81 Wash. 241 | Wash. | 1914
— Respondent brought this action against appellant to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by eating diseased dried beef. He obtained judgment below, and the defendant appeals.
Many errors are urged against the judgment, but from the conclusion we have reached, only one need be noted. The action is founded upon negligence, it being alleged that “the defendant negligently and carelessly sold and delivered to. Charles Flessher, plaintiff herein, a certain piece or parcel of poisoned and diseased meat known as dried beef, which said meat was then and there unfit for human food and injurious to the life and health of a person eating it.” In submitting the case to the jury, the lower court disregarded the allegations of the complaint, and instructed the jury that
“No person, firm or corporation shall, within this state, sell, offer for sale, have in his possession with intent to sell, or manufacture for sale, any article of food or drug which is adulterated or misbranded within the meaning of this act.”
And § 3 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 5455; P. C. 195 § 5) :
“For the purposes of this act an article shall be deemed to be adulterated: ... In case of food: . . . If it consists in whole or in part of a filthy, decomposed or putrid animal or vegetable substance, or any portion of an animal unfit for food, whether manufactured or not, . . .”
These sections were read to the jury as the law of the case that was to govern them in determining the
It seems to us the exception must be sustained. The character of the action is to be determined from the allegations of the complaint, which alleged, as the only basis for recovery, the negligence of the respondent in selling diseased meat unfit for human food. No mention was made of the pure food statute, nor was any violation of it charged. The case to be submitted to the jury was the one framed by the pleadings and not some other. If respondent desired to submit an issue upon the violation of the pure food act, he should have pleaded and proved it. It was not permissible to go outside the issues as framed to strengthen the one case or weaken the other. Hoffman v. Watkms, 78 Wash. 118, 138 Pac. 664; Acres v. Frederick Nelson, 79 Wash. 402, 140 Pac. 370.
We have in this state a statute known as the factory act, providing for the guarding of dangerous machinery. Any workman injured through the negligence of his employer because of the unguarded condition of dangerous machinery
For these reasons, we think the case was not properly submitted to the jury, and that appellant’s exceptions to the instructions must be sustained. The judgment is reversed.
Crow, C. J., Mount, and Parker, JJ., concur.