(dissenting).
The writer finds himself mildly in disagreement with the majority opinion, as to the result reached, but firmly in disagreement as to the reasoning used to reach that result.
The majority opinion overstates the evidence in favor of upsetting the decision below. The evidence as to the total use made of this toy by the two Bailey children is vaporous at best. It was first used by the younger child, Ricky, eight years of age, and the only testimony delineating the extent of this use is as follows:
“Q For how long did he play with it?
“A [The plaintiff’s mother] Not very long, I’m not sure how long.
“Q Did you see him play with it?
“A No, they were in the house and I told them that they couldn’t use it in the house.
“Q Where did they play with it instead, then?
“A He had taken it outside and tried it a couple of times, then, he came back in. This was earlier.
“Q And, then, who took the Pogo Stick?
“A David took it outside and played with it.” (Emphasis added)
The testimony then indicates that David, the older child of ten, played with the Pogo stick in the accompaniment of another child of about the same age. The mother testified that “ * * * it wasn’t very long” after David took the toy that the injury occurred. There is no testimony that the toy was not used by anyone else other than the two Bailey children. There is no testimony that any portion of the toy failed or broke—only tlwt it came apart. And there is no testimony as to what caused it to come apart.
There are few mechanical assemblages which will frustrate the disassemble genius of a small boy. Unless we take judicial notice that a safe' toy for a ninety pound boy cannot be manufactured and sold at retail for $2.99 (the amount paid by the Baileys for this Pogo stick), we have little: to go on here. Though I consider the: question a close one, I believe the paucity *220of the facts developed in the trial court place this case in the category of decisions such as Jakubowski v. Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing, 42 N.J. 177, 199 A.2d 826 (1964), and Shramek v. General Motors Corp., 69 Ill.App.2d 72, 216 N.E.2d 244 (1966). Whatever the test of liability be, whether negligence, breach of warranty or strict liability, there must be evidence which creates a reasonably probable inference that there was a defect of some kind in the product at the time it left the seller’s hands.
However, admittedly, it is a close question in this case as to the sufficiency of the proof. Under not too dissimilar situations, courts have permitted the question of whether an accident had been caused by a defect in the product to go to a jury. See Davidson v. Wee, 93 Ariz. 191, 379 P.2d 744 (1963); Canadian Fire Insurance Co. v. Wild, 81 Ariz. 252, 304 P.2d 390 (1956); Fraley v. Ford, 81 Ariz. 268, 304 P.2d 1068 (1957); and, Zesch v. Abrasive Co. of Philadelphia, 353 Mo. 558, 183 S.W.2d 140, 156 A.L.R. 469 (1944). But if the trial court must be reversed, I do not believe that the doctrine of strict tort liability is an appropriate one to reach this result in this case. If we do so, we are going outside any contentions presented by the plaintiff to the trial court to justify recovery, and this we have said we would not do. Schwamm v. Superior Court in and for County of Pima, 4 Ariz.App. 480, 421 P.2d 913 (1966); and see 5 Am.Jur.2d Appeal and Error §§ 545, 546, pp. 29-32; 5 C.J.S. Appeal & Error § 1503, p. 872.
There are a total of ten counts to the plaintiff’s complaint filed below, but none of these suggests that the defendant should be held liable on a theory of strict tort liability. The appellant’s opening brief in this court makes no suggestion that a concept of strict liability should be used to upset the judgment below. It is only when we come to the defendant’s brief that we have any such theory mentioned, and then it is only for the purpose of pointing out that even under the doctrine of strict liability there must be a showing that there was a “defect” which resulted in the injury.
It is my view that the decision of whether to adopt the doctrine of “strict liability”' as the law of this state should await a case which is properly briefed and in which there is some necessity to “cross the Rubicon.” Here, there is no such necessity. If this Pogo stick was unsuitable for a child of less than ninety pounds when it was sold, there is evidence to let the question of liability go to the jury under contentions advanced by the plaintiff. These include theories of express and implied warranty.
