Dechello v. Johnson Enterprises

536 A.2d 1203, 74 Md. App. 228, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 10, 1988
Docket845, September Term, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 536 A.2d 1203 (Dechello v. Johnson Enterprises) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dechello v. Johnson Enterprises, 536 A.2d 1203, 74 Md. App. 228, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 49 (Md. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

WILNER, Judge.

Appellant was injured when a plastic stopper allegedly flew off a bottle of Asti Spumante sparkling wine and hit her in the eye. In the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, she sued the retailer who sold her husband (then her fiance) the bottle of wine and the importer who purchased the bottle from the manufacturer and sold it to the retailer. She did not sue the manufacturer/bottler of the wine.

According to appellant, when her fiance brought the bottle home, she removed it from the bag, briefly examined it, and placed it on the kitchen counter. While it was on the counter, she removed the foil and the wire basket from the top of the bottle. She then turned to throw the foil and wire into the wastebasket. As she turned back and reached for the bottle, the stopper spontaneously ejected and struck her in the eye.

Appellant’s amended complaint contained three counts. The gravamen of Count I, captioned “Strict Liability—Failure to Warn,” was, indeed, the failure to warn of a dangerous condition. She alleged that the bottle was “in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the plaintiff in that it failed to contain any warning of the latent risks inherent in such product and the use thereof,” that “[t]he defendants knew or should have known of the latent risks and dangers associated with carbonated wines, of which *231 plaintiff was unaware, but failed to provide any warning whatsoever of such risks and dangers, despite minimal cost to do so,” and that “[a]s a direct and proximate result of defendants’ failure to warn of the defective and unreasonably dangerous condition of the bottle and its contents, plaintiff sustained severe and permanent injury to her eye.”

Nothing was said in Count I about either a design or manufacturing defect.

Count II, captioned “Negligence,” was voluntarily dismissed by appellant at the beginning of trial and is therefore not directly relevant to this appeal. We observe, however, that it too was based essentially on the failure to warn. Appellant averred that the defendants knew or should have known that the bottle was unreasonably dangerous for the use for which it was supplied and that consumers would not realize its dangerous condition, that the defendants had a duty “to warn of the dangers inherent in sparkling carbonated wine” and that they breached that duty by “failing to exercise reasonable care to inform plaintiff of the dangerous condition____”

Count III was based on breach of implied warranty of merchantability under Md.Code Ann.Comm.Law art., § 2-314. Appellant incorporated by reference all previous allegations in the amended complaint and further averred that the defendants were merchants or sellers for purposes of § 2-314, that they warranted that the bottle was fit for ordinary purposes and was adequately contained, packaged, and labeled, and that that warranty was breached because the bottle was “in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the plaintiff.”

In support of her case, appellant called two experts— James Green, an engineer, and Robert Cunitz, a psychologist. Mr. Green said that he conducted experiments on nine bottles of Asti Spumante wine—four from one “lot,” five from another. He chilled the bottles to 48° F, removed the foil and the wire baskets, set the bottles on a level device outside his home, brought them up to 68° F (ambient room *232 temperature) and observed what happened. In the first lot of four bottles, each stopper ejected spontaneously; the stoppers in the second lot did not eject “without me forcing them out at room temperature.” Upon ejection, the stoppers flew straight up and hit the eave of Mr. Green’s roof, which, using a surveyor’s tape, he calculated was “approximately 20 feet in height.” By timing the flight of the stoppers, Green determined the velocity of the stopper in flight to be “approximately 34 miles per hour at the end of the 20 feet.”

Five of the nine stoppers (three from the first lot of four bottles and two from the second lot of five bottles) were lost in the woods behind Green’s house. After sending a report of his observations to appellant’s counsel, Green decided to measure the rings on the four remaining stoppers. He discovered that the one stopper he still had from the lot of four bottles—the one that spontaneously ejected —was smaller than the average of the three stoppers he had remaining from'' the lot of five bottles that did not spontaneously eject. 1 Four of the five rings on the stopper that struck appellant were smaller than the corresponding rings on the four stoppers he had left from his experiment.

Finally, Mr. Green determined that there was a variance in the size of the corresponding rings from one stopper to another of between 0.001 and 0.055 inches. He concluded that there should not be a variance of more than 0.001 inches, and from that opined that (1) there was poor quality control during the manufacturing process and (2) the capping on the bottle that struck appellant was defective.

On cross-examination, Mr. Green conceded that he was unaware of any official or industry-wide standards regarding allowable variations in the stoppers, that he was not an *233 expert in plastics, and that he did not know why a manufacturer would want to use a plastic stopper. 2

Dr. Cunitz, testifying as a “human factors psychologist,” opined that a bottle of Asti Spumante wine is defective unless it contains a warning and that it was economically feasible to put a warning label on the bottle.

Though deprecating the evidence produced by appellant and disputing the conclusions sought to be drawn from it, defendants produced little evidence of their own. 3 They simply argued that the accident could not have happened as appellant alleged, suggesting to the jury that appellant must have been trying to open the bottle, or at least have had it pointing toward her head, when the stopper ejected. That argument was apparently persuasive, as the jury returned a defendants’ verdict.

Aggrieved by the judgment entered on that verdict, appellant has brought this appeal, complaining that:

“1. The court should [have] enter[ed] judgment in favor of the appellant notwithstanding the verdict of the jury and order[ed] a partial new trial on damages because the appellant conclusively established that she was injured by a defective and unreasonably dangerous product and the appellees did not introduce any evidence at the trial to refute appellant’s evidence.”
*234 and
“2. The judgment of the Circuit Court should be reversed and a new trial granted to the appellant because the trial court erroneously instructed the jury regarding the law of strict liability and warranty of merchantability.”

This case was not well tried; indeed, it was substantially misdirected. Appellant sought to prove facts and theories that she never pled and offered suspect and uncompelling evidence to support her new theories.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
536 A.2d 1203, 74 Md. App. 228, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dechello-v-johnson-enterprises-mdctspecapp-1988.