Chapman v. Redwine

370 P.2d 147, 149 Colo. 515, 1962 Colo. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 19, 1962
Docket19381
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 370 P.2d 147 (Chapman v. Redwine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. Redwine, 370 P.2d 147, 149 Colo. 515, 1962 Colo. LEXIS 462 (Colo. 1962).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Hall.

The parties appear here in reverse order to their appearance in the trial court. We refer to them as they there appeared or by name.

The plaintiff in her complaint, filed December 24, 1957, alleges that on July 2, 1955, the defendant, Rocky Mountain Beverage, Inc., herein referred to as Beverage Co., was engaged as a bottler and distributor of a carbonated beverage known as Vess Cola; that at that time Chapman owned and operated a grocery store known as Evans Super Market, located at 527 West Evans Avenue, Denver, Colorado; that on said date plaintiff entered said store for the purpose of buying merchandise;

“4. * * * While plaintiff was standing near a display rack in said store on which bottles of a carbonated beverage known as Vess Cola were displayed, one of the bottles of said carbonated beverage known as Vess Cola, which bottle was on said display rack, exploded and caused pieces of glass to be projected through the air. One or more of these pieces of glass struck plaintiff causing the injuries hereinafter described.

“5. At no time did plaintiff by her actions or omissions do anything, or omit to do anything, which proximately [517]*517caused said explosion, oí said bottle .of. Vess Cola.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Plaintiff further alleges that the Beverage Co. bottled the bottle which exploded; transported the bottle which exploded to Chapman’s market, placed said bottle which exploded on the display rack in Chapman’s market; prior to and at the time of the explosion of the bottle of Vess Cola the display rack was owned, maintained, and stocked by the Beverage Co.

She further alleges that “this bottle of Vess Cola” which exploded, which was on the display rack with other bottles of carbonated beverages, was being offered for sale by Chapman.

Next plaintiff alleges that the explosion of the bottle of Vess Cola was caused by the negligence of the Beverage Co. in:

“ * * * improperly bottling, inspecting, handling, storing, transporting, distributing or placing upon the display rack the said bottle of Vess Cola; or the explosion and injuries were directly and proximately caused by the negligence of defendant Rocky Mountain Beverage, Inc., or defendant A. B. Chapman, or both defendants, in that the bottle of Vess Cola which exploded was improperly handled or offered for sale by either or both of the defendants after the bottle was placed on the display rack.”

Next she alleges that defendants at all times had exclusive possession and control of the bottle which exploded, and that all of the facts and circumstances of the bottling, etc., are exclusively within the knowledge of defendants and beyond the knowledge of plaintiff. Then follow allegations of plaintiff’s injuries, for which she seeks damages in the amount of $25,000.00.

The defendants filed separate answers in which they admit many of the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint, but each denies negligence and each denies that any bottle exploded.

The case- was tried to a- jury which returned a verdict [518]*518in favor of the plaintiff and against both defendants, and on which judgment was entered.

Defendants are here by writ of error seeking reversal.

There is no substantial conflict in the testimony. The plaintiff testified that she and her husband went to the Chapman store sometime after 7:30 P. M., on July 2, 1955; she was carrying two cartons, one in each hand, each containing six empty pop bottles. She proceeded through an aisle for the purpose of purchasing some “Dr. Peppers”; on one side of the aisle was a fruit rack, on the other side beverage racks; the Dr. Pepper bottles were at the end of the fruit rack, a fact which she had not yet discovered. She was followed down the aisle by her husband, who was ten or twelve feet behind her.

Not seeing the Dr. Peppers, she looked toward her husband, turning her head, and remarked to him that she did not see any Dr. Peppers. She then heard a noise behind her which sounded like an explosion. She then realized her left leg was cut just above the ankle. She observed glass and liquid behind her on the aisle floor. There was no liquid on her dress; she did not see any bottle explode; she did not observe glass or liquid on the display rack or other place except on the aisle floor.

Harlan Redwine, plaintiff’s husband, testified that he was following his wife in this aisle; that he was about twelve to fourteen feet behind her; she was looking down at the “six-packs”; it was a hot day; plaintiff turned to him and spoke, and he glanced down and as he glanced down he heard an explosion and his wife scream and he went to help her, and in doing so stepped on glass and liquid in the aisle. He, together with Chapman, examined the display rack, and there was no broken glass or liquid on any of the shelves of the rack. On the concrete floor in the aisle, between where he and his wife were standing at the time of the “explosion,” they found the bottom of a Vess bottle, the neck with cap attached, broken glass and liquid confined to an area about three feet in diameter near the point where plaintiff was standing.

[519]*519The foregoing is a fair representation of the testimony offered to prove the allegation of the complaint that a bottle “on said display rack exploded.”

Conditions existing in the aisle near where plaintiff was standing when injured, coupled with conditions on the display rack where the Vess bottles were displayed immediately following the so-called explosion, render testimony of the plaintiff that “I heard this loud explosion” — the noise “sounded like a loud explosion” — “there was a loud explosion — or something — an awful loud noise,” and testimony of her husband that “I glanced down, and as I glanced down I heard an explosion” —• incredible and insufficient to support any finding of the spontaneous explosion of a bottle on the rack or elsewhere.

It is common knowledge and within the very nature of things that when and if a bottle filled with liquid resting on a shelf explodes, glass fragments, liquid, other bottles, broken or knocked over, remain on the shelf. On the happening of such an event one does not find all of the glass fragments and liquid in an area about three feet in diameter on a concrete floor some feet away from the shelf where the bottle was resting and where the explosion is alleged to have occurred.

The location of the glass and liquid tells the true story much more convincingly than the cry of “explosion” on which plaintiff predicates her whole case.

To accept plaintiff’s story that a bottle exploded on the shelf, one would have to ignore simple facts of life, shut one’s eyes to reality, substitute fiction and fantasy for fact, do a complete overhaul job on the law of gravity, and live in a land of make believe.

Not all noises are explosions. A filled bottle explodes when the inside pressure is so great as to exceed the containing strength of the bottle.

Calling a noise an explosion does not make it such, though it may be some evidence thereof. More tangible [520]*520evidence is found in the flying glass and liquid and disturbance at the point where the explosion occurs.

Plaintiff’s counsel urge that: .

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Chapman v. Redwine
370 P.2d 147 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
370 P.2d 147, 149 Colo. 515, 1962 Colo. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-redwine-colo-1962.