McAlester Coca-Cola Bottling Company v. Lynch

1955 OK 4, 280 P.2d 466, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 384
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 7, 1955
Docket35994
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1955 OK 4 (McAlester Coca-Cola Bottling Company v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAlester Coca-Cola Bottling Company v. Lynch, 1955 OK 4, 280 P.2d 466, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 384 (Okla. 1955).

Opinion

O’NEAL, Justice.

Plaintiff below, J. D. Lynch, recovered a money judgment against the defendant below, the McAlester Coca-Cola Bottling Company, in an action for damages for injuries to his face and left hand resulting from the explosion of a bottle of Coca-Cola manufactured or processed by defendant and sold to Gobby’s Cafe, and thereafter resold to plaintiff on or about March 28, 1950.

Plaintiff’s action sounds in tort as well as an alleged breach of an express or implied warranty. To sustain plaintiff’s cause *468 of action, based upon the alleged tort of the defendant, it was pleaded:

(1) That the injuries sustained by plaintiff were due solely to the carelessness, negligence and want of care of the defendant in using a defective bottle which had not been properly constructed;

(2) Was due to an improper mixing and composition of the Coca-Cola placed in said bottle; and

(3) To excessive pressure injected into the bottle in the manufacture of the product contained therein.

With reference to plaintiff's cause of ac'tion based upon the express or implied breach of warranty, plaintiff pleaded that the Coca-Cola bottle and contents were sold and delivered by defendant to Gobby’s Cafe in violation of an express or implied warranty to the cafe and the public; that said soft drink had been properly compounded and placed in a bottle that was safe for human use.

The pivotal question for our decision is whether plaintiff has established one or more of the acts of negligence alleged to sustain the verdict in his favor, and the judgment rendered thereon.

The record discloses that on the 28th day of March, 1950, plaintiff purchased three bottles of Coca-Cola at a restaurant operated as “Gobby’s Lunch or Cafe” in Hartshorne, Oklahoma. The purchase was made from Leona Wansick, an employee in the cafe. Plaintiff placed the three bottles on the front seat of his automobile and proceeded to drive toward his home. When he reached a point approximately one block east of the cafe, one bottle of the Coca-Cola burst and particles of glass injured plaintiff’s face and left hand. Particles of glass were removed from plaintiff’s face and hand by a local physician who testified that the tendons of plaintiff’s left hand were permanently damaged.

Leona Wansick, who made the sale to plaintiff, testified that cases of Coca-Cola were from time to time delivered to the cafe by the defendant, and were stored in the rear of the cafe; that various employees of the cafe would remove the Coca-Cola bottles and place them in the cooler. She was unable to state in what manner these bottles of Coca-Cola were removed from the cases and placed in the cooler by other cafe employees.

Walter Gorham, the owner of the cafe, testified that the McAlester Coca-Cola Bottling Company of McAlester, delivered several cases of Coca-Cola to the cafe once or twice a week and they were stacked in the rear of the restaurant; that once or twice each day employees of the cafe would fill the cooler with Coca-Cola and other soft drink products; that ordinarily he or his father filled the cooler either in the morning or in the evening of each day, but he was unable to state whether the bottle in question had been placed in the cooler on the 28th day of March, or some days previous thereto.

Gene McBee testified that he operated the delivery truck of the defendant in the delivery of Coca-Cola to defendant’s dealer in Hartshorne; that he delivered several cases of Coca-Cola to Gorham’s Cafe on March 28, 1950; that he stacked the Coca-Cola cases in the rear of the Gorham restaurant; that his truck carries 146 cases of bottled Coca-Cola, and that he has observed bottles break during deliveries when the temperature stood at 100 degrees or above; that he has never observed a bottle burst during the months of March or April.

Upon cross-examination he stated that all empty bottles are examined by him prior to loading them upon his truck for return to the plant, and that any bottles appearing to be chipped, or otherwise injured, are removed and charged to the dealer. When the truck arrives at the plant the empties are re-examined by him for further defects and any injured bottle is then discarded. The bottles are then run through a washer and sterilized under steam pressure, after which they are re-examined by defendant’s employees by the use of electric light bulbs. After the bottles are refilled they are again inspected in the same manner for observable defects.

Defendant contends that plaintiff’s evidence wholly fails to sustain his contention that the injury sustained by plaintiff was *469 due solely to the carelessness, negligence and want of care in using a bottle which, had been improperly constructed and was due to an improper mixing of the composition of the Coca-Cola, or was due to the excessive gas pressure injected into the bottle by the manufacture thereof.

Defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence in chief was overruled. Thereafter, defendant introduced evidence tending to establish that the defendant purchased its bottles from the Owens Illinois Glass Co., Chattanooga Glass Company and the Liberty Glass Company; that the bottles so purchased were of uniform specifications and standards prescribed by the United States Bureau of Standards. The bottles remain the property of the defendant and remain in use unless discarded for observed defects.

Defendant’s manager testified that the driver of the delivery truck made the first inspection of the empty bottles when they were loaded for return to the plant. Another inspection was made when the bottles were unloaded at the plant. In each instance, bottles with chips or cracks, or other observed defects, were discarded and not further placed in use. In preparing bottles for refilling they are placed sideways in front of an electric light, and if defects are thus observed the bottle is discarded. The bottles are then run through a washer for cleansing and sterilization, after which another inspection is made of the bottles, and they are then filled with Coca-Cola and carbonated water at a pressure of 60 pounds to the square inch; that a pressure of 60 pounds is comparable to pressure employed by manufacturers of soft drinks generally by those engaged in the industry. After the bottles are capped they are again inspected with electric lights to discover either foreign matter or defects in the structure of the bottle.

A Chemist testified that he selected 24 Coca-Cola bottles at random at defendant’s plant, and placed them upon a hydrostatic testing machine to determine the internal pressure the bottles would stand. The test disclosed the lowest bottle failed at 450 pounds pressure per square inch; the strongest bottle broke at 1245 pounds pressure per square inch; that the average of the 24 bottles tested failed or broke at a pressure of 694 pounds per square inch. He further stated that the continued use of a bottle did not affect its resistant strength, and that he had found that bottles would break from slight external blows.

Defendant renewed its demurrer and moved the court for a directed verdict, which demurrer and motion were overruled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1955 OK 4, 280 P.2d 466, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcalester-coca-cola-bottling-company-v-lynch-okla-1955.