Armstrong Packing Co. v. Clem.

151 S.W. 576, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 691
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 576 (Armstrong Packing Co. v. Clem.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong Packing Co. v. Clem., 151 S.W. 576, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 691 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

RAINEY, C. J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries to ap-pellee’s wife, Emma Clem, brought by appel-lee against appellant, Armstrong Packing Company, alleging, in effect, that appellant was a manufacturing company, manufacturing, among other things, a certain brand of soap labeled “B. & B.,” or “Biggest and Best,” which was placed on the market and sold, through retailers to ultimate consumers, the public generally; that some of this soap was purchased by appellee from a retailer for use, carried home, and used in the laundry of their family clothes, from the use of which said soap appellee’s wife became poisoned and injured; that her hands, arms, and other parts of her body that came in contact with the soap, or came in contact with her hands and arms after the use of the soap, became poisoned and inflamed, causing her great pain and suffering, rendering her unable to perform her household duties, and she has become an invalid and will so remain the rest of her life; that appellant was negligent in the manufacture of said soap and placing it upon the market. Appellant answered by general and special exceptions and general denial, and specially that the soap was manufactured by it exclusively for sale to jobbers, never sold to retail dealers, nor did it warrant same to them. “The soap was not represented to be for bathing purposes, but only for laundry and ordinary cleaning purposes; that the ingredients of same are purely vegetable products, and that the soap does not contain any oils or animal greases, and that the same is free from all excessive poisonous, injurious, or deleterious ingredients and substances; that the defend *577 ant lias used and uses the greatest care and caution in seeing that the soap was made only from harmless substances, and that there was excluded from it any injurious, poisonous, or deleterious substances whatever in the finished product; that it would have been impossible for such injuries as are claimed by plaintiff to have been sustained by his wife from using the brand of soap known as Armstrong’s B. & B. soap, but that such injuries, if they occurred at all, were not caused by said soap, but were caused by some other agency to the defendant unknown. The defendant on the trial filed a supplemental answer alleging contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff and his wife; that Mrs. Clem was performing her labor while in a delicate condition, which caused or aggravated her injuries; that she was guilty of negligence in not immediately ceasing when she began to discover that something was injuring her hands; that the plaintiff and his wife were guilty of negligence in not at once seeking the advice of a physician; that the plaintiff and his wife were both guilty of contributory negligence in using unsterilized scissors to open the blisters on the different parts of her body, and that the plaintiff and Mrs. Clem were guilty of contributory negligence in permitting the watery substances from the blisters to come in contact with other portions of her body.” A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee for $1,500, from which the packing company appeals.

The assignments that the court erred in overruling the general exception to plaintiff’s petition, and the assignment that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict and judgment, raise practically the same issues, and therefore they will be considered in the same connection. The evidence, in substance, substantially supports the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, in that it shows that the appellant was manufacturing washing soap for the market, selling same to jobbers, the jobbers selling to retailers, and they, in turn, selling to consumers. A retailer sold some of this soap to the appellee, whose wife used it in washing the clothes of the family, and she was injured by the use of the same in the manner alleged by plaintiff. The formula used by appellant for making the soap necessarily contained poisonous ingredients, which become harmless in the proper preparation of the soap. In the batch of soap sold to plaintiff the poison used was not neutralized, but it contained a sufficient quantity to injure plaintiff’s wife in the use thereof, for which it was intended. The evidence is sufficient to show that appellant was negligent in preparing the particular batch of soap sold to plaintiff. This case, as shown by the record, was tried on the theory and supported by the facts that appellant negligently manufactured and placed upon the market the soap in question, which contained injurious and poisonous substances, from the use of which the injuries sustained by plaintiff’s wife proximately resulted.

Appellant contends “that, under well-settled authorities, there was no question of warranty as between Armstrong Packing Company and the plaintiff in this ease, but only that Armstrong Packing Company rested under the duty imposed upon a manufacturer not to put upon the market a commodity that was unsuitable for use by the public, and which the public could not use without injury’. Even in regard to this duty, the manufacturer is not an insurer, and is held to ordinary care.”

[1] The liability of appellant in'this action does not rest upon any contract or privity between appellant and appellee, but from the duty which the law imposes upon the manufacturer to avoid acts in their nature dangerous to the lives and persons’of others. Though no contract or privity existed between appellant and appellee, yet, as appellant was manufacturing and placing the soap upon the market, it is liable primarily to any one buying and using it for the want of care in the preparation of the soap.

[2] That appellant failed to use care in its preparation is sufficiently shown by the evidence. It knew that poisonous and injurious substances were necessary in its preparation. It knew if too much of the poisonous ingredients were used, and not neutralized in manufacturing it, that injury was liable to result from the use thereof. It knew by the proper saponification the poison would become harmless. The soap was placed upon the market and injury resulted from the use thereof, which shows to our minds that appellant failed to use care in the manufacture of this particular soap, or the injury would not have happened, which fixes the liability of appellant. Thomas v. Winchester, 6 N. Y. 397, 57 Am. Dec. 455; Tomlinson v. Armour Co., 75 N. J. Law, 748, 70 Atl. 314, 19 L. R. A. (N. S.) 923. In the case of Thomas v. Winchester, supra, it is held that a dealer in drugs and medicines who carelessly labels a deadly drug as a harmless medicine, and places it upon the market, is liable to all persons who, without fault on their part, are injured by using it by reason of such label. Such liability does not arise by reason of contract or privity between the dealer and the person injured, but out of the duty imposed by law upon the former to avoid acts which by their nature are dangerous to the lives of others. In Tomlinson v. Armour, supra, a suit for injury to a consumer caused by eating canned meat, the following language is used, viz.: “The fact that the defendant was the manufacturer, presumably having knowledge, or opportunity for knowledge, of the contents of the cans and of the process of manufacture; that it put the goods upon the market for sale by dealers to consumers, under circumstances such that neither dealer nor consum *578

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 576, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-packing-co-v-clem-texapp-1912.