47 Iowa 552 | Iowa | 1877
what damages the defendants were liable. See ojfinion on rehearing in Engleken v. Webber, p. 558, post. The demurrer, therefore, should have been sustained.
It is urged that the matter of habitual intoxication is an entirety-, and that whoever contributes to it should be held responsible for all the damages resulting to plaintiff therefrom, on the same principle that each person who contributes to a particular intoxication is held responsible for all the damages resulting from it, although the persons so contributing do not act in concert. We may concede that it is not easy upon principle to make a sharp distinction between the two cases. Yet, no one will deny that there is very considerable difference. If the. plain tiff’s husband became addicted to habitual drunkenness, the habit was acquired by drinking one glass of liquor at a time; each glass contributed to the habit. Yet, to hold a person who sold him a single glass responsible for all the damages resulting from his habitual drunkenness would be a great hardship; it would shock every one’s sense of justice, and violate well recognized legal principles. La France v. Frayer, 42 Iowa, 143; Jewett v. Wanshura, 43 Iowa, 574; Hitchner v. Ehlers, 44 Iowa, 40.
He who contributes to an injury in such a case must be liable for all the damages, or part, or none. That he is liable for some damages was expressly held in Woolheather v. Risley, 38 Iowa, 486. If he cannot be made liable for the whole, he must then be liable for a part. What portion of the damages should be paid by each person contributing to the injury can
Reversed.