Marigny v. Dejoie

172 So. 808, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 126
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1937
DocketNo. 16371.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 172 So. 808 (Marigny v. Dejoie) 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
Marigny v. Dejoie, 172 So. 808, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 126 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Edward Marigny, suffering from a minor ailment, summoned his physician, who prescribed certain medicine in the shape of pills and directed that two be taken at bedtime. The physician prepared a prescription order reading as follows:

“Tabletae hydrargyri chloridi mitis comp. * * * Two at bed time as directed.”

The prescription order was sent to the pharmacy .owned by defendants, of which one of them, Lucille Dejois Tureaud, was the pharmacist. She, in filling the prescription, which, when translated, called for compound cathartic tablets,, erroneously sent bichloride of mercury tablets of 7% grains each. Marigny took two of the tablets and almost immediately became violently ill. He was rushed to the Touro Infirmary for emergency treatment, where the contents of his stomach were removed by means of a stomach pump. He was then taken to the Flint-Goodridge Hospital, where he remained for some time. He has since suffered severely and, contending that the error in filling the prescription resulted from negligence on the part of the pharmacist and that all his subsequent sufferings have resulted from that error, seeks- recovery from defendants, owners of the pharmacy.

Defendants contend that the mistake in filling the prescription did not result from negligence and that, even if there was negligence, the proximate cause of the resulting unfortunate occurrence was the contributory negligence of- plaintiff himself in not noticing that the box in which the tablets were contained bore the inscription “for external use only” and in not noticing, also, that the tablets themselves were stamped on one side with the word “poison” and on the other with the familiar skull and cross-bones.

In the district court there was judgment for plaintiff for $350. Maintaining that the amount of the award is insufficient, plaintiff has appealed,, and defendant has answered the appeal praying for a reversal of the judgment and for the dismissal of the suit. *

The principal contention of defendant is that the error resulted from the fact that the physician used the word “tabletae,” instead of “pilulae” in preparing the prescription order. It is practically admitted that the remaining Latin words used, when interpreted, mean “compound cathartic,” but- it is argued that compound cathartic is customarily compounded in pill form and not in tablet form and that, when the pharmacist saw the word “tabletae,” or “tablets,” she was justified in assuming that it was not compound cathartic “pills” that the physician intended. She, the pharmacist, states that bichloride of mercury tablet’s and compound cathartic pills contain very much the same ingredients, except that the former contain a much larger quantity of mercury and that the two are so similar that she was justified in assuming, from the use of the word “tabletae,” that the physician intended the one which is generally prepared in tablet form and not the one which is usually found in pill form.

There seems to be no doubt whatever that the words used by the physician meant “compound cathartic” and not “bichloride of mercury” and there is also no doubt that compound cathartic is merely a rather potent purgative, whereas bichloride of mercury is a deadly poison. That the said ■pharmacist, or some one connected with the establishment, realized the error, is *810 evidenced by the fact that apparently an attempt was made to destroy the prescription blank when it was discovered that bi-chloride of mercury had been furnished instead of compound cathartic.

In view of the dangerous nature of the tablets which were furnished, we think that even if there was justification for the error which was made, there was extreme negligence in delivering the deadly poison in a container which did not on its face show the dangerous character of the contents. In section 7 of 'Act No. 66 of 1888 it is provided:

“ * * * That all pharmacists, druggists or apothecaries, shall label all bottles, vials,, jars, boxes, parcels, packages, or other receptacles, or coverings, or wrappings of drugs, medicines or chemicals sold or dispensed by them, with a label in legible writing or printed letters, giving the name of the proprietor of the store, the name of the physician prescribing, or shop and the place of sale of said .drug, medicine 'or'chemical; and in case the medicine,, drug or chemical be of a nature poisonous to the human system or to animals, said label shall have printed thereon a skull and cross bones, with the word ‘Poison’ in large, heavy lettering.”

On the container, which was a small pasteboard box, there was nothing to show that the contents were in any way poisonous except the printed words “for external use only.” There was ho word “poison,” there was no facsimile of the familiar skull and cross-bones, and, in fact, there was typewritten, in accordance with the doctor’s instructions, “two at bed time, as directed,” which directions would ordinarily be taken to mean that two should be taken internally, or, in other words, should be swallowed. In view of the fact that plaintiff had been instructed by the physician to take two internally, we d'o not believe that it can be said that he was negligent in not noticing the words “for external use only,” or, if he did notice them, in not assuming, since they were printed on the regular label of the pharmacist, that the doctor’s instructions, which were in typewritten form, were intended to be followed rather than the general warning in printed form, “for external use only.”

Defendants point, also, to the word “poison” printed on each of the tablets and to the skull and cross-bones, also printed on each of them, and they maintain that, in view of these warnings, it was negligence for plaintiff to take the said tablets internally. But the tablets are very small, are of a bluish gray color, and the warnings to which defendants point might well be overlooked' by any one who had been instructed to take the pills or tablets internally. We do not mean to say that the printing of the word “poison” on each tablet and the printing of the skull and crossbones might not, in many instances, serve a useful purpose, but we do say that, in view of the statute of 1888 and in view of the rather small size of ¿he tablets on which the warnings were printed, it was negligence on the part of the pharmacist to fail to plainly mark the container with such warnings as would have been readily noticed.

The measure of the obligation of a pharmacist or druggist who dispenses poisons is set forth by the Supreme Court of Louisiana in Trumbaturi v. Katz & Besthoff, Ltd., 180 La. 915, 158 So. 16, 19. It is true that the facts of that case bear only slight resemblance to those found here. Still, there is involved here, as there was there, a poisonous drug, and, in discussing the duty of druggists to use extreme care in dealing with such drugs, the court said:

“ ‘In the discharge of their functions, druggists and apothecaries, persons dealing in drugs and medicines, should be required not only'to be skilful, but also exceedingly cautious and prudent, in view of the terrific consequences which may attend, as they have not unfrequently in the past, the least inattention on their part. Cooley on Torts, pp. 75, 76; 648-9.
“ ‘All persons who deal with deadly poisons are held to a strict accountability for their use.

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 808, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marigny-v-dejoie-lactapp-1937.