207 Mass. 30 | Mass. | 1910
These two actions of tort were tried together
The relation of husband and wife and the obligation which the husband was under to support his wife did not as matter of law render either incompetent to act as the agent of the other or prevent the wife from giving a dinner party on her own account any more than from buying stock on her own separate and individual account if she saw fit to do so. Whether the husband was acting for the plaintiff in the purchase of the leg of lamb or was buying it for family use, and whether in giving the dinner party the plaintiff was acting on her own account were questions of fact to be determined by the jury under suitable instructions. The husband testified that he was sent by his wife for the leg of lamb; that she gave him the money with which to pay for it; and that he told the salesman that his wife wanted a nice leg of lamb and the salesman got it for him and he paid for it with the money that his wife gave him. The wife testified that she was going to give a dinner party and gave her husband $2 and sent him for a leg of lamb and he brought one home and she looked it over and put it in the ice chest and while preparing it to be served at the dinner party to be given by her received the injuries complained of, which, it appeared, were caused by a double-pointed carpet tack barbed at both ends with which the tag had been fastened to the Iamb and which was suffered to remain embedded in the leg of lamb when the
The question is not one of the weight of evidence but whether there was any evidence tending to show that the husband was acting as agent for the wife.' While the circumstances are somewhat unusual and it is possible that the dinner party spoken of differed from the ordinary family dinner only in being more elaborate and in the fact that guests were to be invited, it cannot be said, we think, that there was no evidence warranting a finding that the husband was acting as agent for the wife.
We cannot help feeling that a more satisfactory ground on which to rest the case would have been the duty which the defendant owed to any one preparing it to be served as food to see that there was not suffered to remain embedded in the lamb anything that was liable to cause injury to any one in preparing it while in the exercise of due care. But we must deal with the case as it is presented.
Exceptions overruled.
Before DeCourcy, J.