Manzoni v. Detroit Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
Manzoni v. Detroit Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
Opinion of the Court
The cases before us are upon implied warranty. One plaintiff is Theresa Manzoni. It is her claim that she was injured as a result of drinking Coca Cola in which something foreign was present. The other plaintiff, her husband, claims damages for medical expenses and loss of services. The cases were consolidated for trial and appeal.
In the store where the Coca Cola in question was-purchased, some 4 or 5 days before it was consumed,, it was set out on the floor, in cases stacked one on top of another, in fact, all over the place. A case was taken home by Mr. Manzoni and kept in a heated basement.
At the trial, to a jury, it was shown that the wife had “a nervous stomach” which, apparently, has not been quieted by this experience. The defendant, in turn, introduced evidence of its care in manufacture, and, in addition, that molds require oxygen for growth and that a bottle of Coca Cola contains carbon dioxide rather than oxygen. In addition, evidence was introduced challenging, in effect, that Mrs. Manzoni’s illness, or at least its persistence, was .attributable to the foreign substance at all. It would serve no useful purpose to describe the whole spectrum of the evidence, pro and con. The jury heard it and brought in verdicts of $650 for the wife .and $350 for the husband. The cases are before us ■on a general appeal.
Defendant urges 2 general arguments. The first has to do with the form of action. It runs something like this: Plaintiffs sued upon an implied warranty; there is “no distinction between a count in implied warranty or in tort;” therefore “the burden was
The fallacy in what is urged is the assertion that there is no distinction between counts in warranty and in tort. Their similarity in the present context lies only in the fact that each is a remedy aimed at the liability of the manufacturer and that each may be grounded upon the presence of a deleterious or harmful substance (e. g., mouse, fly, snake, mold, animal or human organs, or residue) in an article intended for human consumption. At this point, however, similarities end and distinctions take over. The warranty action, of ancient lineage, did not require a showing of negligence
Yet there was a problem here that required solution within the framework of modern commercial realities. At an earlier day, the day, in fact, when many of our precedents began to take form, commerce, as Llewellyn
Today we have no barter, no simple village shop, no personal knowledge of the maker, of the source of his materials or of his methods of manufacture. Rather, rudely intruding upon the ancient precedents “like a belligerent wife crashing in on an assignation with a hussy,”
The result of the operation of these forces has been a marked change in legal theory on a wide front. The food and beverage area is but a small subdivision of a field much more comprehensive, involving the whole topic of products liability.
The supreme court of New Jersey has recently given this modern development exhaustive examination, concluding as follows:
“The limitations of privity in contracts for the sale of goods developed their place in the law when marketing conditions were simple, when maker and buyer frequently met face to face on an equal bargaining plane and when many of the products were' relatively uncomplicated and conducive to inspection by a buyer competent to evaluate their equality. See, Freezer, ‘Manufacturer’s Liability for Injuries-Caused by His Products,’ 37 Mich L Rev 1 (1938).. With the advent of mass marketing, the manufacturer became remote from the purchaser, sales were-accomplished through intermediaries, and the demand for the product was created by advertising-media. In such an economy it became obvious that the consumer was the person being cultivated. Manifestly, the connotation of ‘consumer’ was broader than that of ‘buyer.’ He signified such a person who, in the reasonable contemplation of the parties to the-sale, might be expected to use the product. Thus,, where the commodities sold are such that if defect tively manufactured they will be dangerous to life or limb, then society’s interests can only be protected by eliminating the requirement of privity between the maker and his dealers and the reasonably expected ultimate consumer. In that way the burden of' losses consequent upon use of defective articles is borne by those who are in a position to either control the danger or make an equitable distribution of the losses when they do occur.”
In this State we permit recovery in this type of case “either on a theory of negligence or implied warranty.”
