FORD, J.
This is an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit as to the plaintiff’s second and third causes of action which were based on alleged implied warranties.
The evidence
which was before the trial court is embodied in a settled statement prepared pursuant to rule 7 of the Rules on Appeal. That statement is “limited to the oral testimony applicable to the correctness of the ruling of the trial judge in granting” the motion for nonsuit. Portions thereof are set forth in the margin.
Two problems are presented on this appeal. The first is whether there was an implied warranty with respect to the condition of the bottle as distinguished from its carbonated contents. The second problem is, if there was such a warranty, whether the plaintiff, an employe of the vendee, can claim any rights thereunder. It is alleged in the second cause of action that the defendant warranted that the “glass bottle containing the beverage known as ‘Club Soda,’ was reasonably fit for the purpose for which it was intended, to wit, that the carbonated beverage would be safely contained within its glass container at all times prior to its opening and use, and would not explode or fragment.” (A similar allegation as to the contents of the bottle is found in the other cause of action.) Since no question is raised on this appeal as to the sufficiency of the pleading of an implied warranty (cf.
Ice Bowl, Inc.
v.
Spalding Sales Corp.,
56 Cal.App.2d 918, 922-923 [133 P.2d 846];
Sears, Roebuck & Co.
v.
Marhenke,
121 F.2d 598, 600-601), we conclude that the parties are satisfied that, taking the cause of action as a whole, sufficient facts are alleged so as to bring into being such implied warranty, if any, as is recognized by the law in a case of this nature.
(Cf. Carter
v.
St. Louis Dairy Co.
(Mo.App.), 139 S.W.2d 1025, 1026.) In any event, since the record does not disclose that any objection was made in the trial court based upon the manner in which an implied warranty was pleaded, we must conclude that, by trying the issue of liability without such question being raised, the defendant waived any curable defect that might be found in the pleading. (See
Hedlund
v.
Sutter Med. Serv. Co.,
51 Cal.App.2d 327, 339 [124 P.2d 878].)
While there is no ready precedent in this state as to whether there is an implied warranty of which the plaintiff may avail himself under the facts of this ease, the course which this court must take in resolving the problems presented has been substantially charted in the recent cases of
Trust
v.
Arden Farms Co.,
50 Cal.2d 217 [324 P.2d 583], and
Peterson
v.
Lamb Rubber Co.,
54 Cal.2d 339 [5 Cal.Rptr. 863, 353 P.2d 575]. It is true that the prevailing opinion in
Trust
v.
Arden Farms Go.
does not expressly hold that there may be an implied warranty as to the container of food or of a beverage (as distinguished from the food or beverage itself) but that assumption appears to be made in the opinion, at least for the purpose of the determinatipn of the problem there presented. It was said (50 Cal.2d, at p. 223): “There was no evidence that the [milk] bottle was defective when delivered by Arden to plaintiff, and therefore there is no basis for claiming any breach of warranty.” But, in any event, there is nothing necessarily inconsistent with that determination in the following statement found in the second of the three concurring and dissenting opinions in that case (50 Cal.2d, at p. 237) : “Whatever the arguments for limiting the manufacturer’s strict liability to foodstuffs, there is no rational basis for differentiating between foodstuffs and their containers.
(Nichols
v.
Nold,
174 Kan. 613 [258 P.2d 317, 323];
Cooper
v.
Newman,
11 N.Y.S.2d 319, 320;
Haller
v.
Rudmann,
249 App.Div. 831 [292 N.Y.S. 586, 587];
McIntyre
v.
Kansas City Coca Cola Bottling Co.
(Mo.), 85 Fed.Supp. 708, 711;
Mahoney
v.
Shaker Square Beverages,
Ohio C.P., 102 N.E.2d 281, 289;
Geddling
v.
Marsh
[1920] 1 K.B. 668, 672-673;
Morelli
v.
Fitch and Gibbons
[1928] 2 K.B. 636, 642-644; see Prosser, Torts, [2d ed.] § 84, p. 509.)” In the
third concurring and dissenting opinion it is said (50 Cal.2d, at pp.238-239) : “If an inference to that effect were drawn by the jury, the defect in the bottle would constitute a breach of warranty by Arden under section 1735 of the Civil Code (Uniform Sales Act, § 15), which reads in part: ‘Subject to the provisions of this act and of any statute in that behalf, there is no implied warranty or condition as to the quality or fitness for any particular purpose of goods supplied under a contract to sell or a sale,
except as follows:
(1) Where the buyer, expressly or by implication, makes known to the seller the particular purpose for which the goods are required, and it appears that the buyer relies on the seller’s skill or judgment (whether he be the grower or manufacturer or not), there is an implied warranty that the goods shall be reasonably fit for such purpose. (2) Where the goods are bought by description from a seller who deals in goods of that description (whether he be the grower or manufacturer or not), there is an implied warranty that the goods shall be of merchantable quality.’ (Italics added.)
