Kroger Grocery Co. v. Lewelling

145 So. 726, 165 Miss. 71, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 275
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1933
DocketNo. 30301.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 145 So. 726 (Kroger Grocery Co. v. Lewelling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kroger Grocery Co. v. Lewelling, 145 So. 726, 165 Miss. 71, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 275 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant is a retail dealer in groceries, including canned vegetables. Appellees purchased of appellant a can of tomatoes, the contents of which, 'upon being eaten by appellees, made them ill because of certain poisonous substances, which were later and upon a more particular examination found to have been embedded in the contents of said can. Appéllant had purchased the can in question along with a large number of like cans from a reputable packer of tomatoes. In fact,' appellant had dealt with the said packer for eighteen years, and had purchased from this particular packer more than 7,000 *81 cases of tomatoes of 24 cans to tlie case, and the can here involved was the only one throughout these years about which any complaint had ever been made. Appellees recovered judgment against the said retail dealer for the consequent injury upon the theory of an implied warranty, and appellant, having brought the case here, raises this sole question: Whether or not a retail dealer of canned food, or food sealed in containers, in the original package, for immediate human consumption, and which the dealer has purchased from a reliablé packer, and without negligence, and without any reason to suspect that as to the can or package sold there is anything wrong, is to be held liable to the purchaser upon an implied warranty of fitness and purity.

It is well settled that, there is no implied warranty of soundness under the laws of this state in the sale of animal foods. Royal Feed & Milling Co. v. Thorn, 142 Miss. 92, 93, 99, 107 So. 282, and cases there cited. It is also well settled that the manufacturer or bottler or packer of foods or beverages for. immediate human consumption is bound by an implied warranty that his said products are wholesome and fit for such consumption, and that this warranty runs to the retail purchaser as though the consumer had purchased directly from the manufacturer or packer. Rainwater v. Hattiesburg Coca-Cola Bottling Co., 131 Miss. 315, 95 So. 444; Jackson Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Chapman, 106 Miss. 864, 865, 64 So. 791; Pillars v. R. J. Reynolds Tob. Co., 117 Miss. 490, 78 So. 365, 366; Grapico Bottling Co. v. Ennis, 140 Miss. 502, 106 So. 97, 44 A. L. R. 124; Jackson Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Grubbs, 143 Miss. 590, 108 So. 732; Coca-Cola Bottling Works v. Lyons, 145 Miss. 876, 111 So. 305; Coca-Cola Bottling Works of Greenwood v. Simpson, 158 Miss. 390, 130 So. 479; Curtiss Candy Co. v. Johnson (Miss.), 141 So. 762. In Pillars v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., supra, it is said that, to the general rule that the manufacturer is not liable to the ultimate *82 consumer, because of tbe absence of contractual relations between them, an exception has been made in cases of human foods in order to protect “the health of the people, and to insure a scrupulous care in the preparation of those articles of commerce so as to reduce to a minimum all danger to those using them.”

But the question now here before us has not been expressly decided by this court. There was some general language used in Dulaney v. Jones & Rogers, 100 Miss. 835, 840, 57 So. 225, 226, which would indicate that the writer of the opinion in that ease entertained the view that a retail dealer would b“e liable upon “an implied warranty of soundness in the case of the sale of provisions intended for human food,” but that case was a suit for feedst.uffs for animals. Hence what was said there was in the nature of discussion rather than decision, so far as concerns the present question. In the recent case, Green v. Brown, 159 Miss. 893, 897, 133 So. 153, 154, this court expressly pretermitted decision upon the question “whether . . . the dealer who retails to the consumer . . . food in cans in the original package, is liable upon an implied warranty in any event.” It is true that in Pillars v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., supra, the distributor, as well as the manufacturer, was sued, and that the court, while holding the manufacturer liable, decided at the same time that there was no liability against the distributor, the opinion concluding upon that point that the distributor could not have suspected that poisonous matter was concealed in the food and was not negligent in not discovering the noxious contents thereof. But it is argued that this opinion proceeded upon the theory of negligence, whereas the point now being submitted is not in tort but in contract.

There is a significance, however, in the long line of cases in this state above cited, that not yet in a single one of them has any judgment been obtained against a retail dealer upon an implied warranty of soundness or fitness *83 of sealed or bottled foods or beverages, and we believe in only two of them has the retailer been sued, and these in joinder with the manufacturer. And these cases go back through a period of more than twenty years. This is indicative that in the general opinion of the bench and bar of this state there is no such liability as is insisted upon in the instant case, or else that it has been distinctly anticipated that actions against retail dealers would not be approved by affirmative responses by the jurors taken from the body" of the good and lawful men of the county or counties. In either event in all this there is a persuasiveness, in respect to what our conclusion should now be, sufficient to tilt the scales were they otherwise evenly balanced upon the question now before us.

Turning to the decisions in other states, the division of opinion is well defined, and the arguments in support of the opposing views are advanced with strength. We cannot undertake to discuss in detail the numerous cases on the subject, or even to cite all of them here. The reporter will group them in his abstracts of the briefs. For convenient reference it may be said, however, that many of them, and all those that may be regarded as leading, are cited in the annotations 26 C. J., pp. 783, 784, 786, and 11 R. C. L., p. 1124. Among the leading cases relied on by" appellee in support of the liability are Wiedeman v. Keller, 171 Ill. 93, 49 N. E. 210, Griffin v. James Butler Gro. Co., 108 N. J. Law, 92, 156 A. 536, and Ward v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 231 Mass. 90, 120 N. E. 225, 5 A. L. R. 242, The reasoning of these cases, and those of a similar import, is that the public safety demands that, in all sales of provisions for human consumption, there should be an implied warranty" of the fitness and wholesomeness of said provisions, and that, although the retail dealer is not and cannot ordinarily be awa.re at the time of sale of the unwholesomeness of an article of food which is sealed in a can or other *84 container in the original package, yet the implied liability should be imposed on the retailer because he is in a better position to know and ascertain the reliability and responsibility of the manufacturer than is the retail purchaser, and because the retail dealer is better able to protect himself by way of recoupment against the manufacturer in view of the fact he knows and is in touch with the manufacturer; in other words, that responsibility to the retail purchaser should be placed upon the retail seller, since the dealer is the more often in a better position to protect himself against an original wrong of this kind than is the consumer.

On the other side, there are the cases, which uphold the view, to quote from Walters v.

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Bluebook (online)
145 So. 726, 165 Miss. 71, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kroger-grocery-co-v-lewelling-miss-1933.