Tombari v. Connors

82 A. 640, 85 Conn. 231, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 7, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 82 A. 640 (Tombari v. Connors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tombari v. Connors, 82 A. 640, 85 Conn. 231, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 119 (Colo. 1912).

Opinion

Roraback, J.

This action is against a druggist for the negligence of a clerk employed by him in filling a prescription. The prescription, as intended by the doctor who wrote it, called for powders to be taken three times a day, each one containing five grains of calumba, with other ingredients. The drug clerk who compounded the prescription substituted calomel for calumba. The defendant denied the negligence alleged in the plaintiff’s complaint, and also based his defense upon the allegation that his clerk was a duly licensed pharmacist. The Court of Common Pleas found the issues for the plaintiff, and held that the clerk should, by the exercise of due care, have read the prescription as calling for calumba, or at least that there was such doubt as to the correct reading as should have led him ■to inquire of the doctor, and that there was negligence in compounding the powders which he delivered to the plaintiff. The substance of the defendant’s appeal is that the court erred in reaching the conclusions just stated.

The finding shows that in July, 1910, the defendant, who is a licensed pharmacist, owned and conducted a drug store in New Britain, and that one Benjamin Cutner, who is also a licensed pharmacist, was in his employ as a clerk. The plaintiff is living with her husband and children in New Britain. She is an Italian, and does not speak or understand the English language. *233 On July 23d, 1910, she was suffering from an attack of indigestion, and with a friend, who acted as an interpreter, went to a doctor’s office in New Britain. The doctor diagnosed the plaintiff’s complaint as indigestion, and gave her a prescription, with directions to have it filled at some pharmacy. Mrs. Tombari, with her friend, went to the drug store of the defendant, and gave the prescription to Cutner, the clerk, to be filled. The ingredients written in the prescription, as the doctor intended them to be read, are as follows: “Rhei, Calumba, Bismuth Sub., Sodii Bicarb, Zingiber, Fiat in Chart XXIV, One t. i. d.” The interpretation, as the doctor intended it to be read, is as follows: “Rhubarb one drachm, Calumba, subnitrate of bismuth, Bicarbonate of Sodium, and ginger, each two drachms. To be made into twenty-four powders. One three times a day.” The clerk read the prescription as intended, except that he interpreted the second word to mean “calomel,” instead of “calumba”; and he accordingly put up the powders, each containing five grains of calomel. Calumba is a mild bitter tonic, useful in functional disturbances of the digestive organs, and is not used frequently. Calomel is chloride of mercury, and is in frequent use in small doses as a purgative and stimulant of the liver. A prescription for five grains of calomel to be taken three times a day, making a total of one hundred twenty grains, or two drachms, in eight days, would be unusual, though not unprecedented in some violent diseases. The quantity of calomel compounded by the clerk attracted his attention, and he inquired of the plaintiff through her interpreter if she understood the dose, and had any special instructions from the doctor. The record does not disclose that any response was given to this inquiry. The taking of six of these powders by the plaintiff as prepared produced a very violent diarrhoea and *234 vomiting by which she was rendered excessively weak, and also produced an excessive flow of saliva, which continually filled and flowed from her mouth; produced the unpleasant odor of mercury; and also produced great pain in her gums, and caused the temporary loosening of her teeth. Her lips and throat became swollen and painful. She sent for the doctor, who immediately discovered the mistake that had been made, and gave her remedies to relieve her of the effects of calomel.

It is elementary that the master who undertakes to perform a service is liable for the negligence of his servant, who, within the scope of his employment, is performing the services undertaken. McKiernan v. Lehmaier, 85 Conn. 111, 81 Atl. 969.

The fact that Cutner, the defendant’s clerk who compounded the prescription in question, "was a competent druggist of experience,” does not relieve the defendant from a claim for damages for injuries sustained on account of negligence of his clerk. "The most skillful and competent may be, and human experience teaches us will be, sometimes negligent. Hence the fact that one is skillful and competent may prove that he will generally be more careful than the unskillful and incompetent; but it has no tendency to prove due care on a particular occasion.” American Straw Board Co. v. Smith, 94 Md. 19, 21, 50 Atl. 414; Smith v. Middleton, 112 Ky. 588, 66 S. W. 388; Burgess v. Sims Drug Co., 114 Iowa, 275, 86 N. W. 307.

The legal measure of the duty of druggists toward their patrons, as in all other relations of life, is properly expressed by the phrase "ordinary care,” yet it must not be forgotten that it is "ordinary care” with reference to that special and peculiar business. In determining what degree of prudence, vigilance, and thoughtfulness will fill the requirements of "ordinary *235 care ” in compounding medicines and filling prescriptions, it is necessary to consider the poisonous character of so many of the drugs with which the apothecary deals, and the grave and fatal consequence which may follow the want of due care. In such a case “ordinary care” calls for a degree of vigilance and prudence commensurate with the dangers involved. The general customer ordinarily has no definite knowledge concerning the numerous medicines and poisons specified in the United States Dispensatory and Pharmacopoeia, but must rely implicitly upon the druggist who holds himself out as one having the peculiar learning and skill, and conceptions of legal duty, necessary to a safe and proper discharge of that duty.

“Ordinary care ” with reference to the business of a druggist must therefore be held to signify the highest practicable degree of prudence, thoughtfulness, and vigilance, and the most exact and reliable safeguards consistent with the reasonable conduct of the business, in order that human life may not constantly be exposed to the danger flowing from the substitution of deadly poisons for harmless medicine. Tremblay v. Kimball, 107 Me. 53, 77 Atl. 405. See cases cited, note 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) pages 900, 901, 902, and 903.

The trial court has found that the defendant’s clerk was negligent in compounding the powders in question as he did, and then delivering them to the plaintiff. This conclusion is a question of fact, and must stand, unless it is inconsistent with the other subordinate facts which have been set forth in the finding. Walcho v. Rosenbluth, 81 Conn. 358, 71 Atl. 566; Metcalf v. Central Vermont Ry. Co., 78 Conn. 614, 619, 63 Atl. 633. It is found that calumba was intended, and that calomel was given. Calomel was furnished by mistake. A prescription calling for one hundred and twenty grains of calomel to be taken in twenty-four powders, one *236 three times a day, is extraordinary, and, if taken as directed, is hable to be attended with serious results.

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Bluebook (online)
82 A. 640, 85 Conn. 231, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tombari-v-connors-conn-1912.