RINEHART KUELLING, Appellant, v. RODERICK LEAN MANUFACTURING COMPANY, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of the State of New York
November 21, 1905
183 N.Y. 78
I concur in the affirmance of the judgment appealed from, also, upon the ground stated by the learned Appellate Division.
HAIGHT and WERNER, JJ., concur with GRAY, J.; BARTLETT, J., concurs with VANN, J.; CULLEN, Ch. J., reads memorandum for affirmance; O‘BRIEN, J., absent.
Ordered accordingly.
1. FRAUD - LIABILITY OF MANUFACTURER TO THIRD PERSON FOR INJURIES RECEIVED FROM MACHINES SOLD BY AND KNOWN TO HIM TO BE DEFECTIVE. One who sells an article knowing it to be dangerous by reason of concealed defects is guilty of a wrong without regard to the contract and is liable in damages to any person, including one not in privity of contract with him, who suffers an injury by reason of his willful and fraudulent deceit and concealment.
3. ACTION FOR DECEIT. The manufacturer of a land roller, who uses in its construction a tongue made of wood unfit for the purpose, in that it was cross-grained, had a knot in it and also a knothole, and who plugs up the hole, and then by means of putty and paint conceals the defects so that they cannot be seen by inspection, is liable in an action for damages for fraud and deceit, for injuries sustained in consequence of such defects by a person who purchased the machine from a dealer who had purchased it from another dealer to whom the manufacturer had sold it.
Kuelling v. Lean Mfg. Co., 94 App. Div. 613, reversed.
(Argued October 17, 1905; decided November 21, 1905.)
APPEAL from a judgment, entered May 28, 1904, upon an order of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the fourth judicial department, overruling plaintiff‘s exceptions, ordered to be heard in the first instance by the Appellate Division, denying a motion for a new trial and directing judgment for defendant upon a nonsuit directed at the Trial Term.
The nature of the action and the facts, so far as material, are stated in the opinion.
Charles Van Voorhis for appellant. A manufacturer is liable to third persons with whom no contractual relation exists, for defects in his articles which are such as render the article in itself imminently dangerous to human life. (Devlin v. Smith, 89 N. Y. 477; Coughtry v. G. W. Co., 56 N. Y. 124; Kahner v. O. E. Co., 96 App. Div. 169; Davies v. P. H. E. Co., 65 Hun, 573; Loop v. Litchfield, 42 N. Y. 351; Losee v. Clute, 51 N. Y. 494; Swan v. Jackson, 55 Hun, 194; Ennis v. Gray, 87 Hun, 356; B. B. Co. v. Cooper, 5 L. R. A. 612; Schubert v. Clark Co., 49 Minn. 335.) This action is based upon the intentional, willful, malicious, negligent and
Cogswell Bentley and S. D. Bentley for respondent. There was no evidence which tended to prove that the defendant negligently placed upon the market an instrument “imminently dangerous to human life.” (Loop v. Litchfield, 42 N. Y. 351; Losee v. Clute, 51 N. Y. 494; Curtin v. Somerset, 140 Penn. St. 70; Huset v. J. I. C. Co., 120 Fed. Rep. 865; Heizer v. Mfg. Co., 110 Mo. 615; Winterbottom v. Wright, 10 M. & W. 109; Longmead v. Halliday, 6 Eng. L. & E. 562.)
The plaintiff is a farmer, residing in East Penfield, Monroe county, in this state; the defendant is a foreign corporation organized under the laws of the state of Ohio, and engaged in the manufacture and sale of farming implements, its manufactory being located at Mansfield, in that state.
A few weeks prior to April, 1902, the defendant sold to the firm of Weaver, Palmer & Richmond, who were engaged in the business of selling agricultural implements in the city of Rochester, a certain road roller, with a tongue to which was attached a team of horses when in use. A few days after this sale the purchasers sold the roller to the firm of Fuller & Barnhart, dealers in agricultural implements at Fairport, Monroe county, in this state. In April, 1902, the plaintiff purchased the road roller of the firm of Fuller & Barnhart, used it a short time in the spring on his farm, stored it in a covered shed until about the first day of the following September, when he had occasion to use it again in the conduct of his ordinary farm work, and while so engaged with two horses attached thereto, the tongue broke, precipitating him from a seat which was attached to the rear end of the tongue immediately over the roller, causing the horses to run away. Plaintiff clung to the reins for a short distance, was compelled to release his hold and the roller, weighing some seven hundred pounds, passed over him, inflicting severe injuries.
