The plaintiff, Yong Cha Hong, commenced this case in a Maryland court with a complaint alleging counts of negligence and breach of warranty against defendants, the proprietor of a chain of fast food restaurants called Roy Rogers Family Restaurants (Marriott) and the supplier of raw frying chicken to the chain (Gold Kist). The case was removed to this Court on diversity grounds. It seems that the plaintiff was contentedly munching away one day on a piece of Roy Rogers take-out fried chicken 1 (a wing) when she bit into something in the chicken that she perceived to be a worm. She suffered, it is alleged, great physical and emotional upset from her encounter with this item, including permanent injuries, in consequence of which she prays damages in the amount of $500,-000.00.
The defendants moved for summary judgment on plaintiff’s warranty count, and also, later, as to the entire complaint, on the ground that there is no genuine dispute of material fact and that, as a matter of law, there was no breach of warranty or negligence. If they are right, they are entitled to summary judgment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
— U.S.-,
*447
It appears that the item encountered by plaintiff in the chicken wing was probably not a worm or other parasite,
see
Strasburger & Siegel Certificate of Analysis (Partial S.J. Motion Ex. A), although plaintiff, in her deposition, steadfastly maintains that it was a worm, notwithstanding the expert analysis. If it was not in fact a worm,
i.e.,
if the expert analysis is correct, it was either one of the chicken’s major blood vessels (the aorta) or its trachea, both of which (the Court can judicially notice) would appear worm-like (although not meaty like a worm, but hollow) to a person unschooled in chicken anatomy. The Court must presume plaintiff to be inexpert as to chickens, even though she admits to some acquaintance with fresh-slaughtered chickens.
See Ross v. Communications Satellite Corp.,
Thus, the warranty issue squarely framed is, does Maryland law 2 provide a breach of warranty 3 remedy for personal injury flowing from an unexpected encounter with an inedible 4 part of the chicken’s anatomy in a piece of fast food fried chicken? Defendants contend that there can be no warranty recovery unless the offending item was a “foreign object,” i.e., not a part of the chicken itself.
In
Webster v. Blue Skip Tea Room, Inc.,
In their respected hornbook,
Uniform Commercial Code,
Sec. 9-7 (2d Ed.1979) at 351, Professors White and Summers classify
Webster
in a category of warranty cases involving “the presence of unexpected objects,” along with several other cases illustrative of that genre.
Id.
at n. 96. In
DeGraff v. Myers Foods,
19 Pa. D & C 2d 19, 1 U.C.C.Rep. 110 (C.P.1958), the unexpected object was a chicken bone in a chicken pot pie. (The plaintiff won.) In
Flippo v. Mode O’Day Frock Shops,
Unlike New England Fish Chowder, a well-known regional specialty, fried chicken (though of Southern origin) is a ubiquitous American dish. Chicken, generically, has a special place in the American poultry pantheon:
The dream of the good life in America is embodied in the promise of “a chicken in every pot.” Domestic and wild fowl have always been abundant and popular, and each wave of immigrants has brought along favorite dishes — such as paella and chicken cacciatori — which have soon become naturalized citizens.
The Fannie Farmer Cookbook (Knopf: 1980) at 228.
*448 Indeed, as to fried chicken, Fannie Farmer lists recipes for three varieties of fried chicken alone — pan-fried, batter-fried, and Maryland Fried chicken. 6 Id. at 238-39. As best this Judge can determine (and he is no culinary expert) the fast-food chicken served in Roy Rogers most resembles Fannie Farmer’s batter-fried chicken. That is, it is covered with a thick, crusty (often highly spiced) batter, that usually conceals from inspection whatever lurks beneath. There is deposition testimony from plaintiff establishing that she saw the offending item before she bit into it, having torn the wing asunder before eating it. A question of fact is raised as to just what she saw, or how carefully she might reasonably be expected to have examined what she saw before eating. It is common knowledge that chicken parts often harbor minor blood vessels. But, this Judge, born and raised south of the Mason-Dixon Line (where fried chicken has been around longer than in any other part of America), knows of no special heightened awareness chargeable to fried chicken eaters that ought to caution them to be on the alert for tracheas or aortas in the middle of their wings. 7
Certainly, in
Webster
and many other cases that have denied warranty recovery as a matter of law, the injurious substance was, as in this case, a natural (though inedible) part of the edible item consumed. Thus, in
Shapiro v. Hotel Statler Corp.,
Applying the reasonable expectation test to this case, the Court cannot conclude that the presence of a trachea or an aorta in a fast food fried chicken wing is so reasonably to be expected as to render it merchantable, as a matter of law, within the bounds of U.C.C. § 2-314(2). This is
*449
not like the situation involving a 1 cm. bone in a piece of fried fish in
Morrison’s Cafeteria.
Everyone but a fool knows that tiny bones may remain in even the best filets of fish. This case is more like
Williams,
where the court held that the issue was for the trier of fact, on a claim arising from a cherry pit in cherry ice cream. Thus, a question of fact is presented that precludes the grant of summary judgment.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
— U.S.-,
In short, summary judgment cannot be awarded defendants on plaintiff’s warranty count, and their motion for partial summary judgment is, accordingly, denied.
Defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to the entire complaint is mainly predicated upon plaintiff’s insistence at her deposition that the offending item was in fact a worm, notwithstanding the independent analysis showing it not to be a worm. It is true that a party having the burden of proof cannot carry that burden by “evidence which points in both directions,”
see N.L.R.B. v. Patrick Plaza Dodge, Inc.,
Finally, the Court perceives genuine, material disputes of fact and law on plaintiff’s negligence count, precluding summary judgment thereon. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). Neither expert testimony nor other direct evidence of any sort is needed (except in professional malpractice cases) to prove negligence under Maryland law; negligence can be inferred.
Western Md. R. Co. v. Shivers,
For these reasons, the defendant’s motion for summary judgment in to to is also denied.
APPENDIX
[[Image here]]
Notes
. The Court takes judicial notice (because it is so wellknown in this jurisdiction) that Roy Rogers specializes in fried chicken, to eat in or take out. Fed.R.Evid. 201. See Appendix hereto.
. Of course, Maryland law applies in this diversity case.
Erie Railroad v. Tompkins,
. The relevant warranty is found in Md. Comm.Law Code Ann. [U.C.C.] § 2-314(2) (1975). The Maryland U.C.C. warranty of merchantability applies to sales of food in restaurants, including take-out sales. U.C.C. § 2-314(1).
. Although perhaps digestible the aorta and the trachea of a chicken would appear indisputably to belong to the realm of the inedible in that fowl’s anatomy.
. Of which this Judge is one (part-time).
. Oddly enough, Maryland Fried Chicken is seldom encountered in Maryland restaurants, though this Judge has seen it on restaurant menus in Ireland and England.
. Of course, if as a matter of fact and law plaintiff abandoned her reliance on defendants’ warranty by eating the wing with “contributory negligence,” the defendants would have a good warranty defense, as well as a good negligence defense, under Maryland law.
Erdman v. Johnson Bros. Radio & Television,
. Although the item encountered by plaintiff in this case does not carry the same potential for physical harm as do fish bones and oyster shells, plaintiff alleges compensable personal injury damage under U.C.C. § 2-715(2)(b).
