State v. Brown

195 A.2d 379
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 6, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 195 A.2d 379 (State v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brown, 195 A.2d 379 (Del. 1963).

Opinion

195 A.2d 379 (1963)

STATE of Delaware
v.
George F. BROWN.

Supreme Court of Delaware.

November 6, 1963.

*381 E. Norman Veasey, Chief Deputy Atty. Gen., and G. Francis Autman, Jr., Deputy Atty. Gen., for the State.

Louis L. Redding, Wilmington, for defendant.

TERRY, C. J., and WOLCOTT and CAREY, JJ., sitting.

TERRY, Chief Justice.

On June 12, 1963, defendant, a Negro, entered the premises of the Deer Park Hotel in Newark, Delaware, and requested service of food. The Deer Park Hotel is a privately owned establishment which provides food, drink, and lodging, but the restaurant is separate from the hotel facilities. The proprietor, relying upon 24 Del.C. Sec. 1501, requested the defendant to leave after denying him service solely because of his race, and, upon his refusal to leave, obtained a warrant for his arrest for violation of the criminal trespass statute of this State, 11 Del.C. § 871, which was executed by the Newark Police.

In order to secure a prompt disposition of the Constitutional questions presented, defendant agreed to the immediate filing of this matter in the Superior Court and joined with the Attorney General in petitioning that court to certify the following question to this court:

"May the Judiciary of this State constitutionally entertain a trespass prosecution against a person who is denied service and requested to leave (refusing to do so) a restaurant or other place of public accommodation, which denial of service and requested exclusion are based solely upon the ground that the defendant is colored without ascertainment of his offensiveness to the major part of the customers of the place of public accommodations and injury to business and which action the keeper of such public place of public accommodation is based solely upon the purported authority granted under 24 Del.C. Sec. 1501?"

The question so certified requires us to determine the correlative rights and duties of the owners of public accommodations who seek to deny service to patrons exclusively upon racial grounds and of those patrons who refuse to leave such places upon request by the owner or proprietor. In addition, we are asked to determine whether or not the Judiciary of this State may constitutionally entertain a criminal trespass action against one who refuses to leave a place of public accommodation when such request to leave is predicated exclusively upon the ground that the patron is a Negro.

Included within these questions is a request that we determine the common law obligations of owners of places of public accommodation. At common law, the obligation of an innkeeper to serve the general public was materially different from the duties imposed upon owners of other places of public accommodation. The Attorney General argues that an exposition of this dichotomy is unnecessary since it is clear that defendant was not seeking lodging in the hotel section of the premises in question. However, since the question has been accepted for certification and because of the relationship between the common law and 24 Del.C. § 1501, discussed infra, we deem it necessary to delineate the common law rule.

At common law, an innkeeper was the subject of extensive regulation and legal *382 disabilities. As stated in Halsbury's, Laws of England (3d Ed.), Sec. 938:

"An innkeeper, that is to say at the present day, a hotel proprietor in his capacity as an innkeeper, is bound by the common law or custom of the realm to receive and lodge in his inn all comers who are travellers and to entertain them at reasonable prices without any special or previous contract unless he has some reasonable ground of refusal." Accord: 29 Am.Jur., Innkeepers, Sec. 48.

It is clear, therefore, that at common law an innkeeper had a positive duty to receive all travellers who conducted themselves with propriety and had the ability to pay for a meal and lodging. It is important, however, to note that this rule of non-discrimination was applied at common law only when an innkeeper-guest relationship arose. An inn or a hotel was defined as "an establishment held out by the proprietor as offering sleeping accommodations, and, if so required, food and drink, without special contract to any traveller presenting himself who appears able and willing to pay a reasonable sum for the services and facilities provided and who was in a fit state to be received." (Halsbury's, Laws of England (3d Ed.), Sec. 931.) To be considered a guest, the person was required to be in a transient status and not a resident of the locality immediately surrounding the inn. In addition, the patron must have requested service within the inn or hotel portion of the public facility; the privilege is not available to one who seeks service in a restaurant or tavern owned by the innkeeper but operated as a separate facility. See R. v. Rymer (1877), 2 Q.B.D. 136. It is true that the requirement that the guest be a traveller has been somewhat eroded in more modern cases considering the common law rule. See Alpaugh v. Wolverton, 184 Va. 943, 36 S.E.2d 906 (Ct. of Appl., 1946). Therefore, in the instant case, defendant would not come within the innkeeper-guest relationship, since service was not requested within the hotel portion of the Deer Park Hotel.

Apart from the above-cited limited category of public establishments, it is clear that at common law the owner of a restaurant or other place of public refreshment, amusement, or entertainment was free to select patrons upon any basis deemed satisfactory to him. See Halsbury's, Laws of England (3d Ed.), Sec. 941; 29 Am.Jur., Innkeepers, Sec. 9; Alpaugh v. Wolverton, cited supra; Slack v. Atlantic White Tower System, Inc., 181 F.Supp. 124 (U.S.D.C.D. Md., 1960). As was stated in State v. Avent, 253 N.C. 580, 118 S.E.2d 47 (1961), vacated on other grounds, 373 U.S. 375, 83 S.Ct. 1311, 9 L.Ed.2d 97 (1963):

"In the absence of a statute forbidding discrimination based on race or color in restaurants, the rule is well established that an operator of a privately owned restaurant privately operated in a privately owned building has the right to select the clientele he will serve, and to make such selection based on color, race, or White people in company with Negroes or vice versa, if he so desires. He is not an innkeeper. This is the common law."

Having considered the requirements of the common law, we are called upon to construe 24 Del.C. § 1501, which provides:

"No keeper of an inn, tavern, hotel, or restaurant, or other place of public entertainment or refreshment of travellers, guests, or customers shall be obliged, by law, to furnish entertainment or refreshment to persons whose reception or entertainment by him would be offensive to the major part of his customers, and would injure his business."
"As used in this section, `customers' includes all who have occasion for entertainment or refreshment."

Defendant argues that the purpose of this statute was the promulgation of a legislative policy favoring the exclusion of Negroes *383 from places of public accommodations. If the statute is so construed, it must be declared an unconstitutional exercise of legislative power by this court. See Turner v. City of Memphis, 369 U.S. 350, 82 S.Ct. 805, 7 L.Ed.2d 762 (1962).

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195 A.2d 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brown-del-1963.