This action was brought by the plaintiff against the defendant as the manufacturer of this roller, and is based upon the
A rather unusual state of affairs is presented in the history of this litigation. This action is based upon the allegation that the defendant “intentionally, wilfully, maliciously, negligently and fraudulently” placed in this roller a tongue containing certain defects and concealing the same, as stated. It appears, however, that at the first trial the case was tried upon the theory of negligence and the jury passed upon no other question. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $3,040.00. The Appellate Division on reviewing the judgment entered upon this verdict stated in its opinion written by MCLENNAN, P. J., as follows: “The case was submitted to the jury purely and simply as an action for negligence. While in the complaint it was alleged that the defendant ‘wilfully, maliciously, negligently and fraudulently’ put the defective tongue into the roller in question, intending that such implement should be sold in the open market, and concealed such defect, knowing that when used it would break and probably occasion injury to the person using it, that question was not left to the jury for determination. The learned trial court charged the jury in substance that no contractual
The learned judge in his able opinion dealt only with the issue of negligence submitted to the jury. On the present appeal the counsel for the appellant presents what we deem the controlling question, the willful and fraudulent act of the defendant as alleged in the complaint. We will assume for the purposes of this case that this roller was not a machine imminently dangerous and likely to injure any person using it.
We express no opinion as to the liability of the manufacturer or seller of a machine or vehicle to third parties in case of negligence, in the absence of fraud or deceit, whether the machine or vehicle be in its original state imminently dangerous to human life or made so by the subsequent act of the manufacturer or seller. The case at bar, in the view we take of it, does not involve the law of negligence, but is controlled by considerations resting upon the law applicable to willful and fraudulent deceit and concealment.
In England the Court of King‘s Bench in 1789 in the case of Pasley v. Freeman (3 Durnford & East, 51) held that a false affirmation made by the defendant with intent to defraud the plaintiff, whereby the plaintiff receives damage, is the ground of an action upon the case in the nature of deceit. In such an action it is not necessary that the defendant should
In Upton v. Vail (6 Johns. 181) Chief Justice KENT, in commenting upon the case cited, said: “I have carefully examined the reasoning of the judges in that case and in the subsequent cases which go to question or support the soundness of that decision, and I profess my approbation of the doctrine on which it was decided. The case went not upon any new ground, but upon the application of a principle of natural justice, long recognized in the law, that fraud or deceit, accompanied with damage, is a good cause of action. This is as just and permanent a principle as any in our whole jurisprudence.” We have here the recognition of the general principle upon which this and similar actions must rest, to wit, that fraud or deceit with damage is a good cause of action.
In many of the cases presented to the courts under this principle of law the litigation is confined to the original parties concerned in the transaction. In the case before us we have a third party seeking damages by reason of the willful and fraudulent act of the defendant. The right of recovery under conditions similar to those now presented is established in this and other jurisdictions.
In this state the principle is fully recognized in Brackett v. Griswold (112 N. Y. 454). This was an action brought by one who purchased notes issued by the Iron Mountains Company of Lake Champlain, a corporation, against its directors for alleged fraud and conspiracy to induce the public, by means of false representations as to its financial condition, to purchase its stock and paper. This court held that there was no evidence that the purchaser in making the purchase relied upon any representations made by defendant, but on the contrary it affirmatively appeared that he was at the time wholly ignorant of the alleged fraudulent scheme or of any acts or representations of the defendant or other parties to the alleged conspiracy.
Judge ANDREWS, writing the opinion for the court, said:
While the case just cited is one of false representations, it involves the precise principle invoked in the case before us: The charge is that the defendant and others made false and fraudulent representations that induced this plaintiff, as one of the general public, to purchase its stock and paper. In other words, it holds that a person guilty of the fraud is liable even to third parties if they have relied and acted upon it. In the case cited we have the charge of affirmative false representations. In the case at bar we have not only fraudulent deceit and concealment, but what amounts to an affirmative representation that the tongue of the roller was sound, as the manufacturer by filling the defect with putty and painting the entire surface so that the eye could not detect any weakness by reason of the knot, knothole filled up, the kind of wood employed and the fact that it was cross-grained, must be held to have represented that the roller as offered for sale was in a perfectly marketable condition.
In Heizer v. Kingsland & Douglass Mfg. Co. (15 L. R. A. 821) it was held by the Supreme Court of Missouri that the
In the case of Wellington v. Downer Kerosene Oil Co. (supra) it was held that a declaration that the Downer Kerosene Oil Company, knowing one Chase to be retailer of fluids to be burned in lamps for illuminating purposes, and naphtha to be explosive and dangerous to life for such a use, sold and delivered naphtha to him, knowing that it was his intention to retail it in his business; that in ignorance of its dangerous properties he retailed a pint of it to the plaintiff Wellington to be burned in his lamp for illumination, and that while the plaintiff, in like ignorance, was so burning it, it exploded and
In Lechman v. Hooper (52 N. J. Law, 253) the defendant, a mason, had erected a building as a contractor, and one wall was in a dangerous condition; the defendant had full knowledge of the fact. The plaintiff, who had entered the building engaged in another branch of work entirely distinct from that of the mason, was injured by a portion of the wall falling upon him. The defendant was held liable. Chief Justice BEASLEY said, in the course of his opinion: “The defendant had erected this wall, and, therefore, the law imposed on him the duty to put it in a safe condition, or to give warning of its unsafe condition, and this was a duty he owed to each individual person who should lawfully come upon the premises.”
