Waters Co. v. . Gerard

82 N.E. 143, 189 N.Y. 302, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 943
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 82 N.E. 143 (Waters Co. v. . Gerard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waters Co. v. . Gerard, 82 N.E. 143, 189 N.Y. 302, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 943 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinion

*305 Chase, J.

In 1898 and 1899 the defendant was the lessee and proprietor of a hotel for public entertainment known as “The Girard,” in the city of New York. On August 23, 1898, one Carlisle came casually to said hotel as a giiest, and so remained until March 15, 1899, inclusive. During said period she received food and lodging as a guest without any express agreement as to the period of entertainment or amount to be paid therefor. On March 15, 1899, she owed the defendant for accommodation, board, lodging and extras furnished at her request from day to day between August 23, 1898, and March 15, 1899, inclusive, the sum of $161.24, a part of which accrued on March 13 to 15, inclusive, 1899.

On March 15, 1899, she took a lease of certain apartments in said hotel for one year from that day, which apartments she in part furnished, and thereupon occupied the same and continued in the occupation thereof until June 25, 1899, taking her meals from time to time without agreement as to price in the restaurant of the defendant in said hotel. On June 25, 1899, she left ■ said hotel owing the defendant $330.85, of which amount $161.24 accrued on and prior to March 15, 1899, as stated, and the balance was due for rent under said lease and for food and incidental's furnished in the defendant’s restaurant between March 15 and June 25, 1899. The lease of said apartments contained a proviso that the defendant should have a lien on all of the effects and property brought into said hotel by said Carlisle for any indebtedness accrued or accruing to her.

The plaintiff is a domestic corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of pianos. On March 13, 1899, the plaintiff delivered to said Carlisle at the defendant’s hotel a piano belonging to it under a conditional contract of sale by the terms of which title thereto remained in the plaintiff until payment in full of the agreed price therefor, and in case of failure by said Carlisle to make any payment on said contract when due that said contract should at once terminate and the plaintiff become entitled to the immediate possession of the piano. Said Carlisle never paid the full purchase price of *306 Said pianp, and became in default under said contract on June 13, 1899, and she then notified the plaintiff that she surrendered said instrument and requested the plaintiff to call and remove it. On July 26, 1899, the plaintiff attempted to remove the piano from said hotel, but the defendant refused to permit its removal, claiming a lien thereon as a hotel and boarding-house keeper for the unpaid bills incurred by said Carlisle, and she retains the possession thereof.

On and after July 13, 1899, the plaintiff had the right to the possession of said piano, subject only to any rights that the defendant had by reason of the facts herein stated. The defendant did not know that said Carlisle was not the real owner of said piano or that the plaintiff had or claimed any rights or ownership therein until the demand was made therefor as herein stated. The plaintiff seeks to recover possession of said piano.

The parties agreed upon a statement of facts to be submitted to the court for the determination of their controversy pursuant to section 1279 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court directed judgment in favor of the defendant, dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint, and judgment has been entered thereon, from which judgment the appeal is taken to this court.

In this State prior to 1897 the lien of an innkeeper rested wholly upon the common law. It was first declared by statute in the Lien Law (Laws of 1897, chapter 418, section 71), although the lien of an innkeeper was recognized in the act for the protection of hoarding-house keepers (Laws of 1860, chapter 446), and the amendment thereto (Laws of 1876, chapter 319), the act relating to the surreptitious removal of baggage by a guest (Laws of 1867, chapter 677), the acts relating to the enforcement and foreclosure of an innkeeper’s lien (Laws of 1869, chapter 738, Laws of 1879, chapter 530), the act extending the lien óf an innkeeper (Laws of 1894, chapter 253), and in the act granting a lien to lodging-house keepers (Laws of 1895, chapter 884).

Section 71 of the Lien Law was amended by chapter 380 *307 of the Laws of 1899, and as it read at the time of the submission of the controversy herein it provided as follows: “A keeper of a hotel, inn, boarding house or lodging house, except an emigrant lodging house, has a lien upon, while in possession, and may detain the baggage and other property brought upon their premises by a guest, boarder or lodger, for the proper charges due from him, on account of his accommodation, board and lodging, and such extras as are furnished at his request. If the keeper of such hotel, inn, boarding or lodging house knew that the property so brought upon his premises was not, when brought, legally in possession of such guest, boarder or lodger, or had notice that such property was not then the property of such guest, boarder or lodger, a lien thereon does not exist.”

The provision in the lease by the defendant to Carlisle, by which Carlisle gave to the 'defendant a lien on all the effects and property brought by her into the hotel for any indebtedness accrued or accruing to the defendant, does not in any way affect the rights of the plaintiff herein, as it was in no way a party to it, and Carlisle could not, by contract with the defendant, transfer to her an interest in the property of a third person.

Upon the facts submitted, the defendant, by the express terms of the statute in effect at the times mentioned, has a lien upon the piano for the entire amount of her claim.

The plaintiff, however, claims that the statute is unconstitutional so far as it gives a lien on property of a person other than the guest. When the piano came into the possession of the defendant through her guest a part of the unpaid account had accrued ; a part accrued thereafter while Carlisle remained a transient guest in the defendant’s hotel, and the remaining part of the unpaid account accrued while Caiiisle was the o'ccupant of the apartments in the defendant’s hotel as a guest at an agreed price per year. If the defendant had a lien on the piano for any part of the account claimed by her, she was entitled to retain possession of it, and the plaintiff’s demand and claim for the possession of the piano cannot be sustained.

*308 It is only necessary to consider whether an innkeeper has a lien on goods rightfully in the possession of a transient guest when such goods are the property of a third person.

Two questions arise for our consideration :

1. Did the common law of England, on and prior to the 19th day of April, 1775, give to an innkeeper a lien on goods owned by a third person in the rightful possession of a guest for the value of his guest’s entertainment ?

2. Apart from the question whether such lien was so given by the common law is the act so far as it gives a lien upon goods owned by a third person in the rightful possession of the guest, a violation of our Constitution ?

Americans claim the common law of England as their natural heritage and shield.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.E. 143, 189 N.Y. 302, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waters-co-v-gerard-ny-1907.