OPINION
We review a court of appeals opinion affirming summary judgment for defendants. The trial court held that A.R.S. § 4-312(B) immunizes a social host from liability for serving alcohol to a minor who became intoxicated and injured an innocent third party. The court of appeals affirmed.
Estate of Hernandez v. Arizona Board of Regents,
We have jurisdiction under Ariz. Const, art. 6, § 5(3) and A.R.S. § 12-120.24. We granted review to determine whether a non-licensee can be liable for damages for furnishing alcohol to a person under the legal drinking age who subsequently harms a third party. 1 See Ariz.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(4).
FACTS
When reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we examine the facts in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion.
Gulf Ins. Co. v. Grisham,
On August 27, 1988, a University of Arizona fraternity welcomed new members with a bid party. As was customary, the fraternity served alcohol. To purchase alcohol for social events, the fraternity maintained a separate fund to which all imbibing members contributed. The social fund chair, a member over the age of twenty-one, collected and held the liquor money, and ensured that noncontributing members did not drink at parties.
The fraternity’s officers kept background records on all members and were aware of their ages. As of August 27,1988, a majority of the members were under the legal drinking age of twenty-one. However, all members, regardless of age, could contribute to the fund; and contribution was the sole criterion to drink at parties. Several hundred people generally attended these functions, but the fraternity checked neither members nor non-members for proof of age.
John Rayner, a contributing fraternity member under twenty-one, drank at the bid party that night. At 1:45 a.m., Rayner’s car crashed into a vehicle driven by Ruben Hernandez. Rayner was driving over forty in a twenty-five mile-per-hour zone. At 2:30 a.m., his blood alcohol level was .15, exceeding the limit set by A.R.S. § 28-692(A)(2). The crash left Hernandez blind, severely brain-damaged, and quadriplegic.
Hernandez brought an action against Rayner for personal injuries, and his three adult children joined in the action to recover loss of consortium. Hernandez later amended the complaint to add as defendants: (1) the fraternity; (2) each fraternity member who contributed to the social fund that semester; (3) the lessor of the property on which the fraternity house was located; (4) the national fraternity organization; (5) the Arizona Board of Regents; and (6) a student assigned to the fraternity through a university student education program aimed at reducing alcohol-related problems among fraternities and sororities. Hernandez died in July 1990, and his personal representative was substituted as a plaintiff. Rayner settled and was dismissed from the suit. We refer *248 to the remaining defendants collectively as “Defendants.”
LEGISLATIVE BACKGROUND
At one time, Arizona arguably did not recognize civil liability for those who furnished or sold alcohol that was a contributing factor in a later accident.
2
See, e.g., Lewis v. Wolf,
Following these decisions, in April 1985, the Arizona Legislature enacted A.R.S. § 4-301, dealing with “social hosts” and granting civil immunity to non-licensees who serve alcohol to a person over the legal drinking age. One obvious purpose of § 4-301 was to limit any extension of Ontiveros and Brannigan to non-licensees. The statute reads:
Liability limitation; social host
A person other than a licensee ... is not liable in damages to any person who is injured, or to the survivors of any person killed, or for damage to property, which is alleged to have been caused in whole or in part by reason of the famishing or serving of spirituous liquor to a person of the legal drinking age.
AR.S. § 4-301 (emphasis added).
The following year the legislature enacted 1986 Ariz.Sess. Laws ch. 329, entitled “Illegal Sale of Spirituous Liquor.” This act had only two sections, designated §§ 4-311 and 4-312. In pertinent part, the first provides:
Liability for serving intoxicated person or minor; definition
A. A licensee is liable for property damage and personal injuries or is liable to a person who may bring an action for wrongful death pursuant to § 12-612 if a court or jury finds the following:
1. The licensee sold spirituous liquor either to a purchaser who was obviously intoxicated, or to a purchaser under the legal drinking age without requesting identification containing proof of age or with knowledge that the person was under the legal drinking age,____
AR.S. § 4-311(A) (emphasis added).
The other provision, § 4-312(B), reads:
Liability limitation
Subject to the provisions of subsection A of this section[ 3 ] and except as provided in section J/,-311, a person, firm, corporation or licensee is not liable in damages to any person who is injured, or to the survivors of any person killed, or for damage to property which is alleged to have been caused in whole or in part by reason of the sale, famishing or serving of spirituous liquor.
(Emphasis added). In Schwab we did not address the scope and effect of the immunity purportedly granted by § 4-312(B), but we must do so now.