In Lewis v. Terry (111 Cal. 39) the defendant was sought to be charged for having placed upon the market a folding bed that was so imperfectly constructed, a fact well known to the defendant, that at times when any weight was placed on the bed the heavy upright frame would be precipitated with such force upon the lower portion as to wound and even kill a person lying thereon. The defendant was held liable, and the court said that the fact “that such articles are in general not dangerous would seem to enhance the wrong of representing one to be safe for use when known to be really unsafe, for the danger is thus rendered more insidious.”
In Woodward v. Miller (119 Ga. 618) the Supreme Court of Georgia dealt with this same question as late as March, 1904. The head note reads: “The manufacturer of a buggy, who sells it to a municipal corporation for the use of one of its employees, representing it to be strong and in good condition, but knowing that it is in fact defective, the defect being so concealed by the use of paint and grease that the purchaser cannot detect it, is liable in damages to the person whose use of the buggy was contemplated at the time of the sale, for injuries caused by such defect; and this is so notwithstanding there was no privity of
In Derry v. Flitner (118 Mass. 131), MORTON, J., said (p. 133): “The rule is well settled and is constantly applied in this Commonwealth, that one who commits a tortious act is liable for any injury which is the natural and probable consequence of his misconduct. He is liable not only for those injuries which are caused directly and immediately by his act, but also for such consequential injuries as, according to the common experience of men, are likely to result from his act. And he is not exonerated from liability by the fact that intervening events or agencies contribute to the injury. * * * (Hoadley v. Northern Transportation Co., 115 Mass. 304; Metallic Compression Casting Co. v. Fitchburg Railroad Co., 109 Mass. 277; Salisbury v. Herchenroder, 106 Mass. 458; Wellington v. Downer Kerosene Oil Co., 104 Mass. 64; Carter v. Towne, 98 Mass. 567; McDonald v. Snelling, 14 Allen [96 Mass.], 290.)”
The cases establish the legal principle that one who sells an article knowing it to be dangerous by reason of concealed defects is guilty of a wrong, without regard to the contract, and is liable in damages to any person, including one not in privity of contract with him, who suffers an injury by reason of his willful and fraudulent deceit and concealment.
The judgment of the trial court and of the Appellate Division should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the plaintiff in all the courts, to abide the event.
VANN, J. One who carelessly labels a deadly poison as a harmless medicine and puts it on the market in that condition is liable to any person who without notice of its dangerous character uses the same to his injury. (Thomas v. Winchester, 6 N. Y. 397.) The manufacturer of a machine not inherently dangerous to human life, but with a defect therein which he pointed out to one who purchased it for his own use and at his request attempted to remedy the defect and then painted it over, is not liable to one who was injured while
The first case is typical of those which permit the user of a machine, appliance or article that is inherently dangerous to recover damages from the maker for injuries sustained without notice, and the second of those which deny relief when the machine is not inherently dangerous to human life.
We now have a case before us with a new element, that of deceit on the part of the manufacturer, who intentionally so concealed a defect in a machine not intrinsically dangerous as to thereby make it dangerous and without notice sold it to one, who, as he knew, intended to sell it to any purchaser he could find. The deceit, as the jury might have found, consisted in the complete concealment of a defect, not necessarily dangerous if unconcealed but dangerous when concealed, and putting the implement in this condition on the market, without notice to any one, with the intention that it should be sold and used as a safe implement. The natural result of this conduct was to injure whoever might use the implement, whether he was the original purchaser, or any subsequent purchaser, or one who simply used it with the consent of the owner.
A manufacturer has the right to sell a defective machine, if he gives notice of the defect to the purchaser, who in turn has the same right. Neither has the right, however, with furtive intent, to completely conceal the defect and sell the machine as sound and safe, intending it to be used as such by any one into whose possession it might lawfully come, when the natural result would be the infliction of an injury upon any person who used it. By giving currency to the implement as safe, with the intent to deceive not only the purchaser but any user, and yet so covering up the defect as to entirely conceal it, the defendant was guilty of an actionable wrong, as the jury might have found. While the machine was not inherently dangerous, that fact is not controlling, for the danger was in the concealed defect in an implement sold as sound, and which not only appeared to be sound, but the
CULLEN, Ch. J., HAIGHT and WERNER, JJ., concur, and GRAY, J., concurs with BARTLETT, J., only; O‘BRIEN, J., absent.
Judgment reversed, etc.
