Keenan v. GOEBEL BREWING COMPANY

59 N.W.2d 103, 337 Mich. 98, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 367
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1953
DocketDocket 76; Calendar 45,628
StatusPublished

This text of 59 N.W.2d 103 (Keenan v. GOEBEL BREWING COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keenan v. GOEBEL BREWING COMPANY, 59 N.W.2d 103, 337 Mich. 98, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 367 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

(dissenting). Richard M. Keenan, by his guardian, brought suit against defendant Goebel Brewing Company, a Michigan corporation, herein *99 referred to as Goebel, and Charles W. McGannon, codefendant, doing business as Tri-City Distributing Company, herein referred to as codefendant. Before trial plaintiff came of age and prosecuted the case in his OAvn behalf. For approximately a year and a half prior to July 5,1949, the late Thomas Keenan, father of plaintiff, operated a grocery store in Detroit, Avhere he also sold a large amount of bottled beer, particularly during the summer months. He handled the product of several breweries, including that of Goebel. At that time the latter sold its product for retail home consumption in 3 different containers, (1) in the usual, standard thick bottle, also called “export” bottle, which was to be returned to Goebel; (2) in cans; (3) in a new type of bottle made of thinner glass and which was not returnable to Goebel. These contained much less glass than the “export” bottles and are variously called “no-return,” “one-Avay,” “throw-away,” “nonrefillable,” or “nonreturnable” bottles.

Goebel’s products were handled by codefendant who, in the latter part of June, 1949, induced Thomas Keenan to try out Goebel’s product in the thin “no-return” bottle. On June 23, 1949, an employee of codefendant delivered a quantity of Goebel’s beer in export bottles and in cans. He also delivered 4 cartons of the new “no-return” bottles, which plaintiff’s father agreed to try out. The “no-return” bottles were delivered in sealed hard pasteboard containers, each 8-1/2 inches high and containing 4 “carriers” of 6 bottles each. The “carrier” is made of cardboard, has a cardboard handle and is somewhat similar to those carriers used for Coca-Cola, except that there is a lining to each of the 6 partitions of Goebel’s carrier so as to protect the bottles from directly knocking against one another. Only the necks of the bottles are not thus protected. The delivery driver of codefendant placed the 4 larger *100 cartons in a stack 4 cartons high in the center of Thomas Keenan’s small store, a few feet in front of a pillar. The driver opened the top carton, exposing the “carriers” of 6 “no-return” bottles each, and placed a placard in front of them which described them as “new throw-away bottles.” The display was in a conspicuous spot in the middle of the store, accessible to anyone who chose to look at the carriers or examine the bottles.

On July 4,1949, plaintiff returned from a vacation in Canada. At the time he was 18 years of age and in the eleventh grade in high school. Evidently he was a good student with bright prospects. He had intended to become an architect. On the day following his return he went to his father’s store, took a broom and started to clean up the floor when he heard one Lieutenant Maurice A. Van Acker, a customer, remark to his father that he saw that “G-oebel has got the throw-away bottles now.” Yan Acker stepped over to the cartons containing G-oebel’s new “no-return” bottles, looked at them for a moment but did not touch them, and went to the counter where the bill for groceries he had purchased was being added up. Plaintiff’s curiosity was then aroused. He set his broom aside and walked over to the display of the “no-return” bottles, took one from the open carton on top and held it at a slight angle in order to read the label when the bottle exploded with a noise like that of a firecracker—through internal forces, as claimed by plaintiff, but because of external force, as claimed by Groebel. As a result plaintiff sustained such a severe gash in the eye that it had to be enucleated. No claim is made that the judgment of $15,000 is excessive. Plaintiff, without any equivocation or reserve, swore positively that his hands were free of any other instrument or article when he lifted the bottle; that he did not knock the bottle against any *101 other object; and that he did not let the bottle fall, but that it exploded without any impact from the outside. His testimony is clear, positive and unevasive. Mr. Keenan, Sr., met his death at the hands of bandits a short time later and his testimony, therefore, became unavailable. Lieutenant Van Acker was called into military service, but his deposition was taken. He testified that although he was not watching plaintiff at the precise moment the bottle exploded, he did see him immediately thereafter; that plaintiff was holding the neck of the still capped bottle in his right hand, the remainder of the bottle having fallen in broken pieces to the floor; that the broom had been left in another part of the store and that plaintiff held nothing in his other hand; that plaintiff was not standing near the pillar of the store; and that no other bottle in the display was affected by the explosion. Straight, positive testimony as to how the accident occurred is thus presented. Plaintiff claimed that Goebel neglected its duties to protect the public in that “it did utterly fail and neglect to check the variable internal pressures of such bottled beer and to provide safe and suitable bottles or containers for said bottled beer, which would permit the handling thereof in the common and usual manner for sale, disposal, use or examination without injury to persons handling such bottled beer, or in the vicinity where the same was kept, displayed or stored, and did permit to be put and placed into the avenues of commerce a bottled-beer product containing defects which were known to said defendant corporation, or should have been known, by the exercise of reasonable care, and which bottled beer was not packaged in a safe glass container when handled in the common and usual manner.”

Defendant based its defense largely on the testimony of 3 experts, 2 of whom in particular had *102 considerable experience in testing causes of breakage of bottles. No question is raised as to the qualifications of tbe experts. They appear to have given much time and study to what causes bottle breakage, an infrequent but not uncommon occurrence, especially where there is fermentation in or carbon dioxide added to the contents of the bottle. These 2 experts referred to a short treatise on bottle breakage and its causes, * written by P. W. Preston, another expert. The article has also been published in pamphlet form and as such was introduced as an exhibit.

The testimony on the part of G-oebel shows the process of brewing and bottling beer, to which carbon dioxide is added so as to give the beer effervescence and taste. However, only a limited amount is added, for otherwise the beer will foam too much in the bottling process, the foam pre-empting space required for the beer and resulting in having less than the standard amount of beer in each bottle. The experts further testified that there is no further fermentation in beer after it is bottled, and that in this respect it differs from certain vinous products whose fermentation continues after bottling and produces carbon dioxide gas. The latter products require thick bottles and other protective measures are used.

The fragments from the broken bottle were gathered together after the accident and with the use of cellophane tape the experts reconstructed the bottle, so far as was possible with the glass that was picked up.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pattinson v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
52 N.W.2d 688 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1952)
Hall v. Horak
44 N.W.2d 848 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1950)
Lyford v. Foster
21 N.W.2d 113 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1946)
MacRes v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
287 N.W. 922 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1939)
County of Ottawa v. Zwagerman
201 N.W. 463 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1924)
Burghardt v. Detroit United Railway
173 N.W. 360 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.W.2d 103, 337 Mich. 98, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keenan-v-goebel-brewing-company-mich-1953.