Martin v. Bartell Drug Co.

284 P. 96, 155 Wash. 317, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 807
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1930
DocketNo. 21853. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 284 P. 96 (Martin v. Bartell Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Bartell Drug Co., 284 P. 96, 155 Wash. 317, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 807 (Wash. 1930).

Opinions

*318 Main, J.

This action was brought to recover for the loss of a number of foxes which it was alleged was due to negligence chargeable to the defendant. The cause was tried to the court and a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $4,000. Motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was made and overruled. A motion for new trial was also made, and this was overruled, conditioned upon the plaintiff electing to remit $1,000 from the verdict and accept a judgment for $3,000, which he did. Judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff for $3,000, from which the defendant appeals..

The appellant, the Bartell Drug Company, a corporation, owns and operates a number of retail drug stores in the city of Seattle. The respondent operated a fox farm in the vicinity of the city. October 20,1927, the respondent went to. one of the appellant’s drug stores for the purpose of purchasing a package containing 100 tetrachlorethylene pills. At this time, he had written on a slip of paper the word “tetrachlore-thylene,” and stated to the clerk that he could not pronounce the word, but, handing the clerk the slip, said that that was what he wanted.

With reference to the circumstances attending upon the purchase, respondent testified:

“Q. Just tell the jury what you did with reference to purchasing any articles, if you did purchase any?
“A. I went to the Bartell Drug Company at Second and Pike and wanted tetrachlorethyléne. Well, I had never heard the name pronounced but a few times, and couldn’t remember the name, and I had a neighbor of mine write it on a piece of paper — no, he didn’t write it, he spelled it off of the box on his cook table, and as he spelled off two or three letters I would write those down, and he would spell out some more and I wrote them down, and I wrote the name ‘tetrachlorethylene’ down, and then I spelled it back to him and he checked *319 back and it was all right. Then I went into this drug store, and the clerk came to wait on me, and I says — -I laid this here piece of paper down and I says, ‘I can’t pronounce this, but this is what I want. ’ He looked at it, and I says ‘have you got it?’ and he said ‘Yes,’ and he went around behind the counter. He was behind the prescription counter, and he walked down and pulled out a box under the case somewhere and come out with a box of twelve. And he says — I says, ‘Is that the largest size box you have?’ and he says ‘just a minute and I will see.’ Then I asked him what the price of this was, and he said ‘Seventy-five cents.’ ‘Well,’ I says, ‘I would have to buy two of them and that would cost me a dollar and a half,’ and I says, ‘I understand a box of one hundred cost two and a half,’ and so I says, ‘That is what I want, a box of a hundred.’ So he went then and looked through the case and came back and says, ‘We haven’t got a box of a hundred, but,’ he says, ‘I will get it for you and mail it out to you.’ I says ‘That is all right if I know I will get it shortly.’ He says ‘You will get it tomorrow.’ I says, ‘If you promise to mail it out today and I know I will get it tomorrow,’ so he promises me that, and I paid him for a box of a hundred, and I made another purchase, and he gave me a receipt for this other purchase and a cash registry slip for the two purchases, and I went out and the next day I got in the mail—
“Q. (Interrupting): Just a minute. Have you the slip of paper that you showed to the clerk?
“A. I have.”

The appellant did not have a box or carton containing 100 tetraehlorethylene pills, and the clerk stated to the respondent that they would get them that afternoon and send them out by mail. During the afternoon of that day, the appellant purchased from a local store of Parke, Davis & Oo. a carton containing 100 “carbon tetrachloride” pills and mailed these to the respondent, which he received the next day. About a week later, after preparing his foxes, the respondent ad *320 ministered to them the carbon tetrachloride pills which had been sent to him, believing the same to be tetrachlorethylene, and, as a result, eight of the foxes died.

The action, as above indicated is for the purpose of recovering the value of the foxes which died as the result of having had administered to them carbon tetrachloride pills instead of tetrachlorethylene.

The first question is whether the appellant was negligent. If the evidence of the respondent is to be believed, he ordered tetrachlorethylene pills and was furnished with carbon tetrachloride. The evidence on the part of the appellant, if believed by the jury, would indicate that the respondent was aware that he was getting carbon tetrachloride, and that the article which he ordered was in fact furnished. This presented a question-for the jury. It is plain that, if the fact be that the respondent ordered tetrachlorethylene and the appellant gave him carbon tetrachloride pills, the appellant would be responsible for the error.

The rule that a retail druggist is not liable for injuries resulting from the use of an article when it is sold to the customer in the original package has no application in this case, because that rule- is based upon the assumption that the druggist delivers to the customer the article Called for, and, as stated, the jury had a right to find that this was not done in the present case. 9 R. C. L. 706; 19 C. J. 781; West v. Emanuel, 198 Pa. St. 180, 47 Atl. 965, 53 L. R. A. 329. In the case of Forney v. Sears, 153 Wash. 615, 280 Pac. 56, the druggist sold and delivered the articles called for, while here the appellant did not, as found by the jury, deliver the article called for and herein lies the distinction between the two cases.

It is next contended that the respondent was guilty of contributory negligence in not discovering that the article which was sent to him was not that *321 which he had ordered. The pills of the respective kinds are of substantially the same size, shape and color. They were put up in boxes or cartons of the same size, which have a strikingly similar appearance. In each of the boxes, is a small four-page circular on which are given the directions for the preparation of animals prior to administering the medicine and the quantity. When the box sent to the respondent was received by him, he took from it the wrapper and laid it aside. Across the front of one of the boxes, is printed the name “carbon tetrachloride,” and across the other, “tetrachlorethylene.” About a week after receiving the box, the respondent prepared the foxes for the medicine, and then administered it, with the result, as stated, that a number of them died.

It cannot be said, as a matter of law, that the respondent was guilty of contributory negligence in not discovering that he had received carbon tetrachloride pills when in fact he had ordered tetrachlorethylene. There was no occasion for him to read the directions, because, a short time before, he had assisted another fox farmer in administering tetrachlorethylene to sixty or seventy foxes, and knew the preparation of the foxes for that medicine and the quantity to administer.

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284 P. 96, 155 Wash. 317, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-bartell-drug-co-wash-1930.