These two wrongful death and survival actions were submitted together to determine whether a person injured by an intoxicated driver may recover from the alcoholic beverage licensee who allegedly sold intoxicants to that intoxicated driver in violation of the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code. In
El Chico v. Poole,
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Poole sued El Chico Corporation and Rene Saenz for the death of their son, Larry, alleging that El Chico negligently served alcohol to an intoxicated Saenz who later collided with Larry’s car. The trial court severed the action against Saenz and granted summary judgment for El Chico. The court of appeals reversed the trial court’s summary judgment and remanded the cause for trial.
In
Joleemo v. Evans,
Mr. and Mrs. Wen-del Evans sued Joleemo, Inc., Bobby L. Morris, individually and d/b/a Bandy’s, and Henry Scott Smith for the death of their son, Patrick, alleging that Bandy’s negligently served alcohol to. Smith, who later struck Patrick’s motorcycle. The trial court dismissed the Evanses’ petition for failure to state a cause of action. The court of appeals reversed and remanded the cause for trial.
The El Chico summary judgment evidence established the following facts: On Friday, January 21, 1984, Rene Saenz, an admitted alcoholic, left work and proceeded with a friend to the El Chico restaurant in Northwest Mall in Houston. Saenz arrived at El Chico shortly after 5:00 p.m. Saenz remembered ordering his first drink, but remembered nothing else until the accident which occurred around 8:00 p.m., three to five blocks from El Chico. In his deposition, Saenz stated that he did not pass out, but rather “blacked out” — forgot or erased from memory — the incidents leading to the accident. Saenz attributed his “black-out” to his inebriation and desire to “put the accident behind him.” Saenz did not recall the number of beverages he drank, but he believed the quantity was sufficient to cause his black-out. Saenz did not remember his condition in El Chico nor could he recall whether his conduct would have alerted any El Chico employees to his intoxicated condition.
Saenz left El Chico around 7:45 p.m. The collision resulting in Larry Poole’s death occurred a few minutes later as Saenz was speeding north on Mangum Road and ran a red light at the intersection *309 of Mangum and the Northwest Freeway service road. His truck struck Larry’s car as Larry was turning left onto the service road. Larry Poole was dead on arrival at Hermann Hospital. The police officer who investigated the accident observed Saenz was wobbly and swaying in his movements, had a strong smell of alcohol on his breath, was talkative although mumbling, and appeared to be intoxicated. A breath alcohol test administered at the scene resulted in a .18 reading. Saenz was arrested for driving while intoxicated and later convicted of involuntary manslaughter.
In
Joleemo,
the trial court dismissed the Evanses’ cause of action upon Joleemo’s special exceptions that the pleadings failed to state a cause; therefore, we accept the facts pleaded by the Evanses as true in determining whether a cause of action exists.
Massey v. Armco Steel Co.,
The courts of appeals in Joleemo and in El Chico reversed the respective trial courts’ judgments. The El Chico court of appeals held:
... [A] bar owner owes a duty to the motoring public not to knowingly sell an alcoholic beverage to an already intoxicated person.
... [U]nder general common law priacl-ples, a tavern owner who encourages on® to consume too much alcohol, continues to serve him alcohol after he knows or should know he was intoxicated, and who knows or should know that he will operate a motor vehicle on the public streets, owes a duty to third persons to take such precautions as are reasonable and prudent to prevent the intoxicated person from driving, and it is foreseeable that a breach of this duty could cause injury to third persons.
On appeal here, both El Chico and Jo-leemo argue that in the absence of a legislative dramshop act specifically creating a civil remedy and civil cause of action against alcoholic beverage licensees, no cause of action may be maintained against them. The Pooles and Evanses contend that liability may be imposed upon an alcoholic beverage licensee based upon the common law principles of negligence and negligence per se. An alcoholic beverage licensee refers to the holder of an Alcoholic Beverage Commission permit or license who may sell or serve alcoholic beverages. See generally TEX.ALCO.BEV.CODE ANN. tit. 3 (Vernon 1978 & Supp.1987). The duty, if any, of one who dispenses or serves liquor gratuitously, in absence of a license or permit, is not involved in this appeal.
At common law, a purveyor of alcoholic beverages was not liable for damages sustained by third persons resulting from a' patron’s intoxication. 48A C.J.S. Intoxicating Liquors § 428 (1981); Annot., 97 A.L. R.3d 528 (1980). The rule of non-liability was two-fold. First, the consumption, not the sale or service of alcohol, was viewed as the sole proximate cause of the patron’s intoxication and later injury to a third party. An able-bodied person was responsible for his or her own actions. Second, even if the sale were a proximate cause of the intoxication, injury to a third person was an unforeseeable result of the patron’s intoxication.
*310
In recent years, modern analyses have discarded the absolute rule of no liability in favor of an approach incorporating current legal understanding as dictated by conditions and circumstances of modern society. An intoxicated person is by definition not an able-bodied nor able-minded person. Of fifty American jurisdictions (including the District of Columbia and excluding Texas), twenty-nine recognize a common law cause of action against an alcoholic beverage purveyor for injuries caused by an intoxicated customer.