DISCUSSION
A. Does A.R.S. § 4-312(B) provide immunity to non-licensees who illegally furnish alcohol to persons under the legal drinking age?
Defendants argue that they are protected under the language of § 4-312(B), which im *249 munizes all persons, firms, or corporations not liable under § 4-311. Under Defendants’ reading, therefore, § 4-312(B) confers blanket immunity on everyone except those licensees who may be liable, in certain instances, under § 4-311. If correct, this theory would immunize Defendants and all non-licensees, including social hosts, under all circumstances.
1. The effect of A.R.S. § 4-301
Defendants’ argument stretches § 4-312(B) much too far for two reasons. First, it overlooks § 4-301, which is in the same chapter as §§ 4-311 and 4-312. By its title, § 4-301 is applicable to social hosts and immunizes only those non-licensees who furnish or serve alcohol “to a person of legal drinking age.” Conspicuously absent from § 4-301 is any provision immunizing non-licensees who serve those under the legal drinking age. It is a familiar if overused rule that a statute’s expression of one or more items of a class indicates legislative intent to exclude unexpressed items of the same class.
Pima County v. Heinfeld,
Second, and as important, common sense tells us that when, in dealing with a very controversial subject, 4 the legislature took the trouble to expressly grant immunity for furnishing alcohol to persons of legal drinking age, it meant to exclude from its largesse those who furnish alcohol to persons below that age. We see no other rational construction of § 4-301, nor has any been suggested. We conclude, therefore, that § 4-301 covers non-licensee liability and grants no immunity when, as in this case, a non-licensee furnishes liquor to an underaged person. Defendants concede this interpretation but argue that § 4-301 was repealed.
2. Implied repeal
Notwithstanding the lack of express repeal, Defendants claim that § 4-301 is no longer in effect because it conflicts with the provisions of § 4-312(B), which grants immunity to all persons, firms, or corporations except those licensees hable under § 4-311. Because § 4r-312 was passed after § 4-301, Defendants argue we must resolve the conflict in the statutes by construing § 4r-312 as repealing § 4-301.
Lemons v. Superior Court,
The law does not favor construing a statute as repealing an earlier one by implication.
Pima County v. Maya Construction Co.,
a. “Plain wording”
Defendants submit that the words of § 4-312(B)—“a person, firm, corporation or licensee is not hable,”—are plain and must be applied accordingly. They read the words as granting immunity to
every
person, firm, or corporation, hcensed or not, except those
licensees
hable under § 4-311 for sale to intoxicated or underaged persons. When determining legislative intent, they argue, courts must apply the ordinary meaning of the words used. This, of course, is true “unless it appears from the
context
or otherwise that a different meaning should control.”
State v. Raffaele,
If read in isolation, the provisions of § 4-312(B) may seem unambiguous. However, given § 4-301, Defendants’ broad interpretation is insupportable. We beheve the section headings are telling. Although section headings are not part of the substantive law,
see
§ 1-212, they aid interpretation
*250
when uncertainty exists.
State v. Barnett,
All three statutes are in chapter 3 of title 4. The chapter is entitled “Civil Liability of Licensees and Other Persons.” The legislature first addressed “other persons”—non-licensee, non-sale liability—in article 1 of chapter 3, denominated as § 4-301, “Liability limitation; social hosts” (emphasis added). The following year, the legislature added article 2 to chapter 3, entitled “Illegal Sale, of Spirituous Liquor” (emphasis added). These headings at least indicate that the legislature intended the first article (consisting of § 4-301) to apply to transactions other than sales and the second article (§§ 4^311 and 4r-312) to apply to sales under a license.
b. Legislative intent
We would be reluctant, of course, to base construction of such important statutes on chapter headings and section titles. However, Defendants’ argument that the conflict in the statutes indicates legislative intent to repeal the earlier statute has yet another fatal flaw. We believe that we would not only defy common sense if we were to conclude that § 4r-301 was repealed by implication on adoption of § 4-312 but would attack legislative competence as well.
Section 4-301 is not a technical provision that could be overlooked and impliedly repealed by a legislative committee engaged in the revision of some obscure portion of the code. Although such oversights may occur with legislative bodies and others, we deal here with three statutes passed by the same legislature. These statutes were contained in the same chapter and dealt with a subject that, after Ontiveros and Brannigan, was one of the most controversial before the legislature. 5 In essence, Defendants ask us to assume that in 1986, when the legislature added article 2 (§§ 4r-311 and 4-312) to chapter 3, it forgot that just the previous year it had adopted article 1 of that chapter, expressly providing for only a partial limitation of social host liability. We do not assume so easily that the legislature was unaware of its own actions. Nor does the legislature’s own language admit of such a conclusion.