The evidence establishes that the plaintiff’s mother ordered this Pogo stick through a catalog of the defendant, which, catalog advertised this toy as being: “SPECIAL STEEL POGO STICK FOR CHILDREN WEIGHING UP TO NINETY LBS.” If this implied statement of suitability induced the plaintiff’s mother to' make this purchase, then I would find an express warranty under A.R.S. § 44-212:
“Any affirmation of fact or any promise by the seller relating to the goods is-an express warranty if the natural tendency of such affirmation or promise is-to induce the buyer to purchase the goods, and if the buyer purchases the goods relying thereon. No affirmation of the value of the goods, nor any statement purporting to be a statement of the seller’s opinion only shall be construed as a warranty.”
Decisions finding an express warranty on no more than this are: Pritchard v. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company, 350 F.2d 479 (3d Cir. 1965), cert. den. 382 U.S. 987, 86 S.Ct. 549, 15 L.Ed.2d 475 (1966); Norton v. Lindsay, 350 F.2d 46 (10th Cir. 1965); Burr v. Sherwin Williams Co., 42 Cal.2d 682, 268 P.2d 1041 (1954); Lane v. C. A. Swanson & Sons, 130 Cal.App.2d 210, 278 P.2d 723 (1955); Gherna v. Ford Motor Company, 246 A.C.A. 721, 55 Cal.Rptr. 94 (1966); and see Young v. Aeroil Products Company, 248 F.2d 185 (9th Cir. 1957).
*221And if this Pogo stick did fall apart soon after its purchase by reason of normal use by a child under ninety pounds, there would be a breach of an implied warranty of merchantability. In Colvin v. Superior Equipment Company, 96 Ariz. 113, 118, 392 P.2d 778 (1964), our Supreme Court held:
“There is in every sales contract, however, an implied warranty provided for by A.R.S. § 44-215(1) * * *.” 96 Ariz. at 118, 392 P.2d at 781.
The implied warranty referred to in Colvin is one that the goods are reasonably fit for the purposes intended. In the instant action the implied warranty would probably more accurately be designated as one of “merchantable quality” under subsection 2 of A.R.S. § 44-215, inasmuch as the buyer’s particular use was equivalent to nothing more than the general purpose for which the article in question was manufactured. See Davidson v. Wee, 93 Ariz. 191, 196, 379 P.2d 744 (1963), for an excellent discussion of the difference between an implied warranty of fitness and one of merchantability.
The defense of lack of privity of contract is not raised by the defendant here. This concept, which has given rise to “utterly preposterous decisions” (quote from Prosser—-The Assault Upon the Citadel, 69 Yale L.J. 1099, at 1118), if raised, should be rejected as in Henningsen v. Bloomfield Motors, Inc., 32 N.J. 358, 161 A.2d 69, 75 A.L.R.2d 1 (1960); in Greenberg v. Lorenz, 9 N.Y.2d 195, 213 N.Y.S.2d 39, 173 N.E.2d 773 (1961); in McBurnette v. Playground Equipment Corporation, 137 So. 2d 563 (Fla.1962); and in Lindroth v. Walgreen Co., 329 Ill.App. 105, 67 N.E.2d 595 (1946); and see Frumer & Friedman, Products Liability § 19.01[3].
If we must consider the doctrine of strict liability, as I think we should not for the reasons stated, then a few comments as to the desirability of this “leap forward” are appropriate. Dissatisfaction with the privity doctrine and the “outrageous” decisions reached in blindly following this doctrine should not in my judgment induce the court to sweepingly set aside the doctrine of liability based on fault.