“Section 1735 does not refer merely to goods sold but to all ‘goods supplied under a contract to sell or a sale.’ It has been held that when bottled beverages are sold, the bottles in which they necessarily must be delivered are
supplied under the contract of sale
within the meaning of the statute although the bottles are bailed rather than sold.
(Geddling
v.
Marsh
(1920), 1 K.B. 668; see 1 Williston on Sales (rev. cd. 1948), 582, n. 1.) The Geddling case related to a sale of ‘lime juice and soda’in bailed bottles and was decided under section 14 of the English Sale of Goods Act, 1893, which contains provisions nearly identical with those quoted above from section 1735. The findings in that ease showed that the sale came within the first subdivision of the section, but the reasoning of the court is equally applicable to a sale coming within the second subdivision. Accordingly, even if we assume that the bottle involved here was bailed, it would be subject to any warranty which would be applicable under either of the quoted subdivisions if the bottle had been sold.[
]
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FORD, J.
This is an appeal from a judgment of nonsuit as to the plaintiff’s second and third causes of action which were based on alleged implied warranties.
The evidence
which was before the trial court is embodied in a settled statement prepared pursuant to rule 7 of the Rules on Appeal. That statement is “limited to the oral testimony applicable to the correctness of the ruling of the trial judge in granting” the motion for nonsuit. Portions thereof are set forth in the margin.
Two problems are presented on this appeal. The first is whether there was an implied warranty with respect to the condition of the bottle as distinguished from its carbonated contents. The second problem is, if there was such a warranty, whether the plaintiff, an employe of the vendee, can claim any rights thereunder. It is alleged in the second cause of action that the defendant warranted that the “glass bottle containing the beverage known as ‘Club Soda,’ was reasonably fit for the purpose for which it was intended, to wit, that the carbonated beverage would be safely contained within its glass container at all times prior to its opening and use, and would not explode or fragment.” (A similar allegation as to the contents of the bottle is found in the other cause of action.) Since no question is raised on this appeal as to the sufficiency of the pleading of an implied warranty (cf.
Ice Bowl, Inc.
v.
Spalding Sales Corp.,
56 Cal.App.2d 918, 922-923 [133 P.2d 846];
Sears, Roebuck & Co.
v.
Marhenke,
121 F.2d 598, 600-601), we conclude that the parties are satisfied that, taking the cause of action as a whole, sufficient facts are alleged so as to bring into being such implied warranty, if any, as is recognized by the law in a case of this nature.
(Cf. Carter
v.
St. Louis Dairy Co.
(Mo.App.), 139 S.W.2d 1025, 1026.) In any event, since the record does not disclose that any objection was made in the trial court based upon the manner in which an implied warranty was pleaded, we must conclude that, by trying the issue of liability without such question being raised, the defendant waived any curable defect that might be found in the pleading. (See
Hedlund
v.
Sutter Med. Serv. Co.,
51 Cal.App.2d 327, 339 [124 P.2d 878].)
While there is no ready precedent in this state as to whether there is an implied warranty of which the plaintiff may avail himself under the facts of this ease, the course which this court must take in resolving the problems presented has been substantially charted in the recent cases of
Trust
v.
Arden Farms Co.,
50 Cal.2d 217 [324 P.2d 583], and
Peterson
v.
Lamb Rubber Co.,
54 Cal.2d 339 [5 Cal.Rptr. 863, 353 P.2d 575]. It is true that the prevailing opinion in
Trust
v.
Arden Farms Go.
does not expressly hold that there may be an implied warranty as to the container of food or of a beverage (as distinguished from the food or beverage itself) but that assumption appears to be made in the opinion, at least for the purpose of the determinatipn of the problem there presented. It was said (50 Cal.2d, at p. 223): “There was no evidence that the [milk] bottle was defective when delivered by Arden to plaintiff, and therefore there is no basis for claiming any breach of warranty.” But, in any event, there is nothing necessarily inconsistent with that determination in the following statement found in the second of the three concurring and dissenting opinions in that case (50 Cal.2d, at p. 237) : “Whatever the arguments for limiting the manufacturer’s strict liability to foodstuffs, there is no rational basis for differentiating between foodstuffs and their containers.
