This is an action of contract to recover compensation for personal injuries resulting from the use of a metal coffee maker purchased from the defendant. The declaration is in one count and alleges breaches of implied warranties of fitness and merchantability. After a verdict for the plaintiff, the judge, on motion of the defendant and subject to the plaintiff’s exception, entered a verdict for the defendant under leave reserved.
There was evidence that on or about May 20, 1949, one Huwe, acting as agent for the plaintiff, purchased a metal coffee maker, called “Lucifer ‘Lifetime,’” from the defendant at its store, 1243 Centre Street, Newton Centre. Huwe had seen “this type of appliance displayed or on sale in that particular store about a week before.” He had told the plaintiff about it and she had asked him to buy one of the coffee makers for her. On the following day, he went to the store and asked the clerk “if there were any more of the metal coffee makers that . . . [he] had seen on sale.” The clerk said that there were and indicated one on the shelf. He asked Huwe “if that was what . . . [he] meant,” and Huwe said, “Yes, that is the one ... as long as it is all metal.” The clerk handed Huwe a coffee maker packed in a sealed cardboard carton which he took away and delivered to the plaintiff.
This coffee maker is an exhibit in the case. From our examination it appears to be similar in design to other coffee makers or percolators which are in general use. It consists of three parts, a lower bowl, an upper bowl, and a filter, which are assembled by the. operator. All parts are metal, except a rubber collar on the base of the upper bowl which fits into an aperture on the top or neck of the lower bowl. Water is boiled in the lower bowl and under pressure of the steam which is generated rises through a tube into the upper bowl where ground coffee is placed. The water is there mixed with the coffee and forms the beverage which, after the heat is reduced, flows down into the lower bowl. See
Saena
v.
Zenith Optical Co.
The plaintiff used the appliance two or three times and *179 noticed that the water was slow in coming up into the upper bowl. On the morning of June 9, 1949, she again used it, complying with the written instructions which came with it. The water began to boil and started to come up into the upper bowl. She waited “for it to reach the top” so that she could shut off the gas and remove the appliance from the stove. “It was taking quite a while” and she “looked over it and noticed it was not coming up. It had stopped, [and] then it blew up” in her face. The water and coffee grounds were thrown over her and over the floor, walls, and ceiling by the force of the explosion. The upper bowl which she had inserted firmly into the neck of the lower bowl “flew onto the floor.” The plaintiff was burned.
The defendant was notified of the occurrence by letter from the plaintiff's attorney dated June 16, 1949. Therein it was stated that the plaintiff was injured on June 9, 1949, “when the top part of a coffee maker apparently having the trademark ‘Lucifer Lifetime' exploded and flew off while being used by her in her home according to the instructions in the circular which accompanied the purchase thereof made at your store on or about May 20, 1949,” and that damages were claimed “ because the appliance was not fit for the purposes for which it was sold and purchased.”
The transaction appears to have been a sale by description. Huwe described the article which he wished to purchase to be one of the metal coffee makers which he had previously seen on sale. The clerk knew to what merchandise he referred and delivered to him a coffee maker of the designated type. The sale carried an implied warranty by the seller that the appliance was a coffee maker of merchantable quality. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 106, § 17 (2). Merchantable quality means that goods are reasonably suitable for the ordinary uses for which goods of that description are sold.
Mead
v.
Coca Cola Bottling Co.
The fact that the apparatus violently burst apart in the manner described showed that the accumulating pressure was not being released and in the absence of explanation was itself evidence of a defective condition.
Sonden
v.
Fore River Ship Building Co.
If the coffee maker was so imperfect in design that it could not be used without the likelihood of an explosion it could be found that the appliance was not reasonably fit for making coffee and therefore not merchantable.
Leavitt
v.
Fiberloid Co.
The judge was not justified in entering the verdict for the defendant on the ground that, as contended by the defendant, the notice required by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 106, § 38, was "insufficient, in not stating the exact date of the purchase or the name of the purchaser. Information as to the
*182
exact date of the sale was here of little if of any importance to the seller. See
Johnson
v.
Kanavos,
The plaintiff's exceptions are sustained. The verdict for the defendant under leave reserved is set aside. The original verdict for the plaintiff is to stand and judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff on that verdict.
So ordered.
