This is a products liability action arising out of the purchase and consumption of an allegedly unwholesome bottle of Coca Cola against Atlanta Coca Cola Bottling Company and Big Apple Supermarket. The plaintiff alleged both negligence and breach of implied warranty in her complaint. The trial court’s charge to the jury limited the basis of recovery by plaintiff to the issue of negligence only completely eliminating any recovery on the claimed breach of implied warranty. The jury returned a verdict for defendants and judgment was entered accordingly. The failure to charge the jury on the issue of breach of warranty and other instructions is enumerated as error.
The pertinent facts are simple. Plaintiff’s minor daughter, while shopping with plaintiff in the supermarket, purchased bottles of Coca Cola from a Big Apple vending machine. Big Apple had purchased the drink from the bottling company. The child opened the bottles and gave one to plaintiff. According to the plaintiff’s testimony a soapy-like substance was in the bottle of Coca Cola that she consumed, which caused her injury. Held:
1. Defendant Coca Cola urges that no implied warranty extended from it to plaintiff as there was no privity of contract between it and plaintiff or plaintiff’s daughter. We agree. Under the Uniform Commercial Code a warranty "that the goods shall be merchantable is implied in a contract for their sale . . .” As this warranty clearly arises out of a contract of sale of goods, it can only run to a buyer who is in privity of contract with the seller.
Code Ann
§ 109A-2 — 316. There is an absence of any privity of contract between the buyer and the defendant Coca Cola, a manufacturer and remote seller. Under the Act of March 13, 1957, an implied warranty by the manufacturer was extended to an ultimate consumer. No privity of contract was required between the manufac
*620
turer and the ultimate consumer. However, this Act was specifically repealed by the Uniform Commercial Code.
Code Ann.
§ 109A-10 — 103. The repeal of the 1957 statute means that an ultimate buyer in Georgia cannot sue the manufacturer directly on a breach of implied warranty where the buyer does not purchase directly from the manufacturer. There is once again a gap in the law between the manufacturer and a buyer who purchases from a wholesaler or retailer in the distributive chain. See
Young v. Certainteed Products Corp.,
The trial court erred in failing to charge the jury on the issue of implied warranty as against defendant Big Apple, but there was no error as regards the defendant Coca Cola. That the error was harmful is apparent as plaintiff was denied the right to have this issue decided by the jury. For this reason we affirm as to Coca Cola and reverse as to Big Apple.
2. Exception was taken to the charge dealing with the duty of a plaintiff to exercise ordinary care for her own safety under Code § 105-603. Recognizing that plaintiff has attempted to recover from defendants both on theories of negligence and breach of warranty, this charge was correct as there was some evidence that made it applicable, for plaintiff testified that prior to taking a drink of the Coca Cola she noticed that it was "slick and soapy.”
3. The plaintiff enumerated as error the trial court’s charge that the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the product was in the same condition from the time it left the defendant Coca Cola’s hands until the time of consumption. This charge was correctly adjusted to the evidence as there was a showing that numerous other individuals had access to the Coca Cola in question from the time it left the bottling plant until it reached plaintiff’s hands.
Macon Coca Cola Bottling Co. v. Chancey,
Judgment affirmed in part; reversed in part.