Before suggesting a few reasons why this change may not be either good law or in. the public interest, we should first consider how far we have already gone in this direction in this state. It has been said that we have already taken this step:
“In the recent case of Colvin v. Superior Equipment Company, 96 Ariz. 113, 392 P.2d 778 (1964), this Court adopted the modern legal concept of a manufacturer’s strict liability in tort with regard to its manufactured products.” Concurring opinion of Chief Justice Lockwood in Nalbandian v. Byron Jackson Pumps, Inc., 97 Ariz. 280, 287, 399 P.2d 681, 686 (1965).
Respectfully, the writer suggests that this simply cannot be so. In the first place, Colvin and Nalbandian were concérned with whether a sales contract was to be enforced and not with consequential damages to person or property resulting from a dangerous defect. In Colvin, the plaintiff was suing to recover a deficiency judgment after a repossession sale of a power shovel under a conditional sales contract under A.R.S. § 44-322. Nalbandian was a suit by a buyer to recover the cost of repairing a pump, the breakdown in the pump having occurred during the period of an express warranty.
Strict liability in tort is imposed for reasons of public policy which have no pertinency to problems such as these. Seely v. White Motor Company, 63 Cal.2d 9, 45 Cal, Rptr. 17, 403 P.2d 145 (1965); Price v, Gatlin & Columbian Tractor & Imp. Co., 241 Or. 315, 405 P.2d 502 (1965); contra, Santor v. A and M Karagheusian, Inc., 44 N.J. 52, 207 A.2d 305 (1965). And certainly the majority of the court in Colvin and Nalbandian did not conceive that there was a problem at hand to be solved under the doctrine of strict liability in tort. Both Colvin and Nalbandian are replete with references to and quotations from our Sales Act, A.R.S. § 44—201 et seq., and cases *222pertaining to express and implied warranties. Most of the discussion in both Colvin and Nalbandian would have been completely beside the point if strict liability in tort had been the rationale of the decision.
The antipathy between the reasoning of Colvin and the doctrine of strict liability in tort can be pointed up by remembering that Colvin gave as one of its reasons for affirming the trial court (in denying recovery to the buyer), the possibility that the trial court may have found that the "buyer did not give notice of the defect to the seller within a reasonable time after discovery thereof. (96 Ariz. at 120, 392 P.2d 778.) If strict liability in tort were the test, this defense has no pertinency:
“Nor is the consumer required to give notice to the seller of his injury within a reasonable time after it occurs, as is provided by the Uniform Act.”
Restatement (Second), Torts § 402(A), p. 356.
But, though our Supreme Court has not as yet wedded this new doctrine, it has certainly at least paid ardent courtship. The citation with approval in Colvin of Greenman v. Yuba Power Products, Inc., 59 Cal.2d 57, 27 Cal.Rptr. 697, 377 P.2d 897 (1962), might even be considered a betrothment. That the engagement has not as yet been broken is demonstrated by the remarks in Shannon v. Butler Homes, Inc., 102 Ariz. 312, 428 P.2d 990 (1967), and the citation therein of the concurring opinion in Nalbandian. But before this romance has reached the let-no-man-put-asunder stage, the writer would hope that the Supreme Court will take one last critical look which will include some of the less appealing facets of this beguiling new doctrine.
Unquestionably, one of the principal attractions of the “new look” is its apparent simplicity. “Confusing” concepts such as privity are swept aside to do “justice.” “Strict liability in tort” has the ring of something sure and firm, with implications that a great morass of unnecessary quibbling over details of liability will be cut through. Analysis of the new rule, however, may lead one to conclude that it presents about as much to litigate over as the old rule.. The burden of proof upon the plaintiff in a strict liability in tort action against a manufacturer, for instance, is very close to being the same as that in either a negligence or a warranty case.1
According to the Restatement (Second), Torts § 402(A), the plaintiff must prove that a product was “ * * * in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous * * * ” (emphasis added) at the time it left the seller’s hands. Though this is not an identical twin to the test of what is negligence as far as a manufacturer is concerned, it is certainly a first cousin.2
Pragmatically, it will be the wholesaler and the retailer who will feel the bite of the new doctrine. As to the non-negligent distributor, wholesaler, and retailer, the new doctrine is heavy-handed to point of injustice. We are all aware that there is a tendency for business enterprises to become larger and larger and for the small entrepreneur to he squeezed into oblivion between the forces of big business and big labor. The new philosophy of liability with*223out fault will mean the difference between survival and extinction to many a small businessman.
