The particular responsibility imposed at common law upon
innkeepers does not extend to goods lost or stolen from a room in a
public inn furnished to a person for purposes distinct from his
accommodation as a guest.
A statute of Missouri provides that no innkeeper in that
state
"shall be Liable . . . for the loss of any merchandise for sale
or sample belonging to a guest unless the guest shall have given
written notice of having such merchandise for sale or sample in his
possession after entering the inn, nor shall the innkeeper be
compelled to receive such guest with merchandise for sale or
sample."
Held that actual knowledge that a guest has in his
possession merchandise for sale, or the consent of the innkeeper to
the guest's use of one of his rooms for such a purpose, does not
fix upon the innkeeper full responsibility for the safety of such
merchandise; such responsibility arises only upon written notice
being given as required by the statute.
This was an action at law. Judgment for defendants. Plaintiffs
sued out this writ of error. The case is stated in the opinion of
the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
By the General Statutes of Missouri of 1865, c. 99, it was
provided that --
"§ 1. No innkeeper in this state who shall constantly have in
his inn an iron safe in good order and suitable for the safe
custody of money, jewelry, and articles of gold and silver
manufacture and of the like and who shall keep a copy of
Page 121 U. S. 384
this chapter printed by itself in large plain English type and
framed, constantly and conspicuously suspended in the office, bar
room, saloon, reading, sitting, and parlor room of his inn, and
also a copy printed by itself, in ordinary size plain English type,
posted upon the inside of the entrance door of every public
sleeping room of his inn, shall be liable for the loss of any such
articles aforesaid suffered by any guest unless such guest shall
have first offered to deliver such property lost by him to such
innkeeper for custody in such iron safe and such innkeeper shall
have refused or omitted to take it and deposit it in such safe for
its custody and to give such guest a receipt therefor."
"§ 2. No innkeeper in this state shall be liable for the loss of
any baggage or other property of a guest caused by fire not
intentionally produced by the innkeeper or his servants, but
innkeepers shall be liable for the losses of their guests caused by
the theft or negligence of the innkeeper or of his servants,
anything herein to the contrary notwithstanding."
The last section was amended by an act approved April 1, 1872,
so as to read:
"No innkeeper in this state shall be liable for the loss of any
baggage or other property of a guest caused by fire not
intentionally produced by the innkeeper or his servants, nor shall
he be liable for the loss of any merchandise for sale or sample
belonging to a guest, unless the guest shall have given written
notice of having such merchandise for sale or sample in his
possession after entering the inn; nor shall the innkeeper be
compelled to receive such guest with merchandise for sale or
sample. But innkeepers shall be liable for the losses of their
guests caused by the theft of such innkeeper or his servants,
anything herein to the contrary notwithstanding."
William M. Fisher, having in his possession, as a traveling
salesman for the firm of which he was a member, certain goods
consisting mainly of gold chains, chain trimmings, and necklaces,
was received, with his goods, into the Planters' House in St.
Louis, a public inn kept by the defendants in error, and was
supplied at his own request with a room in which such articles
could be exhibited to customers. During
Page 121 U. S. 385
his occupancy of the room for that purpose, $12,626.32 in value
of the articles were, without his knowledge, taken and carried
away, so that they could not be recovered. It does not appear that
the loss was attributable to the neglect either of Fisher or of the
innkeepers. Although the nature of his business was well known to
the defendants and they were aware that the articles in question
were brought into the hotel to be exhibited for sale in a room to
be occupied for that purpose, written notice was not served upon
them that Fisher had "such merchandise for sale or sample in his
possession after entering the inn." In this action, such a notice
was required by the statutes of Missouri in order to fix liability
upon the innkeeper. The jury having been so instructed, there was a
verdict and judgment for the defendants.
