Anderson v. Meyer Bros. Drug Co.

130 S.W. 829, 149 Mo. App. 554, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 942
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 130 S.W. 829 (Anderson v. Meyer Bros. Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Meyer Bros. Drug Co., 130 S.W. 829, 149 Mo. App. 554, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 942 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

This plaintiff is the daughter of John and Mary Anderson and at the time of the events to be narrated, lived with her parents in their home in Keokuk, Iowa, of which city they had been residents for many years, and through all plaintiff’s life. Her father was chief of the fire department of the city and the home of the family was above the engine room of said [558]*558department. A block and a half away was the drug store of McGrath Brothers, of whom the Anderson family were friends and customers. Plaintiff and her sister Georgia Anderson were employed by a telephone company to work at its switchboard in Keokuk. A cousin of plaintiff named Herbert Anderson, who resided in Decatur, Illinois, not far away, was visiting the family on December 8, 1905, and some members of it being indisposed, he was sent by Mrs. Anderson to the Mc-Grath drug store to purchase licorice powder, a remedy the Andersons were in the habit of using for slight ailments. McGrath Brothers had purchased recently ten pounds of the remedy from defendant, a wholesale drug concern doing business in the city of St. Louis, and had emptied it into a dawer in their store in which they had always kept licorice powder and nothing else. A small portion of the powder in that drawer was sold and delivered to Herbert Anderson, who took it to Mrs. Anderson, and on the same night she gave her husband two teaspoonfuls and one teaspoonful to each of her daughters. Those three persons were seized with a violent illness shortly afterward and came near dying. For the purposes of this appeal we need not enumerate the symptoms from which plaintiff suffered, further than to say they were extremely distressing and painful, affected her eyesight and nervous system and the consequences of the poisoning had continued to the date of the trial in May, 1909, more than three years after the medicine was taken. The physician called to see the patients found they were suffering from belladonna poisoning and it turned out leaves of the belladonna plant had been in some unexplained way mixed with the licorice powder. It is in proof that belladonna contains atropin, hyoscymine and hyoscin, all of which are poisonous. There was abundant, if not conclusive, evidence to establish that plaintiff, her father and her sister were made dangerously ill and narrowly escaped death by the effect of the doses of medicine they took, and that the pernicious [559]*559result was due to a poisonous ingredielit having been carelessly mixed with the licorice powder. The remedy when properly prepared is mild and harmless, so the physicians testified, and contains no belladonna. The powder sold by defendant to McGrath Brothers was analyzed by a St. Louis chemist and found to contain belladonna, but the import of the testimony of experts is that the quantity of the belladonna was insufficient to produce so violent an illness as plaintiff and the other members of her family experienced. By January 11, 1906, plaintiff was able to go back to the telephone office and did go back that' day, though she was still suffering from the poison. The firm of McGrath Brothers was much concerned about the catastrophe and one of them had said to Mrs. Anderson a night or two after the accident, in the presence of her husband and in the room where her daughters were sick in bed, she “need not worry a thing about this. I will see that your daughters get paid for the time they lose and the doctors all get paid. You need not Avorry a bit;” to which remark Mr. and Mrs. Anderson answered “All right, sir.” Mr. Anderson gave this testimony regarding information about defendant’s connection with the medicine: “We told Mr. Mc-Grath (meaning John McGrath) we did not intend to have anything against him on account of the licorice powder.” He was asked if he told said McGrath anything about Meyer Brothers Drug Company and answered: “No, sir; he told us about them . . . the next day after we took the poison.” Asked if the intention then was to make a claim against said Drug Company, he answered: “Not at that time; we had not decided to do anything;” said they had not yet consulted an attorney and probably did not for a year later. The witness also testified he had told Thomas McGrath, in answer to an inquiry by the latter, propounded about a week after the poison had been taken, the girls Avere paying five or six dollars a week for substitutes to work in their places in the telephone office, and he said that [560]*560was not enough (meaning not enough compensation to the sick girls for their time) and he would make' it ten dollars and would pay the doctors’ hills — “would see that everything was paid.” These promises of McGrath were repeated by Mr. Anderson to his wife and daughters. An attorney was sent by defendant from St. Louis to Keokuk and said attorney employed an attorney in Keokuk named Hollingsworth. On January 11th, Hollingsworth went with Thomas McGrath to the engine house and held a conversation with Anderson, Hollingsworth saying he wanted Anderson to sign a paper he (Hollingsworth) produced, for McGrath Brothers, without explaining further what it was and Anderson took it without asking what it was or learning its contents. Nothing was said in that conversation about what the Anderson girls had been earning or had paid for substitutes. McGrath said nothing then and neither he nor Hollingsworth mentioned the amounts stipulated in the paper to be paid the Andersons, or said the paper was merely a receipt for ten dollars paid each of the girls for their lost time and expenses. Hollingsworth only asked Anderson to sign the paper for the McGraths and Anderson said he did not feel like signing it then. Hollingsworth said he wanted the girls to sign it and was told they were away at work, but would be home at five o’clock. The further evidence for plaintiff on the issue of the execution of the paper was, in substance, about as follows: Though plaintiff was able to go to the telephone office January 11th, she was still quite ill and when she returned home in the afternoon was suffering-in some degree from the poison; was “in a sort of a daze,” and her vision was so blurred she could not read, but was able to understand what was said or read to her. She signed the paper in the kitchen of her family home above the engine house, without reading it or hearing it read by any one. Her father, mother and sister were all present at the time and no one else was present. Plaintiff attempted to read the paper but could [561]*561not; her father brought the paper up- and did not give plaintiff time to read it. Her mother could read, was an educated woman and perfectly familiar with the English language, but plaintiff never asked her to read ' the paper and she (the mother) did not have time to read it. Her father came upstairs with the paper in his hand and handed it to her, telling her to sign it. She and her sister Georgia both objected to signing it, but her father insisted and her mother signed his name for him, then told plaintiff where to sign, saying: “Sign right here,” pointing. Plaintiff could see her mother’s hand. Her father brought the paper and did not allow time to read it and no one stated to plaintiff the contents or character of the paper; ‘ she “naturally supposed it was for our substitutes.” The objections of plaintiff, her mother and sister were stated three times, but as often her father told her to sign and to hurry as a man was waiting downstairs for the paper. Plaintiff did not know the paper contained a release of demands against defendant and never had heard of defendant company in connection with the poisoning. .

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W. 829, 149 Mo. App. 554, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-meyer-bros-drug-co-moctapp-1910.