Hickman v. St. Louis Dairy Co.

90 S.W.2d 177, 232 Mo. App. 117, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 218
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 90 S.W.2d 177 (Hickman v. St. Louis Dairy Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickman v. St. Louis Dairy Co., 90 S.W.2d 177, 232 Mo. App. 117, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 218 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

*120 BECKER, J.

This is an action for damages brought by plaintiff through his next friend, against the defendant for injuries alleged to have been sustained on June 2, 1931, when plaintiff was nine months of age, as the direct result of drinking some of the contents of a bottle of milk sold by defendant to plaintiff’s mother, which milk contained ground and broken glass.

The case was tried to a jury which returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant in the sum of $1500. From the resulting judgment defendant appeals.

Plaintiff’s petition sets up two assignments of negligence: First, that defendant, its agents and servants, sold milk, filled with ground and broken glass to the plaintiff, for consumption, when they knew or by the exercise of .ordinary care could have known that plaintiff would drink said, milk and would become violently, sick and injured; second, that an inspection on the part of defendant, its agents or servants,. would; have disclosed broken and ground glass' in said, milk in; time, by the exercise of .ordinary- car;a, to have re-moved the same, and.the defendant could thereby have avoided injuring plaintiff, but carelessly and negligently failed to do so, and plaintiff sustained serious and. .violent injury and sickness.

The defendant’s answer, was a. general denial. .. .. ..

Defendant’s first assignment of error is in effect that. plaintiff. failed to make out a case for the jury, and that the trial court therefore erred in overruling its demurrer offered-.at the close of plaintiff’s case. The point .is 'vyithout merit.

In determining the question as to whether or not plaintiff made • *121 out a case for the jury we are mindful that’on demurrer plaintiff’s evidence, whether contradicted or not,, must be regarded as true, so long as it is not impossible as opposed to the physics of the case or entirely beyond reason, and that defendant’s, evidence must.be taken as false where it is contradicted by that of plaintiff. Further-more, plaintiff is entitled to the: benefit of every reasonable inference favorable to his case, which the- evidence tends to support. [Grubb v. Curry (Mo. App.), 72 S. W. (2d) 863; Marshak v. Grocery Co. (Mo. App.), 83 S. W. (2d) 185, l. c. 190; Freeman v. Term. R. R. Co. (Mo. App.), 78 S. W. (2d) 559; Mick v. Thompson Co. (Mo. App.), 77 S. W. (2d) 470, l. c. 474; Howard v. Sacks (Mo. App.), 76 S. W. (2d) 460, l. c. 463; Steger v. Meehan (Mo.), 63 S. W. (2d) 109, l. c. 110.]

So too, it must be remembered that a jury may-believe .all of the. testimony of any witness or may reject the whole of-it; as untrue,, or it may accept part of a witness’ testimony and reject .as untrue the remainder thereof, as the jury find the same to b:e true-or false when viewed-and considered in •'relation to the-, other- testimony and the facts and circumstances in- 'the case. [Rockenstein v. Rogers (Mo.), 31 S. W. (2d) 792, l. c. 798; Anderson v. Davis, 314 Mo. 515, 284 S. W. 439; Gould v. Ry. Co., 315 Mo. 713, l. c. 723, 290 S. W. 135.]

■Viewed in light of the rule above.Stated 'there- is- testimony in the record which if believed tends to prove that plaintiff’s motherrwas a regular customer of■ the defendant,1-and-on the day in 'question, and for-some time prior thereto, had -been purchasing a quart and a pint of -milk -each day.' -This milk was delivered'by-defendant’s driver in the morning between/tbAhours of six and six-thirty!; that it was ‘customary- for the driver in making -his delivery of the milk, tq set the bottles on the top step-of the stairs leading to the door of the plaintiff’s home; that the driver, .in carrying the-bottles of-milk from- his wagon- to -the doorstep would-place the bottles'in a specially designed’wire basket, the basket being -made in a manner intended to avoid the bottles striking- together; thát-on June-2; 1931, defendant’s driver placed a quart' and a-.pint bottle of milk-on the top step of plaintiff’s home at’the usual time;‘that plaintiff’s father’ a short time 'thereafter, took the milk- from the -door step, wálked through the four rooms of the home, and placed the bottles of milk in the refrigerator; that some time after eight o’clock that morning plaintiff’s mother went to the refrigerator and took out the pint bottle of milk,’ took it to the kitchen sink, examined the top of the bottle, then placed- it beneath the faucet and washed off the top and thereafter removed the cap and-put a nipple on the bottle, which nipple was practically new, and the top of which was punctured with three small holes to permit theinilk to be drawn through when in use for feeding an infant; that the mother gave the bottle *122 of milk-to plaintiff to drink therefrom and went about her work; that a short time thereafter the mother, hearing the baby cry, went to him and found that the baby had vomited curd which contained blood; and upon making -an examination thereof she found that the curd contained several needledike slivers of glass, and one or two small particles of glass; that she thereupon called a doctor who in her presence drained the balance of the .milk in the bottle through a clean napkin and found in the- napkin other slivers and pieces of glass, and that an examination of the bottle disclosed several slivers of glass on the inside thereof near the top. ,

On the question as to whether or not the milk was the milk left by defendant on the morning in question, there is the direct testimony of the mother that she examined the bottle and cap thereof and found it to be the bottle containing the usual and customary cap of the defendant.

In defendant’s case we find testimony in aid of plaintiff’s case. The sales superintendent for the defendant company testified, with reference to the physical possibility that bottles of milk when carried in the wire basket by the driver from the wagon to the customer, might bump and thereby cause chips of glass to splinter off from the inside of the bottle.

“Q. Now, when they do jump off the wagon with pint bottles mixed in with quart bottles, they do bump together, don’t they? A. I guess they do, depending on the driver.

“Q. Well, I say that could happen, couldn’t it? A. Possibly.

“Q. And the bumping together of these bottles could cause a breakage and chipping inside the bottle, could it not? A. If they were bumped hard enough together.’,’

In. light of the testimony we have set out above we rule that there was sufficient competent evidence-to take the case to the jury, and that the demurrer was well ruled.

Appellant next contends that instruction numbered two given at the request of plaintiff injected into the case a foreign issue when considered in light of the pleadings and the evidence in the record, and that this error was prejudicial to the rights of the defendant below. Instruction numbered two reads as follows:

“The Court instructs the jury that'if you find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff’s mother used a nipple ivhich contained a hole larger than usual or customary, and that the use of send ■nipple with said large hole therein, contributed ta plaintiff’s injury and sickness, if any,

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Related

Gould v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad
290 S.W. 135 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1926)
Anderson v. Davis
284 S.W. 439 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1926)
Rockenstein v. Rogers
31 S.W.2d 792 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1930)
Silliman v. Munger Laundry Co.
44 S.W.2d 159 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1931)
Gray v. Columbia Terminals Co.
52 S.W.2d 809 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1932)
Schulz v. Smercina
1 S.W.2d 113 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 177, 232 Mo. App. 117, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickman-v-st-louis-dairy-co-moctapp-1936.