Although Fisher was received by the defendants into their hotel
as a guest with knowledge that his trunks contained articles having
no connection with his comfort or convenience as a mere traveler or
wayfarer, but which at his request, were to be placed on exhibition
or for sale in a room assigned to him for that purpose, they would
not, under the doctrines of the common law, be held to the same
degree of care and responsibility, in respect to the safety of such
articles as is required in reference to baggage or other personal
property carried by travelers. He was entitled as a traveler to
room for lodging, but he could not of right demand to be supplied
with apartments in which to conduct his business as a salesman or
merchant. The defendants, being the owners or managers of the
hotel, were at liberty to permit the use by Fisher of one of their
rooms for such business purposes, but they would not, for that
reason and without other circumstances, be held to have had his
goods in their custody or to have undertaken to well and safely
keep them as constituting part of the property which he had with
him in his capacity as guest. Kent says that
"if a guest applies for a room in an inn for a purpose of
business distinct from his accommodation as a guest, the particular
responsibility does not extend
Page 121 U. S. 386
to goods lost or stolen from that room."
2 Kent Com. 596.
See also Myers v. Cottrill, 5 Bissell
470, Drummond, J.; Story on Bailments § 476;
Burgess v.
Clements, 4 M. & S. 306; Redfield on Carriers 443; Addison
Law of Contracts, 6th ed. 360.
Such, we think, was the state of the law in Missouri prior to
the passage of the act of 1872. That act prescribes the conditions
upon which an innkeeper in that state may be made liable for the
loss of merchandise belonging to a guest and brought into the hotel
only to be exhibited or sold. In view of the large and constantly
increasing business transacted by traveling salesmen, the
Legislature of Missouri deemed it just to all concerned that their
relations with innkeepers in respect to goods carried by them
should be clearly defined, and not left to depend upon mere
inference or usage. The statute makes the innkeeper responsible in
every event for the loss of baggage or other property of the guest
by fire intentionally produced by the innkeeper or his servants or
by the theft of himself or servants. But since the innkeeper is not
ordinarily bound to the same care for the safety of goods, in the
possession of a guest for the purpose merely of being exhibited or
sold, as for articles carried by the latter for his comfort or
convenience as a traveler, the statute changed the rule so as to
make his responsibility the same in both cases, provided, in the
former case, the person received as a guest gives written notice
that he has merchandise for sale or sample in his possession in the
hotel, leaving the innkeeper, upon such notice, to elect whether he
will permit the guest to remain in the hotel with such merchandise
for sale or sample. Notice in this form, when the guest is
permitted to remain in the hotel with merchandise in his possession
"for sale or sample," is made by the statute evidence that the
innkeeper has assumed responsibility for the safety of such
merchandise to the full extent that he is bound by the settled
principles of law for the safety of the baggage or other articles
brought by guests into the hotels.
It is suggested that the purpose of the act of 1872 was to
protect innkeepers, and therefore actual knowledge that a
Page 121 U. S. 387
guest has in his possession merchandise for sale, or at least
the consent of the innkeeper to the guest's use of a room in his
hotel for such purpose, should be deemed sufficient to fasten upon
the innkeeper responsibility for the safety of such merchandise. It
seems to us that the statute is equally for the benefit of
traveling salesmen. Be this as it may, as the law in regard to the
liability of an innkeeper is one of extreme rigor, he should not be
held to any responsibility beyond that arising from the relation of
innkeeper and guest, unless, at least, the circumstances show that
he distinctly agreed to assume such additional responsibility.
There is no pretense in this case that the defendants made an
express agreement of that character. Nor can such an agreement be
implied merely from the knowledge on the part of the innkeeper that
a guest has in his possession in the hotel, for exhibition or sale,
merchandise for the safe custody of which he is not ordinarily
responsible. Such knowledge implies nothing more upon the part of
the innkeeper than his assent to the use of his rooms for purposes
of that kind.
If, as to such merchandise, it is intended to hold the innkeeper
to the strict liability imposed at the common law in respect to the
baggage or other personal property of a guest, the statute
indicates the mode in which that intention must be manifested. The
guest must give notice of such intention; and, as the notice is
expressly required to be in writing, no other form of notice can be
deemed a compliance with the statute.
Porter v. Gilkey, 57
Mo. 237. With the reasons which induced the legislature to
prescribe a written notice in order to fix upon the innkeeper
responsibility for the safety of merchandise carried by traveling
salesmen for sale or sample, we have nothing to do. The law of
Missouri is so written, and it is our duty to give it effect
according to the fair meaning of the words employed.
It results that the court below did not err in refusing the
instruction asked by the plaintiffs, but correctly held that the
absence of the written notice required by the act of 1872 was fatal
to their right to recover. The judgment is
Affirmed.