Weller v. Plapao Laboratories Incorporation

191 S.W. 1056, 197 Mo. App. 47, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 139
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 191 S.W. 1056 (Weller v. Plapao Laboratories Incorporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weller v. Plapao Laboratories Incorporation, 191 S.W. 1056, 197 Mo. App. 47, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 139 (Mo. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

BEYNOLDS, P. J.

This is an action for damages claimed to have accrued to plaintiff on account of the death of her husband, A. J. Weller, who died from “locked bowels,” resulting from strangulated hernia.

The petition alleges that plaintiff is the widow of deceased; that he left no minor children and no personal representative; that he had brought no action-prior to his death on account of the injuries mentioned in the petition, and that he died intestate. It is then averred that defendant represented itself to decedent, who was then suffering from hernia, as skillful in the treatment of that affliction and as having and furnishing and using for its treatment an appliance known as Plas-tr-pads, and that these appliances were suitable and safe for treating his hernia and would cure him of it; that decedent, then residing at Nashville, Tenn., applied to defendant in the city of St. Louis for that appliance and for directions for using it for his affliction, and informed defendant that he desired it for that purpose; that he paid defendant the price demanded for the appliance and directions; that defendant, in response to the application and payment, sent from St. Louis to decedent at Nashville, and for the purpose of treating his hernia, one of its plas-tr-pads and directions for using it; that decedent thereafter, relying on the representations and directions of defendant, used the appli[51]*51anee for his affliction according to the directions of defendant, “when by reason of the wrongful acts, faults and omissions of defendant herein mentioned and while so using it and whilst in the State of Tennessee, said appliance, because it was defective, insufficient, worthless, dangerous, and unfit for the purpose for which defendant had so furnished it, caused and permitted said hernia to become a strangulated hernia and caused and permitted parts of internal organs of the body of said A. J. Weller to escape and protrude from their proper place, whereby said A. J. Weller was so injured that he died of said injuries on August 19, 1910, in the State of Tennessee; that at the times herein mentioned said appliance was defective, insufficient, worthless, dangerous, and unfit for treating hernia and for the purpose for which defendant so furnished it to A. J. Weller, as aforesaid. ”

It is further averred that defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known, that the appliance was insufficient, worthless, dangerous and unfit, as aforesaid, and of the danger of injury to decedent from so using it as he did use it, “yet thereafter defendant wrongfully and negligently furnished the same to said A. J. Weller for him to use as he so used it aforesaid and wrongfully and negligently directed him to use it as he so used it, all without protection or notice of any kind to him and thereby directly caused his said injuries and death.”

It is further averred that A. J. Weller was a citizen and inhabitant and resident of the State of Tennessee, and that plaintiff is still a resident, inhabitant and citizen of that State, and that defendant has always been a resident of and located in the city of St. Louis.

Various sections of the statutes of the State of Tennessee are pleaded and set out in full, which will be found in Shannon’s Edition of the Code of Tennessee (1896), commencing with section 4025, on page 986. Section 4025 is entitled, “Right of action in case of injuries or death,” and reads:

[52]*52‘ ‘ The right of action which a person who dies from injuries received from another, or whose death is caused by the wrongful act, omission, or ldlling by another, would have had against the wrongdoer in case death had not ensued, shall not abate or be extinguished by his death, but shall pass to his widow, and, in case there is no widow, to his children or to his personal representative, for the benefit of his widow or next of kin, free from the claims of creditors.”

Other sections provide how and by whom the action is to be prosecuted, when it may be instituted by the widow or children; the measure of damages and limitations of action, all unnecessary to set out here.

Averring that by his injuries so sustained A. J. Weller suffered greatly, both mentally and physically, and lost much time and incurred large expenses and became liable for large expenses, and that prior to his death had lived with, supported and protected plaintiff and by the death of her husband plaintiff lost his care, maintenance and support, all to her damage in the sum of $7500, judgment is asked for that amount.

The answer was a general denial.

At a trial before the court and a jury a verdict was returned in favor of defendant, from which plaintiff has duly perfected her appeal to our court.

The errors here assigned are to the giving of certain instructions at the request of defendant and one by the court of its own motion, the refusal of two instructions asked by plaintiff, improper exclusion of evidence offered by plaintiff, the improper admission of evidence offered by defendant, and improper remarks by the court.

It appears that the decedent had been suffering from hernia for a number of years and had been wearing steel and elastic trusses. Acting for decedent, his wife, from their home in Tennessee, wrote to defendant at St. Louis, in the name of her husband, that seeing the advertisement of defendant in a publication named, he wrote for a trial treatment of defendant’s plas-trpads for rupture. In response to this decedent received [53]*53a blank printed slip and book of testimonials, together with some ointment. It further appears that after receiving the above articles plaintiff, or his wife, filled up the blank and returned it to defendant with a postal order for $6.75. In answer to this decedent received three of the plas-tr-pads and directions for applying them. Plaintiff, testifying at the trial, said these directions were lost. These plas-tr-pads were received on August 15, 1910, in the afternoon, and plaintiff applied them to her husband, the appliance consisting of a pad and a belt, the pad containing medicinal matter, as it is said, and intended to press into the hollow and over the- protruding intestine, which was to be pushed back, that part of the pad being covered with plaster so that on being affixed to the body of the patient it adhered. After applying this pad decedent, who was an engineer on a switch engine, went to work and the day after the intestine protruded and Mr. Weller being taken to a hospital, it was found that he had a case of “locked bowel,” resulting from strangulated hernia, from which he died on August 19.

' It appears that the blank slip above mentioned as sent with the literature to plaintiff was to be filled up among other matter, with a description of the case and measurements of plaintiff. What was claimed to be this blank, printed on white paper, and filled up with answers and with what purported to be the name of plaintiff signed to it, was produced by defendant, but plaintiff testified that it was not the blank she had signed and sent to defendant; that the one she had signed and sent was on a “kind of a yellow paper,” which she thought contained questions and answers as to the age and weight of her husband, as well as his height. Beyond this she did not remember what was on it, but testified very positively that the blank shown to her printed on white paper was not the one she had signed and sent on, and that she did not recognize the’ signature to it as her own.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 S.W. 1056, 197 Mo. App. 47, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weller-v-plapao-laboratories-incorporation-moctapp-1917.