HUGHES PROVISION CO. et al.
v.
LA MEAR POULTRY & EGG CO., Inc.
St. Louis Court of Appeals, Missouri.
*286 Sievers & Reagan, St. Louis, Joseph N. Hassett, St. Louis, for appellants.
Shifrin & Shifrin and Louis Shifrin, all of St. Louis, for respondent.
ANDERSON, Presiding Judge.
This is an appeal by the plaintiffs, Hughes Provision Company, a corporation, and The Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corporation, Limited, a corporation, from a judgment of dismissal entered by the court after it had sustained a general demurrer to the plaintiffs' petition.
The petition alleged that plaintiff Hughes Provision Company was a corporation engaged *287 in the business of operating a market for the sale of foodstuffs in Youngstown, Ohio, and that defendant, La Mear Poultry and Egg Company, Inc., was a corporation engaged in the business of selling poultry, eggs, and other products, including dressed rabbits.
It was further alleged that on or about November 28, 1938, "defendant sold to one of the operators of a stall in the store of plaintiff Hughes Provision Company a shipment of dressed rabbits * * * and that plaintiff Hughes Provision Company advertised for sale and caused some of said rabbits to be sold to a customer in its store on or about the 29th day of November, 1938, and that said rabbits were adulterated, poisoned, putrefied and diseased, and were unfit for human handling and consumption, and that said customer's wife contracted the disease of tularemia as a result of handling and preparing said adulterated, poisoned, putrefied and diseased rabbits, and preparing same for cooking, and as a direct result thereof she became sick and was seriously injured and damaged from the effects of said disease."
It was further alleged that the purchaser of said rabbits, Nicola Rubbo, and his wife, Susie Rubbo, made claim for damages against said plaintiff Hughes Provision Company on account of their injuries which resulted from the said illness of said Susie Rubbo, and instituted separate actions to recover damages therefor; that Susie Rubbo recovered a judgment in her action and collected thereon from plaintiffs the sum of $2,105; that the suit of Nicola Rubbo was settled and compromised for the sum of $900; and that plaintiffs expended in the defense of said suits the sum of $1,805.33.
It further appears from the allegations of the petition that a policy of liability insurance issued by the plaintiff Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corporation was held by plaintiff Hughes Provision Company and that said insurance company, pursuant to the terms of said policy, took over the defense of said suits.
It was further alleged that plaintiffs notified defendant of said claims and suits, and demanded that defendant take over the defense of same and pay whatever damage that might result therefrom, but that defendant failed to comply with said demand.
It was further alleged that defendant shipped said diseased rabbits from Missouri and delivered same to one of the operators in the store of plaintiff Hughes Provision Company in the State of Ohio, and as a "direct result of said rabbits being poisoned, putrefied, diseased and unwholesome, and unfit for human handling and consumption, plaintiffs have been damaged in the sum of $4,810.33." The petition prayed judgment for said amount, together with costs.
Appellants assign as error the action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer to the petition, and in dismissing the action. In support of this assignment it is urged by appellants that their petition stated a cause of action under the Ohio law.
The first question to be determined is whether the petition contains allegations which show that the law of Ohio must be applied. If there are such allegations it then becomes our duty to take judicial notice of the statutes and judicial decisions of that state. R.S.Mo.1949, sections 490.080 and 509.220; Rule 3.14, Supreme Court Rules.
The petition alleges that the defendant sold the rabbits in question to the operator of one of the stalls in the store of plaintiff Hughes Provision Company; that said rabbits were shipped by defendant from the State of Missouri and delivered by defendant to the said buyer in the State of Ohio; that said rabbits were poisoned, putrefied, diseased and unwholesome; that plaintiff Hughes Provision Company advertised the rabbits for sale and caused some of them to be sold to Nicola Rubbo, a customer in its store, and that Susie Rubbo, wife of Nicola Rubbo, contracted tularemia as a result of handling said rabbits while preparing same for cooking.
From the foregoing allegations it is clear that if there was any wrong committed by the defendant it was perpetrated in the State of Ohio, and that the rights of the parties should be governed by the Ohio law.
*288 The rule applicable is set out in the case of Hunter v. Derby Foods, Inc., 2 Cir.,
Section 12760 of the Ohio General Code provides: "Whoever sells, offers for sale or has in possession with intent to sell, diseased, corrupted, adulterated or unwholesome provisions without making the condition thereof known to the buyer, shall be fined not more than fifty dollars or imprisoned twenty days, or both."
The Supreme Court of Ohio has held that the violation of the foregoing statute is negligence per se, and, where such act of negligence by a defendant is the direct and proximate cause of an injury not directly contributed to by the injured person, defendant is liable in damages to said injured person. Rubbo v. Hughes Provision Company,
It was under the foregoing statute, Section 12760 of the Ohio General Code, that plaintiff Hughes Provision Company was held liable to Mrs. Rubbo. Her action was predicated on negligence and not on any theory of breach of implied warranty of fitness. Rubbo v. Hughes Provision Co.,
The Ohio Supreme Court has held that under the foregoing statute the retailer and wholesaler may both be held *289 liable to the person injured. Canton Provision Co. v. Gauder,
It is also held by the Ohio Supreme Court that where a manufacturer or producer puts into commerce diseased, corrupted, adulterated or unwholesome food, his liability is primary and that of the retailer is secondary, and that a right of action for indemnity exists in favor of the latter against the former. Kniess v. Armour & Co. et al.,
Under the Ohio law, as elsewhere generally, a party secondarily liable in a tort action is entitled to indemnity from one primarily liable. Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Federal Express, Inc., 6 Cir.,
In the petition in the case at bar plaintiffs sought to enforce the primary liability of the defendant. It is our opinion that the petition stated facts sufficient to constitute such a cause of action under the Ohio law. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
McCULLEN and BENNICK, JJ., concur.