But, whether the theory employed is that of warranty or negligence, it must be shown, in an action against the manufacturer, that the offensive condition was present when the product left the defend
Finally, defendant complains of many errors in the charge given, particularly that a careful distinction was not observed throughout between cause of action based upon negligence and upon warranty, that the jury was not charged as to contributory negligence, that the jury was not instructed to the effect that defendant would no longer be responsible when it relinquished control of the bottle to the retailer, that the statement of the doctrine of implied warranty was tantamount to directing a verdict for plaintiffs, that no charge was given re proximate cause, and that plaintiffs’ burden was to show that the foreign substance was in the bottle when it left the manufacturer.
Much of this is utterly inconsistent with an action based on a warranty theory. It was plaintiffs’ theory of their cause of action that a manufacturer who prepares “foodstuffs destined to be sold to and consumed by the public is bound by an implied warranty that its product is free from foreign, poisonous or deleterious substances,” Cheli v. Cudahy Brothers
Affirmed. Appellees having submitted no briefs will not be awarded costs.
See Kenower v. Hotels Statler Co. (CCA 6), 124 F2d 658.
“During the year * * * [defendant’s] plant bottled 14,000,000 bottles of Coca-Cola.” Norfolk Coca-Cola Bottling Works, Inc., v. Krausse, 162 Va 107, 112 (173 SE 497).
Llewellyn. Cases and Materials on Sales, p 204.
Moog Industries, Inc., CCH, Trade Reg Rep (10th ed) Complaints and Orders Transfer Binder 1954-1955, paragraph 25,444 (dissenting opinion).
See Wilson, Products Liability, 43 Cal L Rev 614, 809.
MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co., 217 NY 382 (111 NE 1050, LRA 1916F, 696, Ann Cas 1916C, 440, 13 NCCA 1029).
Spence v. Three Rivers Builders & Masonry Supply, Inc., 353 Mich 120.
Noone v. Fred Perlberg, Inc., 268 App Div 149 (49 NYS2d 460), aff’d mem 294 NY 680 (60 NE2d 839).
Jacob E. Decker & Sons, Inc., v. Capps, 139 Tex 609 (164 SW2d 828, 142 ALR 1479).
Sharp v. Pittsburg Coca Cola Bottling Co., 180 Kan 845 (308 P2d 150).
Carter v. Yardley & Co. Ltd., 319 Mass 92 (64 NE2d 693, 164 ALR 559).
Henningsen v. Bloomfield Motors, Inc., 32 NJ 358, 379 (161 A2d 69, 80, 81).
2 Harper and James, Torts, § 28.1, at 1535. See, also, Professor (now Mr. Justice) William O. Douglas, Vicarious Liability and Administration of Risk, 38 Yale LJ 584, 720.
E.g., The consumer is a third-party beneficiary of the manufacturer-dealer contract, or, the dealer’s cause of action is “assigned”" to the consumer, et eetera.
Spence v. Three Rivers Builders & Masonry Supply, Inc., 353 Mich 120, 135.
LaHue v. Coca Cola Bottling, Inc., 50 Wash2d 645, 647 (314 P2d 421). See, also, 77 ALR2d 7, 215, 241.
Hertzler v. Manshum, 228 Mich 416, 421, See, also, Pattinson v. Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Port Huron, 333 Mich 253.
Eger v. Helmar, 272 Mich 513, 517.
Concurring Opinion
(concurring in affirmance). We are concerned in these cases with a product manufactured and sold for human consumption. The principles applicable to the disposition thereof were considered and declared at some length in Hertzler v. Manshum, 228 Mich 416, the scope of the opinion being expressly limited to facts of the character there involved. In accordance with the decision, which has been recognized as declaring the law of this State, the manufacturer of a product intended for human consumption owes a duty to the ultimate consumer and impliedly warrants that the article as manufactured is free from any content inimical to human life or health.
In the instant cases it is apparent from the record before us that the plaintiffs relied on the case cited. The pretrial statement so indicates. The cases were tried on the theory of the implied warranty recognized in Hertzler v. Manshum, and the trial judge submitted the cases to the jury accordingly. It is apparent that the jury determined from the proofs that plaintiffs had established prima facie cases and that defendant had failed to meet the burden resting
We find no reversible error and the judgments entered on the verdicts of the jury are affirmed.
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