The new doctrine takes the tranquilizing view that strict liability in tort reaches a just result because it passes back to the manufacturer—where it “really belongs” —the liability for a defective product. This “passing back,” of course, will only be possible to the extent that proof is available to trace the defect back and to the extent that the original supplier is financially responsible. If passed back, inexorable laws of economics do not permit the loss to rest with the manufacturer. It will be a rare manufacturer of any size who will make less profit at the end of the year because of the new doctrine. Big manufacturers will pass the loss on to the consumer. Products liability insurance, another tranquilizing thought which has appealed to some of the proponents of this doctrine,3 is of no real consequence in determining the final debtor in this shifting of losses, as the cost of the liability insurance must in turn pay a profit in the insurance company, all of which must be paid in the final analysis by the consumer.
And some will not have the economic wherewithal or the good luck to be able to pass the loss along. Prosser himself comments upon this unfortunate aspect of the new concept in words pertaining to the small manufacturer, but which have equal pertinency to the small middleman and retailer :
“It is a common failing to overlook the problem of the small manufacturer. When social reformers speak of 'manufacturers’ they generally assume that all manufacturers are in the position of U. S. Steel Corporation or General Motors or Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. It may very well be (leaving out considerations of justice) that large organizations of this character can absorb or distribute an item of increased cost such as that which would result from the imposition of strict liability. But many manufacturers are in a totally different situation. Their position in the industry is vulnerable and their competitive situation delicate. It is these comparatively small manufacturers who suffer when additional costs are added without regard to their situation.”
69 Yale L.J. The Assault Upon the Citadel (Strict Liability to the Consumer) 1099, at 1121-22, n. 147 (1959-60).
Under the strict liability concept, neither contributory negligence (Comment n of Restatement (Second), Torts § 402(A)) nor contract limiting liability (Comment m of Restatement (Second), Torts § 402 (A)) are to detract from full recovery. Under this doctrine, then, the negligent consumer, and the consumer who has deliberately limited his right to recovery by solemn contract, are to recover their losses from all other consumers, non-negligent and contractually unencumbered as they may be. In the process of passing these losses along, there will be substantial wastage in the costs of litigation and by reason of the small entrepreneurs who will fall by the wayside, thus frustrating this equalizing process from full achievement.
The argument favoring abrogation of the traditional law, to the effect that the manufacturer is too often out of the jurisdiction of the only court available to the injured consumer4 no longer has efficacy in the light of “long arm statutes” such as our own Rule 4(e), Rules of Civil Procedure, 16 A.R.S. See Phillips v. Anchor Hocking Glass Corporation, 100 Ariz. 251, 413 P.2d 732 (1966). This Rule permits the passing back of the loss without the impalement of the innocent middleman on the sword of liability.
By accepting the strict liability in tort doctrine, this state will be leapfrogging over *224the question of whether contributory negligence is a defense in an implied warranty case.5 The only contributory negligence defense permitted by § 402(A), Restatement (Second), Torts, is that usually denominated assumption of risk. Negligence in the failure to discover a defect is no defense. See Comment n, § 402(A) Restatement (Second), Torts, p. 356. On those occasions when our legislature has passed upon the related problem of whether failure to discover a defective condition should be a defense in a warranty case, it has spoken in favor of denying recovery, under certain circumstances, to the buyer who negligently fails to inspect and discover a defect. See A.R.S. §§ 44—215, subsec. 3 and 44-2333, subsec. C, par. 2, of the newly adopted Uniform Commercial Code.