In 1985, when enacting § 4-301, the legislature’s stated purpose was “in no way [to modify] existing law with respect to the principles of civil liability applicable to licensees who sell, furnish or serve spirituous liquor.” A.R.S. § 4-301, Historical Note. We believe the only rational conclusion is that in 1985 the legislature enacted a provision (§ 4r-301) dealing only with the liability of non-licensees, and in 1986, the same legislature, after further. debate and thought, followed with two complementary provisions (§§ 4-311 and 4-312) regulating only licensee liability. We believe common sense makes this conclusion much more likely than the “legislature forgot” argument that we would otherwise have to adopt if we found an implied repeal.
The legislative record further indicates the lawmakers’ intent to address only licensees by the 1986 enactments. Legislative committee members considering § 4-312 discussed “bar owners” and “liquor establishments,” but never even mentioned social hosts or non-licensees in reference to the statute. See Minutes, Committee on Judiciary, H.B. 2376, March 3,1986. They referred to the proposed law as “dramshop legislation.” Id. The legislative minutes also contain numerous comments by bar and restaurant owners, and the Arizona Licensed Beverage Association, 6 indicating that the pur *251 pose of the 1986 legislation was to alleviate commercial vendors’ difficulties in obtaining affordable liquor liability insurance. Id. The owner of one Tempe establishment testified that his insurance premiums had jumped from $43,000 in 1983 (when there was almost no common-law liability) to $113,000 in 1985. Id. This testimony was typical of that given by several other individuals in the restaurant and bar industry. Id.
Some further history helps to clarify legislative intent. After passing §§ 4-311 and 4-312, citizens groups attempted to place the legislation on the November 1986 general election ballot as Proposition 301. See Proposition 301, Publicity Pamphlet. The measure evidently did not qualify. See State of Arizona Official Canvass, Nov. 4, 1986 (an official list of all measures that were actually on the ballot). Proposition 301 does not appear on the canvass—presumably because the sponsor did not collect the required signatures—but the Arizona Attorney General’s Office published the necessary publicity pamphlet.
As required by § 19-124, 7 a simple analysis and a “pro” and “con” argument written by the Arizona Legislative Council, with input from informed and interested legislators, accompanied Proposition 301 in the publicity pamphlet. This analysis of Proposition 301 discussed only licensee liability, and in reference to § 4-312(B) states, “if the conditions listed in paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 above [§ 4-311] do not exist, then the liquor licensee is not liable.” Proposition 301, Publicity Pamphlet (emphasis added). In its supporting statement, the council even gave meaning to the terms “person,” “firm,” and “corporation” in the context of a liquor licensee. When discussing the “server” of liquor it stated, “every time a server pours a drink, he is exposing himself and the owner of the business to possible liability that can wipe out the business.” Id. (emphasis added). Hence, we believe that the legislature’s intent with respect to a person, firm, or corporation was to protect those associated with licensees. Our reading is reinforced by the wording of § 4-301, which excludes from immunity an employee of a licensee acting in connection with employment. This illustrates the legislature’s belief that the word “licensee” is broad enough to encompass those beyond the actual license holder.
In short, every aspect of the statute’s history indicates a legislative intent to regulate non-licensee liability under § 4r-301 and licensee liability under §§ 4-311 and 4^-312.
c. Overall legislative scheme
As this court has stated, “[w]hen the text of a statute is capable of more than one construction or result, 'legislative intent on the specific issue is unascertainable, and more than one interpretation is plausible, we ordinarily interpret the statute in such a way as to achieve the general goals that can be adduced from the body of legislation in question.”
Dietz v. General Elec. Co.,
The legislature’s goals are clear. As pointed out in an amicus curiae brief, the legislature has responded to the tragic problem of underaged drinking 8 with a strong policy of deterrence. The statutory scheme includes § 4-244(9), which creates criminal penalties for both minors who possess alcohol and licensees or others who serve alcohol to anyone under the legal drinking age; § 4-241(A), which requires a licensee or other *252 person to demand identification before serving liquor to a person who appears underage; § 4-301, which grants immunity to social hosts only when serving those of the legal drinking age; § 4-312(A), which implies, among other things, that licensees are liable for injuries resulting from a licensee’s service to a minor; and § 8-249 (the “not a drop” law), which allows courts to suspend the driver’s license of a minor who drives while possessing or consuming any alcohol.
