71 So. 743 | Miss. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant instituted this action against appellee to recover damages alleged to have been sustained for the loss of one of plaintiff’s eyes. Mr. Wheeler, the appellant, was the owner of a restaurant in the city of Laurel, Miss., and at his restaurant, among other things, he sold soft drinks, including bottled Coca-Cola, which was manufactured, bottled, and sold by appellee. He kept the bottled drinks in an ordinary ice box, the top or lid of which opened upwards and worked or hung upon hinges at the back of the box. It appears that appellant kept his restaurant open all night, and some time after one o’clock in the night he went to the ice box to see about his Coca-Cola, and, on lifting the lid of the box, a bottle of Coca-Cola exploded, projecting a small piece of glass into the right eye. From the injury thus Inflicted it became necessary to remove the eyeball. It was the custom of appellant to place fifty pounds of ice in the box, and then to stack about four dozen bottles of Coca-Cola upon and around this ice. The declaration is in four counts. The first is based upon the alleged negligence of the defendant in overcharging the bottles with too much carbonic acid gas; the second, in using defective and dangerous bottles; the third, on the alleged failure of the defendant to test or inspect the
The evidence shows that the bottle of Coca-Cola that caused the injury was bottled by appellee at its regular bottling works in the city of Laurel. It is further shown that appellee made use of two kinds of bottles, one what is termed a “light-colored” and the other a blue bottle. One witness, a discharged employee of appellee, testifies that many of the light-colored bottles were defective. The substance of the testimony of this witness is that these bottles were thinner than the blue bottles; that many of them had thin places in them; that the company would sell to the retail trade in cases of twenty-four bottles each, making delivery by means of a truck or conveyance owned and operated by appellee; that in hauling the bottles for delivery they would frequently burst in the case, and that customers frequently required the agent of appellee to make good certain bottles which would be found to be broken when taken out of the case in the usual course of the customer’s business. This witness, Tillis Walters, had driven for some months the delivery wagon of appellee, loading the wagon in the morning and returning some time that day either for a new load or to leave the conveyance at the' plant of appellee during the night. In mailing his reports he would account for the bottles charged to him when he would start out with a load, and sometimes he would be allowed credit for broken bottles. The witness furthermore testifies' that he himself had no practical experience in bottling Coca-Cola, but that he understood that the pressure put upon the bottles when filled was supposed to be about sixty pounds. lie further says that sometimes the pressure would crush a bottle in
The question for decision, therefore, is whether negligence on the part of appellee is shown or proved. There are very few reported cases of the kind now under review, and no previous case of this kind by our own court has been cited by counsel for either side. A case very similar to the one at bar is that of Guinea et al. v. Campbell, 22 Quebec Official Law Reports 257, in which Judge Archibald, among other things, says:
“It is proved that glass is not a substance that becomes weakened by use, unless from the application of some physical force it is cracked. If it were cracked at the time of filling, the proof shows that it would explode in that operation,-and so if the crack occurred at any time when the pressure existed within, it would immediately explode. I am driven to the conclusion that when the bottle in question was placed in her refrigerator by the plaintiff, it was sound and strong enough to support the pressure of the liquid. What then could
The only case that appears to support the contention cf appellant is that of Payne v. Rome Coca-Cola Bottling Company, 10 Ga. App. 762, 73 S. E. 1087, but it is to be observed that the eourt, in concluding the opinion in that case, does not decide whether the mere explosion itself would be sufficient. On this point the -opinion says:
“As to whether an inference of negligence would arise against the manufacturers upon mere proof of the explosion, without more, we express no opinion.”
We do not think the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applies in this case. The bottle at the time of the injury was not under the control or management of the manufacturer. The. unfortunate occurrence appears to be one •of those unforeseen accidents for which appellee under fhe facts of this case should not be held liable.
The proof is not satisfying that appellee made use of bottles that were too weak to stand the pressure put upon them in the ordinary process of bottling, and this •one instance of a bottle bursting under the circumstances -disclosed by this record is, in itself, not sufficient to charge appellee with conducting its business in an unusual or unsafe fashion or making use of unsafe appliances. There is too much' conjecture about the whole case to upset the ruling of the trial court in granting the peremptory instruction.
Affirmed.