304 Mass. 257 | Mass. | 1939
This is an action of contract to recover damages for a breach of an implied warranty. The judge found for the plaintiff and assessed damages in the sum of $125. The case now comes before us on the plaintiff’s appeal from the order of the Appellate Division that judgment be entered for the defendant.
There was evidence that on December 3, 1938, the plaintiff, a married woman, residing with her husband, purchased a loaf of sliced bread at the defendant’s market. The following day she removed the wrapper and took two slices of the bread and placed them on the table in preparation for dinner. She started to eat her dinner, took one of the pieces of bread, and broke it into two pieces. She ate one of these pieces and was about to eat the other piece when she noticed for the first time a dead cockroach "near” the upper crust of the bread. She did not eat any part of the piece of bread
At the close of the trial the defendant presented seven requests for rulings, all of which were refused, the judge stating that he “had found to the contrary.” He made the following “special finding of fact”: “The court specially finds that a loaf of sliced bread containing a dead cockroach embedded in one of the slices was purchased by the plaintiff of the defendant; that the plaintiff, while having her dinner, ate half of this slice of bread and was about to eat the other half when she saw the remains of the cockroach; that she became mentally disturbed and made sick; that she vomited and remained in. this condition for about a week after the onset of her illness, losing about ten pounds in weight; that the bread, when delivered to the plaintiff, was not reasonably fit to be eaten by her; that the unrefuted medical testimony showed that the plaintiff was not peculiarly susceptible, that an average person might be similarly affected, and that the plaintiff’s experience was an adequate cause of her illness; and that her illness was the result of a breach of the implied warranty of the fitness of the bread for human consumption.” The sixth request follows: “Even though there was a breach of an implied warranty on the part of the defendant, the plaintiff cannot recover for any physical injury she sustained caused solely by her mental disturbance upon seeing a ‘cockroach’ contained in the bread sold by the defendant.”
We are of opinion, however, that the Appellate Division erred in ordering judgment for the defendant. There were findings warranted by the evidence of an implied warranty of the fitness of the bread for food under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 106, § 17 (1), and of a breach of that warranty, Holt v. Mann, 294 Mass. 21, and cases cited, for which the plaintiff is entitled to recover damages to be measured by the "loss directly and naturally resulting . . . [therefrom] in the ordinary course of events . . . .” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 106, § 58 (6). Upon the facts disclosed by the record, the plaintiff is entitled to recover nominal damages.
The order of the Appellate Division that judgment be entered for the defendant is reversed, and instead judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff for nominal damages.
So ordered.