Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Ark. v. Eudy

88 S.W.2d 53, 191 Ark. 877, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1935
Docket4-4069
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 53 (Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Ark. v. Eudy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Ark. v. Eudy, 88 S.W.2d 53, 191 Ark. 877, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 370 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

Baker, J.

Mrs. Ella Eudy sued the Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Arkansas in the circuit court of Jackson County. She alleged that on or about November 18, 1933, she purchased from a man named Taylor, who was running a restaurant in Newport, a bottle of Coca-Cola, manufactured and put up by the defendant; that she drank about two-thirds of the contents of the bottle at the time of the purchase and immediately became nauseated; that upon an examination of the remaining portion of the contents of the bottle she discovered therein a spider. She was sick for several days, and had a physician who administered to her, and that she was not really well for a considerable time thereafter.

Upon a trial of the case, on February 5, 1935, there was a verdict by the jury for $600 and consequent judgment was rendered. From this verdict and judgment is this appeal.

Immediately after this trial, motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and appeal was prayed and granted.

The only matters raised upon this first motion for a new trial were as to the sufficiency of the evidence offered in support of the complaint, which charged facts above stated, and in addition thereto that the contents of the bottle from which she drank was poisonous and in an unfit and unwholesome condition for human consumption. It was also charged in said motion that one of the attorneys representing the plaintiff had made improper and prejudicial remarks in the course of his argument. He had said in effect: “You have to be careful in weighing and considering the testimony in this case, because, when you go up against these powerful corporations, you have a hard fight.” This remark was objected to at the time made. The jury Avas cautioned by the court and advised not to consider the remark; that it was improper and should not have been made. These are the only issues appearing in the record at that time. We think it is sufficient to say, without detailing the testimony adduced upon the trial, that a careful examination of this entire record to that point discloses no prejudicial error.

The foregoing statement must not be taken as an approval of the remark made by the attorney, but the remark did not express or allege any statement of fact which Avould, or might tend to, present the jury any new matter. As Ave understand the record, the attorney Avas merely seeking to give advice to the jury by Avay of caution. and the most that could be said about his remark is that he was perhaps, expressing an opinion that was in no wise warranted. • 1'

We think, however, the court properly instructed and advised the jury upon objections made by the appellant. We assume that the jury did not permit itself to be influenced, as the trial court promptly and correctly instructed them in regard to the remarks objected to by appellant. Hogan v. State, ante p. 437. Cases cited in above case are authoritative and followed by this court.

Later, however, on April 30th, the defendant, appellant here, filed a supplemental motion under the seventh subdivision of § 1311, Crawford & Moses’ Digest, praying that a new trial be granted to it upon newly-discovered evidence. To this supplemental motion was attached an affidavit of Mrs. Moore. This affidavit is here copied, omitting only the formal parts thereof.

“On November 18,1933, Mrs. Ella Eudy, who is now Mrs. Ella McAllister, was staying at my house on Plum Street in Newport, Arkansas. About three or four days prior to November 18, 1933, Mrs. Ella Eudy caught a. spider in an old sweater at my house. I was working for Owen and Bowie at .that time, and when I came in from work that day Mrs. Eudy had the spider in a glass of water and told me she was going to go to Paul Taylor’s Restaurant and buy a Coca-Cola and put it in there and make like she was sick. On November 18, 1933, about 2:30 or 3:00 o’clock in the afternoon, I came home. Mrs. Eudy told me she Avas going to Paul Taylor’s and get a bottle of Coca-Cola and drink part of it and then put the spider in it and make like she was sick. She asked me to go along with her. Alfred McAllister, Mrs. Eudy McAllister’s husband, came in and heard her tell me about it. Mrs. Eudy McAllister took the spider out of the glass of water and put it in her handkerchief and took it with her. Before we left the house, Mrs. McAllister took a dip of snuff so, she said, when she swallowed the Coca-Cola she would get sick and vomit. She didn’t dip snuff at all that I know of. We went to Paul Taylor’s Restaurant, Mrs. McAllister and I, and each ordered a bottle of Coca-Cola. Paul Taylor, I think, waited on. us. Paul left out soon and lie gave us the Coca-Colas. Buddy Mink and Henry Tracey ivere working there. Mrs. McAllister drank about half the Coca-Cola and slipped the bottle down in her lap and put the spider in it. She began to gag and spit and Buddy Mink came and picked up the bottle and looked at it and said there ivas nothing in it. Then Mrs. McAllister whispered to me that she ‘dropped that damned spider.’ She then took my bottle of Coca-Cola and put the spider in it, and while Buddy Mink was looking in her bottle, and when he set her bottle down, she switched bottles with me and called Buddy Mink and told him, ‘ There is something in there. ’ She then began to act like she was sick and tried to vomit. Henry Tracey said he would call a doctor, and she said to call Dr. Best. Henry Tracey and I took her in the back room of the r.estaurant and laid her down on a bed. Dr. Best brought her to my house and gave her some medicine, and she wouldn’t or didn’t take any medicine at all, and I threw the medicine away. Dr. Best came out to see her twice and she went to his office once. She had her doctor bill charged to me, and I paid for the medicine. Never was a dose of it taken. She never was sick, and thirty minutes after she was home from drinking the Coca-Cola she ate some bologna sausage and crackers. When any one would come to the house, she would run and jump into the bed and act like she was sick.
“There positively was nothing in the bottle but Coca-Cola when she bought it. She put the spider in it so she could sue the Coca-Cola Company for some money.”

Upon presentation of this supplemental motion for a new trial, Mrs. Moore and other witnesses were sworn and testified. It is unnecessary to repeat in detail the testimony of all of the witnesses, particularly that of Mrs. Moore, whose testimony was substantially in accord with her affidavit.

. Lawrence A. Goldman testified that he was employed by the Coca-Cola Bottling Company to investigate this case when the suit was filed. He went to Newport and first obtained permission from counsel for appellee to talk with his client, Mrs. Eudy. From her he learned thal Mrs. Moore ivas with Mrs. Eudy at the time Mrs. Eudy went to the restaurant and drank the Coca-Cola. Mrs. Eudy also advised him as to the location of the place where Mrs. Moore lived in Newport. He called at that place twice on that day and failed to find Mrs. Moore there. On two or three other occasions, later on, when he was in Newport, perhaps on other business, he attempted to find Mrs. Moore to interview her in regard to facts concerning this suit. He ivas never able to find her. He also testified that Mrs. Eudy informed him that Mrs. Moore would testify to substantially the same facts that Mrs. Eudy had stated to him. On account of these statements, he was led to believe that Mrs.

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Related

Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Ark. v. Eudy
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90 S.W.2d 978 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1936)

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88 S.W.2d 53, 191 Ark. 877, 1935 Ark. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coca-cola-bottling-co-of-ark-v-eudy-ark-1935.