33 A.2d 488 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued April 28, 1943. The plaintiff recovered a verdict in an action of trespass for injuries alleged to have resulted from drinking coca cola in which there was the remains of a spider. The trial judge subsequently sustained defendant's motion for judgment n.o.v. holding that the evidence did not show that the dead spider (1) rendered the coca cola injurious; or (2) that it caused plaintiff's illness. We are of the opinion that the evidence was sufficient to support a verdict.
The plaintiff, a steel worker 47 years of age, at about 6:30 P.M. of the evening of May 25, 1938, purchased a bottle of coca cola in the store located on the first floor of the premises where he resided with his family. A clerk opened the bottle and handed it to the plaintiff who took a swallow of the liquid, which "tasted kind of bitter." After a second drink he became ill and fell to the floor. The clerk upon examining the contents of the bottle exclaimed: "No wonder you are sick, there is a big spider in it." The plaintiff was taken upstairs to his apartment where he remained in bed for 12 days and he was absent from work 90 days.
Dr. Winstead, the attending physician, stated that plaintiff had an attack of acute gastric indigestion, fermentative form, and sustained a slight concussion of the brain due to his fall. He gave a definite and positive professional opinion that plaintiff's drinking the coca cola with the spider in it was the cause of his illness. His testimony was not materially weakened *447 as appellee argues by stating on cross examination that his conclusion would be the same whether the contents of the bottle were poisonous or otherwise.
Mr. Lester Patton, a chemist, testified that he analyzed the contents of the bottle, which he found contained a spider, but no other injurious ingredient or substance. He expressed the opinion that this contaminating foreign substance in the coca cola made it unfit for human consumption.
The appellee does not seriously question the sufficiency of the proof to warrant a finding of negligence; that was established by showing the presence of the spider in the bottle. The burden was not upon the plaintiff, as the court below apparently thought, of proving that the foreign substance was highly poisonous. He made out a prima facie case by proving that before he drank this coca cola he was in good health and immediately thereafter he became ill. A jury should not be allowed to guess what causes physical harm to a plaintiff. The correct test applicable in the instant case is proof of circumstances that "would satisfy a reasonable and well-balanced mind" that the plaintiff was harmed by the negligence of the defendant: Madden et ux. v. Great A. P. TeaCo.,
We held in Menaker et al. v. Supplee-Wills-Jones Milk Company,
In Nock v. Coca Cola Bottling Works of Pittsburgh,
In Madden et ux. v. Great A. P. Tea Company, supra, the wife plaintiff purchased tea, which when brewed that evening had a bitter or sour smell. She became nauseated after drinking the tea and remained ill for a period of three months. The investigation that followed disclosed a mouse in the tea, which two attending physicians attributed to be the cause of the illness. We upheld the verdict recovered by the plaintiff.
The plaintiff in Koplin v. Louis K. Liggett Company,
In the recent case of Bonenberger et al. v. PittsburghMercantile Co.,
True, Dr. Epstein, defendant's physician, attributed plaintiff's condition to thrombosis or infarction of the blood vessels of the abdomen, which may have resulted from taking a cold drink. In his opinion the foreign substance in the coca cola had nothing to do with his illness. We are concerned only in determining whether there was sufficient evidence offered by the plaintiff to submit the case to the jury. Concluding that the plaintiff made out a case, it is not necessary for us to consider the testimony favorable to the defendant; that was for the jury:Heinz v. Pittsburgh,
The judgment of the court below is reversed with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff on the verdict.