Greenwood v. John R. Thompson Co.

213 Ill. App. 371, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 142
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 12, 1919
DocketGen. No. 24,079
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 213 Ill. App. 371 (Greenwood v. John R. Thompson Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenwood v. John R. Thompson Co., 213 Ill. App. 371, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 142 (Ill. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thomson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action on the ease brought by Arthur B. Greenwood as administrator of the estate of Clarence E. Greenwood, deceased, under section 1, ch. 70, Illinois Statutes (J. & A. ¶ 6184), by which he seeks to recover damages resulting from the death of the deceased, which is alleged to have been caused by the wrongful act of the defendant, John R. Thompson Company. The plaintiff filed a declaration consisting of three counts. To the first count, defendant pleaded the general issue and certain special pleas and to the second and third counts, pleas in abatement. The latter pleas were sustained and plaintiff had leave to file amended second and third counts, which he did. General demurrers were filed to these new counts and these were sustained and plaintiff excepted. Later defendant withdrew its pleas to the first count and filed a general and special demurrer thereto which was also sustained. Plaintiff elected to stand by the count and the trial court dismissed the suit. On this appeal by the plaintiff there is therefore involved, the question of the sufficiency of the three counts to which the trial court sustained demurrers.

In the first count of his declaration, the plaintiff alleges that the defendant was a restaurant keeper and that the deceased purchased certain food from him for immediate consumption in said restaurant,

“Whereby the said defendant then and there warranted that the said food so sold and delivered by it to the deceased was then and there good and wholesome food and safe to be eaten; but the said defendant, by its said agents and servants, then and there so carelessly, improperly and wrongfully served and sold the said food aforesaid to the said deceased when the said food was not then and there good and wholesome food, but * * * Was, in fact, unwholesome, poisonous, dangerous and unfit to be eaten, * * * that by reason thereof, the said deceased,' without knowledge or notice of any kind as to the condition of said food, and relying on said warranty of the defendant that the said food was then and there good, pure and wholesome food and fit to be eaten, did then and there eat and partake of the said food * * * and by reason of the said deceased so eating such food aforesaid, he then and there became” poisoned and died.

This is clearly a count in case for an alleged breach of an implied warranty, and not in assumpsit as defendant contends. The warranty is not set up as a part of any alleged express promise made by defendant but the count, after setting forth the relation of restaurant keeper and patron, as existing between defendant and plaintiff’s intestate, proceeds by saying, “Whereby the said defendant then and there warranted,” etc.

Where one is damaged by a breach of warranty, he has a choice of two remedies. He may bring an action on the case, based upon the alleged wrongful act of the defendant in committing the breach, or he may bring an action in assumpsit based upon the contractual relation existing and the defendant’s failure to fulfil his express or implied promise of warranty. 1 Chitty on Pleading, star pages 153, 154, 16th Am. Ed. p. 198; 35 Cyc. 444; 1 C. J. 1021; Nevin v. Pullman Palace Car Co., 106 Ill. 222, 236.

' The ancient remedy for a false warranty was an action on the case sounding in tort. The remedy by assumpsit was adopted later and apparently to enable the pleader to be in a position to add the money counts. Schuchardt v. Allen, 1 Wall. (U. S.) 359, 368; Vanleer v. Earle, 26 Pa. St. 277, 279.

Where an action on the case is brought for breach of warranty, the gravamen of the action is not fraud and deceit but merely lies in the wrongful act of the defendant in making a false warranty and therefore scienter need not be alleged nor must it be proven. The defendant may even have made the false warranty in perfect good faith and believing it to be true, but nevertheless he will be liable if the warranty proves false, for in undertaking to warrant, whether that undertaking be in the form of his express promise, or a burden imposed upon him by the law as an incident to his occupation, he takes all the consequence of the falsity of the warranty, if it proves such, irrespective of whether or not he knew it to be false. 1 Chitty on Pleading, star page 403, 16th Am. Ed. p. 507; 1 C. J. 1021; Schuchardt v. Allen, 1 Wall. (U. S.) 359; Williamson v. Allison, 2 East 446; 2nd Am. Ed. vol. 1, p. 537, 539; Trice v. Cockram, 8 Gratt. (Va.) 442, 450; Carter v. Glass, 44 Mich. 154; Arnold v. White, 153 Mich. 607, 610; Norton v. Doherty, 3 Gray (Mass.) 372, 373; Wallace v. Tanner, 118 Ill. App. 639, 641.

In discussing this subject, in his work on the Common Law, Justice Holmes says:

“The question is, what known circumstances are enough to throw the risk of a statement upon him who makes it, if it induces another man to act, and it turns out untrue. Now, it is evident that a man may take the risk of his statement by express agreement, or by an implied one which the law reads into his bargain. He may in legal language warrant the truth of it, and if it is not true, the law treats it as a fraud, just as much when he makes it fully believing it, as when he knows that it is untrue, and means to deceive. If, in selling a horse, the seller warranted him to be only five years old, and in fact he was thirteen, the seller could be sued for a deceit at common law, although he thought the horse was only five. The common-law liability for the truth of statements is, therefore, more extensive than the sphere of actual moral fraud” (p. 135).

We therefore hold that it is not the law, as defendant contends, that an action on the case will lie for breach of warranty, only when the warranty is knowingly and deliberately false.

In further support of its demurrer to the first count the defendant contends that no implied warranty that the food it serves is good and wholesome is imposed upon the keeper of a restaurant by the law, but that one so engaged is liable for damages caused by the eating of unwholesome or poisonous food only when it can be shown that the serving of such food is the result of negligence on the part of the keeper of the restaurant, and that the first count is demurrable inasmuch as it makes no charge of negligence.

It has been held repeatedly in this State that a retail dealer in foodstuffs, selling the same for domestic use and consumption, impliedly warrants that such" food stuffs are sound and wholesome and fit to be eaten, and he is liable in damages if they prove to be otherwise, whether he was aware of their condition or not. These cases make an exception to the ordinary rule of caveat emptor, squarely upon the ground'of public policy. Wiedeman v. Keller, 171 Ill. 99; Sloan v. F. W. Woolworth Co., 193 Ill. App. 620; Chapman v. Roggenkamp, 182 Ill. App. 117. In the last two cases cited the rule is extended to apply to cases involving the sale of food in sealed cans.

The only authority in Illinois on the question of the liability of the keeper of a restaurant as distinguished from a so-called retail dealer is found in the case of Sheffer v. Willoughby, 163 Ill. 518., In that case the plaintiff brought an action of trespass on the case, alleging that she had been made ill by eating unwholesome food in the restaurant of the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
213 Ill. App. 371, 1919 Ill. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwood-v-john-r-thompson-co-illappct-1919.