dissenting:
Believing that the decision of the majority in this case, reversing the judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County which reversed the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of that county and set aside a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, constitutes a substantial and in my opinion an utterly unwarranted departure from the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur as heretofore applied by this Court in a case of an explosion of an instrumentality which causes an injury, I respectfully but emphatically register my dissent.
This Court has heretofore repeatedly held that “The *472doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is that when a person who is without fault is injured by an instrumentality at the time within the exclusive control of another person and the injury is such as in the ordinary course of events does not occur if the person who has control uses due care, the injury is charged to the failure of such other person to exercise due care. It is based on the lessons of experience that an injury, in the usual course of every day conduct, does not occur if the person who controls an instrumentality which will likely produce injury exercises reasonable care to prevent its occurrence; and it is given practical effect as a part of the judicial function to administer justice between litigants.” Pope v. Edward M. Rude Carrier Corporation, 138 W. Va. 218, 75 S. E. 2d 584. (Emphasis supplied). See Mecum v. Food Machinery and Chemical Corporation, 143 W. Va. 627, 103 S. E. 2d 897; Ellis v. Henderson, 142 W. Va. 824, 98 S. E. 2d 719; Wright v. Valan, 130 W. Va. 466, 43 S. E. 2d 364; Jankey v. Hope Natural Gas Company, 98 W. Va. 412, 127 S. E. 199. The cited cases show that the element of control of the instrumentality is essential to the application of the doctrine and that when that element is missing the doctrine does not apply.
This Court has refused to apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in cases involving an explosion of a steam boiler and also in a case involving an explosion in a coal mine. Hanley v. West Virginia, Central and Pittsburgh Railway Company, 59 W. Va. 419, 53 S. E. 625; Veith v. Hope Salt and Coal Company, 51 W. Va. 96, 41 S. E. 187, 57 L.R.A. 410; Dickinson v. Stuart Colliery Company, 71 W. Va. 325, 76 S. E. 654, 43 L.R.A., N.S., 335. It has likewise said that the doctrine does not apply when the instrumentality which produced the injury was not within the control of the defendant when the injury occurred. State ex rel. Bennett v. Sims, 131 W. Va. 312, 48 S. E. 2d 13, involving an explosion of dynamite; H. B. Agsten and Sons, Inc. v. United Fuel Gas Company, 117 W. Va. 515, 186 S. E. 126; Laurent v. United Fuel Gas Company, 101 W. Va. 499, 133 S. E. 116, and Marshall Window Glass Company v. Cameron Oil *473and Gas Company, 63 W. Va. 202, 59 S. E. 959, involving explosions of natural gas.
Until the present decision, this Court has refused to apply the doctrine to an explosion of a bottle which injured the purchaser when the defendant did not have control of the bottle at the time it exploded. Keffer v. Logan Coca-Cola Bottling Works, Inc., 141 W. Va. 839, 93 S. E. 2d 225. It has also refused to apply the doctrine to a defective carton from which a bottle containing a carbonated beverage fell causing the bottle to break and injure the plaintiff who was severely cut by the broken glass when control of the bottle had passed from the bottler at the time of the injury. Cunningham v. Parkersburg Coca-Cola Bottling Company, 137 W. Va. 827, 74 S. E. 2d 409.
In Laurent v. United Fuel Gas Company, 101 W. Va. 499, 133 S. E. 116, involving an explosion of natural gas in a building which resulted in property damage and also caused personal injuries to the plaintiff, this Court held in point 1 of the syllabus that “The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur cannot be invoked if defendant does not have control or management of the premises or operations where the accident occurred; or where there is divided responsibility, and the unexplained accident may have been the result of causes over which defendant had no control.”
If the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur may not be invoked in cases in which there is an explosion of a steam boiler; or if it does not apply to an explosion of natural gas if the instrumentality which causes the injury is not within the control of the defendant at the time of the injury, it is difficult, indeed in my opinion logically, legally and practically unsound, to apply the doctrine to the manifestly less violent and less destructive explosion of a small glass bottle containing a carbonated beverage which has been placed and confined in the bottle under an ordinary amount of pressure of air when the bottle, at the time it explodes, is not within the control of the defendant.
*474The present decision is contrary to the most recent case decided by this Court involving the explosion of a bottle containing a soft drink, Keffer v. Logan Coca-Cola Bottling Works, Inc., 141 W. Va. 839, 93 S. E. 2d 225, decided in 1956. In the Keffer case the evidence showed that after the bottle containing coca cola was sold and delivered by the defendant at wholesale to a retailer and may have been mishandled by someone other than an employee of the defendant bottling company, the bottle burst in the store of the retailer and injured the plaintiff who had purchased it. This Court in reversing a judgment entered upon a verdict for the plaintiff held in point 1 of the syllabus that “In an action against a bottler of soft drinks instituted to recover damages for personal injuries allegedly suffered by a plaintiff, who claims he was injured by being struck by a fragment of glass from a bursting soft drink bottle which he had purchased from a retailer of soft drinks, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does not apply where the evidence establishes affirmatively that after the bottle was sold and delivered by the bottler at wholesale to the retailer, the bottle causing the injury may have been mishandled by someone other than an employee of the bottling company.” (Emphasis supplied). As the bottle at the time it burst was not within the control of the defendant the doctrine did not apply to the facts established by the evidence. The recent case of Cunningham v. Parkersburg Coca-Cola Bottling Company, 137 W. Va. 827, 74 S. E. 2d 409, can not in principle be distinguished from and is contrary to the decision in the case at bar.