(Nichols
v.
Nold,
174 Kan. 613 [258 P.2d 317, 323];
Cooper
v.
Newman,
11 N.Y.S.2d 319, 320;
Haller
v.
Rudmann,
249 App.Div. 831 [292 N.Y.S. 586, 587];
McIntyre
v.
Kansas City Coca Cola Bottling Co.
(Mo.), 85 Fed.Supp. 708, 711;
Mahoney
v.
Shaker Square Beverages,
Ohio C.P., 102 N.E.2d 281, 289;
Geddling
v.
Marsh
[1920] 1 K.B. 668, 672-673;
Morelli
v.
Fitch and Gibbons
[1928] 2 K.B. 636, 642-644; see Prosser, Torts, [2d ed.] § 84, p. 509.)” In the
third concurring and dissenting opinion it is said (50 Cal.2d, at pp.238-239) : “If an inference to that effect were drawn by the jury, the defect in the bottle would constitute a breach of warranty by Arden under section 1735 of the Civil Code (Uniform Sales Act, § 15), which reads in part: ‘Subject to the provisions of this act and of any statute in that behalf, there is no implied warranty or condition as to the quality or fitness for any particular purpose of goods supplied under a contract to sell or a sale,
except as follows:
(1) Where the buyer, expressly or by implication, makes known to the seller the particular purpose for which the goods are required, and it appears that the buyer relies on the seller’s skill or judgment (whether he be the grower or manufacturer or not), there is an implied warranty that the goods shall be reasonably fit for such purpose. (2) Where the goods are bought by description from a seller who deals in goods of that description (whether he be the grower or manufacturer or not), there is an implied warranty that the goods shall be of merchantable quality.’ (Italics added.)
“Section 1735 does not refer merely to goods sold but to all ‘goods supplied under a contract to sell or a sale.’ It has been held that when bottled beverages are sold, the bottles in which they necessarily must be delivered are
supplied under the contract of sale
within the meaning of the statute although the bottles are bailed rather than sold.
(Geddling
v.
Marsh
(1920), 1 K.B. 668; see 1 Williston on Sales (rev. cd. 1948), 582, n. 1.) The Geddling case related to a sale of ‘lime juice and soda’in bailed bottles and was decided under section 14 of the English Sale of Goods Act, 1893, which contains provisions nearly identical with those quoted above from section 1735. The findings in that ease showed that the sale came within the first subdivision of the section, but the reasoning of the court is equally applicable to a sale coming within the second subdivision. Accordingly, even if we assume that the bottle involved here was bailed, it would be subject to any warranty which would be applicable under either of the quoted subdivisions if the bottle had been sold.[
]
“The sale of a bottle of milk by a dairy under the circumstances appearing here clearly comes within the language of the second subdivision of the statute, and the seller’s implied warranty of merchantable quality under this provision includes a warranty that his product is reasonably fit for the general purpose for which goods of that kind are sold. (See
Simmons
v.
Rhodes & Jamieson, Ltd.,
46 Cal.2d 190, 194 [293 P.2d 26];
Burr
v.
Sherwin Williams Co.,
42 Cal.2d 682, 694 [268 P.2d 1041].) It is obvious that a milk bottle which is so defective that it will break under normal handling is not fit for the ordinary use for which it was intended and that the delivery of such a defective bottle constitutes a breach of warranty.” (See also
Canada Dry Bottling Co. of Florida
v.
Shaw
(Fla Dist. Ct. App.), 118 So.2d 840, 842.)
There is a conflict of authority in this country as to the existence of an implied Avarranty of the condition of a container of food. After noting such conflict, Dean William L.. Prosser recently said: ‘ ‘ This metaphysical distinction between the container and the contents can only be regarded as amazing. The two are sold by each seller, and received by the ultimate purchaser, as an integrated whole; and where the action is against the immediate seller, it is well settled that the warranty covers both.” (Prosser,
The Assault Upon the Citadel (Strict Liability to the
Consumer), 69 Yale L. J. 1099, 1138.)
We have concluded that there was an implied warranty of the nature discussed above with respect to the bottle herein involved. But there still remains the question of whether such warranty extended to the plaintiff as an employe of the restaurant enterprise to which the bottle, together with its contents, was deliArered. In
Peterson
v.
