Wood v. Standard Drug Co.

157 N.W. 403, 190 Mich. 654, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 919
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1916
DocketDocket No. 42
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 157 N.W. 403 (Wood v. Standard Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Standard Drug Co., 157 N.W. 403, 190 Mich. 654, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 919 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Bird, J.

Mrs. Virginia Wood’s boy Jack, two and one-half years of age, was suffering with pinworms. Mrs. Wood consulted a medical work entitled “The 20th Century Book for Every Woman,” and found the following treatment for pinworms:

“Treatment: Prepare a small quantity of starch, as it is generally used in starching clothes, only a trifle thinner. To 4 tablespoonfuls of this add 2 drops of spirits of turpentine, mix it thoroughly, and inject into the rectum. A second application would not be required if the eggs could be killed by such treatment. * * * At least once a day the rectum should be well greased with lard, etc. This will prevent the [656]*656propagation of the worms. The size of a pea of santonine in powder form or two tablets mashed into powder mixed with the lard would increase its efficacy. A dose of mercurius viv should be given in the morning, and one of silica at night for one month to remove the predisposition to worms.”

Mrs. Wood concluded to try the treatment, and accordingly handed her husband a paper upon which was written the following, with the request that he purchase them:

Spirits of Turpentine 10c

Santonins .......... 10c

Mercurius viv...... 10c

Silica .............. 10c

Mr. Wood presented the paper to the prescription clerk at defendant’s store in the city of Detroit, and he read it over and inquired what “mercurius viv” was, and what it was to be used for, and Mr. Wood replied: “My little boy has pinworms.” Soon thereafter the clerk delivered to him two bottles, one of turpentine, the other of silicate of soda, and two small .envelopes each containing a powder, one being marked santonine, and the other calomel. Under the word “calomel” was written in parentheses “mercurius viv,” and under that the words “mild form.” Mr. Wood delivered the medicine to his wife, and at 4 o’clock in the afternoon of that day she administered to Jack from the powder marked calomel about as much as could be held on the tip of a teaspoon. Jack immediately grabbed his throat and began to scream and choke, and said: “Oh, mother, it burns! it burns!” soon thereafter he began to vomit and purge. Medical help was summoned and treatment administered, but the burning sensation was not relieved. At about 4 o’clock the next morning he died. The post mortem disclosed no poison, and the official cause of death was given as acute gastritis. An examination of the stomach, [657]*657liver, and kidneys by Dr. Clark, the county physician, found them inflamed and congested.

The theory upon which the plaintiff recovered was that among other drugs called for at defendant’s store was mercurius viv; that mercurius viv was not furnished, but that some irritating poison was substituted therefor which caused the death of the boy. In support of this theory it was shown that a dose the size of that given to the boy either of calomel or mercurius viv would not produce death; neither would it produce the inflammation found in the stomach, liver, and kidneys. Some of the medical experts said mercurius viv was quicksilver. Others said it was quicksilver “rubbed up” with sugar. It could not be definitely determined what the powder was which was administered, because after seeing the effect of it upon the boy the mother threw it into the fire, fearing lest a younger child might get it. The opinion of. the attending physician was that the symptoms indicated an irritating poison not unlike that of corrosive sublimate, and that the failure to discover it at the post mortem may have been due. to the excessive vomiting. Plaintiff’s testimony tended to .support his theory of the case.

Defendant admits that it substituted calomel for mercurius viv, but it insists that in so doing it substituted a less poisonous and less dangerous drug than the one called for; that the boy did not die as a result of the substitution, but from a failure of the mother to properly administer the drugs, and, further, that the boy’s death was not caused by any of the drugs furnished. The trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff, and the defendant assigns error.

1. That this action should have been based on the .death act instead of the survival act is one of defendant’s contentions. After much consideration of these [658]*658two statutes (sections 10117 and 10427, 3 Comp. Laws; 3 Comp. Laws 1915, §§ 12383, note, and 14577) by this court, it promulgated a rule for the benefit of courts and litigants by which it could be determined with reasonable certainty under which statute to proceed. It is that:

“If the death be not instantaneous, the administrator recovers under the survival act the full measure of damages for the benefit of the next of kin. If it be instantaneous, he recovers under the death act, for the same persons, a limited amount of damages, viz., for such pecuniary injury only as they can be shown to have suffered.” Dolson v. Railway Co., 128 Mich. 444, 454 (87. N. W. 632).

The testimony in this case shows that the boy survived nearly 12 hours. Under no reasonable construction could it be said that his death was instantaneous. If it were not, it was properly brought under the survival act. Counsel bases his contention upon the case of West v. Railway, 159 Mich. 269 (123 N. W. 1101), where it was held that:

“Where there is a continuing injury, resulting in death within a few moments, it is ‘instantaneous’ within the meaning of the statute.”

Counsel argues that this was a continuing" injury, resulting in death, but gives no heed to the limitation of a few moments placed upon it. There is no room under the testimony in this case to claim that the action should have been brought under the death act.

2. Counsel in his brief, under the heading, “Negligence and Contributory Negligence,” complains because the court failed to give his requests thereon. In defendant’s requests Nos. I and II the court was, in effect, asked to direct a verdict for defendant, on tlie ground that the substitution of the drug was not thte proximate cause of the death of the boy, and on the) ground that the mother was guilty of contributory! negligence in administering the drug. Both of these' [659]*659questions were submitted to the jury. The question of proximate cause was clearly one for their consideration. The case of Love v. Railroad Co., 170 Mich. 1 (135 N. W. 963), indicates that the question of the contributory negligence of the mother was not one for the jury. But whether it was or not is- now of no importance, as its submission worked no injury to the defendant. Counsel in this connection offered certain alternative requests, numbered I to XV and from XVII to XXIX. We shall consider only those which have been considered by counsel in his brief.

3. Request No. VII asked the court to instruct the jury that the book from which Mrs. Wood copied the “¡treatment” prescribed a sixth attenuation of metallic drugs and a third attenuation of vegetable drugs. This request included a formula by which the sixth attenuation is reached. The book referred to was at the trial, and appears to have been used by counsel in his cross-examination of Mrs. Wood, and some extracts read therefrom, but we find no basis in the record for such an instruction, and our attention has not been called to any page in the record which would justify it. If the book showed that the drugs purchased by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
157 N.W. 403, 190 Mich. 654, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-standard-drug-co-mich-1916.