Court Opinion

ID: 1750347
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 07:18:57.522137+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:49:29.780863
License: Public Domain

379 Mich. 197 (1967)
150 N.W.2d 804
SAVAGE
v.
PETERSON DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, INC.
Calendar No. 17, Docket No. 51,346.
Supreme Court of Michigan.
Decided June 6, 1967.
Rehearing denied July 21, 1967.
van Benschoten & van Benschoten, for plaintiffs.
Cook, Nash, Deibel & Borrelo, for defendant Ralston Purina Company.
O'HARA, J.
The fundamental issue presented by this appeal is what measure of direct proof is necessary *200 to make a submissible case for jury consideration thereby permitting the jury to make inferences from established facts.
The action was originally brought against Peterson Distributing Company, Incorporated, and Ralston Purina Company. Peterson, Inc., is engaged in the business of manufacturing, processing, packaging, and selling a mink food product. Ralston Purina is a manufacturer and supplier of one of the components used by Peterson, Inc., in the processing and manufacture of the finished mink food. Plaintiff-appellant is a copartnership which raises mink for the sale of mink fur and of breeding stock.
In the trial court, judgment was had against both defendants upon a jury verdict. Thereafter, Peterson, Inc., settled with plaintiff. Ralston Purina alone appeals. Motions non obstante veredicto and for a new trial were denied by the trial court. The Court of Appeals set aside the verdict and judgment and ordered judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto.
We granted leave in part because certain language in the opinion of the Court of Appeals might be subject to misconstruction. The language could be considered in conflict with settled law. We quote:
"There was no analysis of the food fed to plaintiff's mink and an autopsy of several mink carcasses from plaintiff's ranch failed to show any salmonellae." (Emphasis supplied.) 1 Mich. App. 548, 550.
Whatever the weight of the foregoing may be, we feel compelled to point out that positive direct evidence resulting from an analysis of the alleged contaminated food is not a sine qua non to the establishment of a prima facie case of alleged poisoned or contaminated food. So to require is to *201 place an unfair burden upon a plaintiff in this kind of case. There are circumstances attending the sale of allegedly poisoned or contaminated food in which a complaining plaintiff cannot obtain a scientific analysis of the involved product. Such plaintiff should not be totally without a basis of making out a submissible fact question. Neither is an absence of the finding of the alleged contaminant by autopsy, standing alone, conclusive upon the question of its presence in the product in question.
In the instant action, plaintiff rested its case upon a combination of circumstantial and direct evidence which in totality it claims pointed to the presence of a contaminant in defendant's cereal component in the multi-ingredient food. To support its claim it introduced testimony tending to show that in a relatively wide geographical area of the midwest an outbreak of epidemic proportion of food poisoning occurred among mink raised for pelting in the year 1961. Among the mink ranches thus affected was an experimental mink-feeding ranch owned and operated by an officer of defendant Peterson, Inc. The cereal additive used in the product mixed and fed to plaintiff's mink and those on the experimental ranch was furnished by defendant Ralston Purina Company. Many of the other ranchers whose mink were involved in the epidemic used the Ralston cereal. All of the affected mink exhibited relatively the same symptoms. An independent research foundation analyzed and found salmonellae in samples of defendant Purina's cereal. The same research foundation autopsied and found in the carcasses of defendant Peterson's mink the same type "A" salmonellae. A qualified bacteriologist expressed the opinion that the presence of the same subclass salmonellae in specific organs of the autopsied mink and the cereal indicated to him that the mink exhibiting the common *202 symptoms were victims of salmonellae type "A" food poisoning. Certain additional admitted testimony tended to show that the mink of some ranchers in the area who did not use defendant Ralston's cereal did not exhibit the common symptoms.
