Stringfellow v. Grunewald

33 So. 190, 109 La. 187, 1902 La. LEXIS 133
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 17, 1902
DocketNo. 13,958
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 So. 190 (Stringfellow v. Grunewald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stringfellow v. Grunewald, 33 So. 190, 109 La. 187, 1902 La. LEXIS 133 (La. 1902).

Opinion

PEOVOSTY, J.

The plaintiff, suing as head of the community of acquets and gains existing between himself and his wife, complains that coffee containing a deleterious substance was served to his wife while she was a guest at the hotel of the defendants, in consequence of which she became seriously ill and underwent great suffering, and complains, further, that while his wife was still sick from the effects of the coffee she was so frightened by one of the waiters, who, in a peremptory and insulting manner, demanded of her the surrender of a certain letter she had in her possession, that she attempted to leave the hotel in search of protection which the officers of the hotel had refused to give her, and, in her excitement and trepidation, stumbled on the stairs, and dislocated and crushed her left arm and shoulder, and also broke her arm near the shoulder, permanently injuring herself, in consequence of which she has suffered and still continues to suffer great pains, and he himself has been put to great expense. Because of’ the foregoing, and also on account of the mental suffering, mortification, and worry, he claims $20,000 damages.

The testimony is simply overwhelming that the coffee contained nothing deleterious, and that Mrs. Stringfellow was simply suffering from cold and indigestion. The coffee out of the same vessel was drunk by everybody about the hotel that day, — guests and proprietors and employés, and nobody found fault. None but the best coffees are used, and the vessels are porcelain-lined, and are carefully scrubbed every day. Dr. Tebault. the first attending physician, “thought that the sore throat was due to some little cold she may have taken, and the gastric trouble to some little indigestion, accompanied with some fever.” He saw her again on the evening of the same day, and says of her case: “I found her condition such that I didn’t think any further visits were justified, and I dismissed the case that evening.”

After Dr. Tebault, Dr. Brewer was called. He says: “I found Mrs. Stringfellow suffering from fever and exceedingly nervous, which sometimes occurs, you know, with fevers. I simply treated her for that fever, and that was. all. According to my idea about the fever, why, it was an ordinary fever that our people have here at that season of the year.”

The coffee was drunk on the 10th of July. On the 11th the plaintiff’s wife wrote the defendants the following letter:

“New Orleans, La.,-, 189-. Mr. Grünewald — Dear Sir: Will you pardon me for asking if the coffee vessels are copper-lined? We had not a double dose yesterday morn, but a triple one, was quite ill all day • & last night. The waiter Jack Hill can tell you the coffee was not right. God grant if anyone is trying to do anything to us, they may meet their fate in their terrible deed is ac[189]*189complished. By answering the above questions, you will greatly oblige, [Signed] Mrs. Stringfellow.”

And the defendants wrote in answer the following:

“New Orleans, La., July 11th, 1899. Mrs. Stringfellow, New Orleans, La. — My Dear Madam: In answer to your note just received, I beg to state that our coffee urns are porcelain-lincd, and that your fears are perfectly groundless. . I am convinced there is no one in the employ of the Grünewald Hotel who bears you ány malice, and that your assertions are most absurd. Very respectfully yours, [Signed] Theo. Grünewald, Manager.

“P. S. The waiter, Jack Hill, tells me that at your suggestion he tasted the coffee, — not only tasted it, but drank quite a quantity of it, — and that he experienced no unusual effects.”

This last is the letter which the waiter wanted to get back.

During the six or eight months that the plaintiff and his wife had been staying at the defendants’ hotel, this waiter, whose name was John or Jack Hill, had always been respectful and polite. He had waited on them sometimes in the dining room, and always when they took their meals in their room. It was he who had served the coffee complained of. On the 19th of July, while in the room of plaintiff’s wife, serving her lunch, he, at her request, wrote at the bottom of the Grünewald letter the words, “Not at your request,” and signed his name, “John Hill.”

Mrs. Stringfellow testifies that Hill wrote and signed the note in the presence of Mr. Louis Grünewald, and that shortly thereafter (about five minutes afterward), she not having yet eaten the luncheon he had brought, he came back to her room and asked her to return the letter; that he was angry and looked entirely different from what he had ever looked when he had served her meals before; that he was excited; that he was furious; that he flourished the napkin he had in his hand, and demanded the letter, and that she, fearing bodily harm, ran out of the room to the elevator, and asked the elevator boy to go and ask the chief clerk, Mr. Saux, to come to her; that she left Hill in her room; also that she said to Hill, “Go to the back elevator and see if you can see Delia [the chambermaid] coming,” and this was to get him from the door; that he went towards the back elevator, and she went the other way, towards the front elevator, to call Mr. Saux; that Hill went out of the room first; that Mr. Saux came, and she told him of Hill’s having come to her room, and of her being afraid of him, and asked Mr. Saux’s protection; that Mr. Saux’s reply was, “Mrs. Stringfellow, if you knew that waiter as well as 1 do, my advice to you is to give him that note;” that she said to him, “Mr. Saux, if you won’t give me protection, I will go to the street, where I will get a policeman to protect me;” that Mr. Saux said nothing further; he took the elevator and went down; that she thereupon went to the steps, and, in going down from the fifth to the fourth floor, she, being excited and frightened, slipped on the brasses on the steps, and fell and hurt her shoulder; that she got up without assistance, and asked a bell boy who was near by to come to her room with her until she could write a note to her husband, and that the boy did so; and that she put on a piece of paper, “Gome to me at once,” and sent the paper to her husband, and he came; that, having this bell boy with her, she felt protected.

The statement of Hill is that while he was in the room of Mrs. Stringfellow, serving her lunch, she requested him to- write and sign the statement in question, and that he did so, and that on going downstairs he informed Mr. Grünewald of what he had done, and Mr. Grünewald did not understand what had been written and signed, and told him to go upstairs and ask for the note, and that he did so, saying to Mrs. Stringfellow that he wanted to show the note to Mr. Grünewald; that Mrs. Stringfellow refused to give the note, and he asked her what she was going to do with it, and she answered that she was going to use it for the purpose of a suit against the house; that he then went downstairs and told Mr. Grünewald that he could not get the note, and that Mr. Grünewald was angry; -that he did not return to the room of Mrs. Stringfellow, or ask her again for the note; that he probably asked her for the note quickly; that he went upstairs quick and asked her for the note, as he wanted to show it to Mr. Grünewald, because, says he, “I thought, in alluding to this case, I thought perhaps it might be of [191]*191some importance. It rather made me flurried;” that his manner towards Mrs. String-fellow on that occasion was as usual, and as it would be towards any other lady; that Mr. or, Mrs. Stringfellow had always treated him well; and that he was friendly to them.

Mr. Saux testifies that Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 So. 190, 109 La. 187, 1902 La. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stringfellow-v-grunewald-la-1902.