Boykin v. Chase Bottling Works

222 S.W.2d 889, 32 Tenn. App. 508, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 2, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 889 (Boykin v. Chase Bottling Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boykin v. Chase Bottling Works, 222 S.W.2d 889, 32 Tenn. App. 508, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 104 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

ANDERSON, P. J.

Mrs. Boykin sustained a personal injury from the bursting of a bottle containing a carbonated beverage produced and sold by the defendant. She brought this action for damages, charging negligence on the part of the defendant in bottling the drink. Her husband brought a separate action for loss of services and companionship and for expenses incurred in treating his wife’s injuries. The cases were tried together. The declarations are respectively in two counts. There were jury verdicts in both cases in favor of the defendant as to count one and directed verdicts as to count two. The judge approved the jury verdicts and judgments were entered, dismissing the suits. The plaintiffs appealed in error.

*512 Since the suit of the husband depends upon that of the wife, and the same questions are made in both, for convenience of expression we take note only of the latter.

Mrs. Boykin and her husband operated a restaurant and grocery business in Shelby County. In connection therewith they sold beverages of different kinds, among them being one known as Double-Cola, which is manufactured, bottled and sold by the defendant, Chase Bottling Company.

On October 19,' 1947, Mrs. Boykin removed a bottle of the beverage from the ice box maintained by the plaintiffs in their place of business, and was about to open it and hand it to a customer when the bottle burst while she had it in her hand. A piece of the glass entered her wrist, resulting in a substantial injury.

In the first count of the declaration, after stating the fact of the injury and its cause, it was averred as follows: “That the defendants manufactured the contents of the bottle, filling them at their plant in Memphis, Tennessee, and at all times had complete control of the bottles until then (sic) were delivered to plaintiff’s place of business; that the bottles were carefully and properly handled by plaintiff and by all persons into whose hands they came after leaving the hands of the defendants; that the explosion was not caused by the negligence or improper handling of the bottle on the part of plaintiff after leavixlg the possession of the defendaúts; that the bottles contained a beverage charged with carbonic acid, which exerts an exploding pressure upon the bottles into which it is introduced and confined; that all the facts and circumstances of and concerning the manufacture and production of said bottles were exclusively within the knowledge of the defendants and not within the *513 knowledge of the plaintiff; that the bottles would not have hurst if due care had been used by the defendants and that said bottles were too highly and dangerously charged with said gas so that they could not withstand the pressure thereof.”

The second count reiterates the averments of the first, and charges in addition that, “The bottles were defective or of inferior material and unable to withstand internal pressure”, and that “the defendants are here notified that the plaintiff will rely upon the rule of res ipsa lo-quitur ’ ’.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, the judge overruled the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict as to Count 1, but as said, sustained the motion as to Count 2. He held the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur was not applicable and in his instructions confined the jury to a consideration of the specification of negligence contained in the first count, to the effect that the bottle was overcharged. The defendant’s evidence tended to show the exercise of a high degree of care in the bottling of its products, and there is no contention that the verdict of the jury as to the first count was not supported by substantial evidence.

The only other hypothesis advanced was that the defendant was negligent in marketing its beverage in a bottle so defective that when handled after it left the defendant’s control in a manner reasonably to be expected, it was incapable of withstanding the. normal pressure exerted by the gas. in th.e beverage. Whether there was evidence, to. justify the submission of the case to the jury upon this theory, is the question presented by the assignment of error challenging, the. action of the court in sustaining the defendant’s motion for a directed *514 verdict as to Count 2. A disposition of this question will in the main dispose of all the others insofar as they are necessary to be considered.

The circumstances under which the defendant’s products were handled after reaching the plaintiff’s place of business appeared from evidence offered by her. Deliveries were made usually on Wednesday of each week by a servant of the defendant. The bottles were in wooden cases, each case containing twenty-four. Upon arrival at the plaintiffs’ store the defendant’s servant ascertained how many cases were desired and then put the requested number in a store-room at the rear of the business house. Plaintiffs also handled other bottled drinks manufactured by different concerns, which were delivered in a like manner. Only the delivery boys, the plaintiff, J. B. Boykin, and his wife and daughter had access to the storeroom.

In that part of the store where the business was conducted the plaintiffs had an ice box with a sliding top. The box was divided into compartments, one for soft drinks and the other for beer.

Mrs. Boykin was usually occupied with, her household duties until about 10 o’clock a. m. but thereafter worked in the store. The business was customarily opened each day about 7:00 o ’clock in the morning by Mr. Boykin. He first cleaned and drained the ice box as required by the Health authorities, and then filled the bottom with bottled beverages, standing them upright. The lid was left off the box until the arrival of the ice man.

Ice in fifty-pound blocks was delivered twice daily, once in the morning and once in the afternoon except on Sunday when there was only a morning delivery. The ice man came “bright and early” in the winter and *515 between 9:00 and 11:00 o ’clock a. m. in tbe summer. Upon the morning delivery the ice was put in the box by the ice man. He deposited the fifty-pound block on top of the bottles which had been placed in the bottom of the box by Boykin prior to his arrival. With the block thus resting on top of the bottles, the ice man, using an ice pick, broke it into pieces somewhat smaller than a man’s fist “so as to get them around the drinks as neatly as possible.” After this was done, Boykin placed a layer of bottles on top of the ice, “to keep from moving the ice to get to the bottom of the box. ’ ’ By the time the bottles which had been put on top of the ice were sold, the ice had melted sufficiently for the bottles on the bottom to be reached without the necessity of pushing the ice aside. But as the ice melted some of the standing bottles would fall over.

Customers over fourteen years of age, who usually knew the kinds of drinks they desired, were permitted to serve themselves from the ice box. In doing this it was sometimes necessary for them to “move the ice around”.

As said, the accident in question occurred on the afternoon of Sunday, October 19, 1947. The particular bottle which burst was one of a lot which had been delivered on the preceding Wednesday.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W.2d 889, 32 Tenn. App. 508, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boykin-v-chase-bottling-works-tennctapp-1949.