Opinion
Grace Joyce Ford appeals judgments in favor of Miller Meat Company (Miller) and Alpha Beta Company (Alpha Beta) in a nonjury
We affirm. Our Supreme Court in
Mexicali Rose
v.
Superior Court
(1992)
Factual and Procedural Background
On January 30, 1989, Ford bought packaged ground beef from Alpha Beta, took it home and, while she was browning it for tacos, removed a small portion to taste. She bit down on something hard and damaged a tooth. When she spit out the meat, she observed a “tiny” bone fragment which she estimated could have been up to a quarter of an inch at its largest diameter. She sued Alpha Beta and Miller, the meat supplier, alleging causes of action for strict product liability, breach of warranty and negligence. The parties waived a jury and proceeded to trial in November 1992.
The issues of liability and damages were bifurcated. Ford’s entire liability case consisted of her own testimony. She presented no evidence against Miller, and its motion for nonsuit was granted. 1 Alpha Beta’s meat manager, Jeff Bear, testified Miller supplies prepackaged ground beef in four-pound rolls. Alpha Beta removes the meat from the packages, regrinds it and repackages it for sale. In the typical regrinding process, the meat handler breaks the ground beef into handful-size pieces, visually inspects them and places them in a grinder. The meat is reground into a “mush,” and then machine-compacted through a steel plate perforated by holes three to four millimeters in diameter. The ground beef emerges in the tubular, spaghetti-like strands familiar to consumers. Although it is not absolutely impossible that anything larger than three or four millimeters will pass through the steel plate, it is “very unlikely.” The meat handler observes the entire operation, from start to finish. The grinder is not left unattended. The reground meat is packaged in styrofoam and sealed in plastic wrap for sale in the Alpha Beta market.
Discussion
Initially, we note that although the parties contend the court granted Alpha Beta’s motion for nonsuit, in a trial by the court a motion for nonsuit is not recognized. The correct motion is for judgment pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 631.8, the purpose of which is to enable the court, after weighing the evidence at the close of the plaintiff’s case, to find the plaintiff has failed to sustain the burden of proof, without the need for the defendant to produce evidence.
(Heap
v.
General Motors Corp.
(1977)
The court found Ford must have overestimated the size of the bone fragment which could not have been larger than one-eighth of an inch. We are bound by that factual determination and do not reweigh the evidence or reassess issues of credibility.
(Orange County Employees Assn.
v.
County of Orange
(1988)
I
Plaintiff’s first argument is: (1) Under
Mexicali Rose
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Ford misconstrues Mexicali Rose, in which the plaintiff sued a restaurant for negligence, strict liability and breach of the implied warranty, alleging he suffered throat injuries from a one-inch chicken bone contained in a chicken enchilada. The trial court overruled the restaurant’s demurrer to the complaint; the Court of Appeal issued a writ of mandate directing the lower court to sustain the demurrer. The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the Court of Appeal insofar as its order eliminated the causes of action for strict liability and breach of the implied warranty. (It reversed with regard to the negligence theory of liability, a point which will be discussed more fully below.)
At the outset, the
Mexicali Rose
court noted it had granted review for the purpose of reexamining the foreign-natural test of
Mix
v.
Ingersoll Candy Co.
(1936)
Discarding the foreign-natural rule of
Mix
in favor of the reasonable expectation test, the
Mexicali Rose
court stated, “First, whether bones or other injurious substances ought to be anticipated in a particular dish becomes a question for the trier of fact, unless as a matter of law the food was fit for consumption because the substance was natural to the food served. [Citation.] Second, and more important, this reasonable expectation test focuses not on the components of the dish, but on the final item sold to the consumer and the expectations that are engendered by the type of dish and the type of preparation used in making the dish.” (
Most significantly to Ford’s claim,
Mexicali Rose
departs from the foreign-natural rule
only
to the extent it bars a negligence claim,
not
to the extent it precludes actions for strict liability and breach of warranty.
(Mexicali Rose
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Confronted with this unequivocal holding, Ford protests the bone fragment was not
natural
to the “pulverized” ground beef, but
Mexicali Rose
answers this claim as well. It expressly adopts the reasoning of an out-of-state case,
Loyacano
v.
Continental Insurance Company
(La.Ct.App. 1973)
Clearly, under Mexicali Rose, a bone fragment remains a natural substance under the foreign-natural distinction. Therefore, the trial court correctly determined Ford could not recover on theories of strict liability or breach of implied warranty.
II
Ford next contends the court should have allowed her to recover on her theory of negligence. She says the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applies, creating the presumption of negligence on the part of Alpha Beta. In regard to this theory, the
Mexicali Rose
court noted: “A number of decisions have deemed it appropriate to apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, where the instrumentality producing the injury was in the exclusive control of the defendant and the injury would not have occurred if due care had been exercised. We express no opinion on whether the doctrine applies in this case and leave it to the lower courts to determine whether, on the facts of the particular case, the doctrine should apply.” (
Res ipsa loquitur applies if three conditions are present: “(1) The accident must be caused by an agency or instrumentality under the exclusive control of the defendant; (2) the accident must be of a type which ordinarily does not happen unless someone is negligent; (3) it must not have been due to any
Ford protests that under
Loyacano,
the defendant has the burden of rebutting the presumption of negligence, but she fails to mention all-important facts. In
Loyacano,
there was no evidence regarding the
size
of the bone fragment, or the kind of examination of the ground beef performed by the vendor, or the specifics of the grinding process itself, and the manager “admitted that pieces of bone [of unspecified size] could get into the meat and through the grinder without one being aware of it.”
(Loyacano
v.
Continental Insurance Company, supra,
Because Ford relied on the res ipsa loquitur doctrine, she failed to put on any evidence regarding the vendor’s duty of due care in processing and packaging ground beef for sale in a retail store. And Alpha Beta’s meat manager testified to the process it follows after it receives the ground beef from its supplier, as we have summarized above. There was no evidence of negligent acts or omissions in that procedure. Ford would like us to find negligence in the mere possibility that a tiny piece of bone could pass through undetected. However, in accordance with the law discussed, we will not make the food vendor an insurer that the product is utterly free of all potentially harmful particles, no matter what size, of substances which occur naturally in the food being prepared. 2 Obviously, had the evidence established the bone fragment in question was larger than a size which could remain after the grinding process, a negligence claim would be appropriate. But that is not this case.
Sills, P. J., and Wallin, J., concurred.
Notes
No further mention of the case against Miller is necessary. Ford does not allude to Miller’s nonsuit until the final two paragraphs of her brief, and then only repeats, in truncated form, her theories against Alpha Beta. As will be seen, they are without merit.
Evart
v.
Suli
(1989)
