Sicard v. Distributing Co.

13 N.E.2d 250, 133 Ohio St. 291, 133 Ohio St. (N.S.) 291
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1938
Docket26600 and 26688
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 13 N.E.2d 250 (Sicard v. Distributing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sicard v. Distributing Co., 13 N.E.2d 250, 133 Ohio St. 291, 133 Ohio St. (N.S.) 291 (Ohio 1938).

Opinion

Myers, J.

This cause raises a question of implied warranty and negligence in the sale of an article inherently dangerous. Plaintiff purchased a product known as Roux Shampoo Tint for use as a hair dye in her beauty parlor. It was purchased from a local Cleveland dealer alleged in the petition to be the agent of the defendant distributor, George Kremer. Whether there was privity of contract between plaintiff and defendant does not clearly appear. In using the hair dye on a customer plaintiff was injured by reason of its containing a poisonous substance. The injurious substance in the product caused plaintiff to suffer from dermatitis, a condition which affected her face, hands and arms, causing her skin to rise and be swollen in a very painful manner. By reason of her injuries plaintiff suffered great pain and was unable to carry on her business and even her household work at home. What obligations and rights are involved in the sale and delivery of such a product? Do they all flow from the contract of purchase itself or may there be common-law rights flowing in the same channel in such manner that the violation of one may also be a violation of the other?

We may say that in the execution of a contract a common-law right beyond the contract may be violated —the right not to be injured in person or property. The buyer of a product not only has a contractual *294 right that the product will be as warranted, express or implied, but the further common-law right not to be harmed or injured by some unknown ingredient or defect when the product is used in the manner intended. In the instant case, the Court of Common Pleas held that the action sounded in tort, while the Court of Appeals ruled that the case rested on implied warranty alone.

In the sale of an article, the seller owes a duty beyond the mere contract. Not only must the goods be according to contract, but if used-according to directions they must not carry harm to the buyer. In Clerk and Lindsell on Torts (9 Ed.), page 2, it is said: “There may be a tort which arises out of breach of contract and yet is independent of it.” In the manufacture and sale of goods, the seller may not include therein, beyond the terms of the contract, anything which, unknown to the buyer, will cause the latter injury. This extra duty to refrain from including in the article any dangerous substance unknown to the buyer may be illustrated in the bestowal of a gift from one to another. Even though there be no purchase price, one has no right to bestow an article containing a hidden danger on another as a gift, knowing that the use thereof by such other will cause the latter injury. But where there is consideration, the responsibility to refrain from including in any such article any hidden danger is very much greater. There is the obligation that the goods will be fit for the particular purpose intended and the further duty to refrain from including therein any hidden danger unknown to the buyer. Failure to meet the first obligation is a breach of warranty, express or implied; failure to meet the second duty is negligence.

A good discussion of this subject is found in Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Hennigan, 33 Tex. Civ. App., 314, 76 S. W., 452, as follows: “The word ‘tort’ denotes an injury inflicted otherwise than by a mere *295 breach, of contract; or, to be more nicely accurate, a tort is one’s disturbance of another in a right which the law has created, either in the absence of contract or in consequence of the relation which a contract had established between the parties. Bishop on Non-contract Law, Sec. 4. In this. definition the term ‘right’ is employed strictly in a legal sense; that is, ‘in the sense it implies something with which the law invests one person, and in respect to which, for his benefit, another, or perhaps all others, are required by the law to do or perform acts, or to forbear or abstain from acts.’ Cooley on Torts, 23. Though a tort is a breach of a duty which the law, in distinction from a mere contract, has imposed, yet the imposition of it may have been because of a contract, or.because of it and something else combining, when otherwise it would not have created the duty. In such a case the party injured by the nonfulfillment of the duty may proceed against the other for its breach or for the breach of the contract, at his election, for'one overlaps the other.” The negligence involved may be the breach of a duty imposed by common law or by statute. Pine Grove Poultry Farm, Inc., v. Newton Ry Products Mfg. Co., Inc., 248 N. Y., 293, 162 N. E., 84, Also see Devlin v. Smith, 89 N. Y., 470, 42 Am. Rep., 311.

Circumstances constituting a breach of warranty may also be negligence. If the circumstances concern only the question of whether the product may properly be used for the purpose intended or represented, there is no negligence involved. But if the product sold is later found to be unfit for the use intended and also, by reason of some unknown dangerous ingredient, injures the buyer, there is not only a breach of warranty but also negligence. In such a case the buyer, subject to the provisions of Section 11306, General Code, may incorporate in his complaint all the ultimate facts tending to prove not only the breach of warranty but also the negligence involved.

*296 “A wholesale druggist sold to a retailer a dangerous drug bearing a false label. The retailer sold it to a doctor who sold it to a patient and the latter took it on the faith of the label and was thereby injured. Despite the absence of privity the court held the wholesale druggist liable to the injured party.” Underhill, The Law of Torts (Canadian Ed.), 36; Thomas v. Winchester (1852), 6 N. Y., 397, 57 Am. Dec., 455. Approved in Dominion National Gas Co. v. Collins (1909), A. C., 640.

Situations may arise where the facts and circumstances are so involved that the pleader is not certain whether the issue is one of implied warranty or negligence, or both. The facts and circumstances may be so complex that the question of whether there has been a breach of implied warranty, or negligence, would be for the jury under proper instructions from the court. “ Whether a given thing is dangerous may be sometimes a question for the court and sometimes for the jury.” MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co., 217 N. Y., 382, 389, 111 N. E., 1050, L. R. A., 1916F, 696. The pleader is under no obligation to allege conclusions of law. Continental Supply Co. v. Fisher Oil Co., 150 La., 890, 91 So., 287. He is required in his complaint to set forth only the ultimate facts.

In the instant case the plaintiff alleged both warranty and negligence. The plaintiff purchased the hair dye known as Roux Shampoo Tint for a specific purpose. The evidence introduced tended to prove that the hair dye was not only unfit for the purpose intended but also contained a poisonous ingredient unknown to the plaintiff and which in the use of the product on a customer injured the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 N.E.2d 250, 133 Ohio St. 291, 133 Ohio St. (N.S.) 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sicard-v-distributing-co-ohio-1938.