The grand simplicity of the new doctrine —its sweeping aside of the concept of liability through fault-—is its most dangerous aspect. The all-inclusive ring of “strict liability” will cause an overextension (as here) of what is conceived by its progenitors to be a limited concept. Unlike its predecessor-doctrine of liability through “fault,” which in the very statement of the principle suggests that the shifting of loss is to be the exception rather than the rule, the innuendos of the new verbiage are pervasive. The supplier-consumer relationship is the most ubiquitous in our society, not even excepting the sexual relationship. A concept that contemplates equalizing most of the accidental loss arising from the consumption of goods demands a vast conveyer belt of judicial machinery to redistribute losses. One might pause to reflect whether a conveyer belt rolling on wheels provided by an adversary system, which expends so much energy in friction heat, will be sufficiently efficient to meet the demands of this brave new world.
A doctrine of liability without fault, while it may eliminate some of the inconsistencies presented by rules of “privity,” will create its own inconsistencies, which will in turn require a sweeping away of other concepts. An example of such is presented in Goldberg v. Kollsman Instrument Corp., 12 N.Y.2d 432, 240 N.Y.S.2d 592, 191 N.E.2d 81 (1963). In that action, the Court of Appeals of New York held that Lockheed, the assembler of an airplane, was to be held liable to the estate of a passenger killed in a crash of that airplane under a principle of strict liability arising from implied warranty, but denied any recovery against Kollsman, the manufacturer of the altimeter which malfunctioned to cause the accident. The court gives no reason for making such a distinction other than that “adequate protection” is provided to the passengers by stopping liability with the airplane manufacturer (240 N.Y.S.2d 592, 191 N.E.2d at 83). Presumably, if the airplane manufacturer had been bankrupt, the manufacturer of the component part would have been held liable.
As pointed out in the dissenting opinion in Goldberg, there seems no logic in holding American Airlines, which contracted directly with the passenger, to a lower standard of liability (in the field of negligence) than the assembler of the aircraft (in warranty), with whom the passenger had no dealings whatsoever. If the new doctrine comes to stay, sooner or later it will embrace within its euphoria the liability of all common carriers. And there are only two short steps from there to impose liability on all owners and operators of motor vehicles, first as to passengers and then as to all others. And those whose sense of social justice prompts them to seek an equaliza*225tion of all accidental losses will hardly cease storming the battlements with only these outer walls taken.
Surely there are many solutions more fitting than the one proselyted.6 If the result reached in some fact situations under the common law of negligence and warranty, as it has been developed and specialized over many generations, is unsatisfactory, the writer suggests that these time-proven concepts be tailored as needed in order to eliminate the injustices perceived rather than to relegate the old concepts to the junkheap. A salutary step in this regard might be to discard the doctrine of privity in the law of negligence. The injection of this contractual concept into the law of torts by Winterbottom v. Wright, M.W. 109, 152 Eng.Rep. 402 (Exch. 1842), has few defenders today. The Palsgraf test7 of reasonable foreseeability may be enough of a limit of liability in this as in all other cases of negligence.
The new approach is Einsteinian in its simplicity, and like Einstein’s theories of relativity, may command more awe than understanding. The new approach attempts to explain all recoveries ever had against a seller of goods. It does explain most, but it fails to explain decisions which are accepted as “fair” which have denied recovery. We are not in the science of physics but in the field which is neither a science nor an art. Clarence Darrow is attributed with saying, “Laws should be like clothes. They should be made to fit the people they are meant to serve.” 8 For the judiciary to adopt a sweeping principle of strict liability for all sellers, whether big or little, of all chattels, whether new or used, whether unfabricated or works of art, and whether sold with implied warranties or sold “as is,” is to hack out a suit of clothes with a woodsman’s ax, though it must be acknowledged, to make the analogy more appropriate, that the ax is finely honed and has several buttonhole notches tooled into its cutting edge.