Lamb Rubber Co., supra,
54 Cal.2d 339, the plaintiff, an employe of the vendee, suffered personal injuries as the result of the disintegration of a grinding wheel purchased from the defendant. In that case, a count in the complaint alleged an implied warranty by the defendant of fitness for use and of merchantable quality under the provisions of subdivisions (1) and (2) of section 1735 of the Civil Code. A general demurrer thereto was sustained without leaA^e to amend. The parties agreed on the appeal that the only ground upon which the demurrer could have been sustained was that of lack of privity of contract between the plaintiff and the defendant manufacturer. The Supreme Court, in rejecting the argument that lack of privity precluded recovery, said (54 Cal.2d 339, at pp. 347-348): “Plaintiff emphasizes, however, that the grinding wheel here involved was manufactured, sold, and purchased, to be used on a power driven, high speed, rotating motor; that it was known by defendant manufacturer to be dangerous if defectively made or if operated at speeds beyond its maximum capabilities (which Avere not marked on it), and that its ingredients were secret and known only to defendant. Therefore, says plaintiff, it was a dangerous instrumentality if containing latent defects or if improperly used, and in view of modern
industrial usage employes should be considered a member of the industrial ‘family’ of the employer—whether corporate or private—and to thus stand in such privity to the manufacturer as to permit the employes to be covered by warranties made to the purchaser-employer.
“We are persuaded that this position is meritorious. In the first place, it is a matter of common knowledge, and of course known to vendor-manufacturers, that most businesses are carried on by means of the assistance of employes and that equipment or supplies purchased by employers will in actual use be handled by the employes, who in this respect may be said to stand in the shoes of the employer. Moreover the term ‘privity’ itself appears to be of uncertain origin and meaning and to have been developed by the courts and applied in various contexts. (See
Klein
v.
Duchess Sandwich Co., Ltd.
(1939),
supra,
14 Cal.2d 272, 276-283 [2,3]; 4 Corbin on Contracts, § 778; 33 Words and Phrases 799-822.) One of the customary definitions is that ‘privity’ denotes mutual or successive relationship to the same thing or right of property; it implies succession. (See eases collected in 33 Words and Phrases 819-820.) Thus, in the present context, the employe had the successive right to the possession and use of the grinding wheel handed over to him by his purchaser-employer, and, we believe, should fairly be considered to be in privity to the vendor-manufacturer with respect to the implied warranties of fitness for use and of merchantable quality upon which recovery is here sought.
“Amici curiae supporting defendant urge, however, that section 1735 of the Civil Code, enacted in 1931, has been consistently interpreted by the courts in a manner opposed to plaintiff’s position and contentions, and that failure of the Legislature to alter the previous judicial interpretation is indicative of legislative intent. (See
Cole
v.
Rush
(1955), 45 Cal.2d 345, 355 [8-9] [289 P.2d 450, 54 A.L.R.2d 1137].) However, as shown hereinabove, interpretation by California courts has not been as clear cut as amici curiae contend, and, further, the foodstuffs exception has been court developed in the interim.
(Klein
v.
Duchess Sandwich Co., Ltd.
(1939),
supra,
14 Cal.2d 272, 276-283 [2, 3].) ”
It is a matter of common knowledge that the explosion
of a defective bottle containing a carbonated beverage may be the cause of serious physical harm to a person handling it or who is in its vicinity when it explodes. A bottle which is subject to such disintegration in the course of ordinary handling or storing because of a defect therein is dangerous in its intended use and is not of merchantable quality. It is obvious that its handling by an employe of the immediate vendee in the normal course of his work, with consequent exposure to danger, is to be expected. We fail to see how the application of the reasoning of the Peterson case can be stopped short of a case such as is here presented. Accordingly, we believe that consistently with the determination of the Supreme Court in that case we must hold that the implied warranty extended to the appellant.
(Cf. Gottsdanker
v.
Cutter Laboratories,
182 Cal.App.2d 602, 606-607 [6 Cal.Rptr. 320]; see 2 Harper & James, Law of Torts (1956), § 28.16; 74 Harv. L. Rev. 630.)
While it was error to grant the motion for a nonsuit, upon a trial on the merits it will, of course, be for the trier of fact to determine whether there was a defect in the bottle at the time of its delivery by the defendant to the plaintiff’s employer.
(Cf. Hartsook
v.
Owl Drug Co.,
182 Cal.App.2d 150 [5 Cal. Rptr. 835].)
The judgment of nonsuit is reversed.
Shinn, P. J., and Vallée, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 27, 1961.