50 W. Va. 644 | W. Va. | 1902
This is an action of trespass on the ease brought in the circuit court of Ritchie County by L. J. Peters against the firm of Johnson, Jackson & Co. The declaration alleges that the defendants sold to the plaintiff through his agent by mistake salt-petre for epsom salts, and that the plaintiff having taken the saltpetre, believing it to be epsom salts, became sick and suffered great impairment of health. The jury in the case found for the defendants.
One error relied upon is that the verdict reads, “We the jury find for the defendants,” whereas it ought to read, “we the jury find the defendants not guilty.” The argument is that as the plea was “not guilty,” the verdict should have responded to the issue. Plainly there can be nothing in this point. The verdict does meet the issue. How could the jury find for the defendants, if they did not find them not guilty P It in effect says they found the issue for the defendants, thus responding to it.
Many verdicts are in this form, and are always regarded as good, just as good as the other form. Verdicts are to be favorably construed, and if the point in issue is substantially decided by the verdicit is good, and when the meaning of the jury can
Another objection to the verdict is that the jury was sworn wrong, as the record simply says it was sworn “the truth to speak upon the issue joined,” whereas, as there had been an inquiry of damages at rules, the jury ought to have been sworn to well and truly find the amount, if any, which the plaintiff was entitled to recover. How can such a point as this be colorably made when there was in court a plea of not guilty, which annulled the rule order for inquiry of damages?
The declaration avers that the plaintiff sent by an unnamed agent to the store of the defendants for epsom salts, and that they wrongfully and negligently sold to the plaintiff by his agent salt petre, which, being taken, sickened and inflicted lasting injury upon him. The contest in the trial court seems to have been upon the question whether the sale was' in fact made to the plaintiff or to McGary. The plaintiff had been sick or indisposed at McGary’s house for some three weeks, and wanted salts for medicine, and, as he claims, procured the son of McGary, a boy, to go for him to the store of the defendants for the salts; whereas, the defendants claimed that the plaintiff neither sent the boy, nor bought or paid for them; but that Mrs. McGary being informed that the salts which they usually kept in the house were exhausted, sent the boy herself to the store, and bought them herself. The circuit court seems to have acted, in its instructions, upon the erroneous theory that if the sale was in fact to McGary, not to Peters, Peters could not recover. This theory rests upon the reasoning that there was no sale to Peters, no contract, no relation between the plaintiff and defendants, and therefore there was no duty upon the defendants to the plaintiff, the breach of which could give rise to an action. But the law will not sustain this line of reasoning. Can a druggist, from incompetency or negligence, sell to one person the wrong poisonous article, as medicine, which, being taken, by such person lying sick in the purchaser’s house, inflicts injury upon such third person without any liability upon that druggist to answer to that third person ? The law says he is liable to that third person. We know that drugs and medicines are kept in homes, and may, probably will, be used by
he departs from the prescription, or ignorantly sell wrong and poisonous or hurtful drugs, he is an absolute guarantor, and cannot plead that he has been extraordinarily careful in general. Fleet v. Eollmlcamp, 13 B. Mon. 219. This excludes the question of negligence or ignorance as irrelevant, and bases the position on the tremendous and imminent danger to the public from the sale of poisons and medicines. It can hardly be said to lay down too rigid a rule, looking to the safety of life; but the authorities generally do admit the question of negligence as material, but they demand the utmost caution and skill above stated. Certainly this duty is demanded as between the parties to the sale, and upon principles above stated this duty exists
between the seller and third persons also. A few cases will show this. The leading, case is Thomas v. Winchester, 6 N. Y. (2 Seld.) 397, 57 Am. Dec. 455, holding that a manufacturing druggist selling a poisonous drug labeled as harmless, is liable to a person who relying on the erroneous label, and without carlessness, takes the drug as medicine, on the ground of breach of public duty, whether the person injured is the immediate customer or not. The druggist, Winchester, sold wholesale to As-pinall, and he to Foord, and Foord sold by retail .to Mrs Thomas. Winchester was held liable to her. The court said: “The death or great bodily harm of some person was the natural and almost inevitable consequence of the sale of belladonna by means of a false-label.” The court distinguished between articles of imminently dangerous character, and those not of such character, in saying: “The defendant’s negligence put human life in imminent danger. Can it be said that there was no duty on the part of the defendant to avoid the creation of that danger by the exercise of greater caution, or that the exercise of that caution was a duty only to his immediate vendee, whose life was not endangered? The defendant’s duty arose out of the nature of his business, and the danger to others incident to its mismanagement. Nothing but mischief like that which actually hap
Contrary to these principles the court instructed the jury that if the sale of the salt petre was in fact mad'e to McGary, the plaintiff could not recover, and therefore instructions of the defendants numbered 1, 4, 5, 6 and 7 are bad. I think defendants’ instructions 4 and 12 are bad, because they say that only reasonable or ordinary care was demanded. The greatest care is demanded of one who sells dangerous drugs. So also is high skill, certainly ample skill. If one sells them who is not skilled, but incapable of the business from ignorance or want of experience, he must not sell them. He does so at his peril. He assumes the obligations and risks incident to his chosen business.
Saltpetre and epsom salts not being drugs prohibited from sale, except as allowed in section 9, chapter 150, Code 1899, it is not unlawful for a merchant to sell them, and instructions 2 and 3 were not objectionable. There is no objection to defendant’s 8 and 9 as to contributory negligence. My understanding is that instruction 7 of plaintiff; was given as it ought to have been. Plaintiff’s instruction No. 9, saying that no one but a licensed druggist can sell saltpetre, and that its sale was prima facie negligence, was properly rejected. Whether so selling would bo ground for treating him as engaged in the business of a druggist without license is one question; but it would raise no presumption, on that ground alone, for the inference of negligence. Of course, it will be understood that whether the defendant in fact did sell the pulverized saltpetre, and whether it was of a highly dangerous character, as also the question of negligence and unskillfulness, will be matters for the jury under the evidence and law on another trial. For these reasons we reverse the judgment, set aside the verdict, grant a new trial and remand the cause to the circuit court.
Reversed. Remanded.