271 Mass. 230 | Mass. | 1930
Sadie E. Farley, herein referred to as the plaintiff, brought three actions of tort against, respectively, Marie H. Dederick, herein referred to as the hairdresser, Edward E. Tower & Company, herein referred to as the dealer, and the Standard Pyroxoloid Corporation, herein referred to as the manufacturer, to recover for personal
The jury would have been warranted in finding, among other facts, that the plaintiff went into the establishment conducted by the hairdresser to have her hair dressed by a method known as water waving; that in the process an attendant wet the plaintiff’s hair, put eight or ten combs in it while it was wet, and was drying it with hot air from an electric dryer when the combs took fire — there was a “sizzling noise” and smoke, but no flame or explosion — and burned the plaintiff’s head; that the combs were bought by the hairdresser from the dealer, and by it from the manufacturer who made them, and that the plaintiff’s injury resulted from the use by the attendant in the hairdressing establishment of these combs in connection with heat. There was no evidence of a contractual relation between the plaintiff and the dealer or the manufacturer, injury to property, or defect in the combs.
1. It was not error to refuse to direct a verdict for the dealer.
Whatever may be the rule applicable to other facts, it is settled that a person, who sells an article, which he knows is inherently dangerous to human life, limb or health, to another person, who has no knowledge of its true character, and fails to give notice thereof to the purchaser, is hable in damages to a third person who, while in the exercise of due care, is injured by a use of it which should have been contemplated by the seller. Wellington v. Downer
The jury would have been warranted in finding facts which would render the dealer liable under this rulé. There was testimony that the combs were made of pyroxoloid, which is “practically the same as celluloid.” It is composed principally of pyroxylin, a “compound of cellulose and nitric-acid, a nitro-cellulose or guncotton.” Flame will readily ignite pyroxylin, and it is “ignitable by the direct application of heat” without flame. It is “stable enough at ordinary temperatures, that is seventy degrees Fahrenheit.” It “would ignite not at any exact temperature, it might vary anywhere from two hundred and forty degrees to three hundred degrees Fahrenheit.” “If it had been subjected to heat it would be partly decomposed and would be then unstable and it might ignite at a very low temperature . . . the temperature of boiling water or two hundred and twelve Fahrenheit.” There was testimony that as a “matter of common knowledge” pyroxylin is “highly inflammable.” “It is explosive — that is its character.” When heat is applied it begins to decompose and its temperature “rises considerably higher than the heat that is applied to it,” and it “is commonly recognized by the public at large as a substance that is dangerous when used in proximity to heat.” From this testimony it could have been found that the combs, when sold by the dealer, were inherently dangerous to human life, limb or health. Guinan v. Famous Players-Lasky Corp. 267 Mass. 501, 512, 514. The fact that, so far as appears, they were dangerous only when heat was applied to them, does not necessarily take them out of the class of things inherently dangerous. Danger is inherent when it is due to the nature of an article and not to a defect in an article
The evidence — especially the answers to interrogatories propounded to the dealer’s officers — warranted the finding that the dealer knew that the combs were within this class of inherently dangerous things. There Was testimony also from which it could have been found that the dealer gave no notice to its purchaser, the hairdresser, orally, by marks or labels, or otherwise, of the true character of the combs and that neither the hairdresser nor the attendant in her establishment, who dressed the plaintiff’s hair, had knowledge thereof.
The jury could have found that the use of the combs shown by the testimony should have been contemplated by the dealer. According to the answers to the interrogatories propounded to the dealer’s officers, the combs were sold in a container or containers and each container bore “a representation of a woman’s head with combs in place . . . and the following wording: ‘“Vassar” Water Wavers Contains 4 Combs Inch. Before retiring dampen the hair and insert . . . where waves are desired. In order to obtain a more perfect wave, hair must be thoroughly dried before removing wavers,’” the combs “were not designed to be used for the dressing of hair together with a machine that was designed to produce heat” and it was not “necessary to use an instrument designed to produce heat in giving water waves.” On the other hand the hairdresser testified that in the process of water waving “in order to dry hair thoroughly it is necessary to use a current of warm air” though she would not say that it was “impossible to water wave hair by dampening the hair before retiring, inserting the combs and allowing the hair to dry naturally.” She “never did it” and did not “know of anybody that ever did.” The attendant testified that “in a beauty parlor it is always done by a dryer of some kind and by heat.” There was testimony that “the temperature of the heat in the form of
Since it could have been found that the plaintiff’s injury was caused by the use of the combs in connection with a machine designed to produce heat and that such use was a natural and probable consequence of the sale of the combs by the dealer, the conclusion was warranted that this sale was a proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury, and that the acts of the hairdresser and her attendant were not intervening causes which broke the causal connection. Guinan v. Famous Players-Lasky Corp. supra. Wellington v. Downer Kerosene Oil Co. supra, at page 68. Lane v. Atlantic Works, 111 Mass. 136. Leahy v. Standard Oil Co. of New York, 224 Mass. 352. Stone v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 171 Mass. 536,' Bellino v. Columbus Construction Co. 188 Mass. 430, and Horan v. Watertown, 217 Mass. 185, relied on by the dealer, are distinguishable on grounds indicated in Leahy v. Standard Oil Co. of New York, supra, page 364. See also Teasdale v. Beacon Oil Co. 266 Mass. 25.
