Dunlap v. Oak Cliff Pharmacy Co.

288 S.W. 236
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 1926
DocketNo. 7024. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 236 (Dunlap v. Oak Cliff Pharmacy Co.) 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
Dunlap v. Oak Cliff Pharmacy Co., 288 S.W. 236 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BAUGH, J.

Appellant, a feme sole, sued appellee, a corporation, for damages for personal injuries alleged to have resulted from the negligence of appellee’s agent, who was a druggist and manager of one of appellee’s drug stores in Oak Cliff. The negligence charged was in the sale to her, when she called for Seilers antiseptic tablets, a nonpoisonous, alkaline, antiseptic tablet, of Diamond antiseptic tablets, a highly poisonous bichloride of mercury tablet.

Appellee answere'd by general and special exceptions, general denial, and a plea of contributory negligence. At the close of the evidence 'the trial court instructed the jury to find for appellee, defendant below. Hence this appeal.

Appellant raises three propositions on this appeal: First, that there was sufficient evidence on the issue of negligence to go to the jury; second, that appellee’s agent misrepresented to appellant the nature and character of the tablets sold, and perpetrated a fraud upon her in order to effect a sale of the tablets used, against which fraud a plea of contributory negligence would not be available; and, third, that there was sufficient evidence that appellant was not guilty of contributory negligence to go to the jury.

We address ourselves first to appellant’s second proposition. A careful reading of appellant’s first amended original petition on which she went to trial fails to disclose that fraud was pleaded. We do not deem it necessary to set out or summarize the pleadings here, but the record clearly discloses, we think, that the case was tried in the court below on the theory Of negligence. Appellant relied upon that issue in the trial court, and cannot be heard to raise the issue of fraud for the first time on appeal. As stated in Boatner v. Providence-Washington Ins. Co. (Tex. Com. App.) 241 S. W. 136:

“The law forbids the assumption of an attitude on appeal inconsistent with that taken at the trial, and on appeal litigants are restricted to the theory upon which the cause was prose *237 cuted or defended in tlie court below [citing numerous authorities].”

In order to fix liability upon appellant it was necessary for appellant, under her pleadings, to show negligence upon the part of appellee’s agent, and that such negligence was a proximate cause of her injuries. And in passing upon the question as to whether or not there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on that issue, we must reject all evidence favorable to appellee and consider only that favorable to the appellant. Barron v. Railway Co. (Tex. Com. App.) 249 S. W. 825; Kirksey v. Traction Co., 110 Tex. 190, 217 S. W. 139. There is little controversy between appellant and appellee as to the rules of law involved. The care required of druggists in the sale of medicine to the public is well stated in Tremblay v. Kimball, 107 Me. 53, 77 A. 405, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 900, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 1215, as follows:

“The legal measure of the duty of druggists toward their patrons, as in all other relations of life, is properly expressed by the phrase ‘ordinary care,’ yet it must not be forgotten that it is ‘ordinary care’ with reference to that special and peculiar business. In determining what degree of prudence, vigilance and thoughtfulness will fill the requirements of ‘ordinary care’ in compounding medicines and filling prescriptions, it is necessary to consider the poisonous character of so many of the drugs with which the apothecary deals and the grave and fatal consequence which may follow the want of due care. In such a case ‘ordinary’ care calls for a degree of vigilance and prudence - commensurate with the dangers involved. * * * ‘Ordinary care’ with reference to the business of a druggist must therefore be held to signify the highest practicable degree of prudence, thoughtfulness and vigilance and the most exact and reliable safeguards consistent with the reasonable conduct of the business in order that human life may not constantly be exposed to the danger flowing from the substitution of deadly poisons for harmless medicines.”

About July 9, 1924, appellant, a girl then about 20 years of age, went with ber father to one of appellee’s drug stores and asked for Seilers antiseptic tablets. According to her testimony and that of her father, the druggist made a search for same, was unable to find them, and returned to appellant, who was seated at a table in the store, saying that he had no Seilers tablets, but that he had Diamond antiseptic tablets, and presented her with a bottle containing six tablets. The appellant then asked the druggist if they were the same or practically the same as the Seil-ers, to which he answered, “Yes.” According to her testimony this is substantially all that occurred at the time. The druggist did not know what use she expected to make of these tablets. The fact was, though not known to the druggist, that her menstruation had continued unduly long and vaginitis had developed. Her stepmother had- told her that she had had similar difficulties; that her family physician in New York had prescribed Seilers antiseptic tablets; and that she had used such tablets successfully by inserting two of them in her vagina upon retiring at night. She advised appellant to obtain and use them in that manner. Appellant upon her return home after purchasing the Diamond tablets, used them ' in the manner her stepmother had told her to use the Seilers, with the result that she received bichloride of mercury poisoning and suffered intense pain and bodily injuries with near fatal results. Appellee’s druggist, who sold the tablets, testified that he knew when he sold appellant the tablets that the Seilers tablet asked for by her was a harmless, soothing, alkaline, nonpoisonous preparation, that it could be used in the manner in which appellant used the other tablets without injurious consequences and with probable beneficial results, and, to quote his testimony: '

“I do not know that women use alkaline tablets in their raw state for irritation in the vaginal tracts.- I do not know whether they do or not; I know that is what they are intended to be used for and can be used for. I know they can be used that way. I do not know that they can be used that way with safety. I have reason to anticipate whenever I sell alkaline tablets, from my experience in the business, not that they will be, but that they inay be used that way.”

He also testified that he knew that the Diamond antiseptic tablet was a mercurial highly poisonous tablet. Testimony of physicians was that when used as appellant used them, the result was usually fatal. There was also ample testimony to show that had the tablets purchased been the Seilers tablets she asked for, the use made of them by appellant would not have been injurious but beneficial.

Clearly this testimony was sufficient to go to the jury on the issue of negligence, unless appellant was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. This issue will be discussed later. The general rule that to hold one responsible for injuries resulting from negligence,, the injuries must be the reasonable and probable consequence of the negligent act and such as should have been foreseen at the time, is well established. 29 Cyc. 492 et seq. But it does hot follow that appellee’s druggist should have anticipated the particular injury sustained, nor the particular manner in which injury might be sustained. See Collins v. P. & N. T. Ry. Co., 110 Tex. 581, 212 S. W. 477, 222 S. W. 156, and cases therein cited.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-oak-cliff-pharmacy-co-texapp-1926.