This court having previously decided the issue of defendant Westinghouse’s liability to plaintiff by upholding the lower court’s judgment sustaining Westinghouse’s general demurrer to the petition of plaintiff’s wife seeking damages for loss of consortium, (See:
Bray v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
Plaintiff alleges that defendant Westinghouse was negligent in providing and failing to test the 2" x 4" wooden standards which it put on the cart. It is clear from the facts alleged in the petition that the use of the cart and the fork lift truck was not the usual and customary method employed by defendant Westinghouse to cany such pipes and therefore that it probably could not reasonably anticipate such use. Even if Westinghouse were negligent in this regard, however, its negligence would be too remote to be one of the concurring proximate causes of the injury to plaintiff, under the theory and principle of intervening and superseding negligence, namely that of defendant McGuire. For a general discussion of this principle see:
Blunt v. Spears,
Since nothing has been found in plaintiff’s petition which would keep it from being “on all fours” with the petition in the *786 wife’s action, it follows that the court did not err in sustaining Westinghouse’s general demurrer to the petition and in dismissing the action as to it.
Judgment affirmed.
