116 So. 147 | Ala. | 1928
The general affirmative charge requested by defendants should have been given. Continental Cas. Co. v. Paul,
London, Yancey Brower and Whit Windham, all of Birmingham, for appellee.
The affirmative charge should never be given where the evidence is open to a reasonable inference of a material fact unfavorable to the right of recovery by the party requesting the charge. B. R. L. P. Co. v. Colbert,
The main insistence on appeal seems to be that the evidence did not identify the beverage bought by plaintiff as the defendants' product. For this cause it is claimed the affirmative charge should have been given, or a new trial granted.
The evidence went to show that defendants manufactured, bottled, and sold for consumption, in and about Birmingham, beverages under the name of "Try-Me"; that such drinks were purchased and kept at the drink stand in St. Mark's school for sale to school children; that plaintiff, a school girl, purchased a bottle, and on drinking a portion of the contents discovered something wrong in the taste, which led to examination disclosing the presence of foreign matter as charged in the complaint; that presently plaintiff became nauseated, began vomiting, and was carried to the hospital for treatment. She was released after a few hours. *304 The bottle alleged to have contained the drink was produced at the trial and identified as the same kind of bottle used by defendants. Plaintiff testifies "Try-Me" was imprinted on the cap. The drink was of grape flavor. Appellant seeks to construe the testimony as meaning the bottle was labeled as the beverage known as "Try-Me Grape," a different drink from "Try-Me" and presumably bottled by some other manufacturer. Some of the eyewitnesses describing the beverage called it a "Try-Me" grape. Other evidence, especially that of plaintiff, shows this phrase was merely used to identify the particular flavor of "Try-Me" beverage. The evidence was sufficient to go to the jury as basis for an inference that this particular bottle was of defendants' products. Defendants produced no evidence that any other bottler used the same trade-name or same type of bottle in Birmingham, nor that this stand bought drinks from any other. This is not a case of mere conjecture or speculation calling for the affirmative charge or a new trial. The presence of foreign matter deleterious to health sealed up in a bottle of soft drink is evidence of negligence.
The full evidence as to the modern equipment of the plant and the details of operation, including inspection both before and after filling the bottle, serve rather to emphasize than to disprove negligence of some employee in passing into the market a bottle containing the articles disclosed in the evidence.
The question propounded by appellants to their witness Teaver, viz. "I will ask you to state whether or not you did on April 5, 1925, see an employee or any one else throw a cigarette in a bottle at the defendants' plant," was properly disallowed. It was not shown that the witness was at the plant watching its operations that day, nor, if so, how long. No evidence tended to show the bottle in question was filled on that day, the same day it was bought by plaintiff at the stand in St. Mark's school. The question called for evidence, negative in character, so remote as to be without probative force.
The trial court, in oral charge, properly defined the legal duty of defendants as follows:
" * * * If you are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that the defendants used the care, skill, and diligence in and about the manufacturing and bottling of the soft drink that a reasonably careful, skillful, and diligent person engaged in a similar business would have used, then that is all the law requires of them and the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover."
Several given charges covered the same principle in varying language. Charge 4 refused to defendants, if correct, must be construed as stating the same principle in less apt and clear language. It is not necessary to here decide whether the refusal of this charge is error in negligence cases generally, or in this particular case. See Grauer v. A. G. S. R. Co.,
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., concur.