Opinion by
The wife plaintiff having been injured by the bursting of a bottle of ginger ale, she and her husband brought suit in assumpsit to recover damages against Confair’s Beverage Company, which had bottled the ale. In that action this court affirmed the judgment of the court below sustaining defendant’s preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer and dismissing the complaint:
Loch v.
Confair,
Plaintiffs were shopping in the A. & P. Company’s super-market in Wilkes-Barre. As the husband was picking up two bottles of ginger ale, one in each hand, from the bоttom shelf of the soft drink display, the bottle in his right hand burst and a piece of the glass struck and cut the back of the wife’s leg, resulting in a deep laceration and a long permanent scar.
Plaintiffs depended for establishment of their case on the doctrine either of res ipsa loquitur or “exclusive control”; they offered no actual evidence of negligenсe on the part of either defendant. The A. & P. *215 Company, having obtained a compulsory nonsuit, presented no evidence. The Beverage Company offered testimony exрlaining the tests, safety devices, controls and manner of carbonating and bottling ginger ale in their plant, and that the methods they employed were used generally by concerns bottling сarbonated beverages.
On this appeal plaintiffs rely principally on
Rozumailski v. Philadelphia Coca-Cola Bottling Co.,
What is perhaps somewhat of a tenuous distinction has been made between the doctrine of rеs ipsa loquitur and the exclusive control doctrine, which latter is more or less peculiar to Pennsylvania law in accident cases. In
Sierocinski v. E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
Viewing realistically the situation presented by the circumstances of the present case, it is obvious that, so far as the evidence discloses, the wife plaintiff was not injured through any fault of her own, and therefore, if the occurrence of the accident was due to negligence on the part оf either of the defendants, plaintiffs should be entitled to redress. It is clear too that the breaking of the bottle could have resulted only from a defect in the bottle itself, or from an еxcessive internal pressure due to over-carbonation, or from the subjection of the bottle to some extreme atmospheric or temperature changes, or from some mishandling, as for example, the striking of it by a hard object. Manifestly it would be entirely beyond the ability of the plaintiffs to ascertain and establish which of these possibilities was in fact the cause of the accident, whereas the defendant Beverage Company could readily explain the equipment and the methods employed by it in bottling the ale and the dеfendant A. & P. Company was equally in a position to explain the manner in which it handled, displayed and protected the bottles placed on its shelves for sale. It would seem, therеfore, notwithstanding the limitations on the applicability of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur and exclusive control previously referred to, that reason and justice alike should entitle plaintiffs to the benefits of those methods of establishing a prima facie case. Plaintiffs having testified to the manner in which the accident occurred, the burden should then rest upon the defendant A. & P. Company to show that after the bottle came into its possession it was not subjected to any mishandling or to any unusual atmospheric or temperature changеs. The duty would then devolve upon the Beverage Company to establish that it conducted its operations with *218 due care and according to the usual and proper methods gеnerally employed in the bottling industry. It would then have been for the jury to decide whether such explanations satisfactorily exculpated either or both defendants from the chargе of negligence, having in mind as to the defendant Beverage Company that it might be humanly impossible, even with the best of care, to discover every latent defect in every one оf possibly hundreds of thousands of bottles or to prevent a possible excess of pressure in perhaps a single one of them, and having likewise in mind as to the defendant A. & P. Company thаt it might be equally impossible to prevent a bottle on a shelf from being struck or otherwise mishandled by some careless customer in a crowded store. In other words, it might be found that the aсcident here in question was one that could not have been avoided by the exercise of reasonable care by either or both defendants judging them by any reasonable standard of duty, and if, in the opinion of the court, the jury capriciously concluded otherwise, the remedy would lie, as always under such circumstances, in the granting of a new trial.
In view of what has been said it is clear that the learned trial judge should not have entered a nonsuit in favor of the A. & P. Company, but should have kept both defendants in the case until final verdict, so that their respective liabilities, if any, could be better determined and each be given the opportunity as well as the duty of establishing that it was not guilty of any negligence that resulted in the accident. The court en banc, therefore, removed the nonsuit entered in favor of the one defendant and granted plaintiffs a new trial as to the other; such action was proper in the light of the circumstances and principles herein discussed.
Order affirmed.
