Herbert v. General Baking Co.

6 Mass. App. Div. 143

This text of 6 Mass. App. Div. 143 (Herbert v. General Baking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herbert v. General Baking Co., 6 Mass. App. Div. 143 (Mass. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Hibbard, P. J.

This is an action of contract in which the plaintiff elected to proceed in contract to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him by reason of the presence of a nail contained in a cake sold to him by the defendant. The action is in reality based upon an implied warranty as to the fitness of the cake for consumption by the plaintiff.

There was evidence for the plaintiff tending to show that his housekeeper on August 12, 1940, acting as the plaintiff’s agent, purchased a cake of the defendant’s salesman and that on the 14th day of August the plaintiff while eating the cake bit on a bent nail, injuring his upper right gum which penetrated between two teeth. The cake was manufactured by the defendant, wrapped in cellophane and newly cut at the time of the injury.

[144]*144, The. Trial Judge, found, "for the plaintiff and filed a finding, the material parts of which are as follows:

“At the trial there was evidence tending to show that plaintiff on August 12, 1940, purchased a cake of one Adams, defendant’s salesman, and on August 14, in eating a piece of said cake, bit on a nail in the cake, which was newly cut and just then taken out of a cellophane wrapper in which it was sold, and was injured; that the next day he informed said Adams that he had been injured by biting on a nail on the previous day in the cake which said Adams sold bim on the 12th. Adams reported the injury and its • alleged cause to the company, the defendant, and a Mr. Chaseau from the defendant company came out to Warren to see the plaintiff; that in making said sale and in making said report to defendant company, said Adams was acting as agent for defendant in the scope of his employment; that the nail, which was a bent nail, penetrated plaintiff’s jaw on the right side between two teeth and the wound bled profusely; that on the day after the injury plaintiff went twice to a dentist in Warren to stop the bleeding and on September 9 went to a dentist in Worcester who found that the wound had completely healed but that plaintiff complained of soreness at one of the teeth at the side of the wound and this dentist advised plaintiff to have the tooth extracted if the soreness continued; that the tooth continued sore for four weeks, at the end of which time a dentist in Springfield examined the tooth and extracted it; that during this four weeks plaintiff suffered pain every time he tried to bite with that tooth and that it ached all the time and that he walked the floor most of the nights.
“There was also evidence tending to show that plaintiff was a wounded veteran of the World War and had part of his right jaw shot away by machine gun fire; that a sinus had been removed as a consequence and that the whole right side of his face was abnormally sensitive including the portion where the nail penetrated but- that this tooth had been all right [145]*145up to the time of this injury and nothing else had happened to cause it to be sore; that before the injury plaintiff could chew meat and solid food of every kind but that after the injury and after losing the tooth he could eat only soup and soft food and had lost 16 pounds; that it will be very difficult on account of the condition of his jaw to fit him with artificial teeth.
“There was also evidence tending to show that before the accident plaintiff had very slight percentage of occlusion of his teeth in that he had only 7 per cent occlusion; that this tooth was the only tooth that met another but he could chew meat and other solid food so that he had no difficulty in eating so long as he had that tooth.
“Plaintiff was not employed so there was no loss of wages. There was no evidence of the cost of fitting him with artificial teeth nor of how much of his need for artificial teeth was caused by the loss of this tooth and how much by the the loss of other teeth. There was no evidence of any unsoundness of the tooth in question and both the dentist who testified for the plaintiff and the dentist who testified for the defendant, both of whom examined the tooth, stated that the tooth appeared all right except for the alleged soreness complained of after the accident.”

The defendant seasonably filed certain requests for rulings which with the comment of the trial judge were as follows:

“Defendant submitted the following requests for rulings and findings, certain numbered requests being omitted as applicable to an action of tort, viz:
‘2. The commodity alleged to have been sold to the plaintiff by the defendant was not inherently harmful or dangerous. ’
I find as requested.
‘3. If it be a fact that the commodity sold to the plaintiff by the defendant contained a substance which [146]*146injured the plaintiff, there is no evidence to show how or when it came there. ’
I refuse this finding. There was evidence that the cake was wrapped in cellophane and sealed when it was sold to plaintiff and that the seal was broken and the cellophane wrapper removed at the time it was eaten. I find that the nail was in the cake before its sale to plaintiff.
‘5. If it be a fact that the commodity sold to the plaintiff by the defendant contained a substance which injured the plaintiff, the cause of its so being contained is conjectural. ’
I so find, but this is immaterial if placed in the cake before its sale to plaintiff.
‘7. If it be a fact that the commodity sold to the plaintiff by the defendant contained a substance which injured the plaintiff, whether said substance became so contained during the process of manufacture or after or before or after sale is a matter of speculation and surmise. ’
See my finding in 3 above.
‘8. The plaintiff has not proven the giving of notice under the requirements of G. L. C., Sect. 38.’
I find that the plaintiff on the next day after the injury informed defendant’s salesman from whom he bought the cake, of the time and character of the injury, the time and circumstances of the purchase and the article purchased being identified in the information given said salesman. I rule that this was sufficient notice.
‘9. There was no breach of warranty on the part of the defendant running to and enuring to the benefit of the plaintiff because the contract of sale if any was made between Miss Keizer and the defendant. ’
There was testimony on the part of plaintiff that ‘we, Mrs. Keizer and I, bought the cake of the sales[147]*147man Adams’ that plaintiff bought goods from defendant’s truck which stopped there every day; that Mrs. Keizer was his housekeeper. Mrs. Keizer testified that she bought the cake. I find that she bought the cake as plaintiff’s agent and that plaintiff was the purchaser and recipient of the implied warranty, and that there was a breach thereof.”

The issues thus presented were stated at the bar by the defendant to be:

(1) Should it be ruled as a matter of law that there was no breach of a warranty between the plaintiff and defendants ?

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6 Mass. App. Div. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herbert-v-general-baking-co-massdistctapp-1941.