It could not have been ruled as matter of law that the dealer’s burden of proving contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff was sustained. G. L. c. 231, § 85. Her testimony, by which alone she was bound on this aspect of the case, that during the water-waving process she felt the heat, asked for a change in the process, which was made, and was told to let the attendant know if she felt the heat again, did not justify such a ruling.
The evidence in the case against the manufacturer was the same as in that against the dealer so far as it concerned the dangerous character of the combs, the lack of knowledge thereof by the hairdresser and the attendant in her hair dressing establishment, and the due care of the plaintiff. Moreover, the manufacturer “must be presumed to know the nature and quality” of the combs which it made, and proof' of this knowledge was not required. Thornhill v. Carpenter-Morton Co. supra, at page 597.
According to the answers to interrogatories propounded to the manufacturer’s officers, the manufacturer “at one time packed such combs in boxes labelled ‘Vassar’, each box containing one dozen pairs; subsequently such combs have been packed in large display boxes containing twelve smaller boxes, each of the small boxes containing one set of four combs” and being marked as shown in the case against the dealer, but the interrogated officer did not “know how the containers of those particular combs were marked.” He stated that “the water waving combs manufactured” by the defendant manufacturer “were not designed to be used in the dressing of hair in proximity to an instrument designed to produce heat.” In spite of this statement it was a fair inference from the evidence, as in the case against the dealer, that, according to human experience, it was likely that the combs would be used in connection with a machine designed to produce heat, unless warning of the hazard was given. It could have been found that the manufacturer contemplated that the dealer would resell the combs and that if such resale was made without notice of their dangerous character, the use of them in connection with a machine designed to produce heat would be a natural and probable consequence of such resale.
It was not contended at the trial that there were any marks or labels on the combs or the containers when sold by the manufacturer which would give notice to the dealer or the hairdresser of the dangerous character of the combs when used in connection with heat. Moreover, there are
The jury, therefore, would have been warranted in finding all the facts which would render the manufacturer liable under the rule stated, except lack of knowledge by the dealer of the true character of the combs and failure of the manufacturer to give notice thereof to the dealer, unless it can be said that there was also failure to prove that the use of the combs in connection with a machine designed to produce heat should have been contemplated by the manufacturer.
While, ordinarily, a vendor is not hable for injuries resulting to a third person by reason of the resale by the vendee of a dangerous article without proof of lack of knowledge by the vendee of its true character and of failure of the vendor to give him warning of the hazard, we think this is not an absolute rule (see Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Deselms, 212 U. S. 159, 179; Bryson v. Hines, 268 Fed. Rep. 290, 294; Clement v. Crosby & Co. 148 Mich. 293), and that the significance of such failure of proof is that by reason thereof ordinarily there is failure to prove that the use of the dangerous article should have been contemplated by the vendor, and that there was a causal relation between the sale by him and the injury to the third person. However, there may be facts, other than lack of knowledge by the vendee of the dangerous character of an article and failure of the vendor to give him notice thereof, which warrant the conclusion that a use of such article resulting in injury to a third person should have been contemplated by the vendor and that the sale by the vendor was the proximate cause of the injury to the third person. The iritervening act of the vendee — the resale of the dangerous article without disclosure of its true character — even if
Though some of us, including the writer, think otherwise, a majority of the court are of opinion that the jury would have been warranted in finding on the evidence in this case, even in the absence of proof of lack of knowledge by the dealer of the dangerous character of the combs and failure of the manufacturer to give notice thereof, that the manufacturer should have foreseen that the dealer might sell them without disclosing their dangerous character; that, as the combs were sold to the dealer in marked containers for the purpose of resale, it was likely, according to the usual experience of mankind, that the dealer might resell them without making any oral or written statement as to their dangerous qualities, adding any statement to that effect to the markings on the containers, or so label-ling the combs themselves; and that, consequently, the manufacturer should have contemplated the use of the combs in connection with a machine designed to produce heat, and the sale by the manufacturer was the proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff.
3. There was no error in the denial of requests for rulings. The subject matter thereof was covered adequately by the charge.
Exceptions overruled.