The foregoing, we believe, is a fair summary of plaintiff's theory of the case and the proof in support thereof. In legal essence this is to say that plaintiff rested its case, in part, on proof of a particular fact condition, or event, by evidence of the existence or occurrence of similar facts, conditions, or events under the same or substantially similar circumstances. 32 CJS, Evidence, § 584, p 713, states the general rule as follows:
"An issue as to the existence or occurrence of particular fact, condition, or event, may be proved by evidence as to the existence or occurrence of similar facts, conditions, or events, under the same, or substantially similar, circumstances."
This principle is not new to our case law. In a breach of warranty action against the vendor of a metal silo warranted as rust proof, watertight and acid resistant, proof of the condition of other silos was admitted in support of the claim of breach. We said:[1]
"Exception is taken to the action of the court in admitting evidence as to the condition of other silos. Plaintiff was permitted to show that other silos of the same material shipped with his, and erected in his neighborhood, had rusted. The proofs showed that the other silos were of like material. Upon the issue whether the silo was rust proof, evidence was received as to the condition of the other silos. We do not think this was error, inasmuch as the other silos were shown to be of the same material, and existing under like conditions. The character *203 of the issue as to whether the silo was rust proof, we think, makes it clearly distinguishable from the case of Second National Bank v. Wheeler, 75 Mich. 546, cited by defendant. It is more like the case of Avery v. Burrall, 118 Mich. 672. If the other silos were of the same material, and they rusted, it would certainly be some evidence that the one in question would, and did, rust, as claimed by plaintiff."
In support of its theory plaintiff adduced the following: The animals being raised in early 1961, both at its mink ranch and other mink ranches using any kind of defendant Ralston's mink food, whether mixed or unmixed with other ingredient mink foods, were gravely affected by an epidemic of food poisoning. The cause was narrowed to defendant Peterson's complete mink food known as "Redi-Mix." Defendant Peterson naturally endeavored to search out the difficulty with its ingredient suppliers, and on August 7, 1961, wrote defendant Ralston a letter which fairly sums up the testimony given by David W. Peterson, president both of defendant Peterson Distributing Co. and ultimately discharged defendant Peterson King Co. The letter follows:
  "Ralston Purina Company
  Checkerboard Square
  St. Louis, 2, Mo.
  Attn  Dr. Paul Kifer, Director of Research
         Mr. A.H. Leonard, Sales Manager,
           Mink Feed Division
Gentlemen:
"I presume you have received the sample of Purina Developer Chow forwarded to you by the Borden Company. We are very pleased that there was a sufficient amount left in the sample for this purpose.
"As described to you on the telephone, starting with the report of Roy Bohn on June 12 and during *204 our subsequent telephone conversations, the difficulties encountered might be summarized as follows: After we started feeding Purina Breeder Chow and changing to Developer at the appropriate time over 75% of our Redi-Mix customers seemed to have had serious difficulties. Most of them reported the kits to be unthrifty, rough furred, reduced rate of growth and having rectal prolapses in many kits and swollen vulva in some female kits. Adult nursing females have been lost and now male and female kits are dying from bladder infections and stones.
"At the beginning and during the progress of this difficulty we were inclined to blame the weather, bad management, an epidemic or disease of some kind. However the symptoms that finally seemed to be common to most feeders resembled that found in mink which had been fed stilbestrol. Testing of products for stilbestrol by an independent laboratory, Rosner Hixon, resulted in negative findings on poultry being used but positive findings on your cereal which we are using, sample of which has been forwarded to you.[2]
"As mentioned on the telephone, we have restricted our discussion of this problem with you and other people to telephone conversations, but are sending you this written description of the difficulty by Dr. Kifer's request.
                                     Yours very truly,
                                     PETERSON KING CO.
                                     (signed: D.W. PETERSON)
                                     D.W. Peterson, president"
Mr. Peterson testified fully during the trial. His testimony alone, if believed by the jury, was sufficient to prove the presence of some lethal contaminant in defendant Ralston's mink food products as manufactured at the time in Ralston's Davenport plant and to link actionably such products  through *205 defendant Peterson's admixture thereof in its "Redi-Mix"  with the ailments and deaths of plaintiff's mink. As to this proof, favorable view suggests a permissible inference that the facts thus brought forth amounted to something more than a series of disconnected and purely coincidental occurrences. The common time, source and effect elements brought them together with evidentiary significance.