As a whole, this body of legislation reveals a definite scheme. The legislature has imposed criminal and other sanctions on all persons who, whether licensed or not, furnish alcohol to minors. Given this, it is unreasonable to assume that the legislature would provide civil relief to those who act illegally by serving alcohol to minors. Such a reading of § 4r-312(B) would give civil immunity to someone whose conduct could even result in a charge of manslaughter.
See State v. Marty,
The parties have not cited, and we cannot find, any instance where the legislature has expressed such an intent. We can see no indication that the legislature wanted to abandon its comprehensive fight against the cost and carnage created by underage drinking and driving by granting immunity to those who illegally furnish alcohol to. minors.
3. Resolution
■ We conclude, therefore, that the most plausible interpretation of § 4-312(B) is that the immunity it grants applies solely to liquor licensees and their associates. In the statute, the word “person” must refer to a licensee’s agent or employee, while “firm or corporation” refers to any entity associated with the licensee, such as a partner, landlord, subsidiary corporation, or the like. The most reasonable construction is that by enacting § 4-312(B), the legislature protected only licensees and those associated with a licensee’s permitted activities from personal liability, “subject to” the common-law liability expressed in Ontiveros and Brannigan and codified in § 4-311.
This interpretation harmonizes all three statutes. It leaves § 4-301 intact, reconciles potentially conflicting wording in all three statutes, and implements the overall intent expressed in the chapter’s title, the legislative history, and the entire body of Arizona law on alcohol and minors.
We hold, therefore, that the term “person, firm or corporation” in § 4-312(B) is intended to protect from liability only licensees and their associates who conduct a transaction permitted under a license for the “sale, furnishing or serving” of alcohol. We further hold that § 4-312(B) has no effect on non-licensee liability under § 4-301. The statutory immunity granted by § 4-301 applies only when a non-licensee furnishes alcohol to “a person of legal drinking age.” Thus, no statutory immunity protects Defendants—all of whom are non-licensees who furnished alcohol to a minor.
This holding obviates the need to determine the constitutionality of A.R.S. § 4-312 under Ariz. Const, art. 18, § 6 or other issues such as severability, de facto licensee, and retroactivity. Having, determined that Defendants are not protected by any statutory immunity, we turn now to the question of common-law liability.
B. Is there a common-law cause of action against a social host who serves alcohol to a minor?
1. The effect of A.R.S. § 4-301
Defendants argue that if we sustain Hernandez’ claim, we create a new cause of action, infringing on the legislature’s realm. Given the noted statutory provisions, we see no infringement on legislative prerogative. Indeed, we believe that by granting immunity in A.R.S. § 4-301 only to those non-licensees who furnish or serve alcohol “to a person of the legal drinking age,” the legislature left this court to determine the liability, if any, of social hosts who furnish or serve alcohol to those under the legal drinking age. We see no other explanation for legislative action immunizing non-licensees who serve those of legal age and legislative silence on the question that then comes into focus: *253 what about the liability of those who serve underaged drinkers?
Thus, we see no reason to “pass the buck” to the legislature. By the words of § 4-301, the lawmakers have obviously left resolution of this issue to us, and we would abdicate our responsibility by refusing to decide it.
2. The effect of criminal statutes
The common-law rule of non-liability was based on either a lack of causation or a lack of duty. The existence of a statute criminalizing conduct is one aspect of Arizona law supporting the recognition of duty in this cause of action. Like other states, 9 Arizona has a statute making it a criminal offense to furnish alcohol to a minor. A.R.S. § 4r- 244(9). A criminal statute may establish a tort duty if the statute is “designed to protect the class of persons, in which the plaintiff is included, against the risk of the type of harm which has in fact occurred as a result of its violation____” W. Page Keeton et al„ Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 36, at 229-30 (5th ed. 1984).
We have previously relied on § 4r-244 to sustain a cause of action against those who furnish alcohol to minors.
We believe that A.R.S. § 4-244(9) ... constitute^] legislative recognition of the foreseeable danger to both the patron and third parties, and an effort to meet that danger by enactment of laws designed to regulate the industry, to protect third persons, and to protect those who are underage from themselves.
