NEWPORT NEWS COCA-COLA v. Babb
This text of 57 S.E.2d 41 (NEWPORT NEWS COCA-COLA v. Babb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
THE NEWPORT NEWS COCA-COCA BOTTLING COMPANY, INC.
v.
ELAINE BABB.
Supreme Court of Virginia.
Charles E. Ford, for the plaintiff in error.
Thomas A. Williams, L. C. O'Connor and Charles H. Gordon, for the defendant in error.
Present, All the Justices.
1. Plaintiff sued defendant, a bottling company, for damages allegedly suffered by her from drinking a beverage which was bottled by it and was found to contain a snail. The bottle had come from a vending machine which was serviced about once a day from cases kept in a warehouse by the retailer who purchased them from defendant. It had been opened at the vending machine and carried 25 to 40 yards across an open courtyard to the building where it was delivered to plaintiff, who drank it almost immediately. The evidence for defendant tended to show that it used a high degree of care and the most modern methods in the process of manufacturing and bottling its product. Whether the snail was in the bottle at the time it left defendant's custody, or got into the bottle when the physical possession was in the intermediate vendor or some third party was a fact to be determined by the jury upon proper instructions.
2. Under the facts of headnote 1, it was error for the trial court to instruct the jury that they might infer negligence from the fact that the snail was found in the bottle, and that the law did not require plaintiff to show the particular dereliction. Since the continuity of possession between defendant and plaintiff was broken, defendant was entitled to make the defense that the foreign matter may have gotten into the bottle while it was out of its possession.
3. Under the facts of headnote 1, the trial court instructed the jury that if they found defendant bottled and placed on the market the bottle of beverage in question, and that plaintiff purchased it in due course of trade, and that as a result of defendant's negligence the bottle contained foreign substance and plaintiff was thereby damaged, it was their duty to return a verdict for plaintiff unless they believed she was guilty of contributory negligence. There was no merit in defendant's objection to this instruction, but the real issue could have been made clearer by the addition of appropriate words setting out that the negligence of defendant must have occurred during the process of manufacturing or bottling the beverage, or during the time the bottle was in its possession.
4. Under the facts of headnote 1, plaintiff complained that her illness from drinking the beverage had been aggravated by her anger over the fact that defendant's representatives had investigated her character and background after she filed a claim for damages, but she asked for damages only for the negligence of defendant in manufacturing and bottling its beverage and not for special or exemplary damages. She was permitted to testify that some of her fellow workers, as a result of the investigation, had asked her what kind of person she was, whether she had been in jail and where she came from. There was nothing in the evidence to indicate that defendant's investigation was improper in any way and evidence of the questions of her associates was pure hearsay, not connected with defendant, and should not have been admitted.
Error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Elizabeth City county. Hon. Frank A. Kearney, judge presiding. The opinion states the case.
SPRATLEY
SPRATLEY, J., delivered the opinion of the court. *362
This is another case in which recovery is sought against a bottling company for injury alleged to have been suffered by drinking from a bottle of Coca-Cola which contained obnoxious foreign matter.
We have twice recently in Norfolk Coca-Cola Bottling Works Land, 189 Va. 35, 52 S.E.(2d) 85, and Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. McCullers, 189 Va. 89, 52 S.E.(2d) 257, stated the rules for determining the liability of the bottler in this particular class of cases, -- that is, where the beverage has not been purchased by the consumer directly from the manufacturer, and the container of the drink is enclosed by a cap which it is possible to remove and replace by the use of care.
Elaine Babb, sometimes hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff, instituted this action by notice of motion against the Newport News Coca-Cola Bottling Company, Inc., for damages which she alleged she suffered as a result of drinking a portion of a bottle of Coca-Cola, which contained a decomposed snail or slug. The allegations of her notice of motion are to the same effect as those in the Land and McCullers Cases. After hearing the evidence and instructions of the court, the jury returned a verdict for $2,500 in favor of the plaintiff.
The defendant bottling company asks us to set aside the verdict on the grounds that there was no evidence of actual negligence on its part, for misdirection of the jury by the court, for the admission of improper evidence, and because the damages were excessive.
The facts in this case, in effect, are much like those in the Pepsi-Cola Case, and the law involved on the principal issue is precisely the same.
We will not undertake to set out the evidence in detail, since for reasons hereinafter assigned, there must be a new trial. Briefly stated, the pertinent evidence shows the following:
Elaine Babb, twenty-seven years old, the wife of a soldier in the United States Army stationed at Fort Monroe, *363 Virginia, was employed as a clerk in the Finance Office of the Army at that military post.
On the afternoon of October 10, 1947, M. M. Toulson, also an employee in the same office, left the Finance Department building, where he and a number of other clerks, male and female, were employed, to obtain some bottles of Coca-Cola for himself and his fellow employees. He went down the back steps of the building, across the open courtyard to a temporary building, twenty-five to forty yards distant, where a Coca-Cola vending machine, owned and operated by the Post Exchange of the Army was located. He purchased three or four Coca-Colas, including one for himself, opened each of the bottles, and retraced his steps across the open courtyard, up the back steps of his building, into the office occupied by Mrs. Babb and the other clerks. He placed one of the bottles on the desk of Mrs. Babb and distributed the others to his friends.
Mrs. Babb took a sip out of the bottle, exclaimed that it didn't taste right and a slight discussion followed. She was told that, "after you drink cokes for a while you don't taste anything." She went back to work and thereafter took several sips. She felt something slimy in her mouth hitting against her teeth. She immediately spit the matter out into a trash can and said, "There's something in this bottle." She went to a washroom where she became ill. Upon her return, there was found floating in the liquid remaining in the bottle something which looked very much like a snail or worm. Someone told her to see a doctor and get a lawyer. She called a representative of the defendant, and within a short time took the bottle and its contents to a laboratory for an analysis. She thereafter made claim against the defendant for damages and employed counsel to represent her.
Mrs. Babb testified that after drinking the Coca-Cola, she became ill, subsequently lost weight, and continued in bad health to the day of the trial of this case on December 6, 1948. She said that her illness was aggravated by reason of her anger over the fact that representatives of the bottling
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57 S.E.2d 41, 190 Va. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newport-news-coca-cola-v-babb-va-1950.