Title v. Pontchartrain Hotel
This text of 449 So. 2d 677 (Title v. Pontchartrain Hotel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Marshall E. TITLE
v.
PONTCHARTRAIN HOTEL and its Liability Insurer the ABC Insurance Company.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Marshall E. Title, pro se.
Walter C. Thompson, Jr., Owen A. Neff, Henry E. Yoes, III, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.
Before SCHOTT, AUGUSTINE and WILLIAMS, JJ.
WILLIAMS, Judge.
Defendant, the Pontchartrain Hotel, appeals a trial court judgment awarding *678 plaintiff, Marshall Title, $2,810.00 in damages for injuries sustained when he bit down on a pearl while consuming a fried oyster at defendant's restaurant.
The trial court's Reasons for Judgment stated: "This is a case of strict liability. The Hotel furnished food that was dangerous for human consumption. The condition was forseeable." Plaintiff was awarded $2,500.00 for pain and suffering and $310.00 in special damages for dental work.
Defendant argues that the trial court erred in imposing strict liability and contends that because the pearl was a natural part of the oyster eaten, the proper standard was one of negligence. Defendant further asserts that it was not negligent.
Plaintiff urges the court to abandon the "foreign-natural" substance test enunciated in Musso v. Picadilly Cafeterias, Inc., 178 So.2d 421 (La.App. 1st Cir.1964), writs ref. 248 La. 468, 469, 179 So.2d 641, and adopt the "reasonable expectation" test used by a number of other jurisdictions.[1] Plaintiff asserts that under this test the defendant would be strictly liable because a customer consuming fried oysters at defendant's restaurant should not reasonably expect to encounter a pearl inside the prepared oyster. Plaintiff additionally requests the court increase the trial court award by $620.00 to cover medical expenses and mental anguish for a future root canal procedure.
THE "FOREIGN-NATURAL" TEST VERSUS THE "REASONABLE EXPECTATION TEST"
The court in Musso, supra, thoroughly reviewed the law of other jurisdictions and noted that the vast majority which had considered the question had adopted the "foreign-natural" test for liability rather than the "reasonable expectation" test. The court stated:
We believe the majority view on the subject under consideration to be reasonable and sound. It recognizes and affirms the high degree of care imposed upon the server of foods but does not inflict upon him the unconscionable burden of becoming the absolute, unrestricted and unqualified insurer of his customers. If the server permits alien, extraneous matter not constituting a natural part of the ingredients or finished product (such as glass or other noxious substances), to enter his product during preparation or processing, he is liable for breach of his implied duty to serve a product free of foreign, deleterious substances. However, should the restaurant keeper inadvertently leave in the food substances natural to the ingredients or finished product he is not liable to the customer, as the food is not thereby rendered unwholesome and unfit for human consumption. As a result there is no breach of the implied warranty of wholesomeness.
Plaintiff complains that the "foreign-natural" test "draws a line," holding liable the purveyor of a foodstuff containing foreign material while arbitrarily exonerating the purveyor of a food when the harm-causing substance happens to be natural to the food itself.
What the plaintiff fails to point out is that the Musso court did not stop with the "foreign-natural" test as defined by other jurisdictions, but gave additional protection to the consumer injured by a "natural substance" in his food by requiring the purveyor prove himself free of negligence:
"An obvious extension of the foregoing rule must perforce be made where the vendor of foods negligently permits substances natural to the ingredients or finished product to remain in the food served the customer and illness or injury results therefrom. Under such circumstances the restaurant keeper is liable because of his negligence."
The Musso court first determined that the defendant could not be held strictly *679 liable on the basis of implied warranty for serving a slice of cherry pie containing a cherry pit, since the pit was natural to the pie's ingredients. Then, the court examined the defendant's preparation of the pie for negligence after enunciating the following standard of care:
We believe the degree of care incumbent upon the restaurant operator in selecting, preparing and cooking food for customers, including the removal of substances natural to the ingredients or finished product, such as bones from fish or meat and stones or seeds from vegetables or fruit, is the same as that which a reasonably prudent man skilled in the culinary art, would exercise in the selection and preparation of food for his own table."
Nine years after the First Circuit decided Musso, this court considered the same issue in Loyacano v. Continental Ins. Co., 283 So.2d 302 (La.App. 4th Cir.1973). Plaintiff broke a tooth when she bit into a bone inside the ground meat she had purchased from defendant Winn-Dixie Food Store. This court quoted extensively from Musso and concluded, "[W]e follow the majority view expressed in Musso.... We believe the principles announced to be controlling in a consideration of the facts of this case." Yet apparently the court then refuted the "foreign-natural" test expressed in Musso and employed the "reasonable expectation" test:
It may be said that a product can be considered defective if it does not meet the reasonable expectations of the ordinary consumer as to its safety. It is not the fact that a defect is a natural one which is important to the inquiry, but the fact that the ordinary consumer would expect that he might encounter it, and thus he would naturally take his own precautions."
If this can be considered an adoption of the "reasonable expectation" test in spite of this court's express approval of the Musso "foreign-natural" test, it should be noted that this court then excepted the defendant from its newly-established strict liability on the premise that the sealed package of ground meat was not intended to be consumed as is, but rather was to be further processed by the individual cooking the meat for a meal. This court then applied the "foreign-natural" test upon the vendor of sealed packages to be further processed by the consumer, explaining:
... it seems to us that the strict liability imposed upon vendors of sealed packages of that nature, cannot be imposed upon the vendor here, except insofar as a foreign object would be considered. For a natural object, such as a bone, from the only evidence produced in this case, it appears that the inquiry should be directed to the size of the bone left in the ground meat. [the size to determine whether defendant were negligent].
Interestingly, having absolved the defendant of strict liability, this court then determined defendant's negligence through a "reasonable expectation" test:
"Certainly the reasonable expectation of the ordinary consumer is that the processor and vendor of ground meat would exercise the same care as that which a reasonably prudent man skilled in the art of meat handling would exercise in the removal of bones from the meat.
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449 So. 2d 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/title-v-pontchartrain-hotel-lactapp-1984.