MacLehan v. Loft Candy Stores, Inc.

172 So. 367, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 72
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1937
DocketNo. 16535.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 172 So. 367 (MacLehan v. Loft Candy Stores, Inc.) 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
MacLehan v. Loft Candy Stores, Inc., 172 So. 367, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 72 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

WESTERFIELD, Judge.

Miss Kathleen MacLehan brought this suit against the Loft Candy Stores, Inc., claiming damages of $2,373 for physical pain and suffering and medical expenses which is alleged to have resulted from her having eaten a portion of a mince pie that she had bought from one of defendant’s confectionary stores.

Defendant, 'in its answer, denied any knowledge concerning the alleged purchase of the pie from it, but averred that, if plaintiff did purchase the pie, it was entirely fit for human consumption, having been manufactured out of the best ingredients under modern and sanitary conditions.

There was judgment below in favor of plaintiff, as prayed for, in the sum of $653.-30.

The defendant in this case was, at the time plaintiff alleges she purchased the mince pie, engaged in business in the city of New Orleans as a retail dealer in candy and confections, operating several stores. It maintained a bakery in which its cakes and pies were manufactured and from which delivery was made, upon requisition, to retail stores conducted by it. On January 4, 1935, the plaintiff, a school teacher by occupation, in company with a friend, Miss Hilda Barrett, entered one' of the defendant’s retail stores about 11 a. m., ordered a light breakfast consisting of toast and coffee, which she consumed on the premises, and purchased a mince pie, which was placed in a paper carton and taken home by her. Miss MacLehan had not previously eaten anything that morning because she had received communion at a Mass at the Jesuits’ Church and was required by her religion to abstain from food for some time prior thereto. About 3 o’clock in the afternoon she ate a small portion of the pié, but after she had taken a few bites, she remembered that it was Friday and ate no more because the pie contained meat and her church forbade her to eat meat on Friday. She put the pie in her ice box, and about 7 o’clock that evening she became intensely nauseated and suffered great pain in her stomach and bowels and had a fit of vomiting. She took some medicine which she had at hand without apparent beneficial result. She was still sick the following day, but felt better on *368 Sunday, got out of bed, consumed a cup of coffee, and went to church. About 5 o’clock on Sunday afternoon she ate part of a small ham sandwich and felt better. About 7 p. m. Sunday evening, she took the mince pie out of the ice box and ate a full slice, believing that she needed more food. At 10 o’clock Sunday evening she became violently ill with cramps, diarrhea, vomiting, and excessive perspiration. She was compelled to remain in her bathroom until about 2 o’clock in the morning and “could not leave, con-tinously vomiting, and perspiration pouring out and I could not move; I had to stay there; I couldn’t get out. I didn’t want to wake the roomers and I strugggled a long time until I could get back to bed.” The next morning red blotches appeared on her body and she sent for Dr. Cosmo J. Tardo, who ordered her to go to Mercy Hospital, where she remained until the foilwing Sunday afternoon, when she left the hospital and went to the home of a friend, Mrs. Herman Friedman, where she remained in bed for'another week.

Dr. Tardo attended her while she was at the hospital and at the home of Mrs. Friedman and advised her to consult Dr. N. R. Thiberge, an expert allergist, which she did. Dr. Thiberge discovered that she was sensitive to certain forms of protein found in milk, meat, beans, and wheat, and that she was susceptible .also to the protein in the air. He gave- as liis opinion, from the history given -him by Miss MacLehan, that she had not been sensitized recently because of the absence of any previous “allergic” symptoms. Dr. Thiberge, however, in spite of Miss MacLehan’s sensibility to proteins of the character found in mincemeat pies, did not believe that the small quantity of pie which she had consumed was sufficient to awaken to activity the protein sensibility to which Miss MacLehan was predisposed, saying that she might have consumed -a larger quantity without ill effect if the pie had been- wholesome. The mince pie which Miss MacLehan had consumed had been compounded, according to the testimony of defendant, of brown sugar, apples, raisins, citron, orange peel, currants, spices, molasses, suet, lean beef, alcohol, flour, Crisco, salt, and water.

Dr. Thiberge implies or suggests that the pie was the cause of plaintiff’s illness, but he made no positive assertion to that effect.

Dr. Tardo, however, was positive in his opinion that Miss MacLehan suffered from food poisoning and from the history of the case given him by his patient he believed the mince pie was the offending food. He explained that poison food might be divided into four different classes:

“The first type, food substances to which have been added some chemical poison — for instance, arsenic — or impurities in the ingredients, or in the manufacturing. A second would be those in which some of the ingredients of the food have some intrinsic poison in them, for instance, mushrooms— certain types of food we can’t classify. The third would be those in which by microbic action some decomposition has taken place prior to ingestion. The last type would be foods which carry with them certain microbes that when they get into the body cause poison symptoms. This is the classification given by Jordan who has written books on the subject.”

He pointed out that when a person is sensitive to certain food the effect of eating them is manifested by a skin rash called urticaria, with which plaintiff was afflicted after having eaten the pie, but that vomiting, diarrhea, and low blood pressure are symptoms 'which are not present except where the allergic individual has consumed poisonous food or “food which by microbic action some decomposition has taken place prior to 'ingestion.” Dr. Tardo also stated that in cases of food poisoning the symptoms appear soon after eating the poisonous food because “nature will attempt to get rid of the offending agent by either vomiting or diarrhea, or both, together with a loSs of fluids, there are signs and symptoms of shock dehydration, the patient perspires and becomes depressed, weak, and also manifests nervous symptoms, is irritable, together with this a skin rash may appear.” There is a distinction to be noted, says the doctor, between food poisoning and food intoxication. The term “food intoxication” might be applied to some chronic condition, in which the individual is sensitive to certain foods; whereas, “food poisoning is generally used for an acute condition, coming all of a sudden, causing severe symptoms.”

Mrs. Friedman, plaintiff’s friend, with whom she resided while ill, after leaving the Mercy Hospital, testified that she had partaken of a small portion of mince pie about a quarter of an inch square with very unpleasant results. It made her sick and left a bad taste in her mouth, a “brassy taste,” for weeks afterwards. Red blotches appeared on Mrs. Friedman’s body as they did on plaintiff. Mrs. Friedman’s testimony, however is very unsatisfactory. When she was first placed upon the stand, she described *369 the effects of the small particle of pie which she had consumed as being much less severe than she did later on, when she again took the stand and elaborated upon the consequences. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 367, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maclehan-v-loft-candy-stores-inc-lactapp-1937.