398 Pa. 386 | Pa. | 1960
Opinion by
On July 16, 1955, an unusually warm day, defendant delivered a quantity of bottled Coca-Cola to a retail store in Philadelphia. The delivery man put the bottles “right in the middle of the floor there, right on the side of the store”, and some time later the retailer put them in his ice-box.
At about six o’clock in the evening of the same day plaintiff-appellant came to the store and bought six bottles. In five or ten minutes he was home with them and in another ten minutes he began to open them and pour their contents into a pitcher. As he was opening the sixth bottle, it made a hissing sound like an explosion, a firecracker, or a muffle (muffler?). The cap flew off the neck of the bottle into the air, and he felt a pinch in his thumb. A sliver of glass from the clinching ring at the lip of the bottle entered his thumb and seriously injured it.
The jury gave plaintiff a verdict, but the court below entered judgment for defendant n.o.v. Its rationale is well set out in the following excerpt from the opinion of President Judge Flood: “In the case of Loch v. Confair, 372 Pa. 212 (1953) our Supreme Court took a step to lighten plaintiff’s burden of proof in view of the difficulty of establishing the cause of such defect. It held that where plaintiff sued both the manufacturer or bottler and the retailer an inference arose that one or the other of the defendants was negligent when the circumstances negatived any fault on the part of the plaintiff. The burden was then cast upon the manufacturer and the retailer to show how the defect occurred.
“Plaintiff asks us to go a step further. He did not sue the retailer but only the bottler. He asks us to
“We conclude that the jury would have to guess that the break was not caused by an external blow after the bottle left the defendant’s hands. There is no direct evidence that it was caused by a defect in manufacturing and there can be no inference of such cause unless the other equally probable cause is elimi
Plaintiff seeks to bridge tbe gap by tbe statement of defendant’s witness, Dr. Turner, that tbe fracture pattern of tbe bottle lip was typical of a break initiated by an external lifting force applied under tbe clinching ring, “and not by any other cause”. If plaintiff adopted tbe quoted phrase fully, it would put him out of court, since it would mean that no causative force other than bis own brought on tbe trouble. He argues that because of tbe verdict be is entitled to discard this awkward result and limit Dr. Turner’s language to tbe single idea that no cause of the accident can be ascribed to tbe retailer alone. But bis argument is silent about tbe further awkward result that tbe defendant would also be freed of all possible blame. There should be a reasonable limit to tbe awkward results that appellant should be allowed to avoid in this fashion, considering Dr. Turner’s vigorous, ample, uncontradicted testimony specifically eliminating all possible causes, such as bottle defect and over-carbonation, for which defendant might be responsible.
We are unwilling to extend tbe doctrine of Loch v. Confair, under these circumstances, to the case of tbe plaintiff who sues the bottler alone. Appellant’s artifact of evidence is too fragile to carry proof that far.
Tbe judgment is affirmed.