Bosquez v. H. E. Butt Grocery Co.

586 S.W.2d 680
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 1979
Docket1416
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 586 S.W.2d 680 (Bosquez v. H. E. Butt Grocery Co.) 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
Bosquez v. H. E. Butt Grocery Co., 586 S.W.2d 680 (Tex. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

BISSETT, Justice.

This slip and fall ease involves an appeal from a take nothing judgment. The basic facts of the case are simple. Hermelinda Bosquez (plaintiff) was a customer in defendant’s grocery store. While shopping for groceries, plaintiff slipped on a quantity of baby food and fell, thereby sustaining personal injuries. The baby food had spilled onto the floor from a broken jar, which was found, after the accident, upon a shelf. There was no evidence of how or when the jar was broken or how the baby food came to be on the floor.

The case was tried to a jury under theories of negligence and strict liability. In its verdict, the jury absolved both plaintiff and defendant of any negligence. In response to the strict liability issue, the jury found that the jar of baby food, while not defective at the time it was placed on the shelf by defendant, was defective at the time plaintiff slipped and fell. Further, the jury found that this defect was a producing cause of plaintiff’s accident. Damages were awarded in the sum of $14,754.71. Judgment that plaintiff take nothing by her suit was rendered by the trial court. Plaintiff has duly perfected an appeal from the judgment. We affirm.

By her first point of error, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in entering a judgment non obstante veredicto because *681 the jury verdict is fully supported by the evidence and requires judgment for plaintiff. We disagree.

Based upon the jury’s verdict, plaintiff moved for judgment in the amount of $14,-754.71. On the same day, defendant made its own “Motion for Judgment" which contended that the findings of the jury established that plaintiff had failed to prove any cause of action. Judgment was rendered by the court in favor of defendant based upon this “Motion for Judgment.”

As a threshold matter, we agree with defendant that the judgment before us is not a judgment non obstante veredicto. Ostensibly, the judgment was rendered in conformity with the jury’s finding that the jar of baby food was defective at the time plaintiff fell. Furthermore, defendant does not complain of that finding. In point of fact, defendant concedes in its brief that the jar of baby food was defective at the time of plaintiff’s fall. The issue before this Court, therefore, is not whether the trial court erred in disregarding the jury’s findings, but whether those findings, accepted as true, can support a judgment for plaintiff as a matter of law. We hold, as a matter of law, that the jury’s findings cannot support a judgment for plaintiff under the theory of strict liability.

In Shopper’s World v. Villarreal, 518 S.W.2d 913 (Tex.Civ.App.—Corpus Christi 1975, writ ref’d n.r.e.) this Court was faced with deciding the crucial time at which a user or consumer must establish that a defect existed in the context of a self-service grocery store format for purposes of recovery under strict liability. In that case, plaintiff was injured when she slipped on some liquid soap that had leaked from a bottle which she had just taken from a grocery store shelf and placed in her shopping cart. In construing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A(l)(b), which provides that a seller is liable if the defective product “is expected to and does reach the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it is sold,” this Court held that the term “sold” was equivalent to “the time when the party seeking to hold a seller liable picks up an item for handling or purchase.” Thus, where a customer was injured by a defective product while shopping at a self-service store the key issue was whether the defect existed at the time the product was removed from display.

In the case at bar, the jury found, and both sides agreed, that the baby food jar was in a defective condition at the time plaintiff slipped and fell. Plaintiff contends that, under the rule enunciated in Villarreal, a “sale” of the jar of baby food took place sometime after the defect arose (when the jar was broken, leaving a residue of baby food on the floor). Further, plaintiff contends that she was a bystander and under the rule announced in Darryl v. Ford Motor Company, 440 S.W.2d 630 (Tex.Sup.1969), she should recover for injuries sustained by her as a result of the sale of the jar of baby food while in its defective condition.

We have no quarrel with plaintiff’s status as a bystander. We disagree, however, with her application of Villarreal to the facts of this case. Plaintiff had the burden of proving that the defective product reached her “without substantial change in the condition in which it [was] sold.” There is no evidence as to when or how the baby food jar became defective. Most importantly, we do not know if or when a “sale” of the jar ever took place.

We could assume for purposes of argument that the jar was broken before it was ever taken from the shelf (purchased) by another customer. That, however, is sheer speculation. It is just as possible that another customer removed the jar from the display (purchased the product) and dropped it (rendered the jar defective) such that no defect ever existed at the time the product was sold. In such a case the product would not have reached plaintiff in substantially the same condition it was in when it was sold to the third party, if such a sale was, in fact, made. Hence, the jury finding that the jar was defective at the time plaintiff slipped only established a defect sometime after a sale, if any, of the product.

*682 Plaintiff’s theory of strict liability and her request that this Court extend its rule in Villarreal to the facts of the case at bar, constitute an attempted end run around the well established rule of liability when injury is caused by a foreign substance upon a floor which rendered it slippery or unsafe for use. That rule was ably set out by Justice Norvell in H. E. Butt Grocery Co. v. Johnson, 226 S.W.2d 501 (Tex.Civ.App.—San Antonio 1949, writ ref’d n.r.e.), wherein it was held:

“In order to establish liability against the defendant operator of the store it is necessary to show:
1. That the defendant put the foreign substance upon the floor, or
2. That the defendant knew the foreign substance was on the floor and wil-fully or negligently failed to remove it, or
3. That the foreign substance had been upon the floor for such a period of time that it would have been discovered and removed by the defendant, had the defendant exercised ordinary care.
See Houston National Bank v. Adair, 146 Tex. 387, 207 S.W.2d 374; Woolworth v. Goldston, Tex.Civ.App., 155 S.W.2d 830; Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. Logan, Tex.Civ.App.,

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