Four States Grocery Co. v. Gray

97 S.W.2d 355
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 2, 1936
DocketNo. 13409.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 355 (Four States Grocery Co. v. Gray) 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
Four States Grocery Co. v. Gray, 97 S.W.2d 355 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

This suit was instituted by R. E. Gray against the Four States Grocery Company, a corporation, and the individual members of the firm, alleged to be Sam Hitri and James Pinto Jr., in the county court at law, No. 2, in Tarrant county, Tex. We shall refer to the parties plaintiff and defendants as they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiff alleges as a basis for his cause of action that, on about October 31, 1934, he went into the place of business of defendants in Fort Worth, where they were engaged in the grocery and livestock feed business, and told the manager he desired to purchase some sorghum or syrup for the purpose of mixing it with other food products to feed his livestock; that defendants sent a helper to some place in the building and procured a can containing a substance resembling syrup and displayed it to 'plaintiff, and, after' its inspection, plaintiff purchased it and paid the price asked. Plaintiff alleged that the container held about five gallons of the substance and that the lid was loose and apparently had been removed; that the helper, with the aid of plaintiff, tied the lid on the can with an ordinary baling wire, after which it was placed in plaintiff’s trailer and he carried it to his home at Snyder in Scurry county; that on reaching home that afternoon, it being too late to feed his.livestock, he left the. trailer containing the merchandise in the driveway near the side of his house until the next afternoon; that at the time for feeding he removed the wire and lid from the container, which were precisely as they had been fixed at the time he received the goods from defendants, placed in a washtub a quantity of chopped grain food products, similar in all respects to that he had fed to his livestock for several months and which were free from poison or other injurious substances, and placed thereon about one-half gallon of the syrup purchased from defendants, stirred all together and fed it to fourteen head of his livestock; that the sorghum molasses, syrup, or substance so purchased by him from defendants contained poisonous ingredients, in that it contained arsenic in sufficient quantity to cause the death of his livestock. The stock that died as a result thereof consisted of twelve Jersey heifers, a bay mare, and a paint pony, all of the value of $720.

Plaintiff further alleged- that defendants impliedly warranted to him that the merchandise so purchased was fit and proper in quality as a food for livestock when mixed with other feed of a proper kind. That defendants knew, or by the exercise *357 of ordinary care should have known, that the syrup or substance so sold was not fit for consumption by livestock, and that they were guilty of negligence and carelessness in selling such substance to plaintiff with the knowledge it was to be used for feed to livestock. Plaintiff prayed for judgment in the amount of his alleged damages.

The defendants presented several demurrers and exceptions to plaintiff’s petition, but the record does not indicate they were acted upon by the court, and there is nothing presented for our consideration in this regard.

Defendants answered with a general denial and special answhrs, to the effect that the syrup was pure and wholesome when sold by them to the plaintiff; that it was purchased by them from wholesalers who in turn warranted or impliedly warranted to them that same was good and wholesome ; that they purchased large quantities of syrup such as that sold to plaintiff and they received same in barrels and sold it out to farmers and stockmen for livestock food purposes and that they had never had a complaint from any other customer; that the principal part of their stock consisted of foodstuffs which is inclosed in sealed containers and is sold to their customers in like manner with seals unbroken, and that they have no means of examination of- the contents and are therefore in no way re-, sponsible for the quantity and quality thereof; that the particular malt syrup which was sold to plaintiff was purchased in like manner from the wholesaler on representations that it was of suitable quality for human or animal consumption. Relying upon such warranties and representations of wholesalers, defendants sold said merchandise, and are in no way responsible for its qualities or its ingredients, and are guilty of no acts of negligence in connection therewith, and that, if the syrup contained arsenic, defendants had no knowledge thereof, and had no opportunity to discover it, and are therefore not chargeable with negligence in connection with same.

A jury trial was had, and the testimony which we consider important under the assignments of error presented was, in substance, as follows: Plaintiff testified that on October 31, 1934, he went into defend-, ants’ place of business in Fort Worth, where he had traded for some time, and was acquainted with the manager, Frank Pinto, and told him he had been feeding his cattle on feed mixed with syrup and water; that he had run out of sorghum and asked the manager if he had some syrup which he could sell to mix with feed for some heifers; the manager sent a helper to bring a five-gallon can of syrup; the lid was loose on it; plaintiff told Pinto it looked like it had been opened; they used a wire to tie it together; it looked like old thick sorghum; the price was paid and the -can placed in the trailer, and he carried it to his home at Snyder, Tex. He did not arrive at home in time to feed the, stock that evening, and he left his trailer containing the can of sorghum in the driveway next to the house until the next afternoon, when he and another man fed the stock; they placed a quantity of chopped grain, about a half gallon of syrup he had on hand and a half gallon of the' syrup purchased from defendants along with water in a washtub, mixed it thoroughly and fed it to his stock; that the' chopped feed and syrup on hand were such as he had been feeding to his stock for several months with no bad results, and that it contained no poison or substance detrimental to his stock, but was wholesome food for them; that the stock ate freely; that when they opened the can-of syrup purchased from defendants the lid and the wire retaining it were in exactly the same condition they were in when placed there at defendants’ place of business and had not been tampered with in any way. The next morning not an animal would eat a bite of food; that afternoon six or eight of the cows were sick, nauseated, and foaming at the mouth; veterinarians were called and the stock treated; he was advised to have the syrup analyzed; it was sent to the state laboratories at Austin for that purpose, but reports were' delayed for some days; that a report was finally received. (This report was offered in evidence but upon objection by defendants was excluded by the court.) All the stock died within a few days; it killed all the cattle, not' a single cow left. The twelve heifers, the bay mare, and the paint pony died; the value of the heifers was $60 each, the mare was worth $125, and the paint pony was worth $60 or $70. A portion of the contents of the can of syrup was, by plaintiff, poured into a clean bottle and brought to Fort Worth; the bottle and its- contents were in evidence. (It does not appear from the evidence when the syrup was transferred from the can to the bottle nor when it was brought to Fort Worth for analysis.) That plain *358 tiff gave Mr. Ward a portion of the contents of the bottle for analysis.

.W. R.

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