In 1972, the plaintiff, then ten years old, fell from a jungle gym while she was sucking a cinnamon-flavored toothpick manufactured by the defendant Harmon Grain Products, Inc., and sold at retail by the defendant Oakdale Variety Store, Inc. She landed face down. The toothpick broke and punctured her lower lip in a manner that left her with a disfiguring linear scar three fourths of an inch long running horizontally beneath her lower lip. By her father she brought actions against both defendants for negligence and breach of warranty. 2 The trial judge directed verdicts in favor of the defendants, and the case comes to us on the plaintiffs appeal from the ensuing judgment.
The testimony most favorable to the plaintiff, supplemented by the manufacturer’s answers to interrogatories (which were read in evidence), would have warranted the jury in finding the following facts. The plaintiff was attending fourth grade at the time of the accident. One of her classmates was the daughter of the proprietor of a small, family-run variety store (the defendant Oakdale Variety
The toothpicks were kept for sale in the candy case. They were packaged in glassine envelopes, roughly two by two and one half inches, which were designed with a striped background and a small picture of a toothpick with a face, and which had as their most prominent feature the names of the product (“Hot Cinnamon Fire Fix”) and the manufacturer, a message which said, “Stop Air Pollution — Flavor Your Breath — Refreshing,” and another message which said, “Twelve Cinnamon Flavored Fix — Imitation Flavors.” The toothpicks looked like ordinary, untreated, wooden toothpicks of the common flat variety, narrow and pointed at one end and slightly broader and rounded at the other. The toothpicks were one of approximately five hundred candy items sold in the variety store and sold for a nickel. They were sometimes bought by adults but were bought more often by children. The proprietor bought them (and his entire line of candy items) from a wholesaler in Cambridge. The envelopes in which the toothpicks were packaged contained no warnings of any kind. Neither did the proprietor receive any warnings, oral or written, from the wholesaler. The proprietor had no dealings with the manufacturer.
A breach-of-warranty theory of recovery, alleged to sound under G. L. c. 106, §§ 2-314 (merchantability) or 2-315 (fitness for particular purpose), is of no pertinence to any set of findings permissible on the evidence. A contention is advanced that the particular toothpick which pierced the plaintiff s lip was improperly manufactured, being pointed at both ends, rather than being somewhat rounded at one end,
3
but if
We similarly reject any contention that such unreasonable danger inheres in toothpicks — flavored or otherwise — that the manufacturer or distributor is subjected to strict liability. See the discussion of Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A (1965) in
Swartz
v.
General Motors Corp.,
Negligence, in products liability cases, typically consists of a failure in the design, manufacture, or inspection or a failure to warn the user of the dangers which he is apt to encounter in using the product. See
Schaeffer
v.
General Motors Corp.,
A duty to warn is not imposed by law as a mindless ritual. A warning is not required unless “the person on whom [the] duty rests has some reason to suppose a warning is needed.”
Carney
v.
Bereault,
The plaintiff makes a more plausible contention, however, that candy-flavored toothpicks should not be sold to children, with or without warnings. The suggestion here is that substantial numbers of children can be counted to use the toothpicks unsafely, even though forewarned. Under
From this vantage the case is analogous to dangerous toy cases. As a group those cases are not particularly helpful to the plaintiff; more often than not they result in exoneration of the supplier, provided that the toy functions properly and the dangers are obvious even to children. See, e.g.,
Morris
v.
The Toy Box,
Against that common experience it seems to us impossible to conclude, as matter of law, that there is never negligence
We conclude, therefore, that the jury should have been permitted to consider the question of the retailer’s negligence. We base this conclusion on the convergence of several factors which could be found from the evidence: that the sale was made directly to a child rather than to an adult who would presumably have provided supervision;
It does not necessarily follow, however, that there was evidence of the manufacturer’s negligence. Presumably, the manufacturer does not know of a sale to any particular customer. A comparable basis for a finding of negligence against a manufacturer would involve the manufacturer’s marketing its product, through advertising, packaging, or distribution, in a manner calculated to induce direct purchases by children or others whose use of the product would involve unreasonable risk of injury. Without such a basis a finding of liability would imply that the manufacturer is subject to a legal duty to guard, by warnings or otherwise, against his products’ falling into the hands of children, a duty which might reasonably be required with respect to a product that is particularly attractive to children and inherently hazardous (an example is the “spit devil” poisonous explosive in
Victory Sparkler & Specialty Co.
v.
Latimer, supra,
which was shaped like and wrapped like a lozenge and had a pleasant flavor), but which, we hold, is not required with respect to such everyday objects as pins, needles, scissors, knives, toothpicks, or objects made of glass. Compare
Venezia
v.
Miller Brewing
Co.,
Here the case against the manufacturer falls down. There was no evidence that Hot Cinnamon Fire Fix were advertised, to children or otherwise. The package is not suggestive of a product marketed to children and seems more obviously directed towards a more mature market, particularly by its appeal to “flavor your breath.” Distribution through a wholesaler who also sold candy carries by itself no connotation of marketing particularly to children. There
The judgment is reversed. The order allowing the motion for a directed verdict in favor of the defendant Harmon Grain Products, Inc., is affirmed. The order allowing the motion for a directed verdict in favor of the defendant Oak-dale Variety Store, Inc., is reversed, and the case is to stand for retrial against that defendant.
So ordered.
Notes
The complaint as amended contained ten counts, five by the minor plaintiff against, respectively, the manufacturer (Harmon Grain Products, Inc.), the retailer (Oakdale Variety Store, Inc.), the keeper of the variety store, the storekeeper’s minor child, and a teacher at the school (who was alleged to have had the responsibility for supervising the activities of the minor plaintiff and her classmates), and five by the father of the minor plaintiff, against the same defendants, for the medical expenses which were incurred shortly after the accident and those which, according to the testimony of the plastic surgeon, must be incurred now in order to reduce the facial scar. All counts against the teacher, the storekeeper and the storekeeper’s daughter were waived prior to trial. After trial, but before direction of verdicts, the father’s remaining counts for consequential damages were similarly waived. As a result the minor plaintiff is the sole appellant.
The plaintiff testified that the toothpick, when extracted from her mouth, had four pointed ends, two of which were presumably created when the toothpick broke.
For the same reason toothpicks differ from many of the dangerous toys discussed in the cases cited above: slingshots, darts, and bows and arrows require the child’s active attention to trigger the moment of greatest danger. More dangerous, in this respect, are air guns or dart guns which may be left in a condition of readiness to shoot. It should be mentioned that in Massachusetts it is unlawful, by statute, to sell slingshots or fireworks. See G. L. c. 269, § 12; c. 148, § 39. It is also illegal to sell or, except for a parent, guardian or teacher, to furnish an air rifle or BB gun to a minor under eighteen. G. L. c. 269, § 12A.