Brannigan,
Although Bmnnigan addressed licensee liability, § 4-244(9) makes it a crime for anyone to furnish alcohol to a minor. We believe the rationale of Bmnnigan is certainly broad enough to apply to the facts of this case. 10 Here, as in Ontiveros and Brannigan, we find Defendants’ violation of the statute further supports a civil cause of action. These provisions are not new. The statutory prohibition against furnishing alcohol to a minor is long settled in Arizona. It was a crime as early as 1887. “Every person who shall directly or indirectly, knowingly ... give away any intoxicating liquor to any minor ... without the consent of [the minor’s] guardian or parent, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, ...” Arizona Penal Code § 514 (1887); see also Arizona Penal Code § 270 (1901) (adopting the same ban). Based on past and present statutes, we see no constriction of the duly of social hosts under the facts of this case.
3. Duty based on common-law principles
Many state courts faced with a claim against a social host who served alcohol to a minor have found this to be a valid cause of action properly before the judiciary.
Cravens v. Inman,
It is especially appropriate for this court to address this issue because, under Ariz.
*254
Const, art. 18, § 6, Arizona’s judiciary shares responsibility for the evolution of the law of torts.
Law v. Superior Court of State of Arizona,
[T]he common law, which is judge-made and judge-applied, can and will be changed when changed conditions and circumstances establish that it is unjust or has become bad public policy. In reevaluating previous decisions in light of present facts and circumstances, we do not depart from the proper role of the judiciary.
Ontiveros,
Before 1983, this court arguably recognized the common-law rule of non-liability for tavern owners and, presumably and
a fortiori,
for social hosts.
Id.
Traditional authority held that when “an able-bodied man”
11
caused harm because of his intoxication, the act from which liability arose was the consuming not the furnishing of alcohol.
See also Megge v. United States,
However, the common law also provides that:
One who supplies ... a chattel for the use of another whom the supplier knows or has reason to know to be likely because of his youth, inexperience, or otherwise ... to use it in a manner involving unreasonable risk of physical harm to himself and others ... is subject to liability for physical harm resulting to them.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 390 (1965) (hereinafter Restatement). Arizona’s courts have repeatedly followed the Restatement’s analysis in this area.
See Powell v. Langford,
Even in an earlier era, it was actionable negligence to furnish a minor with a dangerous instrument. For example, in
Anderson v. Settergren,
This principle, like Restatement § 390, found common application in cases involving furnishing cars to inexperienced, youthful, or intoxicated drivers.
See Engleman v. Traeger,
We perceive little difference, in principle between liability for giving a car to an intoxicated youth and liability for giving drinks to a youth with a car. If there should be a difference between duty in the former and the latter, no case cited has explained it to us, and we perceive none. If the recipient is known to be incompetent to receive the dan
*255
gerous instrument, it is irrelevant whether it is a loaded gun, a car, or alcohol. The theory of recovery is the same and was well-established long ago. This, perhaps, is the unarticulated rationale explaining why so many states now impose either common-law or statutory liability in cases such as this.
See Cravens,
4. Duty based on prior Arizona case law
In 1940, this court sustained a claim for a wife’s loss of consortium against defendants who had supplied liquor to her husband, despite knowing he was alcoholic.
Pratt v. Daly,
Every requested application of the principles of the common law to a new set of circumstances is originally without precedent, and some court must be the first one to make the proper application.
In answer to the second question, ... [w]e are asked to declare what the common law is and always has been, and a declaration by us that it has always permitted such an action, even though none has ever actually been brought, is no more legislation than would be a declaration that it does not.
Id.
at 545-46,
A minor is similar to an adult who has diminished judgment and capacity to control his alcohol consumption. Moreover, unlike Pratt, where the tortious conduct was legal, here it is illegal to furnish alcohol to a minor.
In Brannigan, this court sustained an analogous claim, basing its decision on the duty, foreseeability, and causation issues related to furnishing alcohol to a minor. We held in relevant part:
A growing number of cases, however, have recognized that one of the very hazards that makes it negligent to furnish liquor to a minor ... is the foreseeable prospect that the [youthful] patron will become drunk and injure himself or others. Accordingly, modem authority has increasingly recognized that one who furnishes liquor to a minor ... breaches a common law duty owed ... to innocent third parties who may be injured.
Brannigan,
Nor are considerations of proximate causation a reason to conclude there is no liability as a matter of law in all cases.
