Guerin v. Huberwald

3 Pelt. 132
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 1920
DocketNO. 7642
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Pelt. 132 (Guerin v. Huberwald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guerin v. Huberwald, 3 Pelt. 132 (La. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

[133]*133OPIHIOH.

By his Honor

John ñt. PAul;

This is an potion for damages hy a husband and wife, against a druggist for alleged negligence in labeling a AT •prescription, in oonsequenoe Whereof the wife, having used the medicine according toAdirections indicated, instead of as .intended by her physician, suffered certain alleged physical and mental injuries, and the husband was thereby put to oertain alleged expenses. She answer is substantially a general denial.

I.

At the time of the occurences hereinafter mentioned the wife was pregnant, and five months of her period had gone by. Having on two former occasions Buffered a miscarriage, she had kept herself under the oareful Observation of her family physician, who up to that time had found no indication of any threatened mishap.

But as the result of her condition she had some pain in her limbs, and besides had contracted a slight cough. To relieve the pain in her limbs the physician prescribed a liniment containing a trace of Menthol, and equal quantities of Oil of Wintergreen and of Olive Oil, with direction to "Apply"looallylr Por the cough he prescribed Wild Cherry and Codeine, with directions to take nAfcea3poonful every three hours when coughing.'-

[134]*134The"two proscriptions were filled at defendant’s drug store, and were handed to the husband in one package. It is not disputed that they wore correctly filled.

Arriving at home the hwshMifl gave the two bottles to his wife, who after having read the labels then took and swallowed a teaspoonful of the contents of that bottle which bore the label with directions to take "a teaspoonful every three hours," with the alleged results hereinafter mentioned.

IX-

It is an undisputed fact that when the two bottdls were produced in court, the cough mixture bore a label directing local application, and the liniment a label directing that a teaspoonful be taken every three hours. The attending physician, whose good repute is not cpisetionee, testifies that when he, first saw the trro bottles, upon being called in some few hours after the obnoxious dose was taken, tJoey were labeled its '••‘hen produced in court. The husband, and a friend who accompanied him, testified that the two bottles were handed hin in one package; the husband swears that he handed the two bottles to his wife ao-ft-ho re-ocirvo-T the bott.1 es as be reeoivPd them. The wife swears that she received t If. bo lulus fror. V •• and having merely examined the labels to ascertain which was which, she took a teaspoonful [135]*135of the mixture contalned in that one of the bottles labeled "a teaspponful every three honra."

Defendant's manager, who saw the bottle of liniment in court, Mislabeled, admits that it came from defendant's establishment, but "won't admit that that is the label which was on the bottle when it was sent out."

She point is not insisted upon; and we ourselves, in the light of the evidence before us, the proverbial uncertainty of law suits, and the well known danger of takingdntarnally the unknown contents of lotions intended for external use only, will not assume that the labels were "switched" otherwise than by some negligence on the part of one of the defendant's employees. In the face of direct-evidence leading to a conoluaion not impossible or absurd, courts will not indulge in fanciful therries whioh, though possible are yet not even suggested by the evidence and in themeelves highly imponoíble. Sanchez vs Woodmen of World, IS Orleans Appeal. 24?; 1amourslie vs Pittsburg Plate Class Co, IS Orleans App. 374; Blook vs Ocean Ins Co, 10 Orleans App 284’DW^V(f>v. (^j^eXjntr w AwJ. Q¡t ¶ .

III.

The wife testifies that immediately upon taking the obnoxious dose she felt, a turning sensation throughout her whole body* that she gradually grew worse, and some hours afterwards called in the physioian who found premonitions [136]*136of another miscarriage and accordingly ordered her to hed a$; - once. Thera she remained three weeks showing all the well known signs of an approaching miscarriage (which howerer gradually subsided) and with the dread upon her that euoh an ooourenoe was impending; that it was another three weeks before all immediate danger thereof had passed. In this she is corroborated by her husband and by the physloian.

IT.

The attending physicaln testifies that the burning sensation was oaused by the small (gqS&liglble) quantity of Menthol; that the sensation was purely local, and had no bad effect upon her, exoept psychologically, whan she realized that in her condition she had swallowed something not Intended -tku, for her stomach in its then delicate condition; but^the Oil of Wtntergraen which she had taken Was the exwitlng cause which sot in motion her own predisposition towards miscarriage. (NOTE; The exciting cause of an ooourenoe is the one whioh sets the other causes in motionj^lt is therefore the efficient or proximate cause. Inse Co vs Boon 95 U. S. 117; Lapleine vs M. La & Tex R. R. Co, 40Ann 661; Wellington vs Downer Kerosene Oil Co, 104 Mass 64; Vandenburg vs Truax, 4 Denio 464; And Scott vs Sheppard, 2 Wm Blaokstone 892, the celebrated and oft cited case of the lighted squib thrown in the market plaoe)

[137]*137The physioian also testified that the text hooks warn against the use of that drug during pregnancy, and he referred to Hare’s "Practical Therapentios" Í9th Bdijion, 1902) e text hook long in use in the local Medical College; pointing especially to page 239 where it_sa4d\^t(Oil of Wintergreen, Saultheria) is about 96 per cent salicylate of methyl, xxx Owing to the large amount of salicylate of methyl contained in the oil, its physiological action is almost identical vflth that of salicylic acid, xxx The dose may he as high as 100 minims a day, but xxx very few patients can take more than 30 minims a day, without suffering from a disordered stomach." HOTA BEHE; At page 791 the dosage for oil of Wintergreen is given at from 1 to 20 minims; at page 783 oil of Saultheria, dosage 2 to 10 minims.

The physioian also pointed to (Hare) page 384, where it said "BIH2 thinks that full doses of Salicylic acid (p. 777, dosage 6 to 16 grains, and as aforesaid similar in its action to Caultheria) may produce abortion in woman who already have a tendency to abort, end VIHEBURG thinks that Menorrhagia and Mehiorrhagia are caused by it (that is to say, Tineburg looks upon it as an Emmenagogue) xxx Salicylio acid x x x is an trritant to the stomach."

The United States Dispensary (17th Edition, 1894) puts the percentage of sal.fcylla- ' snUfayTic ee-id ln in oil of Wintergreen somewhat lower than them 96 per cent. At pages 937-938, it Is [138]*138said; "169 grains of the oil contain 162 grains of methyl salicylate and ars therefore equivalent to 138 grains of salloyllo aoidj" this is about 81 per cent***-¿~ •

Observing this percentage, and noting that the minim or drop is the 60th part of a fluidrachm (fluid-drachm) and therefore the liquid equivalent of one grain (approximately), we see that 20 minims of (liquid) Winterpreen oil are the equivalent of 16 grains of (crystalized) salicylic acid, and that both are full doses.

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Related

Insurance Co. v. Boon
95 U.S. 117 (Supreme Court, 1877)
Vandenburgh v. Truax
4 Denio 464 (New York Supreme Court, 1847)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Pelt. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guerin-v-huberwald-lactapp-1920.