16 Mass. App. Dec. 188 | Mass. Dist. Ct., App. Div. | 1958
This is an action of contract and tort wherein the plaintiff seeks recovery for injuries .caused by the use of a cologne stick purchased from the defendant. The
A representative of the defendant sold the plaintiff a cosmetic known as “Avon Cotillion Cologne Stick” and the plaintiff applied the product to her body from time to time without ill effect from late December, 1956, until April 15, 1957. On this occasion the plaintiff said she dressed for work and rubbed the end of the stick on her throat and upper chest.
During the day she noted a mild irritation on her upper breast and that night she discovered that a piece or lump of the cologne stick had become lodged against her breast and was held there by her brassiere. The area thus covered was inflamed and sore and had become infected and she was later treated by a physician who testified that the infection was caused by “a piece of cosmetic becoming attached to the flesh in the manner described.”
Neither the stick nor the holder appear to have been marked as an exhibit and we have no adequate picture or description of them excepting that the plaintiff while testifying was permitted to show how pieces of the stick could break away and fall to the bottom of the container and into the clothes. It was the contention of the plaintiff that in normal use the “tin prongs” which hold the stick to the container tended to break away pieces of the stick.
At the close of the evidence the plaintiff filed requests for rulings which were denied and the court found for the defendant.
REPORTER’S NOTE
Liability of Seller of Products For Use On the Human Body.
A manufacturer or seller of a product for use on the human body which when so ap
In this latter respect Rule 31 provides that “such draft report shall state the issues raised by the pleadings, shall set forth in clear and concise terms the rulings upon which the party seeking the report has requested and now asks a rehearing by the Appellate Division, . . .” “The report is fatally defective in this respect.” Irving v. Bonjorno, 327 Mass. 516, 518.
Under the .circumstances it seems clear that this Division has no alternative but to dismiss the report. Sutherland v. McGee, 329 Mass. 530, 532; Menton v. Melvin, 330 Mass. 355, 35 7-
Report dismissed.
“It is enough if a sufficient number are susceptible so that the [the manufacturer or seller] ought to have known and recognized the danger of injury and ought to have guarded against it.” Taylor v. Newcomb Baking Co., 317 Mass. 609, 611, quoted in the Yardley Case, page 94. Knowledge of unfitness on the part of the manufacturer or seller need not be shown. Bianchi v. Denholm & McKay Co., 302 Mass. 469, 474.
The nature and contents of the article and its injurious character need not be proved by direct evidence or by analysis where the results which its use produces sufficiently disclose its qualities and composition so as to warrant an inference of its harmful character. Watson's Case, 322 Mass. 581, 583, 584 (Benzol in paint thinner) ; Kuriss v. Conrad & Co., Inc., 312 Mass. 670, 674; Holt v. Mann, 294 Mass. 21 (Cold cream).