Sullivan v. H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc.

168 N.E.2d 80, 341 Mass. 216, 1960 Mass. LEXIS 581
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 23, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 168 N.E.2d 80 (Sullivan v. H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc., 168 N.E.2d 80, 341 Mass. 216, 1960 Mass. LEXIS 581 (Mass. 1960).

Opinion

Wilkins, C.J.

The plaintiff drank milk from a container in which was a dead mouse. In this action of contract or tort the first count against H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc., the producer, is based upon negligence. The second count against B. J. Lang’s Provision Company, Inc., which sold the container of milk, is for breach of warranty of merchantability. G-. L. c. 106, § 17 (2). The case was first heard by an auditor whose findings of fact were not to be final. He found for the plaintiff on both counts. At a trial in the Superior Court the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on each count. The defendants excepted to the denial of motions for directed verdicts and to the denial of a motion to strike certain findings of the auditor. On the second count there is a contention in the alternative that the plaintiff is entitled, at most, to nominal damages.

We first set forth “preliminary findings of fact” of the auditor. The plaintiff was a widow residing in Pembroke. Living with her was her unmarried adult son John. On Sunday, March 14, 1954, he purchased at Lang’s market a quart of Hood’s milk in a cardboard container, which was sealed. The top of the container was flat, and at one corner was a round hole through which the milk could be poured. This opening had a hinged cardboard cover. The son frequently made purchases for his mother, sometimes paying cash and sometimes charging to her account. As to his testimony that he did not remember which he did this time, the auditor stated, “I am convinced by further testimony, and I so find, that this purchase was for the use in the household by both John” and his mother.

The container was placed unopened in the plaintiff’s refrigerator. On Monday morning the plaintiff took out the carton and poured some milk in a cup of coffee, which she drank. She then replaced the carton in the refrigerator. An hour later, about 9 a.m., she took out the carton and poured a glass of milk, which she drank, and then returned *218 the carton to the refrigerator. About 9 :'50 a.m. she again removed the carton from the refrigerator and poured another glass which she drank. As she was drinking the second glass, she felt some “little stuff” go into her mouth and down her throat. Each of the two previous times when she had any of the milk “she felt that there was a ‘funny feeling in the carton. ’ ” After pouring the second glass, she felt as if something was moving inside it. 'She poured most of the milk in the sink, and saw “a lot of ‘little things’ in it.” When she poured out all the milk, she saw a dead mouse in the carton.

After a moment she started toward the telephone to call her daughter, but “she began to sweat and her stomach turned and she found that she couldn’t get to the phone.” She put her head on the kitchen table and slept from about ten o’clock until about two o’clock. She then answered a telephone call from her daughter, who came to the house in five or six minutes. The plaintiff told the daughter what had happened and fell asleep in a chair. She ‘ ‘ slept most all that evening and night and all the next day. During this time she broke into about fifteen or twenty sweats.” On Tuesday night she itched, and on Wednesday morning there was a rash all over her body, face, and hands. The rash subsequently turned into sores. “During the first six weeks she had fifteen or twenty sweats every day and she itched. The itching interfered with her sleep. ’ ’ iShe was nauseated. 'Since March 15, 1954, the plaintiff has had no milk. When she thinks of the incident, as she does frequently, her stomach turns.

We omit the auditor’s descriptions of the expert medical opinions given on behalf of the plaintiff or the defendants. The ‘‘preliminary findings” lack any clearcut statement of fact based upon such testimony. These descriptions are, for the most part, couched in terms of what a doctor “testified,” or are described as “testimony,” or as constituting “conflicting evidence.” The duty of the auditor under the rule issued to him was to find facts and not to report evidence. Spirito v. Capar, 337 Mass. 431, 432, and cases cited. See G. L. c. 221, § 56.

*219 The preliminary findings go on to state that testimony was introduced to show the method of manufacture of the carton by American Can Company and the subsequent filling of the carton with milk by Hood at its East Bridge-water plant. We do not repeat the findings on these subjects because they are not material to the view we take of the case.

“While the testimony on behalf of the defendants seems to indicate that it would be improbable for a mouse to be in the carton of milk at the time it was purchased by John Sullivan, I am satisfied that it was there at the time it was purchased. The fact that there was fecal matter within the milk confirms my feeling that the mouse was alive in the carton at some time prior to the introduction of milk into the carton. This can only lead to the inference that the defendant H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc., was negligent in the packaging of its milk.”

Here follow “Ultimate findings of fact based upon the foregoing preliminary findings of fact. ’ ’ Some of these, as numbered by the auditor, are: 1. “ [T]he purchase of the carton of milk by John Sullivan was made for and on behalf of the plaintiff.” 2. “ [T]here was an implied warranty of merchantability made by B. J. Lang Provision Company, Inc., in said sale.” 3. “ [T]he milk so purchased was unmerchantable in that it contained a foreign substance, to wit: a dead mouse and fecal matter from the mouse.” 4. ‘ ‘ [T]here was a breach by B. J. Lang’s Provision Company, Inc., of the implied warranty of merchantability.” 5. ‘ ‘ [A] s a result of the breach and by drinking the milk the plaintiff sustained injuries.” 6. “ [AJs a result of drinking the milk the plaintiff suffered no deleterious effect from taking into her body the fecal matter and ... no serious bodily harm was caused her by such intake. ” 7. “ However . . . the plaintiff suffered a severe emotional shock when she saw the dead mouse in the milk, and she realized that she had drunk some of the fecal matter from a dead mouse, and ... as a result of such emotional shock she has developed a condition within her body which causes her to *220 break out into perspiration, which, in turn so irritates her skin that she has developed a rash over much of her body, and in addition has made her nervous and caused her blood pressure to be increased.” 9. “ [T]he defendant H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc., was negligent in filling with milk a carton containing a mouse.” Findings 11 and 12 were noncumulative findings for the plaintiff in the sum of $4,000 on counts 1 and 2 respectively.

At the jury trial the plaintiff introduced the auditor’s report and evidence relating to notice to Lang of the alleged breach of warranty. There was testimony by the plaintiff’s son that in a conversation he had with the president of Lang three or four days after she drank the milk he said that she had been made quite ill and that “she should bring suit because of that damage to her.” A so called confirmatory letter dated April 27, 1954, from the plaintiff’s lawyer to Lang was admitted in evidence.

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168 N.E.2d 80, 341 Mass. 216, 1960 Mass. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-h-p-hood-sons-inc-mass-1960.