144 A. 884 | R.I. | 1929
Plaintiff, a customer in a restaurant, purchased and ate therein a portion of ice cream manufactured and put up by defendant in small parcels, each wrapped in tissue paper. The cream was kept in a cooler furnished by defendant, the pieces being taken out singly and served in the wrappers. Imbedded in the middle of plaintiff's parcel were four very small particles of glass which scratched plaintiff's throat and two of which a physician removed from his stomach by means of a stomach pump. The fragments of glass were so small that they probably would have been swallowed unnoticed except for the scraping of plaintiff's throat and a subsequent crushing of a spoonful of cream to ascertain what the hard substance might be. Return to the counterman and examination by him disclosed another bit of glass in the "middle" of the portion which had been served to plaintiff. Plaintiff who incurred some medical expenses and suffered for a time with stomach trouble brought suit in "trespass on the case for negligence" and recovered a verdict for $425, which was not excessive.
The declaration contained two counts: the first, asserting negligence in the manufacture of the cream; the second asserting the presence of glass but without averment of negligence. Defendant is before this court claiming numerous errors in the course of the trial, including refusal of the court to direct a verdict for defendant, and the court's subsequent refusal to grant defendant's motion for a new trial based upon the ground that the verdict was against the evidence. *45
The trial court treated the case under the pleadings as an action of trespass on the case for negligence. The plea was not guilty. There is a suggestion now made that the second count sounded in contract for breach of an implied warranty, Hertzler
v. Manshum,
Defendant asked for the direction of a verdict on the ground that it had violated no duty to plaintiff because no privity of contract existed between them. McCaffrey v. Mossberg Granville Mfg. Co.,
Was the evidence sufficient to warrant submission to the jury and to sustain the finding for plaintiff? Perhaps in no state have so many and recent cases been brought for putting out dangerous foodstuffs as in Massachusetts. One of the latest isO'Brien v. Liggett Co.,
When defendant then offered in evidence facts showing that the utmost care in straining and preparing ingredients for the cream was exercised by defendant at about the time this particular piece of cream was made, although the manufacture of the particular piece of cream causing the *49
injury could not be traced by defendant, the basis was furnished for a logical inference that defendant was not negligent. If the care commonly used by defendant had been exercised the presence of these pieces of glass in the cream sold to the plaintiff would have been impossible. Yet the fact remains that there they were with no circumstance to warrant an inference of negligence on the part of anyone other than defendant. Davis v. Van Camp PackingCo., 189 Iowa, 775. Only when no inference of defendant's negligence fairly may be drawn from the facts can a verdict be directed in his favor. Hardie v. Boland Co.,
Defendant's other exceptions are intertwined with the problems we have discussed and require no further comment.
All the exceptions of defendant are overruled. The case is remitted to the Superior Court for the entry of judgment on the verdict.