh and has enacted Nevada’s Rev.Stat. § 651.010 (1979) to limit its stringency. That statute reads:

1. No owner or keeper of any hotel, inn, motel, motor court, boardinghouse or lodging-house in this state is civilly liable for the theft, loss, damage or destruction of any property left in the room of any guest of such an establishment because of theft, burglary, fire or otherwise, in the absence of gross neglect by the owner or keeper.
2. If any owner or keeper of any hotel, inn, motel, motor court, boardinghouse or lodging-house in this state provides a fireproof safe or vault in which guests may deposit property for safekeeping, and notice of this service is personally given to a guest or posted in the office and the guest’s room, the owner or keeper is not liable for the theft, loss, damage or destruction of any property which is not offered for deposit in the safe or vault by a guest' unless the owner or keeper is grossly negligent. An owner or keeper is not obligated to receive property or deposit for safekeeping which exceeds $750 in value or is of a size which cannot easily fit within the safe or vault.
3. The liability of the owner or keeper under this section does not exceed the sum of $750 for any property of an individual guest, unless the owner or keeper receives the property for deposit or safekeeping and consents to assume a liability greater than $750 for its theft, loss, damage, or destruction in a written agreement in which the guest specifies the value of the property. (Emphasis added.)

The second and third paragraphs were added by a 1979 amendment introduced in response to court decisions that had granted large damage awards to hotel guests despite the existence of statutory guidelines *202 that were intended to provide the means for determining whether security measures taken by hotel owners were sufficient. 4

In the absence of the words “under this section,” paragraph three of the statute would limit the innkeeper’s liability in all instances. The scope of that paragraph, however, is obscured by the insertion of those words.

Literally read, the words “liability ... under this section” might make the third paragraph meaningless, for the “section” does not impose liability, but provides limitations on the liability that exists at common law. If, therefore, paragraph three is to be read to have any meaning, it must be read to limit the liability of the innkeeper in at least some instances when liability would exist under the common law as narrowed by paragraphs 1 and 2.

In interpreting a statute that is both remedial and in derogation of the common law, courts strictly construe the question whether the statute modifies the common law but, if it is clear that the legislature intended to change the common-law rule, liberally construe application of the new rule. 5 Applying these rules to the Nevada statute, we find that the most coherent reading of the statute as a whole makes the $750 maximum applicable when a guest’s property is lost as a result of the gross negligence of the innkeeper except when the innkeeper has waived its application.

The first paragraph of § 651.010 relieves the innkeeper of all liability, save when grossly negligent, for property in a guest’s room. The second paragraph relieves the innkeeper of all liability, save when grossly negligent, for property not in a guest’s room if the innkeeper provides a safe and gives notice that it is available.

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Bluebook (online)
799 F.2d 199, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 29984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-d-kahn-v-hotel-ramada-of-nevada-dba-tropicana-hotel-and-country-ca5-1986.