251 Mass. 76 | Mass. | 1925
In this action of contract the plaintiff seeks to recover for injuries resulting from the eating of unwholesome food, furnished to him, in response to his order, by the defendant at its restaurant.
The plaintiff testified that on March 1, 1924, he ordered chicken pie, two rolls, and a cup of coffee; that he ate the food, then made a few business calls, and in three or four hours after having “eaten his lunch ... he felt sick to his stomach and vomited ”; that on his return to his home he called a doctor; that his stomach and intestines were washed with hot water; that he was “ sick for a week and three or four days the following week ” had “ pain in his bowels and was weak ”; that on the morning of March 1, 1924, for his breakfast he had a cup of coffee, shredded wheat and a banana; that on the night previous he had “ toast, tea and a scrambled egg.”
His physician testified that on the night of March 1,1924, she “ told some one of the plaintiff’s family over the phone to wash out the plaintiff’s- stomach and bowels and to give him all the water he could drink until he vomited ”; that the next morning she visited the plaintiff and found him sick and weak; that she diagnosed the case as ptomaine poisoning; that ptomaine poisoning means “ If a person has had chicken or anything of that sort that is not fresh, it becomes putrefied and if they take it to the stomach, it causes nausea and vomiting.” To the question “ How many causes are there for ptomaine poisoning? ” she replied, “/There may be so many different circumstances you could not tell. They have to have food that is not good or properly prepared in the stomach. Ptomaine poisoning would be from eating meat. No fruits cause it. Anything in the meat line.”
In Barringer v. Ocean Steamship Co. of Savannah, 240 Mass. 405, there was evidence that the plaintiff was in good health when he became a passenger on the defendant’s steamship; that the white meat he ate at lunch on the ship about five o’clock on June 20 “ didn’t taste very good to ” him; that he left the boat about seven o’clock that evening; that he neither ate nor drank anything after he departed, about four o’clock the next morning he was suffering from cramps, was' covered with perspiration, and was in great distress in his intestines. In addition to this, his physician gave it as his opinion that the plaintiff’s illness was caused by the food he ate Sunday on the boat. In the Barringer case the evidence showing that the defendant furnished unwholesome food was very slight, but in view of the evidence above referred to, it was decided that it could not be ruled that as matter of law there was no evidence that the plaintiff’s injuries resulted from the improper food furnished by the defendant. '
In the case at bar there was no evidence that the plaintiff’s illness was caused by the food furnished by the defendant, or that the food was unwholesome. Although he was not sick until three or four hours after he ate the meal, we know nothing further about the condition of his health on March 1. There is nothing to show that the food tasted bad or appeared to be unfit for use. His physician did not give it as her opinion that the plaintiff’s illness was caused by the food furnished by the defendant; she stated that there are so many different circumstances that the cause of ptomaine poisoning could not be determined. And there is nothing to show within what time the effects of eating
The order dismissing the report must be reversed.
Judgment for the defendant.