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CHAPTER 10: Rights of Innkeepers

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Title: CHAPTER 10: Rights of Innkeepers


1
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Hotels and restaurants have the right to make
    reasonable rules for the behavior etc. of their
    customers.
  • However hotels extend and implied invitation to
    both non-guests and guests.

2
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Therefore a person who enters a hotel while not a
    guest is not considered a trespasser. This
    implied license can be revoked by the innkeeper
    at any time

3
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • and if the non-guest refuses to leave the
    premises after being asked, he becomes a
    trespasser. After the person has been asked to
    leave the innkeeper can use reasonable force to
    remove him, but not more.

4
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • People v. Thorpe. Jehovah's Witnesses enter a
    hotel and start going from door to door with
    their pamphlets. They are asked to leave by
    refuse.

5
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Then the police are called and they are told that
    the hotel has a right to bar them from entry.
    They are removed, but only to return moments
    later in order to continue their preaching.

6
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • They are subsequently arrested. The hotel has a
    right to remove non-guests if it feels that their
    behavior is unwanted by the guests or could be
    found annoying even if the conduct is not itself
    unlawful.

7
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • After enactment of The Civil Rights Act of 1964
    hotels and restaurants are considered public
    places and it is unlawful to discriminate against
    persons because of color, religion etc.

8
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Refusing a guest lodging
  • RULE A hotel cannot refuse a person seeking
    lodging.
  • Exceptions 1) if the hotel has no vacancies. 2)
    if person drunk,

9
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • 3) if visibly unclean, 4) if disorderly, 5) if
    suffering from contagious disease, 6) if
    prospective guest cannot pay in advance,

10
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • 7) if known criminal, 8) if prospective guest
    carries firearms, 9) if prospective guest has
    pets (excluding seeing eye dogs).

11
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • The consequences of wrongful refusal. The
    excluded guest can sue hotel for damages
    including the expenses of staying elsewhere.

12
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Age. Age is not a protected class in places of
    public accommodation. Therefore a restaurant
    could refuse to serve a child.

13
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • However, a hotel has a common law duty to provide
    accommodation to all seeking it, only with the
    before mentioned exceptions.

14
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • A hotel can therefore not refuse a child. If a
    child cannot pay, the hotel can either go after
    the child

15
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • because the services (food and shelter) are
    considered necessities and therefore the child
    must pay reasonable value, or the hotel can sue
    the parents of the child.

16
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Selecting accommodations for a guest
    Determination of which guest gets which room has
    always been the prerogative of the innkeeper.

17
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Nixon v. Royal Coach Inn of Houston. A female
    guest is assigned a room some distance away from
    the front desk.

18
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • After she returns from having dinner in town, she
    is attacked in the hallway on the way to her
    room.

19
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • She is claiming that the hotel was negligent for
    assigning a single female guest a room that
    remote and far away from the front desk. But the
    hotel is not liable.

20
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Changing a guests accommodations The
    hotelkeeper has the sole right to select the room
    for the guest and, if expedient, change it. It is
    legal, but not advisable.

21
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Entering a guests room. The rule is that when a
    guest occupies a room, he should be the sole
    occupier. But the hotel can enter the room for
    maintenance, repair, imminent danger, nonpayment
    and when requested by the guest.

22
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Evicting a guest Under some circumstances a
    hotel may evict a guest provided it does not use
    excessive force. These are the circumstances

23
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Failure to pay bill.
  • Morningstar v. Lafayette Hotel. A hotel guest
    refuses to pay a charge in the hotel restaurant.
    The next time he goes there, he is being told
    that the restaurant will not serve on him. This
    is the right of the restaurant.

24
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Overstaying. If the guest is staying longer than
    the period of time agreed on the contract, the
    hotel has the right to evict. If the guest
    refuses to leave, he breaches the contract and
    becomes a trespasser.

25
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • The hotel has two choices either evict or assume
    that a new contract exists and charge the guest
    on a day-to-day basis.

