Taylor v. F. W. Woolworth Co.

98 P.2d 114, 151 Kan. 233, 1940 Kan. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1940
DocketNo. 34,534
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 98 P.2d 114 (Taylor v. F. W. Woolworth Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. F. W. Woolworth Co., 98 P.2d 114, 151 Kan. 233, 1940 Kan. LEXIS 96 (kan 1940).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hoch, J.:

Plaintiff was awarded damages for personal injuries which she alleged were the result of eating part of an unwholesome sandwich served by the defendant company in a public eating place. Judgment was for $937, from which defendant appeals, and also from orders overruling motions for a new trial and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

Appellant contends: (1) that the verdict was procured by perjured and fraudulent testimony of the plaintiff and her doctor; (2) that the verdict was arrived at under the influence of passion and prejudice induced by improper and prejudicial statements made by plaintiff’s counsel in his argument to the jury; and (3) that the damages awarded were excessive.

[234]*234« The plaintiff, Delores Taylor, testified that about noon on Wednesday, September 12, 1938, she went to the store of the defendant company — the Woolworth store, in Wichita, Kansas — accompanied by her mother and her young son. They stopped at the eating place maintained in the store and she ordered a ham sandwich and ate about half of it; that it tasted “sort of -moldy” and she handed it to her mother, who said it was “terribly molded and black,” that the girl at the counter took it and threw it in the garbage can and she ordered another sandwich, that she ate part of it and got so sick she had to leave; that they went to the office of Doctor Chipps and Doctor Chipps gave her some medicine; that they were there about half an hour and then took a cab and went home and she stayed in bed all day; that she was worried about a radio singing contest that she was to take part in, and that she did sing that afternoon, but did not go to the club where she was accustomed to sing until the next night; that in the afternoon of the day she ate the sandwich she called Doctor Bernstorf and went to his office; that Doctor Bernstorf gave her some medicine to take home with her and that she had been taking it ever since until the week before the trial (which was in April, 1939), and that he then gave her a different kind of medicine for her nerves; that she had not been able to eat pork or ham and didn’t eat at all for four days after eating the sandwich; that she had been nervous and could not eat the food that she ate before; that she fell off in weight from 112 or 115 to 96 pounds in two weeks and that she then weighed 102 or 103 pounds; that she had been filling singing engagements as many times as possible, but hadn’t been able to do all her work; that she was doing radio work fifteen minutes a day. On cross-examination she testified that immediately after leaving the store they went to Doctor Chipp’s office and home from there, that later she called Doctor Chipps, but he wasn’t in his office, and then she called Doctor Bernstorf and went to his office, then went back home, and then to the radio station. She said that she did not know Doctor Bernstorf before and that he was recommended to her by a lady who lived in her mother’s house; that she went to the radio station between four and five o’clock in the afternoon to take part in a contest and was there about twenty minutes; that she sang at a club the next day, Thursday, and on Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights, and as a prize for winning the contest was given a trip to Chicago on September 27, for an audition with one of the major broadcasting com[235]*235panies; that she was in Chicago four days; that she saw Doctor Bernstorf every other day before she went to Chicago; that she started singing over the radio right after Thanksgiving and had been singing there every morning since January 1; that she had not refused any engagements at the radio station but had-refused two programs from someone else and they were the only ones she had refused; that she went back to Chicago on November 12 for two weeks, during which time she rehearsed in the studio and sang one program on the radio; that she did not see a doctor while in Chicago but took with her a supply of medicine which Doctor Bernstorf had given her; that she sang three times a week over the radio until January 1 and six days a week since that time and did not miss a program after January 1; that she missed four programs before January 1 because she was too nervous and sick. Later on she testified that she went to Chicago the second time on October 12 or 13, instead of on November 12, and came back about November 1.

Doctor Chipps testified that the plaintiff came to his office and said that she was very sick and thought she had been poisoned by some food, that he examined her and found her pulse and color normal and that her heart wasn’t exaggerated or weak, that' she tried two or three times to vomit but couldn’t vomit and that she didn’t look ill; that he gave her a dose of alkaline powder; that she was in his office about thirty minutes; that in his opinion she was not ill from food poisoning, and that she was not poisoned by anything she ate at noon, as food poisoning would not develop that quickly; that he later saw the ham sandwich which was represented to be part of the one she had eaten, that the bread and meat appeared fresh and he suggested that it be taken to Mr. Kabler, a chemist and bacteriologist, for examination; that he was in his office the remainder of the afternoon after the plaintiff left.

Doctor Bernstorf testified that he first met the plaintiff on September 12, when she came to his office and complained of cramping and sickness of her stomach. She said she had been vomiting and was rather in a state of collapse; th$t she had eaten a sandwich which made her sick; that he had treated her since September 12 and she was still under his- care; that she was suffering from food poisoning when he first saw her on September 12; that she had been weak, her blood pressure was down, she was losing some weight, had indigestion, that she would probably never be able to eat certain foods again and is probably allergic to pork; that he couldn’t state [236]*236how long she would suffer from nervous disorders; that her singing made her nervous; that the poison food affected her nerves and that he had been giving her medicine to help her digestion and nervousness. On cross-examination he testified that he did not have his office records with him and could not tell how many times he had seen her, that it was around twenty or thirty times as nearly as he could recall; that when the plaintiff called at his office on September 12 she told him that Mr. Sowers, plaintiff’s attorney in the action, had sent her to him. Later, on redirect examination, he testified that he imagined he had been mistaken when he said that Mr. Sowers sent the plaintiff to his office on September 12, because he found a notation on his record “Clarence Sowers on October 11.” Later in the trial Doctor Bernstorf produced his office books and an office card purporting to show the office visits made by the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 P.2d 114, 151 Kan. 233, 1940 Kan. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-f-w-woolworth-co-kan-1940.