Greenberg v. Lorenz

12 Misc. 2d 883, 178 N.Y.S.2d 407, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2647
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedSeptember 25, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 Misc. 2d 883 (Greenberg v. Lorenz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenberg v. Lorenz, 12 Misc. 2d 883, 178 N.Y.S.2d 407, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2647 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinions

Hopstadter, J.

This case poses the challenging question whether an infant may maintain an action for damages for breach of the implied warranty of fitness for consumption where food was purchased by her parent.

The defendants conduct a neighborhood store at which the father of the infant plaintiff, Sheila, then 15 years old, on his way home at the end of his day’s work purchased a can of brand-name salmon. The salmon was served at the evening meal on the day of its purchase to the family, consisting of Sheila and her parents. Concealed and imbedded in a piece of this salmon into which Sheila bit, was a metal fish tag shaped like a pin, to which were attached two small plastic discs; as a result she suffered a fracture of her right central upper incisor, with accompanying infection of the cheek. Sheila has recovered damages for her injuries and her father for loss of services and medical expenses.

Both causes of action alleged a breach of the defendants’ implied warranty that the salmon was wholesome and fit for consumption. The defendants rested on the plaintiffs’ proof. They relied on the claim of lack of privity to bar recovery.

We affirm the judgment. In our view, the father’s purchase of the can of salmon to be eaten not by himself alone, but by the members of his household, including the plaintiff Sheila as well,, was clearly one made by him for the entire household. To view the situation otherwise is to blind oneself to its realties. [885]*885It is not without interest in this case, though we need not rest our decision on the incident, that the salmon was bought at Sheila’s own request, because she preferred it to tuna fish which her mother had originally intended to serve at the evening meal.

A legal principle must have the “ transcendent dimension ” of reality to retain validity. As the rule of domestic conduct must be invested with the authority of duty as well as of affection, that of social governance-jurisprudence — must afford protection as well as have warrant in precedent if it is to possess vitality. It must be effectual “ to see the hedge keep the cow and the latch keep the door,” in the homely but expressive idiom of an earlier age (Alfred Duggan: “ My Life for My Sheep —A Biography of St. Thomas a Becket,” pp. 104,171).

A doctrine is conceived in necessity. It is supported by theory. The considerations which gave it birth cease; but it continues its sway. As its inutility for living purposes becomes apparent, it is gradually fragmentized by decisional law — and its segments discarded. Finally, it disappears altogether — as in the ‘ ‘ hospital immunity ” cases (Bing v. Thunig, 2 N Y 2d 656). We need not give privity in the present context, the undue value of capital letter; here, it has ceased to be functional and is only a vestigial remain.

Not insensible to the need of symmetry as well as certainty in the law, we conceive it to be yet more important that the law respond to reality; indeed, it need not remain insensitive to common humanity.

It need not stultify itself by making the terminal of privity at the very point where it becomes needful — where its usefulness really begins. In the case of highly advertised “baby foods,” for instance, what can be fairly and reasonably urged to deny a tender infant recovery because it cannot claim that an umbilical cord of privity attaches it to a monolithic “ chain store? ” TV, radio, billboard, magazine and newspaper advertising zoom forth strident ballyhoo and urgent “invitations to deal,” addressed to fathers and mothers, to be sure but actually intended for the special benefit of their infants — for whom the foods have been primarily processed.

As between weakening of privity in these food cases and diminishing consumer protection, common sense, as well as good conscience, permit no choice. “It is a melancholy state of affairs to witness courts more preoccupied with privity than consumer protection.” (Prof. Thomas F. Lambert, Jr., 21 N A O O A Law Journal 421.) We cannot yield to those who would view the matter from the “ icy heights ” of outmoded concept, and would overlay its nakedness with precedents which [886]*886we believe are no longer controlling because they are irrelevant. As Justice Holmes has said: “ It is revolting to have no better reason for a rule of law than that so it was laid down in the time of Henry IV. It is still more revolting if the grounds upon which it was laid down have vanished long since, and the rule simply persists from blind imitation of the past.” (The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L. Rev. 457, 469.)

The rule of privity is no longer pressed to the extreme of confining the right of recovery to the very individual who made the purchase. There has been a constantly mounting criticism leveled at the requirement of strict contractual privity in this type of ease. The criticism has been voiced both by the courts and by legal writers. An illuminating article on the subject was written recently by Justice George Starke of the Municipal Court of the City of New York (N. Y. L. J., April 8, 9 and 10, 1957, editorial page). Numberless law review articles have commented on its unreality; these are noted in the Starke article. (See, also, Melick, Sale of Food and Drink, pp. 83-84; 154-161.)

In the light of today’s conditions it is fair to say that the rule is all but an anachronism — weighed on the scales of reality, it is found wanting. And, indeed it has been rejected outright in some jurisdictions, and denigrated in others in “ domestic meals ” cases. This process has been supported on different bases: “household agency ”, “ agency for the consumer ”, or ‘ ‘ third party beneficiary ’ ’. The activating dynamic, however, has been constant, although variously called: “ public policy ”, ‘ ‘ breach of duty ”, “ privity imposed by operation of law ’ ’, and simply “ social justice ”. (Ward Baking Co. v. Trizzino, 27 Ohio App. 475; Davis v. Van Camp Packing Co., 189 Iowa 775; Swengel v. F. & E. Wholesale Grocery Co., 147 Kan. 555, 561-562 [note on this case 52 Harv. L. Rev. 328]; Klein v. Duchess Sandwich Co., 14 Cal. 2d 272; Welter v. Bowman Dairy Co., 318 Ill. App. 305.)

A review of the many cases in our own State, commencing with Chysky v. Drake Bros. Co. (235 N. Y. 468) in which the rule was applied that only one in contractual privity with the seller (be he manufacturer, distributor or retailer),- may assert a claim for breach of the implied warranty that food is fit for human consumption, is no longer fruitful or necessary. For, the most recent authoritative decisions have pointed in a different direction. Thus our courts have already allowed recovery by a husband whose wife bought the food (Ryan v. Progressive Grocery Stores, 255 N. Y. 388; Visusil v. Grant Co., 253 App. Div. 736). More recently one of two sisters who lived together was held entitled to enforce the implied warranty in respect of [887]*887food bought by the other (Bowman v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 284 App. Div. 663, affd. 308 N. Y. 780).

The case of Blessington v. McGrory Stores Corp. (305 N. Y. 140) was an action by the personal representative of a deceased child to recover for his pain and suffering caused by breach of warranty affecting an inflammable cowboy suit bought for the deceased by his father.

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12 Misc. 2d 883, 178 N.Y.S.2d 407, 1958 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenberg-v-lorenz-nyappterm-1958.