102 S.W.2d 833 | Ark. | 1937
This appeal is from a judgment of the Independence circuit court against The Coca-Cola Bottling Company in favor of Sophia Davidson. She alleged in her complaint, and offered proof to show, that she bought a bottle of Coca-Cola from a dealer at Oil Trough. She drank some from the bottle and discovered therein what appeared to be a portion of a decomposed mouse. She became ill shortly thereafter and continued ill for a time, lost weight and finally filed her suit for damages against the Coca-Cola Bottling Company. *827
Whatever facts are necessary for a proper discussion of this case will be set forth in our comment. It may he said, however, in the beginning that the facts are not unusual, but follow much after the conventional lines off this class of litigation.
The appellant argues in his brief four different matters for the reversal of the judgment rendered herein. First, the verdict was arrived at by lot. Second, the court erred in allowing a bottle of Coca-Cola to be introduced in evidence. Third, the court erred in refusing appellant's motion to dismiss plaintiffs cause of action for defect of parties plaintiff, and, fourth, the court erred in overruling appellant's requested instruction. No. 1 for a directed verdict. These several matters will be taken up in the order mentioned.
Upon the first proposition we find that the defendant bottling company filed its motion for a new trial in which it alleged as the 11th cause therefor that the verdict rendered herein was a quotient verdict and that it was arrived at in a manner substantially as follows:
That after the jurors had retired to the jury room, each one of the jurors named an amount which he considered plaintiff was entitled to receive, then the total of the twelve amounts added together was divided by twelve. The result was $473.08. This alleged fact was established by all affidavit made and subscribed to by L. L. Morrow and John L. Lytle, who testified among other things, that they were petit jurors upon that cause and who explained that this method was used in arriving at their verdict, saying, among other things in the affidavit, that the amounts ranged from one dollar to three thousand. There was no other proof offered as to the manner in which the jury had arrived at its verdict. Seriously, we doubt if any proof could have been offered in regard thereto, except such as was tendered in this case in support of the motion.
The effect of this testimony, if it may be considered for any purpose, is to show that the verdict was not arrived at by lot. It was a quotient verdict. We could conceive of a system being devised whereby the jury might by lot determine and render a verdict in favor of *828 the defendant, but this would not be possible at all in the matter of a quotient judgment if any one of the jurors was in favor of giving to the plaintiff any sum whatever. Some authorities are cited to the effect that this court has upheld quotient verdicts. So far as we now are advised there is no case so holding.
In the case of Speer v. State,
Let it be suggested here that the law inveighing against the evils of a verdict arrived at by lot is a part of the criminal procedure of the state. Section 3219, Crawford Moses' Digest.
But the same statute, salutary as it was intended to be, is not broad enough to permit jurors to impeach their own verdict when arrived at in the manner above described.
However much we might feel like condemning a system of arriving at verdicts in any manner except by the exercise of judgment reflection and conscientious conviction there is no way of having legal knowledge or obtaining information in a manner provided by law that a verdict was a quotient verdict. The binding effect of this verdict must be recognized, and if wrong the remedy lies not in the courts, but in the Legislature.
The second proposition upon which the appellant relies is the matter of introduction in evidence of the bottle of Coca-Cola purchased by the appellee. This bottle at the time it was purchased by the plaintiff, under the proof, was opened and handed to her by the dealer. After she drank a portion of it and discovered in it what she said was apparently parts of a decomposed mouse it was handed back to the dealer who testified that he recapped it and set it away and produced it at the time of the trial.
The objection made to its introduction was that it was not all there, or, that is to say, the remaining portion, *829
after plaintiff had drunk therefrom; that it had changed color and, according to some of the witnesses, the foreign object had broken up into smaller particles. The foundation for the objection was that the bottle was not in the same condition when offered in evidence as it was at the time it was purchased and plaintiff drank therefrom. To support appellant's contention, several cases have been cited. One is Coca-Cola Bottling Company v. Adcox,
We are not saying that any natural force will in all particulars be disregarded and objects about which the controversy may have arisen be in every case competent, but we do say that so long as delay, or even changed conditions by reason of delay do not destroy the evidentiary factor, it is not improper to make it an exhibit. It certainly was not the purpose in this case, and the jury would not have to be told that this bottle of Coca-Cola was offered to show the faded contents of the liquid, or to show that it had lost its sparkle; the jurors did not expect to see original freshness, but they knew, as the court did, and as every one of common or ordinary intelligence must admit, the production and exhibition of the bottle was to show there was some foreign matter in it, that foreign matter which the plaintiff had been pleased to designate or describe as a partly decomposed mouse. Under the circumstances there was no error. It *831 is unnecessary to examine into or discuss other cases cited.
The third proposition upon which the appellant relies was the fact that at the time this suit was instituted Sophia Davidson was a minor and a suit was brought in her name by her mother, Bess Davidson, as next friend. Before the trial of the case Sophia Davidson became eighteen years of age and appellant urges that on that account the suit was suspended or abated, or, at least, in some manner affected adversely by reason of this fact. This must necessarily arise out of a failure properly to interpret or understand the conditions. Section 1111, Crawford Moses' Digest, provides for the manner of bringing suit for minors. Section 1089, Crawford
Moses' Digest, provides that all suits shall be in the name of the real parties in interest. Sophia Davidson, though a minor, was the real party in interest, even in the suit brought for her benefit by her mother as next friend. She continued as the real party in interest until the judgment was rendered. The fact that she arrived at the age of eighteen years simply empowered her to proceed alone from that date without the supporting presence of another adult's name, as provided in suits for the benefit of minors. Whatever she did after that time she became liable for costs. She ratified the suit brought for her by her mother as next friend. Her suit in no sense abated nor was its efficacy in any manner unpaired or changed. She, and not her mother, from that time on controlled the policy of the suit. The effect of a suit by a minor may be further considered by an examination of the case of Wood Henderson v. Claiborne,
The fourth proposition suggested by the appellant and which is argued with a great deal of force is that the court should have directed a verdict upon the whole case, for the bottling company. It is argued here, as it has been many times, that, although plaintiff made a prima file case by her showing that she had bought the bottle, that it contained the foreign or deleterious *832
substance, causing injuries and that, on that account, there was a prima facie showing of negligence in the manufacturing, bottling, or handling of the Coca-Cola, the defendant, Coca-Cola Bottling Company, offered evidence showing every step in the production of the Coca-Cola and making it ready for sale, including the washing and sterilizing of bottles, the manner in which the syrup and carbonated water were placed in the bottles, the manner of capping or sealing, the inspection of the bottles both before and after filling, seemingly meets the requirements of ordinary care and that the prima facie case of plaintiff was overcome, and that therefore it is the duty of the court to direct a verdict for the defendant. It cannot be of avail or serve any good purpose to go over and recite the evidence of these particulars, but let it suffice for our present purposes to say that the appellant is apparently right. In this suggestion the word "apparent" is used advisedly. In this case, as in many others that have presented this same proposition upon this identical point, astute counsel have never yet found a way or suggested wherein this court upon appeal may invade this exclusive province of the jury and determine the disputed question of fact, or wherein it might attempt a supervision or control of the discretion of the trial court. Whatever might be our predilections, or inclinations, or our ideas of what we would have done had we occupied the jury box, cannot and will not influence us in the determination of a matter of this kind. It is better that some sometimes suffer the apparent injustice than that the jury system should be impaired by judicial incursions and the entire public suffer on account thereof. We are bound by a long line of decisions. Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. McBride,
The foregoing are the only matters raised or discussed on appeal. The judgment must, therefore, be affirmed. *833