88 So. 36 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1920
The judgment from which the appeal is taken in this case was rendered against the appellant in a suit for damages wherein it was alleged that appellant, being engaged in the business of bottling and selling a beverage known as Coca-Cola, did so negligently conduct its business as to bottle and sell a bottle of said beverage which contained a decomposed rat or mouse; a part of the contents of the bottle being drunk by appellee, who was made sick. The case was submitted to the jury on amended count No. 1, and the sufficiency of this amended count was questioned by demurrers to the same. There was no error in overruling these demurrers. The appellant, being engaged in the business of bottling and selling a beverage for human consumption, was bound to use due care to see that the beverage bottled and sold was such as could be partaken of without causing sickness or endangering human life or health because of its unwholesome and deleterious condition; and for any negligence in this particular, in failing to observe this duty, which proximately resulted in injury to any one, the appellant would be responsible. See recent case of Chysky v. Drake Bros. Co.,
What the defendant did and how he did it and what he failed to do are generally better known to the defendant than to the plaintiff; and hence it is that in such cases a general form of averment is sufficient. M. O. R. R. Co. v. George,
Where a duty to exercise care is shown, a failure to perform the duty and negligence which causes the injury complained of may be well averred in the most general language. Postal Tel. Co. v. Jones,
If there was any error in sustaining appellee's demurrers to appellant's plea No. 2, that of contributory negligence, it was without injury, for the reason that appellee's demurrers were overruled to appellant's amended plea of contributory negligence, which plea was substantially the same as the one to which demurrers were sustained.
We do not think the trial court was in error in permitting the introduction of the bottle and the decomposed rat, over the appellant's objections. The appellee identified the bottle and its contents. The testimony is not to be excluded because the witness does. not speak with positive assurance. Mitchell v. State,
It fairly appears from the cross-examination of the plaintiff that defendant's counsel asked the witness in regard to his answers to several interrogatories propounded to him by the defendant, and that on redirect examination plaintiff's counsel asked the witness the following question:
"I will ask you to look at this copy of the interrogatory which you answered in this case. In answer to the interrogatory propounded by Mr. Pitts, when did you eat your next meal after you drank Coca-Cola. Please state to the jury what your answer was."
To this question the defendant objected on the ground that the same was irrelevant, immaterial, and inadmissible. The court overruled the objection.
As said in the case of So. Ry. Co. v. Hubbard,
"It is the settled construction of the statutes which authorize the filing of interrogatories to the opposite party, and offering the answers into evidence, that only the party taking them can make them evidence."
Yet we think that, when the party propounding them questions the witness as to what his answer was to a certain interrogatory, certainly as to the answer to the interrogatory inquired about, the opposite party may cross him as to his answer, and that an examination of this kind on the part of the party propounding the interrogatory is to this extent, at least, an offering by him of the answers in evidence.
Furthermore, it will be seen that no objection was made to offering this part of the interrogatory, but the objection was to the question, and only general grounds of objection were assigned, and no motion was made to exclude the answer.
There was no error in overruling defendant's objection to the question:
"Have you ever drank Coca-Cola that tasted the same and had no ill effects from it?"
Besides, no motion was made to exclude the answer.
We know of no statute allowing a party to reserve an exception to what the court said in its oral charge "in substance," and a party desiring this court to pass on any part of the trial court's oral charge should reserve an exception to that particular part which is objectionable, and not to the substance of it, as appellant did in this case.
We hold that under the evidence in this case it was a question for the jury as to whether the plaintiff was entitled to damages for mental anguish and pain. Watson v. Augusta Brewing Co.,
Whether or not the defendant was negligent in failing to use due care in seeing to it that the beverage bottled by it and sold to the public was fit for human consumption under the facts and the tendencies afforded by the evidence in this case was, we think, for the jury to determine. That the plaintiff was made sick there seems to be no doubt. Just how sick and its effects was for the jury to say. He says he was made sick by drinking the beverage bottled and sold by appellant; that he did not know the mouse was in the bottle until he had drank the Coco-Cola.
The defendant's testimony tends to show that it has an up-to-date plant, and that it was operated in a skillful manner such as all well-ordered and up-to-date plants are, and the manager of the plant and one of the defendants testified that the only way for this thing to have occurred was for there to have been some break in the machinery, and that there was no break, or through some carelessness of some one operating the plant. So from the conflict in the evidence it necessarily became a question for the jury to determine from a consideration of the whole evidence.
As was said in the case of Pantaze v. West,
"It was not for the court to pass upon the conflicting, probable, or reasonable inferences to be drawn from the evidence, nor to weigh or balance one inference that could be so drawn against another contra inference deduced from other testimony, and thus determine and pass upon these different and conflicting inferences afforded by the evidence for or against one or the other of the parties to the suit; for this, under our system, is exclusively the province of the jury. And as negligence and the failure to exercise due care and ordinary caution, like any other fact, may be inferred from circumstances, the court would not have been justified in taking the case from the jury unless, as a matter of law, no recovery could have been had in the case upon any view which could properly have been taken of the evidence and of the reasonable tendencies afforded by it."
See Smoot v. M. M. Ry. Co.,
The eleventh assignment of error is:
"The verdict in this case is excessive and should be reduced by the Court of Appeals," etc.
Appellant in argument insists that the verdict is excessive, and that under Acts 1915, p. 610, this court should determine the amount of the excess and direct a reversal *609 unless the appellee remit the excess. It nowhere appears from the record or the bill of exceptions that appellant made a motion for a new trial which was acted upon by the trial court, on the ground that the verdict was excessive, or that a motion for a new trial was made predicated on any other grounds as for that. So we are confronted with the entirely new question as to whether under the acts of 1915 this court can primarily consider the question of the excessiveness vel non of said verdict; the same appearing not to have been raised in and passed upon by the trial court. We think not. We do not see how the trial court could be put in error for something that has never been presented to it and it has not had an opportunity to pass upon. It is noticeable that the record in all cases that we have examined where the verdict was claimed to be excessive discloses the fact that in each a motion for a new trial has been made and acted upon by the trial court. So, then, pretermitting the question as to whether the verdict in the instant case is excessive, our conclusion is that this is not properly presented to us for review under this record in this case.
We find no error, and the judgment for the plaintiff is affirmed.
Affirmed.