1
Additionally, nineteen state legislatures have enacted civil dramshop liability,
2
seven of which also have recognized a complementary and supplemental common law cause of action.
3
In total, a civil cause of action exists in forty-one jurisdictions with a substantial majority basing the cause of action upon the common law principles of negligence, negligence
per se,
or both. Focusing on the carnage inflicted upon innocent victims by drunk drivers, courts have rejected the rationale supporting no liability as outdated and unrealistic and thus invalid. Injury to a third person is no longer unforeseeable in an age when death and destruction occasioned by drunk driving is so tragically frequent.
Alegria v. Payonk,
As demonstrated by the actions of the majority of states, the common law is not frozen or stagnant, but evolving, and it is the duty of this court to recognize the evolution.
See Otis Engineering Corp. v. Clark,
Negligence, a common law doctrine, consists of three essential elements — a legal duty owed by one person to another, a breach of that duty, and damages proximately resulting from the breach.
Rosas v. Buddies Food Store,
... if a party negligently creates a situation, then it becomes his duty to do something about it to prevent injury to others if it reasonably appears or should appear to him that others in the exercise of their lawful rights may be injured thereby.
Buchanan v. Rose,
In addressing foreseeability, we know by common knowledge that alcohol distorts perception, slows reaction, and impairs motor skills, while operation of an automobile requires clear perception, quick reaction, and adept motor skills. Our everyday use and reliance on the automobile is unquestionable. Also unquestionable is the tragic relationship between intoxicated drivers and fatal or injury-producing accidents. The most recent available statistics show that in 1985, there were 30,794 total motor vehicle traffic accidents in Texas involving intoxicated drivers.
See
TEX. DEP’T OF PUBLIC SAFETY, A LOOK AT DWI ... ACCIDENTS, VICTIMS, ARRESTS 1-4 (1985 ed.). In those accidents, 989 persons were killed and 25,461 were injured. The 1985 figures represent a 6% decrease over 1984, due in part to society’s increased awareness of the danger of drunk driving and an increase in “driving while intoxicated” arrests.
Id.
The risk and likelihood of injury from serving alcohol to an intoxicated person whom the licensee knows will probably drive a car is as readily foreseen as injury resulting from setting loose a live rattlesnake in a shopping mall.
Accord Jardine v. Upper Darby Lodge No. 1973, Inc.,
Based upon foreseeability, the duty of an alcoholic beverage licensee is apparent:
The first prime requisite to de-intox one who has, because of alcohol, lost control over his reflexes, judgment and sense of responsibility to others, is to stop pouring alcohol into him.
Jardine,
Separate and apart from our recognition here of a common law duty of reasonable care based on the principle of foreseeability, the attendant standard of conduct may in addition be determined by a penal statute.
Nixon v. Mr. M Property Management Co.,
In addressing whether § 101.63(a) establishes an applicable standard of conduct, El Chico and Joleemo correctly state that art. XVI, § 20 of the Texas Constitution grants the Legislature the power to regulate the manufacture, sale, transportation, and possession of intoxicating liquors. The regulation of alcoholic beverages is governed exclusively by the provisions of the Alcoholic Beverage Code. Code § 1.06. Regulations encompass among other things the hours of sale, to whom sales may be made, and where intoxicants may be consumed. Code § 105.01-.05 (Vernon Supp. 1987); § 106.01-13 (Vernon Supp.1987); § 101.72 (Vernon Supp.1987). The administrative regulation of alcoholic beverages, however, does not foreclose using the statute as a definition of reasonable conduct in a civil suit. By recognizing the standard of conduct imposed by the statute, we are not regulating alcohol, but rather acknowledging possible civil liability for failure to follow the statutory standard. Moreover, a standard of conduct may be found in a statute silent on the issue of civil liability.
Nixon,
The expressed public policy of the Alcoholic Beverage Code is the protection of the welfare, health, peace, temperance, and
safety
of the people of the state. Code § 101.03 (Vernon 1978). The express purpose of a statute, stated in the preamble, may evidence which persons are included within a protected class.
See Largo Corp. v. Crespin,
By interpreting the general purposes of § 101.63(a) to protect the safely and welfare of the general public in addition to those named, Texas joins the modem trend in tort law and the majority of other jurisdictions with statutes similar to § 101.63(a).
See Nazareno v. Urie,
In order to complete a cause of action in negligence, a plaintiff must establish that the liquor licensee’s negligent conduct proximately caused his injuries. Proximate cause consists of cause in fact and foreseeability.
Exxon v. Quinn,
El Chico and Joleemo misread the Pooles’ and Evanses’ cause in fact burden. The plaintiff must prove it is more probable than not that but for the licensee’s conduct, the accident would not have occurred.
See Farley,
Foreseeability, the second element of proximate cause, means the actor as a person of ordinary intelligence should have anticipated the dangers his negligent act creates for others.