26
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Three states have enacted statutes that modify
    the common law rule in that they do not require
    the hotel to request the guest to leave before he
    becomes a trespasser.

27
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Persons of ill repute.
  • Raider v. Dixie Inn. A female guest staying at an
    inn is removed without explanation. The reason is
    that the innkeeper has learned that she is a
    prostitute.

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CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • She files suit, not because of the eviction, but
    because of the manner in which she was evicted.
    But the fact that the innkeeper removed her
    belongings from the room when she was not

29
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • there and then quietly asked her to leave upon
    her return was not excessive, not unlawful.

30
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • However what constitutes an objectionable
    character is changing over time and today she
    would not have been evicted unless she was
    practicing her profession in the hotel.

31
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Intoxication and disorderly conduct. Intoxication
    alone is not enough to remove the guest. The
    guest must be disturbing the other guests or
    otherwise behave in an disorderly fashion.

32
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Disorderly conduct. A person can also be removed
    for disorderly conduct and disturbance of other
    guests, even if not intoxicated.

33
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Contagiously ill guests. The general rule is that
    the hotel may evict, but after enactment of the
    ADA, the guest is protected so that the hotel
    must make reasonable accommodations, but is that
    possible? There are no cases yet.

34
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Breaking house rules. A hotel is permitted to
    have house rules and it can evict a guest for
    breaking them. But the rules must be posted in
    visible places.

35
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Persons not registered. Rights of a guest are
    not transferable and a hotel may evict a
    non-guest anytime.

36
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Kelly v. United States. The appellant was seen on
    several occasions in the Statler hotel and was
    later identified as a prostitute who was doing
    business from the hotel.

37
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • She is stopped by security and a barring notice
    was read to her. When she returns some time later
    she is arrested for unlawful entry.

38
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Appellant contends that the unlawful entry
    statute does not apply to hotels.

39
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • But since it is a general rule that a hotel has
    the right to exclude a person who is not and has
    no intention of becoming a guest, then entry
    subsequent to such an exclusion is unlawful.

40
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Henning v. Goldberg. The hotel changes the locks
    when the person occupying the room is out. When
    she returns she cannot get in.

41
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • But she is not a registered guest and the room is
    in fact booked by another person under a
    different name.

42
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Having permission from the real guest is not
    enough to give her a lawful right to occupy the
    room.

43
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Persons without baggage. The mere absence of
    luggage does not itself suggest an immoral or
    illegal intent.

44
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Business competitors. If business competitors
    come to a hotel seeking accommodation, they have
    to be treated like any other guest and cannot be
    evicted.

45
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • But if they come there soliciting business, they
    act unlawful and can be evicted. Even if a guest
    in the hotel orders food from a competitor and
    wants to have it delivered, the hotel can refuse
    the competitor at the door.

46
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Also a hotel which is not serving food can choose
    a limited number of businesses to deliver food
    and exclude others. Only when there are no
    legitimate interests for excluding a business, it
    will be unlawful.

47
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Illegal eviction or detention.
  • Excessive force. Use of excessive force in an
    eviction can lead to liability for assault or
    battery.

48
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Assault means intentionally putting someone in
    fear of harmful physical contact. Battery means
    causing actual harmful physical contact.

49
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Hopp v. Thompson. A person enters a hotel and is
    asked to leave. He is a stranger and not a guest.
    He refuses.

50
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • The hotel threatens to call the police, but the
    man attacks the person on duty when he picks up
    the phone receiver. Then the employee strikes the
    man with a piece of pipe. He gets injured.

51
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • The man has a completely different story and says
    that he did not refuse to leave and that he did
    not attack the employee. However the rule is that
    only reasonable force can be used and here it was
    excessive.

52
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Durand v. Moore. A doorman at a night club
    attacks a waiting customer. The nightclub
    contends that the employee did not act within the
    scope of his employment.

53
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • The customer waiting had been passed several
    times by others behind him who were chosen by the
    doorman to be let in. The customer complained but
    was attacked by the doorman.

