Burrus Feed Mills, Inc. v. Reeder

391 S.W.2d 121, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2560
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 17, 1965
Docket7467
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 391 S.W.2d 121 (Burrus Feed Mills, Inc. v. Reeder) 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
Burrus Feed Mills, Inc. v. Reeder, 391 S.W.2d 121, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2560 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, Justice.

This is a products liability case tried to a jury upon the theory adopted by the trial court to the effect that the rule of ■“implied warranty” as announced by our Supreme Court in Decker & Sons v. Capps, 139 Tex. 609, 164 S.W.2d 828, 142 A.L.R. 1479, has application to food - mixed and processed by the manufacturer and sold for immediate consumption by animals.

The Decker case announced the principle that a non-negligent processor could be held liable in damages to a person injured from eating contaminated food prepared by such processor, although there was no privity of contract between the latter and the consumer of the contaminated food.

As pointed out in effect by our former, revered Chief Justice Alexander in Decker, there is no unanimity in the various jurisdictions upon the question, and many courts have insisted strictly on the requirement of privity. However, even as far back as 1942 when the Decker case was announced that court said: “There is a growing tendency * * * to discard the requirement of privity and to hold the manufacturer liable directly to the ultimate consumer.”

Thus, to affirm the instant case we must extend the doctrine beyond that to which our Supreme Court has as yet given assent, though so far as we have been able to determine, they have in no case yet refused to extend the doctrine. We believe this to be an appropriate case for such extension.

Appellee Reeder was a breeder of Quarter Horses, some of which carried the top blood lines of the breed. Among these was a two-year old stallion by the name of General Champ.

The evidence indicates that under the rule of genetics, even when two top blood lines are crossed in a breeding program, sometimes the result is not favorable. But in the case of General Champ, a foal out of Miss Cuba Girl by General Roy, those two blood lines “nicked” and he was a top two-year old stallion. Though his value was placed as high as $12,000 by one Quarter Horse breeder, the most reliable testimony of an expert in the Quarter Horse business who knew both the blood lines and the individual colt from the time he was foaled showed him to be worth between $7,000 and $10,000, “ * * * he could have expected to have sold from $7,000 to $10,000.” This witness was Bob Hooper, one of the original organizers of the American Quarter Horse Association who served as its president for four consecutive years; who has bred, raised and *123 owned such horses even before there was an official registry association; who owned approximately 150 head of horses in 1962, 75 of which were registered Quarter Horses; and who has judged all the major shows in the United States, including the Kansas City Royal, the National Western at Denver, the Cow Palace at San Francisco, and the International Livestock Show at Chicago.

On July 28, 1962, Burrus Feed Mills, Inc. delivered to Plainview for Roy Phil-pot, a retail dealer, by way of rail, 80 100-pound sacks of feed mixed and designed by them for horse feed and labeled “Hearts Delight Heavy Duty Horse and Mule Feed,” manufactured by them. Also written on the said sack was the slogan: “Be Sure You’re Right — Use Hearts Delight.” The feed was shipped in what was referred to in the record as “toe” sacks, and the exhibits of which show to be loose woven burlap sacks. Each sack contained a tag which guaranteed the analysis. In none of the ingredients was there a mention of arsenic poison, of course.

Appellee had ordered from the retail dealer some of the described feed. Mr. Philpot was out of the feed at the time but soon afterwards, to wit, on July 28, 1962, the railway car from Burrus Mills, Inc. was spotted on the tracks with the feed and appellant Philpot went to the car, picked up 2 of the 100-pound sacks, placed them in his pickup and personally delivered them to appellee about 5:00 p. m. that afternoon by placing them in the consumer’s pickup. The evidence eliminates any possibility of arsenic poison in the two pickups that handled the feed after it left the railway car. Appellee then took the two sacks of feed to his barn, emptied them in a clean feed container and then filled a five-gallon bucket, which he emptied in the feed trough in his horse lot. There was no other feed in the trough at the time and there were three horses in the lot for which the horse feed was designed, all young stallions.

The two sacks were emptied one at a time in the feed container. A clean sack was emptied first and the sack that later showed a stiff spot on it and which the evidence showed to contain arsenic poison was emptied on top of the other. The five-gallon feed can was filled from the top part of the feed container.

General Champ was the boss in the lot over the other two horses. All became ill soon after eating the feed but despite all a veterinarian could do for General Champ he succumbed on Monday, July 30, at 3:00 o’clock p. m., following the feeding on the previous Saturday.

The next day appellant Philpot, James Pulliam, a Burrus Feed Mill representative, and appellee, while discussing the horse’s death, went to the horse lot and Mr. Pulliam noticed a stain on one of the feed sacks. It was the sack which had been emptied into the feed container last and which logically contained some of the feed that had been consumed by the three horses. The men then made an investigation of the railway car in which the feed had been shipped. The car was in excellent condition, being lined with clean paper on both the bottom and sides. There was one stain on the paper at the precise place where the sack of feed had been taken from, about four feet up from the floor of the railway car where the sack had been lying against the paper. The stain was also on the side of the paper next to the sack.

Dr. Joe Braden, the attending veterinarian, who performed, a complete post-mortem on General Champ testified that in his opinion, the horse died from arsenic poison which was in a soluble form.

The Chief of Police sent a sample of the stained part of the burlap sack to the Texas Department of Public Safety and Mr. Charles G. Smith, a chemist in the department, testified by deposition, after performing a chemical analysis on the stained feed sack, that the burlap contained arsenic poison. Fecal material saved from *124 the horse while he was sick was sent in a plastic container to Terrell Laboratories in Fort Worth. Mrs. Jane Hester, a chemist for the laboratory, after making a chemical analysis of the fecal material after it was completely dried out, testified it contained arsenic.

Without further detailing the evidence we are compelled to say it was abundantly sufficient to show the particular sack from which the food was ingested by the horses, including General Champ, contained arsenic poison by a heavy metal, arsenic being so classified, that such poison was in soluble form, and that a sufficient amount of it was in the feed of the stained sack when removed from the railway car to produce the illness in the three horses and the death of the “boss of the corral,” General Champ.

As to appellant, Roy Philpot, there is no question that under the present rules of law in our state, so far as our Courts of Civil Appeals have spoken, a cause of action was proven because a privity of contract was established between him and ap-pellee.

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Bluebook (online)
391 S.W.2d 121, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burrus-feed-mills-inc-v-reeder-texapp-1965.