"We examine the case, of course, upon view of the testimonial record in that light which is most favorable to the plaintiff. Defendant, by its presently tested motion for judgment notwithstanding the jury's verdict, has for the purposes of such motion stipulated all that the plaintiff may rightfully claim from the adduced proof." Barnebee v. Spence Brothers, 367 Mich. 46, 48.
Applying the foregoing test, we are constrained to disagree with the Court of Appeals.
Since this opinion stands for reversal of the judgment of the Court of Appeals, it is necessary to consider defendant Ralston's counterstated questions 2, 3 and 4.
Counterstated question 2, eliminating the argumentative part thereof, inquires whether the trial judge erred prejudicially in admitting the testimony of the aforesaid other mink ranchers (some 11 in all), the substance of which was that each experienced the same difficulty at the same approximate time as suffered by plaintiff after having fed their animals defendant Ralston's cereal mink food; a cereal not directly identified by any of such witnesses with defendant Ralston's "Mink Breeder Chow SF." It was "Mink Breeder Chow SF" only, according to defendant Ralston, which was furnished by it to defendant Peterson.
In view of the common nature of the trouble these mink ranchers experienced after having fed *206 Ralston mink food in the forepart of 1961, we find no evidentiary error here. It was proper to show these circumstantial facts as some evidence from which the jury might conclude that there was a pattern of causally connected carelessness at Ralston's Davenport plant in manufacturing, for the market at the particular time, Ralston's various types of mink food.
The proof of sale of such food, for the purpose mutually intended by the defendant manufacturer and the respective rancher-witnesses, coupled with proof of a common, widespread, and almost simultaneously damaging aftermath, rendered it admissible and its probative worth was for the jury. The foundation for its introduction was laid by the substantially corresponding time of feeding of defendant Ralston's mink food and the substantially corresponding effect of such feeding.
Defendant Ralston's remaining questions 3 and 4 are as follows:
"3.
"Was it prejudicial error to exclude appellee's offered testimony relative to lack of complaints by users of its Laboratory Chows produced at the same plant, with the same common ingredients and at the same relevant times as the Mink Breeder Chow SF involved in this case?"
"4.
"Was it prejudicial error to exclude testimony of mandatory Federal Food and Drug Administration inspections of appellee's human and animal food plant to show absence of any improper practices during time period relevant to law suit?"
Defendant Ralston would have us answer these questions in the affirmative. We agree. When a *207 product liability cause is presented which depends for connecting links on circumstances presented as here, the defendant has a like right to depend in rebuttal upon opposing circumstances of relevance such as questions 3 and 4 suggest.
In summary, on due favorable view there is evidence here which, as between plaintiff and defendant Ralston, points to a specific theory of causation which indicates a logical sequence of cause and effect. As against this the defendant Ralston suggests no opposing theory of cause and effect. Only the old Scottish verdict, "Not proven, M'Lord," is urged upon us. In the exhaustive evidentiary circumstances disclosed by this record the trial judge ruled properly that such a verdict should not be instructed, and later, that defendant Ralston was not entitled to judgment contrary to the jury's verdict.
We reverse and remand for retrial, leaving the matter of costs to abide the final result.
DETHMERS, C.J., and KELLY, BLACK, SOURIS, and ADAMS, JJ., concurred.
T.M. KAVANAGH, J., did not sit.
BRENNAN, J., did not participate in the decision of this case.
NOTES
[1]  McNamara v. E.W. Ross Co., 225 Mich. 335, at pp 339, 340.
[2]  It is fair to say that the results of a subsequent biological test, if believed by the jury as against the Hixon test mentioned in this letter, disclosed an absence of stilbestrol in the same "cereal."