Nixon,
Common sense, common experience and authority all combine to produce the irrefutable conclusion that furnishing alcohol, consumption of alcohol, and subsequent driving of a vehicle when it is then involved in an accident are all foreseeable, ordinary links in the chain of causation leading from the sale to the injury.
Ontiveros,
The determination of proximate cause and intervening cause in cases involving a licensee's liability for knowingly serving alcohol to an intoxicated patron rests with the jury, as in any other action grounded in negligence. Issues of concurrent causation are not outside the competence of our judicial system. While a jury may find a licensee’s conduct is not the proximate cause of an injury, the inquiry should be made on a case-by-case basis, not a rule of law denying recovery in all cases. The absolute rule of no proximate cause is no longer viable today when a patron sits behind the wheel of an automobile instead of jumping on a horse.
Based on both common law negligence principles and a violation of § 101.-63(a), we hold an alcoholic beverage licensee owes a duty to the general public not to serve alcoholic beverages to a person when the licensee knows or should know the patron is intoxicated. A licensee who violates that duty by serving alcoholic beverages to an intoxicated person is negligent as a matter of law. Whether a licensee breached his duty and whether that breach proximately caused a plaintiff’s injuries are issues of fact for a jury to resolve.
In recognizing the cause of action announced today, we are mindful that the legislature has this week enacted a statute creating a civil remedy for persons injured by a licensee’s intoxicated patron. The legislature amended the Alcoholic Beverage Code to include a civil cause of action against an alcoholic beverage licensee when “at the time ... [of service] ... it was apparent to the provider that the individual being ... served ... was obviously intoxicated to the extent he presented a clear danger to himself and others.” Act of June 1, 1987; § 3 (to be codified at TEX.ALCO.BEV.CODE ANN. § 2.02) (emphasis added). 4 The legislature appears to have created a much more onerous burden of proof for an injured plaintiff than we have in this opinion. This act, however, does not by its terms govern a cause of action arising or accruing before its effective date. We should determine then whether, as El Chico and Joleemo contend, the legislature has previously expressed its intent regarding civil liability.
In 1977, 1979 and 1983, legislation creating a civil remedy was introduced but never voted on by the legislature as a body or by any committee. Failure to report a bill from committee or inaction by the legislature, however, does not conclusively establish legislative intent.
See Sanchez v. Schindler,
The creation of new concepts of duty in tort is historically the province of the judiciary.
See Rosas,
El Chico and Joleemo contend that the rule announced today is too burdensome and places compliance beyond their capabilities. On the contrary, the burden is no more than that already placed upon them by law.
See
Code § 101.63(a). They have the right to control the amount of alcohol served and are statutorily required to exercise that control. Furthermore, they are required to do no more than to respond in damages if and when they fail to use due care.
Brannigan v. Raybuck,
In reviewing the summary judgment granted to El Chico we accept as true evidence in favor of the Pooles, indulge in every reasonable inference, and resolve any doubts in their favor.
See Montgomery v. Kennedy,
In Joleemo, the dismissal of the Evanses’ petition for failure to state a cause of action was improper. The Evans-es pleaded that Smith was sold alcohol when Bandy’s knew or should have known Smith was intoxicated and the sale was a proximate cause of their injuries. The pleadings state a cause of action under the rule announced today.
Accordingly, the court of appeals’ judgment in El Chico v. Poole is affirmed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court. The court of appeals’ judgment in Joleemo v. Evans is affirmed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court.
Notes
.Buchanan v. Merger Enterprises, Inc.,
. ALA.CODE § 6-5-71 (1975); ALASKA STAT. § 04.21.020 (1986); COLO.REV.STAT. 13-21-103 (1974); CONN.GEN.STAT.ANN. § 30-102 (West Supp.1987); FLA.STAT.ANN. § 768.125 (West 1986); ILL.ANN.STAT. ch. 43, § 135 (Smith-Hurd Supp.1986); IOWA CODE ANN. § 123.92 (West 1987); ME.REV.STAT.ANN. tit. 28 § 1402 (West Supp.1986); MICH.COMP. LAWS ANN. § 436.22 (West Supp.1987); MINN. STAT.ANN. § 340A-801 (West Supp.1987); N.Y. GEN.OBLIG.LAW § 11.101 (McKinney 1978); N.C.GEN.STAT. § 18B-121 (1983); N.D.CENT. CODE § 5-01-06 (1983 Supp.); OHIO REV. CODE ANN. § 4399.01 (1985); OR.REV.STAT. § 30.950 (1985); R.I.GEN.LAWS § 3-14-1 to 14-15 (1986); UTAH CODE ANN. § 32A-14-1 (1986); VT.STAT.ANN. tit. 7, § 501 (1972); WYO.STAT. 12-5-502 (1986). Generally, civil dramshop liability is strict liability. See, e.g., ILL.ANN.STAT. ch. 43, § 135.
. Buchanan (Ala.); Crespin (Colo.); Kowal (Conn.); Klingerman (Me.); Berkeley (N.Y.); Hutchens (N.C.); Mason (Ohio).
. The effectiveness of this act depends upon the action, if any, taken by the Governor.
