64 A.2d 525 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1948
Argued October 7, 1948. In this action of trespass for negligence the defendant offered no testimony, the court declined its point for binding instructions, and the jury found for the plaintiff. Judgment having been entered on the verdict, defendant appeals, assigning as error the refusal of its motion for judgment non obstante veredicto. Therefore the sole question is whether the evidence will sustain the jury's finding of defendant's negligence, giving the plaintiff the benefit of all reasonable inferences and deductions therefrom. We are of the opinion that the verdict and judgment should be sustained.
The defendant prepares coffee which it sells to retailers under the trade name of "Boscul Coffee." The *367 coffee is marketed by the defendant in glass jars and is vacuum packed,1 so that some of the air in the jar is withdrawn. The glass container is sealed with a metal top having a rubber washer or gasket between the flange of the metal top and the glass. Atmospheric pressure of 14.7 pounds per square inch (at sea level) is, of course, exerted from all directions upon the glass container. To open the jar the lid or top must be pried off,2 and when this is done the sound of air flowing into the container is heard. Since a portion of the air had been withdrawn from the jar, the pressure from without the jar was greater than the pressure from within.
Defendant-processor, the remote vendor, sold jars of this coffee to the Penn Fruit Company, which operated a retail store in Philadelphia.
The plaintiff visited this store, which was of the "self-serve" variety. She collected various groceries from the store shelves and placed them in a wire basket mounted on wheels. Among these items was a glass jar of defendant's Boscul coffee. She then wheeled the carrier to the aisle and counter where they were to be removed by her from the basket, checked, and the total price computed and paid.
The plaintiff placed her hand on the jar in order to lift it out of the basket. Her hand was not applied with any force, but the jar exploded and her hand was severely cut.
She testified that the explosion "was a loud noise like an automobile back firing." On this she was corroborated by the store manager, who described the sound as a "loud noise, which was an unusual noise." The *368 explosion threw out fragments of glass a distance of three feet from the basket or carrier; but the bottom of the jar, with some coffee in or on it, remained in the basket.
The evidence therefore sustained a finding that the explosion occurred from a force generated from within the container, and that this force was built up until it was greater than the atmospheric pressure and until it also exceeded the fracture or yield point of the glass container.
Coffee, being an inert substance, could not of itself cause the pressure and explosion. Therefore something, — something other than coffee, was packed in the contents of the jar. Whatever may have been this adventitious substance, it was placed in the container with the coffee before it left the defendant's plant. It could not have entered the jar after it was vacuum packed, for the evidence showed that the jar of coffee had a normal aspect, which would not have been true had the container been opened. It was the defendant's duty to use reasonable care and by proper inspection to prevent any such matter (which would generate gas and cause an explosion) being in the apparently inert substance which the plaintiff purchased, viz., coffee. The evidence amply demonstrated that the foreign material was in the jar. Defendant offered no explanation nor did it show what means it employed to prevent the happening of the event.
The appellant contends that the plaintiff merely showed the happening of an accident, and that the evidence did not disclose either how it happened or that it was the defendant's fault. With this we cannot agree. This is a case of the "proof of negligence by circumstantial evidence" (Stanalonis, Admr., v. Branch MotorExpress Company,
Actually the whole doctrine, — and this is also true of res ipsa loquitur, — is but a rule of evidence which determines whose task it is to produce evidence, or, as Professor Wigmore phrases it, "who has the risk of non-persuasion." That is, first, whether, as a matter of law, the court determines under the rules of law that the circumstantial evidence is sufficient to take the case to the jury, and second, whether the jury is persuaded; for the jury may but need not find that the defendant did not use due care. In such cases the question is whether this risk of non-persuasion has been properly cast on the defendant, regardless of whether we use the term "presumption of fact" or "inference." See MacDonald, Admrx., v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co.,
In the instant case the thing which caused the injury was under the exclusive management and control of the defendant, for the "manufacturer was for all purposes in exclusive control of the . . . [container] and its contents, as its contents were undisturbed until it reached the consumer's hands. . . . The particular dereliction is not shown, nor was it necessary; the negligent act is demonstrated by [the] showing. . . .":Rozumailski v. Philadelphia Coca-Cola Bottling Co.,
The appellant contends that the jar which exploded was handled by many people after it passed from the possession of the defendant; but there is no evidence *371
nor any explanation, reasonable or even fanciful, of how the mere handling of the jar by the employes of the immediate vendor could have contributed in any wise to the explosion. See Saganowich etal. v. Hachikian,
In the instant case the plaintiff sued the remote vendor in trespass for negligence, and no privity need be shown between the plaintiff and defendant: Catani v. Swift Company,
There is nothing even suggested that any act of others than the defendant's own employes could have, in any manner, contributed to the explosion, nor that *372 the damage could be attributed to some other cause.4
Judgment affirmed.