The Coca-Cola Bottling Company v. Wood

123 S.W.2d 514, 197 Ark. 489, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 355
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1939
Docket4-5320
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 514 (The Coca-Cola Bottling Company v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Coca-Cola Bottling Company v. Wood, 123 S.W.2d 514, 197 Ark. 489, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 355 (Ark. 1939).

Opinions

Holt, J.

Appellee, Alice Wood, recovered judgment for $1,000 against appellant, in the White circuit court, to compensate damages alleged to have been sustained by drinking a portion of a bottle of Coca-Cola, bottled by appellant, which contained a rusty and corroded Coca-Cola bottle cap. The acts of negligence set out in her complaint are: “That the said plaintiff drank practically all of the contents of the said bottle of ‘ Coca-Cola’ that the contents of the said bottle were poisonous, unwholesome and unfit for human consumption in that it. contained a bottle cap which was rusty and corroded and from which all of the paint had been eaten away and which caused the said bottle of fluid to become poisonous and unfit for human use, and that the said plaintiff did not discover that the said bottle cap, so rusted, was in the said bottle until she had consumed practically all of the contents thereof. That the defendant was careless and negligent in the preparation of the said bottle of ‘Coca-Cola’ in that it permitted, the said bottle top, which was made of metal, with a cork filler and painted, to be-sealed in said bottle and sold for human consumption;, and that by reason of such carelessness and negligence,, the plaintiff became extremely sick and nervous and her system poisoned . . .” Appellant interposed a complete denial of all allegations of negligence.

There are three assignments of error presented here:: 1. That the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s, motion to require appellee to file cost bond. 2. That the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury to find for the defendant because there- was no' substantial evidence-upon which a verdict of the jury could be based. 3. That the verdict is excessive. The view that we have taken of this case malíes it necessary for us to consider only the-second assignment.-

The material facts, as disclosed by the record, stated in their most favorable light to appellee, substantially are: On October 18, 1936, appellee, in company with her husband, stopped at a filling station and while sitting; in their oar, drank abont three-fourths of a bottle of Coca-Cola. After drinking most of the contents of the bottle she discovered a crushed Coca-Cola cap •with a dark substance around it inside the bottle. Before drinking it she had been in good health. Some ten minutes after drinking same she became nauseated and nervous. They drove immediately to Beebe, Arkansas, where she was given an emetic which caused her to vomit several times. She remained in Beebe an hour or two and then proceeded to her home in Conway. Three of four days later she called her family physician and he prescribed for her and treated her from time to time at his office until she left Conway. She was unable to go to her husband’s place of business, a cleaning and pressing establishment, where she kept the books and assisted in waiting on the customers, for. a few days, during which time she kept the books at her home. Her doctor prescribed a soft diet for her which she has kept up more of less until the date of the trial. Her weight dropped from 145 pounds to 135 at the time of the trial, but was holding her own now and still suffers from pains in her stomach. The testimony of appellee’s husband was substantially the same as her own.

Dr. Abington, who gave her an emetic at Beebe, which caused her to vomit several times, stated he knew nothing as to the cause of her condition except what she told him.

Dr. Brook, appellee’s family physician, testified in substance that appellee had - previously been in good health; that she came to him several days after the occurrence complained of and he told her he didn’t know whether it was the Coca-Cola, the dinner she ate or Dr. Abington’s treatment, but that she was a pretty sick girl, and continued to be sick for some time after that; that he treated her until April or May and put her on a diet because she kept having’ a gastritic condition and pains; that she would talk to him by telephone and' come to the office and he would see her at her place of business and that he gave her anti-acids.

Dr. Dunklin, on behalf of appellee, testified in response to a hypothetical question as follows: “Q. Dr. Dunklin, I will ask you to state to the jury whether or not, in your opinion, if a bottle of Coca-Cola had sealed up in that bottle a cap consisting of metal, cork and paint, the usual Coca-Cola top, and remaining therein for some time, if the liquid in the said bottle of Coca-Cola with the cap sealed therein is taken into the human stomach if it would cause gastritis or an irritation to the inner lining of the stomach? A- Yes. Q. Do you know of any case in which that has occurred? A. No, I can’t cite you specifically to a case.” The testimony is undisputed that there was no chemical analysis of that part of the Coca-Cola remaining in the bottle in question from which appellee drank.

On behalf of appellant, the testimony of Dr. J. M. Kilbury was introduced, and he testified in substance that he was a chemist engaged in laboratory work, chemistry and pathology, or the study of diseases, in which he had been engaged for about twenty years; that he was also a licensed physician; that he conducted tests by breaking down Coca-Cola bottle caps, as well as other caps, so as to make a chemical analysis of same, which caps consisted .of the paint on them together with the iron, tin and cork in them; that iron is often given as a medicine and that an ordinary dose is three or four times as much as was found in one of these bottle caps; that the human body will absorb only a certain amount of iron,, any excess passing into the intestinal tract; that no harmful effects result from a.large dose of iron; that the amount of iron in a bottle cap taken into the human stomach would produce practically no effect; . . . that the bottle caps were dissolved by the use of acid and heat and the liquid content was fed to mice upon which it had no effect and that it would have produced practically the same effect on the mice that it would on a human being; that caps, both with paint and without paint, were placed in bottles and put in incubators which maintain a heat of about that of a human body and left ■'there two weeks; that in the case of the caps that had paint still on them.there was no substance in the Coca-Cola and in the ones from which the paint had been removed there was some tin that could be recovered, but that it was a very small amount, twenty to one hundred times less than a toxic dose and that in his opinion either of these Coca-Colas conld have been drunk by anyone . without any ill effects.

Giving to the above testimony of appellee its strongest probative force, and ignoring appellant’s testimony, we hold that it is not sufficient to support a verdict for appellee, because there is no evidence disclosed by this record of a substantial nature upon which a verdict can be based. The contents left in the bottle of Coca-Cola in. question were never chemically analyzed and no one knows whether there were any harmful ingredients in these contents or not. To assume that there were .and such was the proximate cause of appellee’s injuries, would be the purest speculation and conjecture, and but a guess. It has long been the settled rule of this court that verdicts of juries cannot be based upon speculation and conjecture, or guess. In Russell v. St. Louis, S. W. Ry. Co., 113 Ark. 353, 168 S. W. 135, we said: “But conjecture and speculation, however plausible, cannot be permitted to supply the place of proof. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 514, 197 Ark. 489, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-coca-cola-bottling-company-v-wood-ark-1939.