Beckwith v. Oatman

50 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 265, 5 N.Y. St. Rep. 445
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 50 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 265 (Beckwith v. Oatman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beckwith v. Oatman, 50 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 265, 5 N.Y. St. Rep. 445 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Childs, J.:

No motion for a new trial having been made by the defendant, either upon the minutes of the judge or at Special Term, the exceptions taken by the defendant on the trial present the only questions for review on this appeal.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case defendant, moved for a nonsuit upon the following grounds: First. That no cause of action has been made out against the defendant. Second. There can be no recovery for negligence, because no cause of action for negligence is set forth in the complaint. Third. That no cause of action for breach of contract is made out by the evidence. This motion was denied and defendant excepted.

[267]*267Again, at the close of the evidence the motion for a nonsuit was renewed upon the same grounds; was again • denied and defendant excepted. .These exceptions, with others, to the charge of the judge as made, and to his refusal to charge as requested, which will be stated and considered later, present the main question for review. The right of plaintiff to recover in this action rested upon, and had its foundation in, the rule of liability established in the case of the entire class of professional persons whose work or employment requires special knowledge or skill. Under that rule the defendant undertook, when he assumed to fill the prescription for plaintiff, that he possessed the ordinary skill of a druggist or apothecary, and that he would exercise due and proper care and skill in putting up the medicine required. (Bellinger v. Craigue, 31 Barb., 534; Carpenter v. Blake, 50 N. Y., 696; Cow. Treatise [7th ed.], 290.)

The degree of care required being proportionate to the gravity of the injury that would naturally result from a want of care, and the failure to exercise such due and proper care, is the ground of an action of negligence, and the only ground upon which plaintiff sought to or could recover in this action. (Thomas v. Winchester, 6 N. Y., 397; Brown v. Marshall, 17 Mich., 576 ; Norton v. Sewall, 106 Mass., 143; Losee v. Buchanan, 51 N. Y., 476, 488; Morris v. Platt, 32 Conn., 75 ; 1 Wait’s Actions and Defenses, 683.)

The Respondent acquiesces in the rule of liability as above stated and concedes that his right to récovér must be made to depend on the negligence of the defendant. It was therefore incumbent on the plaintiff to allege, and to prove on the trial, such want of skill on the part of defendant’s clerk, or such negligence on his part, in filling the prescription, as would bring the defendant within the rule, and make him liable for negligence in respect to that transaction. The complaint contains no allegation of negligence, and no testimony was given by the plaintiff tending to prove negligence, other than such as was given to show that the prescription had not been properly filled or put up by defendant’s clerk. This question was raised for the first time by defendant’s motion, for a nonsuit; it is one presenting some difficulty, but as we have concluded to grant a new trial upon another ground it does not become necessary to hold that for the insufficiency of the complaint the motion should have, been granted. At the close.of the case the judge charged [268]*268tlie jury, among other tilings, as follows: “ This action is brought by the plaintiff against the defendant as proprietor of a drug store in Angola, upon the charge that a prescription, drawn for her by her physician, was wrongly compounded; as a consequence of that the medicine proved to be injurious to her health. So far as tlie plaintiff’s case is concerned, there is no direct evidence given by her as to the fact of this compound not having been according to the doctor’s prescription. Witnesses have been placed upon the stand for the purpose of establishing that to be a fact, and if it is the fact, if the evidence establishes it to your satisfaction, then the defendant in that case would be liable.” And again: “The controversy relates to the allegation whether it was compounded in a manner in which the prescription required it to be done; if it was, then the plaintiff cannot recover. If, as urged in her behalf, that it ivas not so compounded, but that the compound was made different, and to such an extent and to such a degree as to render it dangerous to be taken by her, and she suffered injury in consequence of it, then the action would be maintained and she would be entitled to a verdict against the defendant.” And again, “ If you are satisfied this medicine was not properly compounded, and in consequence of that this injury was sustained, she is entitled to recover.”

To each of these propositions the defendant excepted, and requested the court to charge the jury “That the plaintiff could not recover if the defendant’s clerk exercised proper care in putting up the prescription, although there might have been a mistake in doing it.” This request to charge was refused, and the defendant excepted. It will be observed that the case was given to the jury solely upon the question whether or not the prescription had been correctly put up, and they were told that if the same was not correctly put up the plaintiff, if injured thereby, was entitled to recover. The question of the Avant of skill or negligence of the defendant’s clerk, upon Avhich the plaintiff’s right to recover wholly depended, was taken from the jury by the court, and they Avere, in effect, instructed that it was immaterial, if a mistake was made, whether it occurred by reason of the want of skill or negligence of defendant’s clerk, or otherwise.

Brown v. Marshall (47 Mich., 576) is in point. In that case the trial judge charged as follows: “ It is the duty of druggists to know [269]*269the properties of the medicines which they sell, and to employ such persons as are capable of discriminating and dealing out according to prescription; and if the defendant’s clerk in this case sold and delivered to plaintiff a poison instead of a harmless drug, and the plaintiff took it supposing it to be harmless, and was thereby caused a suffering and a serious injury, the defendant is liable for the damages so caused in this suit.” Cooley, J., giving the opinion of the court (p. 582), remarks upon this instruction as follows:

In this instruction there is no hint of negligence as a necessary element in the right of action. The duty is correctly stated, and it is assumed that a right of action will arise from a failure to perform it, irrespective of the reasons. If the judge is wrong in this the judgment cannot stand ; for though there are other instructions which seem to be inconsistent with this, we cannot know that the jury did not shape their action by this rather than by any other The question then is whether the delivery at a drug store of a deleterious drug to one who calls for one that is harmless, and a damage resulting therefrom, will not merely tend to make out a right of action, but of themselves give a right of action, even though there may have been no intentional wrong and the jury may believe there is no negligence. That such an error might occur, without fault on the part of the druggist or his clerks, is readily supposable. He might have bought his drugs from a reputable dealer, in whose warehouse they have been tampered with for the purposes of mischief. It is easy to suggest accidents after they come to his own possession, or wrongs by others of which he would be ignorant, and against which a high degree of care would not give perfect protection.

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Related

Carpenter v. . Blake
50 N.Y. 696 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Thomas v. . Winchester
6 N.Y. 397 (New York Court of Appeals, 1852)
Losee v. . Buchanan
51 N.Y. 476 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Bellinger v. Craigue
31 Barb. 534 (New York Supreme Court, 1860)
Norton v. Sewall
106 Mass. 143 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1870)
Morris v. Platt
32 Conn. 75 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1864)
Brown v. Marshall
11 N.W. 392 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1882)

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 265, 5 N.Y. St. Rep. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beckwith-v-oatman-nysupct-1887.