Champs Convenience Stores, Inc. v. United Chemical Co.

406 S.E.2d 856, 329 N.C. 446, 1991 N.C. LEXIS 534
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 14, 1991
Docket350A90
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 406 S.E.2d 856 (Champs Convenience Stores, Inc. v. United Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champs Convenience Stores, Inc. v. United Chemical Co., 406 S.E.2d 856, 329 N.C. 446, 1991 N.C. LEXIS 534 (N.C. 1991).

Opinions

FRYE, Justice.

In this appeal we consider whether the Court of Appeals erred in determining that this action is a products liability action and thus covered by the provisions of N.C.G.S. § 99B and in determining that plaintiff’s employee, under the facts of this case, was contributorily negligent as a matter of law. Defendant also raises five issues on cross-appeal dealing with jury instructions and the amount of damages awarded plaintiff. We conclude that the jury instructions given in this case make it unnecessary to decide whether the provisions of § 99B, more specifically the defenses found in § 99B-4, apply to the facts of this case, and we further conclude that the Court of Appeals erred in its determination that plaintiff’s employee was contributorily negligent as a matter of law. We also conclude that none of the issues raised by defendant on cross-appeal have any merit.

Plaintiff Champs Convenience Stores, Inc., operated a small grocery store called Miller’s Grocery. Plaintiff purchased Miller’s Grocery on 8 May 1987 and in July 1987 hired Marta Sprinkle to manage the operation of the store. In August 1987, Sprinkle told Jim Hanvey, the president of plaintiff corporation, that she was having trouble keeping dust off the merchandise in the store. Hanvey told her to call defendant United Chemicals Company, Inc.

When Sprinkle called defendant on 31 August 1987, she spoke with an employee, Bill Robinson, and told him that she needed something to put on the wood floors of the grocery store to control the dust. According to Sprinkle’s testimony at trial, “I told him that my bossman said it was ‘dust-something or other,’ and that was all I knew.” Robinson, after inquiring if she was calling from Miller’s Grocery, told her that defendant had sold a product known as Dust Command to the previous owners. Sprinkle asked Robinson what size container it came in, and he replied that it came in both one-gallon and five-gallon containers. Robinson, after asking when the product had last been applied, suggested that Sprinkle purchase a five-gallon container.

[450]*450Sprinkle asked Robinson how to apply the Dust Command. He told her that she would have to close the store to put it down, but she could put it down after the store closed that evening, and the store could be reopened the next morning as usual. He also told her that she needed to apply the product with old mops because she would have to throw the mops away after using them to apply the product. When Sprinkle asked if she needed a special bucket to use, Robinson replied that she could just open the container the product came in and apply it directly from that container. He also suggested that she not wring out the mops because she should not get the product on her hands.

About thirty minutes after Sprinkle called defendant, a delivery person arrived at Miller’s Grocery with a five-gallon black bucket. The delivery person told Sprinkle that he was from United Chemical and that he had brought the Dust Command she ordered. Sprinkle asked him to put it down in the corner so that it would not be in the way of the customers, and she asked him a question about the product. The delivery person looked at the bucket and told her that he could not answer her question. He then gave her the invoice; she looked at the invoice, signed it, and. paid him. The invoice, presented as an exhibit at trial, listed the product delivered as Dust Command.

After closing the store at the usual time that evening, Sprinkle and Steve Creaseman, another employee of the store, began to apply the product which had been delivered that day. Sprinkle admitted at trial that she never read the label of the product which was delivered and did not know that the product she was using was actually Carbo-Solv which defendant had mistakenly delivered in place of the Dust Command Sprinkle had ordered. Sprinkle did not read the directions and warnings on the label until'she was asked to read the label during a deposition. During the deposition, she also admitted that she would not have applied the Carbo-Solv to the floor of the grocery store if she had known what it was.

As Sprinkle and Creaseman were applying the contents of the bucket, they noticed that it had a strong, unpleasant odor, and they commented to each other about the odor but continued to apply the product. When she arrived the next morning to open the store, Sprinkle noticed that the unpleasant odor was still present in the store. The other workers and the customers at the [451]*451store complained about the odor. Several customers who purchased food from the grocery store that day returned the food because it contained the same odor as the store, and they did not want to eat it. The next day, 2 September 1987, the store was closed, and the North Carolina Department of Agriculture issued an embargo for the contents of the store, which meant that the merchandise in the store could not be sold or moved until the matter was resolved. About one-half of the contents of the store were salvageable, and the remaining merchandise had to be thrown away because it was unsafe for consumption as a result of the exposure to the fumes from the Carbo-Solv. Plaintiff began the process of cleaning up the store so that it could be reopened, and this clean up continued until the store was sold in July 1988.

Plaintiff filed a complaint on 10 December 1987 alleging that defendant negligently delivered a toxic chemical, Carbo-Solv, to plaintiff and represented to plaintiff that the product was suitable for cleaning the floors of Miller’s Grocery. A jury trial was held in Buncombe County Superior Court beginning on 17 January 1989, and the case was tried as a negligence action. At trial, in addition to the evidence already discussed above, plaintiff presented evidence of damages in the form of lost profits during the clean up period and ongoing expenses incurred by Miller’s Grocery while the store was closed for the clean up. Three issues were submitted to the jury, and the jury, finding that defendant was negligent and plaintiff’s employee was not contributorily negligent, awarded plaintiff $148,000 in damages. Judgment was entered on 19 January 1989 and was filed on 23 January 1989. On 24 January 1989, defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and alternatively for a new trial. Both of these motions were denied, and defendant filed notice of appeal on 31 January 1989.

The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court, reversed the denial of defendant’s motion for directed verdict, and remanded the case for entry of a directed verdict in favor of defendant. Champs Convenience Stores, Inc. v. United Chemical Co., Inc., 99 N.C. App. 275, 392 S.E.2d 761 (1990). Plaintiff gave notice of appeal to this Court based on the dissent of Judge Lewis. Defendant also filed with this Court a petition for writ of certiorari as to additional issues raised at the Court of Appeals but not addressed by the Court of Appeals in its opinion because of its decision in favor of defendant. On 8 November 1990, this Court granted defendant’s petition for review of these additional issues.

[452]*452Although not briefed by the parties, plaintiff raised the issue during oral argument as to whether the Court of Appeals correctly concluded that this was a products liability action. However, we find that a decision on this issue is not necessary to the resolution of this appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
406 S.E.2d 856, 329 N.C. 446, 1991 N.C. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champs-convenience-stores-inc-v-united-chemical-co-nc-1991.