54
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • It is disputed whether the customer had been loud
    and threatening.

55
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • A court found the club liable under Respondeat
    superior. On this appeal the issue is whether the
    doorman acted within the scope of the general
    authority of the employment.

56
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • In this case the doorman had the responsibility
    to control entry of the customers and since the
    assault happened in direct connection to the
    argument about admittance,

57
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • it was seen as an overzealous enforcement of the
    criteria laid down by the club. The use of
    Respondeat superior was correct.

58
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Verbal abuse. It is also illegal to use verbal
    abuse when evicting a person.

59
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • How to evict. When evicting, a hotel must
    distinguish between a guest and a tenant. A
    tenant cannot be removed without court
    proceeding.

60
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Refusing a diner Under common law, a restaurant,
    unless part of an inn, had the right to refuse
    any person. This is still the rule today absent a
    statute modifying common law.

61
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • But federal and state law prohibits
    discrimination against persons because of race,
    religion etc. But if a person has a reservation,
    the restaurant is obligated to serve the person
    because a contract exists.

62
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Statutory protection for the hotelkeeper If a
    patron does not pay, the hotel lien gives the
    innkeeper the right to hold the patrons
    belongings.

63
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • The innkeepers lien. A lien is a security
    interest in the property of a debtor. The lien
    gives the creditor the right to take possession
    of the property, realize the assets and apply the
    proceeds to the unpaid debt.

64
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Lien is derived from common law but all states
    have enacted legislation supporting the
    principle.

65
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • The issue was brought before the Supreme Court,
    plaintiffs arguing that these laws were
    incompatible with the Due Process Clause of the
    Constitution,

66
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • because it states that you cannot derive a person
    his property without due process in court. But
    the SC held that this only applies in cases where
    the property is taken by the government.

67
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • After this ruling, some states have enacted
    legislation widening the Due Process Clause to
    also covering the private cases. But other states
    have done nothing.

68
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Rights under the lien. The innkeeper can prevent
    the guest from removing the property, it can take
    possession, and it can sell. What property?

69
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Almost all property that a guest brings into a
    hotel. Exceptions are necessities and some very
    personal pieces of jewelry, such as a wedding
    ring.

70
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • The right also extends to property brought into
    the hotel, not belonging to the guest, PROVIDED
    that the hotel does not know that the property
    does not belong to the guest.

71
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • If the guests tries to take possession of the
    property under the lien, he can be charged with
    theft. Typically the statutes require

72
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • the innkeeper to post an announcement of sale of
    the property at least 2 weeks prior to the sale
    date, including a description of the goods. The
    innkeeper must also send notice of the sale to
    the nonpaying guest.

73
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Defrauding the hotelkeeper or restaurateur
  • Intent to defraud. Two elements must be proven
    That there is a criminal act and that there is
    intent to defraud.

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CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Since the intent is difficult to prove, some
    states have a presumption of intent and the
    defendant has to rebut that.

75
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • State of Utah v. Leonard. The defendant checks
    into a hotel and pays in cash the first two days.
    Thereafter no payment is received. When the hotel
    four days later asks him to pay his accumulated
    bill and nothing happens,

76
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • he gets locked out of his room. He promises to
    pay and is let back into the room. But defendant
    vacates the room and is arrested shortly
    thereafter. He is convicted of obtaining services
    by deception. However, fraudulent intent must be
    proven,

77
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • a mere inability to pay is not enough. Neither is
    a mere breach of contract enough to prove theft
    of services. Reversed and remanded.

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CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • Fraudulent payment. Most states punish the act of
    knowingly writing a bad check. Also paying with a
    stolen credit card, which is forgery and
    possession of stolen property. Forgery is the
    unauthorized alteration, completion or making of
    a written instrument.

79
CHAPTER 10 Rights of Innkeepers
  • False arrest Proceed with caution. In many
    states it is illegal to detain a guest if he in
    fact did not commit a crime. Rather call the
    police.
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