See Ontiveros,
CONCLUSION
The factors we have considered on the issue of recognizing the common-law liability of those who provide alcohol to persons under the legal drinking age point to a single conclusion. Furnishing alcohol to underaged drinkers violates numerous statutes. It is outside the area of immunity from civil liability described by the legislature in A.R.S. §§ 4-301 and 4-312. It is within the area *256 left by the legislature to judicial decision. The conduct in question violates well-established common-law principles that recognize a duty to avoid furnishing dangerous items to those known to have diminished capacity to use them safely. These principles are embodied in Arizona authority and in the majority of cases that have examined the question of common-law duty.
We join the majority of other states, therefore, and conclude that as to Plaintiffs and the public in general, Defendants had a duty of care to avoid furnishing alcohol to underaged consumers. 13 We understand the need to specify in this area of tort law what we hold and what we do not. We hold only that the so-called traditional rule—if ever there was one—of non-liability when a non-licensee serves alcohol to minors does not exist in Arizona. We do not, in this opinion, lay down any rule of absolute liability for serving alcohol to minors. We also expressly refrain from addressing, considering, or deciding in any way the liability of non-licensees for serving adults or the validity of A.R.S. § 4-301 under Ariz. Const, art. 18, § 6.
Arizona courts, therefore, will entertain an action for damages against a non-licensee who negligently furnishes alcohol to those under the legal drinking age when that act is a cause of injury to a third person.
We vacate the court of appeals’ opinion and reverse the trial court’s judgment. Because we do not, at this stage in the case, reach the questions of negligence or cause in fact, we simply remand to the trial court for further proceedings.
Notes
. We consolidated this case for oral argument with Petolicchio v. Santa Cruz County Fair & Rodeo Ass'n, No. CV-92-1098-PR, and Simental v. Magma Copper Co., No. CV-92-0036-PR, which present related issues.
.
But see McFarlin v. Hall,
. A.R.S. § 4-312(A) limited liability by preventing intoxicated persons and their companions from suing the
licensee
provider of the alcohol. In
Schwab,
we found this section unconstitutional because it mandated a finding of contributory negligence and assumption of the risk, impermissibly infringing on the jury’s right to decide the question in "all cases” as guaranteed under the Arizona Constitution.
Schwab,
. The subject of this legislation was hotly debated. See, e.g., New law takes aim at teen-age ‘keg parties,’ Ariz. Daily Star, May 4, 1985, § B, at 6.
. For example, in one of several articles, the Arizona Daily Star called Ontiveros and Brannigan "landmark decisions.” The paper, quoting a legislator about resulting legislation, stated "[a]nytime you get into legislation that involves alcohol, you get into a lot of discussion.” See Bars liable for patrons, state justices rule, Ariz. Daily Star, July 7, 1983, at 9.
. We consider this testimony in conjunction with the legislators’ own comments and only to discern the subject matter. Little weight is generally given to non-legislative testimony when determining legislative intent, unless there is some indication that such evidence reflects the legislators' views.
See Turner v. Prod,
. The version of § 19-124, in effect in 1986 stated:
B. Not later than sixty days preceding the regular primary election the legislative council, after providing reasonable opportunity for comments by all legislators, shall prepare and file with the secretary of state an analysis of the provisions of each ballot proposal of a measure or proposed amendment____
(Emphasis added.)
. The statistics are alarming. In 1990, about 30.8% of fatally injured 16- to 20-year-old drivers were intoxicated at the time of the accident. More than 43% of all deaths of 16- to 20-year-olds in 1990 resulted from automobile accidents. Almost half of those were alcohol-related. Of all persons arrested for DUI/DWI nationally, approximately 26% were under the age of 25. Alcohol is a factor in 21% of all college dropouts and that likely costs nearly $210 million in tuition in 1991. MADD Amicus Curiae Brief, Appendix A.
. Cf. Michael P. Rosenthal, The Minimum Drinking Age for Young People: an Observation, 92 DickA.Rev. 649, 656 n. 62 (1988) ("every state bans sales [of alcohol] to minors”).
. We contrast these facts with those in
Keckonen v. Robles,
.
See Cruse v. Aden,
.
See also Binford v. Johnston, 82
Ind. 426 (1882) (holding defendant liable for harm caused from giving toy pistol loaded with gunpowder and ball to two boys, ages 10 and 12);
Carter v. Towne,
. In speaking of duty here, we include not only the concepts of duty as described in most cases, see, e.g.,
Markowitz v. Arizona Parks Board,