Would it not be preferable to leave this particular tailoring to the legislative branch of our government? Those of us whose training and experience has been largely confined to the law have a limited view of the broad scene. Each discipline is inclined to have prejudices arising from the fact that it views life from its own peephole. On something as far-reaching as this, the viewpoint of a branch of our government containing more of a cross section of our people should give a closer approximation of what will suit our society as fair and just in the years ahead.
This judgment should be affirmed.
. Prosser evaluates tlie situation as to manufacturers as follows:
“Where the action is against the manufacturer of the product, an honest estimate might very well be that there is not one case in a hundred in which strict liability would result in recovery where negligence does not.” 69 Yale L.J. The Assault Upon the Citadel (Strict Liability to the Consumer), 1099, at 1114 (1959-60).
Also see a comparable statement in Hursh, Products Liability, Vol. 1, Supplement § 5A:2, at 144-45.
. Restatement (Second), Torts § 282, p. 9, defines negligence as follows:
“ * * * conduct which falls below the standard established by law for the protection of others against unreasonable rislc of harm.”
(Emphasis added)
And see § 395, Restatement (Second), Torts, p. 325, for the specific standard applicable to manufacturers.
. I.e., Justice Traynor as expressed in Ms memorable concurring opinion in Escola v. Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Fresno, 24 Cal.2d 453, 462, 150 P.2d 436, 440 (1944).
. I.e., Prosser, The Assault Upon the Citadel (Strict Liability to the Consumer), 69 Yale L.J. 1099, at 1116 (1959-60).
. There is a raging conflict on this legal issue. There is substantial authority negating the defense: Hansen v. Firestone fTire and Rubber Company, 276 F.2d 254 (6th Cir. 1960); Brown v. Chapman, 304 F.2d 149 (9th Cir. 1962); 77 C.J.S. Sales § 357, p. 1266 (but see below); but for a contrary view see Dallison v. Sears, Roebuck and Co., 313 F.2d 343 (10th Cir. 1962); Gardner v. Coca Cola Bottling Company of Minnesota, 267 Minn. 505, 127 N.W.2d 557 (1964); 77 C.J. S. Sales § 383, p. 1335. Also see 4 A.L.R.3d 501 for a topical analysis.
. The word “proselyted” is justified. Though the Restatement is said to be a compendium of the common law as it currently exists in this country, Honnold, The Life of the Law, pp. 144, 168, 176-77 (1964), Restatement (Second), Torts, Vol. 1, Introduction, p. VII, at IX (1965), this surely cannot be said of the rule under discussion. In May of 1964, when the new rule was promulgated, California was the only jurisdiction, in Greenman v. Yuba Power Products, Inc., 59 Cal. 2d 57, 27 Cal.Rptr. 697, 377 P.2d 897 (1962), speaking of “strict liability in tort.” See Hursh, Products Liability, Vol. 1, Supplement § 5A:1 et seq. Even now, there is probably no jurisdiction which has adopted § 402(A), Restatement (Second), Torts, in all of its ramifications. See 17 U.Ela.L.Rev. Products Liability: Doctrinal Problems and the Restatement’s Answer, pp. 421, 444 (1964) ; and see Condon, Product Liability Problems, 57 Nw.U.L.Rev. p. 536 (1962), in which the author states :
“No one can quarrel with the right of these scholars to entertain and foster by every appropriate means whatever views they may have as to what the law should be. One can quarrel, however, with a Restatement which does not restate. One can take violent exception to the promulgation by the American Law Institute of a revolutionary concept in the law under a banner which proclaims it to be ‘an orderly statement of the general law of the United States’.”
Nw.U.L.Rev. Product Liability Problems, Vol. 57, p. 542.
. Palsgraf v. Long Island R. Co., 248 N.Y. 339, 162 N.E. 99, 59 A.L.R. 1253 (1928).
. The New Dictionary of Thoughts, New Standard Book Co., p. 342 (1960).