Trumbaturi v. Katz & Besthoff, Ltd.

154 So. 58, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 646
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 23, 1934
DocketNo. 14661.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 154 So. 58 (Trumbaturi v. Katz & Besthoff, Ltd.) 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.

Bluebook
Trumbaturi v. Katz & Besthoff, Ltd., 154 So. 58, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 646 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment dismissing on exception of no cause of action her suit in which she seeks recovery for the death of her daughter which death she attributes to negligence on the part of defendant’s employees.

The alleged acts of negligence of which plaintiff complains as the proximate cause of her daughter’s death may be set forth briefly as follows:

That defendant owns and operates several retail drug stores in the city of New Orleans and that among the drugs sold by it is carbolic acid which is alleged to be a dangerous poison; that the board of health of the state’ of Louisiana has enacted, under proper legal authority, regulations under which all dispensers of poison are required to maintain for inspection by proper authorities a written record of all sales of poisons and are specially required to enter in such record certain information which, it is contended, may be obtained only from the person to whom the poison in each case is sold; that plaintiff’s daughter, though twenty-one years of age, was “demented, simple minded, idiotic” to such an extent that her condition was apr parent to any one who might make the slightest attempt to obtain any form of information from her, and that even had her name and address been asked the answers would have indicated her mental condition and, that particularly would her incapacity have appeared had she been asked the purpose for which she wanted the drug; that not only defendant, but all other druggists have deemed it necessary to adopt a rule requiring that an employee who delivers poison to a purchaser shall question the purchaser in order to comply with the said regulation of the board of health; and that it was a rule and custom of defendant to require a written receipt before making delivery of any poison.

It is also alleged that petitioner’s daughter ordered by telephone carbolic acid from one of defendant’s stores and directed that -it be delivered at her residence and that the proper record of the said sale was not made; that had the said employee who made the delivery questioned the daughter or required a receipt from her he would have discovered her mental condition; and that the most casual observation would have sufficed to apprise him of the danger of delivering such a poison to so irresponsible a person.

It is charged that in hurriedly handing to the daughter the package and in rushing away without questioning her and without obtaining a receipt, the employee was guilty of a negligent act which was the proximate cause of the subsequent death of the daughter who drank the acid with fatal results;

The regulation of the board of health to which reference is had in one of the petitions is No. 35 and reads as follows:

*60 “All druggists and all otter persons dealing in or selling poisonous substances shall keep a special book, open at all times to the proper authorities, in which they shall register the name and quantity of the drug, and the name and residence of the person to whom any poisonous substance is sold, the use it is intended for, also the date of the sale, whether sold-upon a personal acquaintance with the buyer.”

Even if it be assumed that the said regulation placed upon defendant any duty in favor of plaintiff or her daughter, the duty was limited to the recording of information on five and only five matters:

(1) The name and quantity of the drug ordered.

(2) The name and residence of the purchaser.

(3) The use for which it is intended.

(4) The date of the sale.

(5) Whether the sale is made upon personal acquaintance with the buyer.

There is nothing in the regulation which prohibits the sale of carbolic acid or which makes the right to sell it in any way dependent upon the information received from the purchaser. In other words, the regulation does not require that there shall be no sale except upon personal acquaintance, nor does it require that there shall be no sale unless the drug is to be used for certain purposes set forth in the regulation. It merely requires that when the sale is made, a record must be made of this information.

It is evident that the charge in the brief for plaintiff that even the name and address of the purchaser was not obtained by defendant is unfounded because it is conceded that the order was given by the daughter over the telephone and that the package was delivered to the person who ordered it and that it was sent to the correct address.

' It follows that, even if it be true that no record of the sale was made, practically all of the information which ought to have been entered in the record was obtained from the person who made the purchase or was already in the possession of the defendant.

The first requirement is that the name and quantity of the poison must be recorded. Evidently the name and quantity of the drug was given to the defendant, otherwise there could have been no delivery at the residence.

Under the second requirement the name and residence of the person who made the purchase should have been entered in the record. It is evident that the name and residence was given or the delivery could not have been properly made.

The third requirement placed upon the druggist the duty of entering in the reeox-d the use for which the drug is intended. It is alleged that this requirement was not complied with and we shall later discuss the effect of this allegation of failure to comply with the regulation.

Under the fourth requirement the' date of the sale should have been entered. The druggist knew the date on which the sale was made and, therefore, to obtain that information there was no necessity for him to question the purchaser.

The fifth requirement is that the druggist state in the record whether the sale is made upon personal acquaintance with the pur-chasex-. Whether or not toe sale in this case was made upon personal acquaintance with the buyer was known by the druggist. No further information from the purchaser was necessary to enable the druggist to make the entry on this point.

Thus, although defendant is charged with failure to enter in the proper record certain information and although it is charged that he did not require that the purchaser answer certain questions; the petition itself shows that with one exception all of the information was in his possession or was obtained from the purchaser and could have been entered in toe record.

There was no causal connection between the death of plaintiff’s daughter and the failure of toe clerk to enter in the record certain information which was in his possession.

Therefore, so far as the alleged failure to comply with the board of health regulation is concerned, we limit our consideration to the effect of the alleged failure of toe clerk to ask .the purchaser what use she intended to make of toe acid.

We repeat that there is no requirement that the sale of poisons be limited to persons who intend to use them for certain designated purposes.

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Related

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946 So. 2d 234 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
154 So. 58, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trumbaturi-v-katz-besthoff-ltd-lactapp-1934.