In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover for injuries alleged to have been sustained by her by reason of a breach of warranty of merchantability.
The evidence was as follows: Two or three weeks prior to September 8, 1959, the plaintiff purchased four or five bars of Ivory soap at one of the defendant’s retail stores. The labels on the soap stated that it was “99 44/100% pure. ’ ’ The plaintiff kept the soap in her kitchen cabinet and on the evening of September 8, 1959, she took a bar of it from the cabinet and cаrried it into the bathroom. After unwrapping it, she broke the bar in half, lathered her hands and began to wash her face. Some soap gоt in her eye and she felt a burning sensation unlike any she had previously experienced, and the eye began to discharge “thick yellow mucus.” The burning sensation and the discharging continued throughout the night. She rinsed the eye during the night with cold water; the discharge continued and the following morning the eye was red, but there was “no difference in vision.”
The plaintiff went to work that day but her eye was “quite irritated”; it was “watering” and “dischаrging” and was “bothering her.” The nurse at her place of employment put some drops in her eye but these did not “give her much relief.” She rеturned to work on the following day (September 10), and the condition was about the same; the “plant nurse gave her some more eye drops.” On September 11, “the vision of the eye was blurred” and the plaintiff went to the outpatient department of the Massachusetts Eyе and Ear Infirmary where her eye was tested by a doctor. More drops were placed in her eye and the plaintiff was given ointment and an eye patch. The eye was uncomfortable and painful. The plaintiff returned to the clinic on the following day and the dоctor “gave her further treatment and ointment to use.” She was advised to rinse the eye with hot water. The blurring of vision cleared up within a week but the pain persisted; her eye “continued to ache off and on until February 1960.” On September 16, the plaintiff went to the store wherе she *156 had purchased the soap and “told the manager what had happened.”
At the close of the evidence the defеndant moved for a directed verdict, which was denied, subject to its exception. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff. The case comes here on the defendant’s exceptions to the denial of its motion and to two rulings on evidence.
We are of opinion that the motion for a directed verdict ought to have been granted.
Other than the occurrence of the injury, the plaintiff introduсed no evidence tending to prove that the soap was not fit for the purpose for which it is normally used, or that the soap wаs other than a pure, bland, neutral soap as warranted by the statement appearing on the package that it was “99 44/100% pure.” G. L. c. 106, § 2-314.
1
Taylor
v.
Jacobson,
The plaintiff did not put in evidence the soap used or a chemical analysis of it. See
Bradt
v.
Hollaway,
There may be situations where аn injury is sustained in circumstances which will permit an inference to be drawn that the product causing the injury was not merchantable, provided the injury was such as would not generally occur unless the product was defective. See, for example,
Mead
v.
Coca Cola Bottling Co.
It is common knowledge that а pure, bland, neutral soap will sometimes produce a slight, temporary burning sensation when introduced into the eye.
Lovely’s Case,
*158
The plaintiff was not bound to exclude every other possible cause for her illness, but she was required to show that the probable cause was the soap. We are of opinion that the evidence did not establish beyond conjecture that the soap was deleterious and thаt the ailment of which the plaintiff complains was due to the soap rather than to the many other factors that will cause eye disorders.
Gracey
v.
Waldorf Sys. Inc.
Exceptions sustained.
Judgment for the defendant.
Notes
Section 2-314 provides, in part, that: “. . . a warranty that the goods shall be merchantable is implied in a contract for their salе if the seller is a merchant with respect to goods of that kind. ... (2) Goods to be merchantable must at least be such as . . . (c) are fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used; and . . . (f) conform to the promises or affirmations of fact made on the container or label if any.”