The holding in the case at bar represents the first departure from the essential requirement of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur that at the time of an injury caused by an explosion of a bottle, the instrumentality causing the injury must be within the control of the defendant. In my opinion the Keffer case can not be distinguished from the facts shown by the evidence in the case at bar. Though as stated in the opinion of the majority in this case the evidence did not show affirmatively that the bottle which exploded and injured the plaintiff had or *475may have been mishandled by someone other than an employee of the defendant, the evidence did not show that the bottle was not mishandled by someone other than an employee of the defendant. But however that may be, the statement in the majority opinion is that the plaintiff in this case does not contend or assert that the bottle when it exploded was within the control of the defendant. In fact the plaintiff concedes that control of the bottle had passed from the defendant when the injury occurred and for that reason the evidence bearing upon that issue is not of vital importance in the decision of this case.
In adopting the so-called “modern view” of the application of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in this type of case, this Court has substantially modified the doctrine as heretofore consistently applied in connection with the explosion of the instrumentality which produces an injury. This modification constitutes a dangérous and unwarranted innovation in its application in cases involving an explosion and in my judgment will create uncertainty and confusion in applying- or refusing to apply the doctrine. It will impose an unjust hardship upon the bottler and for all practical purposes subject him to the liability of an insurer of the safety of the bottle. This I am unwilling to do.
It will not do to say, as does the majority opinion, that “Those who bottle and deliver carbonated drinks are aware of the ever potential danger to an ultimate user by the explosion of an improperly designed or defective bottle, or a bottle with too great inside pressure. They also have knowledge that the bottle will reach the hands of the consumer without further inspection. The consumer has little or no knowledge of the potential danger and, in most cases, at least, no way of discovering such danger. In such circumstances, the bottler can not complain that too great a burden is placed on him by the variation of the rule.” Despite the statement just quoted, I think the bottler has just cause to complain of a ruling which subjects him'alone to the application of the doc*476trine of res ipsa loquitur after the bottle has passed from his control. The boilermaker also knows that after his product has left his control there is potential danger that it will explode and that it will be subjected to varying degrees of heat and pressure by different operators, but despite this well-known situation he is not subjected to the application of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur if the boiler explodes and causes a much greater injury than that caused by a bursting bottle. See Hanley v. West Virginia, Central and Pittsburgh Railway Company, 59 W. Va. 419, 53 S. E. 625; Veith v. Hope Salt and Coal Company, 51 W. Va. 96, 41 S. E. 187, 57 L.R.A. 410. The manufacturer of dynamite knows too that his product, after it leaves his control, will be subject to violent treatment and stored and used in temperatures of varying degrees and under different atmospheric conditions which are likely to result in injury, but notwithstanding these known potential dangers the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does not apply to him after his product has passed from his control. See State ex rel. Bennett v. Sims, 131 W. Va. 312, 48 S. E. 2d 13. I am unwilling to place the bottler whose product is much less dangerous than an overheated or excessively pressured boiler or a mishandled stick of dynamite in a different category with respect to the application of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur than that-of the boilermaker or the manufacturer of dynamite; and, I repeat, to do so subjects the bottler to discrimination and an unjust and unequal burden in defending a claim for damages which result from his alleged negligence.
The majority seeks to justify its departure from the requirement that the instrumentality which causes the injury must be in the control of the defendant when the injury occurs by placing a bursting bottle containing a carbonated beverage in the category of a tightly capped bottle or a sealed package which when the cap is first removed from the bottle or the sealed package is first opened is found to contain a harmful substance the con*477sumption of which results in injury. With this action of the majority I completely disagree.
It is true that this Court has applied the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in the cases of Parr v. Coca-Cola Bottling Works of Charleston, West Virginia, 121 W. Va. 314, 3 S. E. 2d 499, in which a harmful foreign substance consisting of maggots was found in a bottle of coca-cola; Webb v. Brown and Williamson Tobacco Company, 121 W. Va. 115, 2 S. E. 2d 898, in which a harmful foreign substance consisting of a dead worm or a moth was found in a packaged piece of chewing tobacco; Blevins v. Raleigh Coca-Cola Bottling Works, 121 W. Va. 427, 3 S. E. 2d 627, in which a deleterious substance consisting of “some kind of old rotten meat” was found in a bottle of coca-cola; Holley v. Purity Baking Company, 128 W. Va. 531, 37 S. E. 2d 729, 167 A.L.R. 648, in which a foreign substance consisting of a small piece of wire was found in a cake in a cellophane wrapper; and Rutherford v. Huntington Coca-Cola Bottling Company, 142 W. Va. 681, 97 S. E. 2d 803, in which small pieces of glass were found in a bottle containing a soft drink beverage and in which it appeared that the tightly capped bottle had not been opened until the plaintiff drank from it and was injured by the particles of glass. In those so-called sealed or orignial package cases, as stated in the opinion in the Cunningham case, which was distinguished from those cases, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur “was held to apply only because no opportunity existed for any negligence on the part of any person other than the manufacturer.” The opinion in the Cunningham case also contains these statements: “Neither can we apply the rule, in the instant case, on the theory that at the time of the injury the article causing the injury was under the exclusive control of defendant. In the instant case the carton alleged to have been defective was not under control of defendant, and had not been for at least three days prior to the time of the injury.” Under the salutary principle of stare decisis, I adhere to the rule of the so-called sealed or original package cases, but I would not place the explosion of the bottle in the case at bar in that cate*478gory where clearly it does not belong nor would I extend the application of the rule of those cases to the bursting of a bottle which contains a carbonated beverage after it has passed from the control of the bottler.
For the reasons stated and under the authorities cited and quoted from in this dissenting opinion, I would follow the decisions of this Court in the Keffer and Cunningham cases and affirm the judgment of the circuit court in refusing to apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in this case.