Schneider v. Suhrmann

327 P.2d 822, 8 Utah 2d 35, 1958 Utah LEXIS 178
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1958
Docket8716
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 327 P.2d 822 (Schneider v. Suhrmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schneider v. Suhrmann, 327 P.2d 822, 8 Utah 2d 35, 1958 Utah LEXIS 178 (Utah 1958).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice.

Kurt A. Schneider sued for damages resulting from contracting trichinosis by eating mettwurst sausage 1 furnished by the defendants. Upon the basis of a jury’s answers to special interrogatories, the trial court entered judgment against Emil Suhr-mann the retailer, but refused to do so against the other defendants Noorda and Guss, the supplier.

Plaintiff’s appeal assigned two main errors: (1) failure to award judgment against the supplier; (2) inadequacy of the damages given against Suhrmann, the retailer.

The contention that plaintiff is entitled to a judgment against the supplier rests upon the jury’s answers to interrogatory No. S, which consisted of two parts: (a) did supplier defendants know that Suhrmann intended to sell the mettwurst without processing it to kill trichina, to which the jury answered “no.” (b) Would a reasonable prudent person in their position have known that Suhrmann would sell the sausage without so processing it, to which they answered “yes.”

Plaintiff bases his claim of negligence against the supplier upon the doctrine, of which we do not doubt the correctness, that the supplier of a commodity, directly or through a third person, is subject to liability to those whom he should expect to use it if the supplier (a) knows of its dangerous potential, (b) knows or reasonably should know that the user will not realize the danger, and (c) the supplier fails to use reasonable care to safeguard against the danger or to inform the user of the facts which make it likely to be dangerous. 2

To deal with the problems involved it is well to have in mind something of the nature of the disease and of the defendants’ method of operation. Trichinosis is caused by a small animal organism known as trichina. Its usual source is uncooked pork, in which the quiescent larvae may exist. *38 When taken into the human digestive tract, the cyst enclosing the larvae dissolves, liberating the larvae, which then mature, mate and reproduce. The female lays eggs, or new encysted larvae, which find their way into the tissues of the larger muscles, particularly the arms, legs and diaphragm. The larvae cause a’ cálcium deposit in the muscles and, if in sufficient number, may permanently affect them. During the initial ■and active stages of the disease it produces fever, headaches, chills and muscular weakness. The illness, and the resultant injury suffered varies greatly from very mild cases that are barely noticeable to severe ones which may last several weeks or months, and leave permanent muscular weakness. The danger may be guarded against by either freezing the pork for a long period, or by the simpler method of cooking, or heating it to at least 137 degrees Fahrenheit. This is usually done to all types of meat products containing pork, such as wurst and sausage, which are ordinarily eaten without being further cooked by the consumer.

The defendant Emil Suhrmann, who sold the mettwurst to the plaintiff, operates a delicatessen in which he specializes in prepared meats and sausages. He purchased this product from the defendant, Jordan Meat and Livestock Company operated by Albert Noorda and Sam L. Guss, who also operate the Valley Sausage Company which manufactures these prepared meats. As we view the issues, their exact business arrangement is not material here but they may be regarded and referred to as the supplier.

Suhrmann had been buying mettwurst from the supplier which had already been heated to the required 137 degrees Fahrenheit while it was being smoked in ovens for flavoring. In the Summer of 1955 the supplier informed Suhrmann that they could no longer furnish him with this mett-wurst because the processor would not cool down the ovens to accommodate the processing of it, to which he replied:

“Let me have it, prepare it as far as you are able and then deliver it to me, and I will finish it. I have an oven to smoke it, and I will take care of the rest. What you don’t — what you cannot do I will complete in my own business.” (Emphasis added.)

In accordance with this direction the supplier processed the meat in the usual manner as completely as they could without the use of ovens, and delivered this unfinished product to Suhrmann. According to the evidence, he had indicated that heating spoiled the flavor his customers preferred in the mettwurst. In order to preserve the natural flavors, in the smoking process in his oven, he purposely kept the temperature below 80 degrees.

The jury found that plaintiff contracted trichinosis from eating mettwurst purchas *39 ed from Suhrmann and no question is raised as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain that finding.

Notwithstanding the jury’s answer to interrogatory No. 5(b) above referred to, to the effect that the supplier in due care should have known that the mettwurst would he sold without proper heating, the trial court refused to enter judgment against them on the ground that the evidence would not justify doing so.

The only fact of significance the plaintiff is able to point to inculpating the supplier is that they knew the unfinished mettwurst delivered to Suhrmann might contain trichina. It is true that Mr. Hoffman, who worked for the supplier, helped Suhrmann smoke the meat, working for the latter part time. But the jury, upon disputed evidence, expressly answered that Hoffman was not the agent of the supplier. Looking at it from the point of view of the supplier, it is difficult to see how they could reasonably be expected to disregard the directions of their customer. In the absence of knowledge of danger to the public, they had no duty to police or supervise Suhrmann in the operation of his business, and likely could not have continued to do business with him had they done so.

Suhrmann had the primary duty to safeguard the public from the danger involved. He accepted the responsibility and in a sense insulated the supplier from further duty in regard to the mettwurst by requesting that the meat be delivered to him uncooked and assuring them, “I have an oven to smoke it, and I will take care of the rest * * * What you cannot do I will complete. * * * ” Excluding the knowledge of Hoffman, who, because of the jury’s finding above referred to, must be regarded as the agent of Suhrmann and not of the supplier, the latter could have nothing more than suspicion that Suhrmann would sell the mettwurst to the public without correctly processing it. There must be something more substantial than mere suspicion or conjecture upon which to base liability.

The discussion above set forth is applicable, and is also deemed sufficient answer to, the other two bases upon which plaintiff seeks to predicate liability against the supplier. The first, of these rests upon the admittedly correct doctrine of implied warranty: that the supplier is deemed to warrant the product to be reasonably safe and suitable for the use for which it is intended. That rule, sound where applicable, may only be invoked where the supplier knows, or reasonably should know, that the retailer is to sell the product to consumers without further processing. 3

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Bluebook (online)
327 P.2d 822, 8 Utah 2d 35, 1958 Utah LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-suhrmann-utah-1958.