Breau v. Eastland Food Products Co.

12 Mass. App. Div. 34
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 11, 1947
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Mass. App. Div. 34 (Breau v. Eastland Food Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breau v. Eastland Food Products Co., 12 Mass. App. Div. 34 (Mass. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

Rollins, J.

This is an action of tort in which the plaintiff seeks to recover for injuries resulting from eating allegedly unwholesome mackerel which had been processed and packed by the defendant Company.

Most of the facts are set forth in the Findings of Fact and Rulings of Law made by the trial judge, which are as follows :

“The three plaintiffs, husband, wife and son sued in-tort the defendant who is engaged in the business of processing and packing mackerel in cans and selling to various retail dealers.
The plaintiffs contend that the defendant was negligent and careless in that he improperly prepared the cans of mackerel and that it became poisonous.
I find that Mary Brean purchased a can of mackerel at a store on July 18, 1945. Later that day at supper [35]*35about six P. M. the can of mackerel was opened by her son and the three plaintiffs ate it. Mary Breau ate nothing but the fish for supper. Her husband Josias Breau ate fish and bread. He said that the fish looked dark in the dish but that it smelt and tasted all right. He also drank milk. Borneo Breau had bread and mackerel and nothing to drink. Borneo’s wife had supper with them but did not eat any of the fish and did not become ill.
None of the plaintiffs had lunch together that day. Between supper and 10 p. m. none of the plaintiffs had anything more to eat or drink. At 10 p. m. all three plaintiffs became very ill. They had pains in the stomach, vomiting and diarrhea. A doctor gave injections to all three plaintiffs and they remained ill for several days.
The plaintiff Josias Breau lost a week from his work as mason.
The can purchased in the store by Mary Breau was admitted in evidence and marked Exhibit ‘A’.
The vice-president and manager of the Eastland Food Products, Inc. testified that this empty mackerel can, Exhibit A, bore their code number M L 194; and this code number identified mackerel that was packed by them on Dec. 19,1944.
There were two other full and unopened cans of mackerel from this same lot M L 194 introduced by the plaintiffs. One can Exhibit B was described as being a ‘snapper’. In the canning trade, a ‘snapper’ is a can that had been improperly packed and denotes the presence of an air pocket in the can. The presence of air in the can would cause the contents to spoil and food poisoning would result. There was evidence that there appeared to be no other defect to the Exhibit B can except that it was a ‘snapper’.
The third can Exhibit C was without defect.
By bringing their actions, the plaintiffs assumed the obligation to show that the negligence of the defendant caused their injury. This was an affirmative burden which could not be left to surmise, conjecture or imagination. There must be something amounting to proof, either by direct evidence or rational inference of probabilities from established facts. While the plaintiff is [36]*36not bound to exclude every other possibility of cause for his injury except that of the negligence of the defendant, he is required to show by evidence a greater likelihood that it came from an act of negligence for which the defendant is responsible than from a cause for which the defendant is not liable.
I find that the mackerel was unfit for food and that the plaintiffs, in the exercise of due care, ate it and became poisoned and suffered as a result.
I find that the defendant improperly prepared the mackerel and due to its negligence in packing the same it became poisonous. ’ ’

In addition to the foregoing the Report discloses evidence tending to show the following:

After the mackerel had been eaten by this plaintiff, her son and husband, some remained in the can. This was placed in the ice box where it stayed until two days later, when it was examined by Board of Health Investigators of the City of New Bedford. At the time of this examination there was ice in the refrigerator. One of the Investigators was Roger Dumas. He had had a few months’ experience in his duties as such investigator.

He testified that the mackerel, when he examined it, was “unfit for food”.

The defendant seasonably filed eight requests for rulings. The trial judge acted upon these requests and found for the plaintiff in the sum of $300.

The defendant claiming to be aggrieved by the rulings and refusals to rule, the case was reported to this Appellate Division for determination.

In order to recover the plaintiff must prove—

(1) the mackerel was unwholesome and the eating of it was the probable cause of her illness. Johnson v. Kanavos, 296 Mass. 373, 376, and also (2) the unwholesomeness of the mackerel was the result of the negligence of the defend[37]*37ant. Crocker v. Baltimore Dairy Lunch Co., 214 Mass. 177, 179.

The evidence tending to prove (1) is as follows:

(a) The mackerel when taken from the can and placed in a dish ‘ ‘looked dark in the dish”.

By this we infer was meant that the mackerel looked darker than sound mackerel should look, that it had an unusual look, that it looked had. The fact that food appears bad, as well as that it tastes bad, is some evidence that it is unwholesome. Schuler v. Union News Co., 295 Mass. 350, 351. Gracey v. Waldorf System, Inc., 251 Mass. 76, 78.

Standing by itself we might be inclined not to give much weight to this, but it is some evidence which the trial judge was entitled to consider in connection with the other evidence.

(b) Mackerel remaining in the can from which the plaintiff had eaten was declared, by an investigator of the Health Department of the City of New Bedford, “unfit for food”.

These words appear to constitute both a conclusion and an opinion. But the Report does not disclose that this testimony was objected to by the defendant. Moreover it may well be that the witness was an expert on this subject and so entitled to give his opinion. As an investigator of the Health Department, and in view of what happened in this case, it may have been one of his usual duties to inspect food to determine its wholesomeness or unwholesomeness.

The trial judge was entitled to consider this testimony.

(c) The plaintiff is not obliged to rely upon the fact that the fish appeared bad, nor that two days after it was eaten, fish from the same can kept in the ice chest, was pronounced “unfit for food”.

Three persons ate the fish and shortly after all became sick. None of the three ate any food after eating the fish and prior to becoming ill, and in a period of many hours be[38]*38fore becoming ill, the only article of food which all three had eaten was the mackerel. Johnson v. Kanavos, supra, at page 375. Moreover in the instant case one other person ate supper with the three who became ill. This person was Stella Brean. She clid not eat any of the fish and she did not become ill.

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Related

Crocker v. Baltimore Dairy Lunch Co.
100 N.E. 1078 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1913)
Gracey v. Waldorf System, Inc.
146 N.E. 232 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1925)
Washburn v. R. F. Owens Co.
252 Mass. 47 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1925)
Walker v. Benz Kid Co.
181 N.E. 799 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1932)
Bresnick v. Heath
198 N.E. 175 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1935)
Schuler v. Union News Co.
4 N.E.2d 465 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1936)
Johnson v. Kanavos
6 N.E.2d 434 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1937)
Carter v. Yardley & Co.
64 N.E.2d 693 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1946)

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12 Mass. App. Div. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breau-v-eastland-food-products-co-massdistctapp-1947.