Montgomery Ward & Co. v. McFarland

319 A.2d 824, 21 Md. App. 501, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 426
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 4, 1974
Docket762, September Term, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 319 A.2d 824 (Montgomery Ward & Co. v. McFarland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery Ward & Co. v. McFarland, 319 A.2d 824, 21 Md. App. 501, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 426 (Md. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Sweeney, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

William E. McFarland (McFarland) brought suit against Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc., (Wards), alleging that he contracted Pasteurella Tularemia, commonly known as rabbit fever, from one of two rabbits that he purchased from a store owned by Wards in Prince George’s County. McFarland alleged (a) negligence on the part of Wards in selling him a rabbit which had a communicable, infectious disease, and (b) breach of warranty as to the good health of the rabbit.

Trial was held before the Honorable Samuel W. H. Meloy and a jury of ten on October 11, 1973, and the jury returned a verdict for McFarland in the amount of $6,582.00 and an additional sum of $1,500.00 to McFarland and his wife for loss of consortium. The jury found for McFarland on the negligence count in the declaration, after first having returned a general verdict for him and being reinstructed by the trial judge that they could find on either the negligence count or the breach of warranty count, but not on both. Wards is taking this appeal from that judgment, alleging, inter alia, that the court erred in failing to grant its motion for a directed verdict and motion for judgment n.o.v.

McFarland has filed a cross-appeal, alleging that the court erred in requiring the jury to elect between the negligence count and the warranty count after it had rendered a general verdict. McFarland also alleges that the trial court erred in refusing to allow his physician to give his opinion as to the cause of his disease. •

It appears that on the evening of February 19, 1970, *503 McFarland purchased two rabbits from Wards as an early Easter gift for his children. He took the rabbits to his home, where they were handled extensively by him, and to a lesser extent by his wife and three children. On the evening of the purchase he noticed that one of the rabbits was scratching a lesion on its jaw, and so McFarland applied an ointment to the jaw, rubbing it in with his finger. He also noticed that the rabbit was quiet and sluggish, had no appetite, and was not as “frisky” as the other rabbit. The next morning, on looking into the cage which housed the rabbits, McFarland found the rabbit with the lesion dead, “lying in the corner of the cage with his face in the water bowl.” He cleaned out the cage, put the dead rabbit in a plastic bag, and disposed of it in the trash can. That same day he returned to Wards, where he was given another rabbit to replace the one that had died.

“A couple days” after the rabbit died, McFarland felt a pain in his jaw, noticed swelling in the jaw, and felt feverish. McFarland’s condition continued unchecked for two or three weeks, at which time, he said:

“[I] couldn’t open my mouth, and the side of my face was distorted, and there was a great deal of pain with it, and you couldn’t even sleep at nights.”

No other member of his family shared any of these symptoms. McFarland sought medical attention from his family doctor, who, according to McFarland, diagnosed his condition as mumps and gave him a prescription. After two visits to the family physician failed to effect a cure, he was referred to Dr. James C. King, an eye, ear and nose specialist. He first saw Dr. King on March 19th, a month after the purchase of the rabbits. He testified that on that date his jaws were so swollen that he was unable to open his mouth and he “couldn’t get a pencil in between [his] teeth.” Dr. King prescribed additional medication and had blood tests, x-rays and throat cultures made. McFarland testified that the acute stage of his illness lasted for three weeks to a month after his first visit to Dr. King, but that he remained on medication for three months, and it was at least that long *504 before he could open his mouth normally. Pain continued for a “couple months” after he began treatment with Dr. King and finally diminished. The only remaining difficulty as of the date of the trial was an occasional cramp in the mouth or jaw.

McFarland testified that he lost three months from his self-employment in the drapery business, with an estimated loss of income of $1,400.00. He also said that he and his wife were unable to cohabit for three months after he became ill, and only infrequently for an indeterminate period thereafter.

Dr. King testified that when he first saw McFarland, his main complaint was swelling and pain in the face, especially in front of the right ear, and the doctor’s initial impression was that “it looked like the mumps, somebody with the mumps.” To assist in the diagnosis, the doctor obtained a blood count, a throat culture, and a sialogram. 1 Those tests revealed a general enlargement of the right parotid gland, with no evidence of a stone or tumor. Dr. King and his partner prescribed various antibiotics for McFarland and during the period March 19th through March 26th they saw him for a total of four times. The doctor testified that on March 26th, McFarland visited his office, and:

“He looked very pale. He just looked obviously sick. And in the course of talking to him he got paler and paler, and finally I took him in the back room and laid him down, checked his blood pressure and talked to him a little bit more. Once he came around I said, ‘Now, look, this has been going on for four or five, six weeks. We have seen you four times in a week. I want you to think about anything you have done, any place you have been, anything different you have done, any out of the ordinary thing which you started or whieh you did around the time that your illness started.’ I said, ‘It’s obviously not the mumps carrying on this long. We *505 know it’s not a tumor or stone.’ I said, ‘It’s got to be something out of the ordinary. Now, look back in your mind and see if you can think of anything out of the ordinary.’ And at that point I got a blood count and ordered the throat culture on him, and he said at that time the only thing — he had talked to his wife that week and he said the only thing odd that they could think about was that he had gotten these rabbits for the children, and that the first week he had them, one of them had gotten sick with a festering sore about one of the eyes, and he tried to treat it with some antibiotic ointment at home, and that the rabbit had died and he buried it. He said that was the only thing they coaid think of that was out of the ordinary.
“Well, I checked him for — with the history of being exposed to a sick rabbit, I was looking for — MR. MCCARTHY: Court please, I am going to object to that. There is no testimony in this case that that rabbit was sick. We don’t know what is wrong with that rabbit.
THE COURT: You may proceed, sir. Overruled.
[DR. KING]: I checked the gentleman for any ulcers or sores on his hands. I checked his axilla, which is under the arm, for lymphnodes. I checked his neck for lymphnodes, and I checked his groin for lymphnodes. I felt his belly for any enlargement of the spleen or liver.
BY MR. BLANK:
Q. Did you look for lesions or other marks about the body?
A. Yes.

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Bluebook (online)
319 A.2d 824, 21 Md. App. 501, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-ward-co-v-mcfarland-mdctspecapp-1974.