G.S. 18A-8, in effect at the time of both actions, makes it a crime for any person, firm or corporation knowingly to sell or give malt beverages or unfortified wine to any person under eighteen years of age. Violation of such statute is a misdemeanor. G.S. 18A-56. There is no question that defendants in both actions violated the statute; the question before this Court is whether defendants can be subjected to civil liability for automobile accidents caused by the negligence of intoxicated minors who purchased malt beverages from defendants. For the reasons set forth below, we hold that plaintiffs’ claims were improperly dismissed; whether plaintiffs can prove a cause of action against defendants is a matter for the jury to determine from the attendant circumstances, not for the court to determine as a matter of law.
To make out a prima facie case of common law negligence plaintiffs must establish:
(1) that defendants had a duty or obligation recognized by the law, requiring them to conform to a certain standard of conduct, for the protection of others against unreasonable risks;
(2) a failure on defendants’ part to conform to the standard required;
(3) a reasonably close causal connection between defendants’ conduct and plaintiffs’ injuries; and
(4) actual loss or damage.
*529
Hutchens v. Hankins,
G.S. 18A-8 imposes upon defendants a duty or obligation not to sell beer to minors. The purpose of this statute is to protect both the minor and the community at large from the possible adverse consequences of the minor’s intoxication.
See Hutchens, supra.
When a statute, such as the one in this case, imposes upon a person a specific duty for the protection of others, a violation of such statute constitutes negligence
per se. Lutz Industries, Inc. v. Dixie Home Stores,
The test of proximate cause is whether a person of ordinary prudence could have reasonably foreseen the actual results or similar injurious results from their negligent conduct.
Sutton v. Duke, 277
N.C. 94,
Defendants cite a case decided in 1913 for the proposition that plaintiffs have no cause of action against defendants. In
*530
Spencer v. Fisher,
We do not find the Spencer decision to be on point or its dicta to be controlling. As we have explained in the past:
The doctrine of stare decisis contemplates only such points as are actually involved and determined in a case, and not what is said by the Court ... on points not necessarily involved therein. Such expressions, being, obiter dicta, do not become precedents .... It cannot be reasonably expected that every word, phrase, or sentence contained in a judicial opinion will be so perfect and complete in comprehension and limitation that it may not be improperly employed by wresting it from its surroundings, disregarding its context and the change of facts to which it is sought to be applied ....
Moose v. Commissioners,
That the jury, not the judge, should determine the question of defendants’ liability has been stated by our courts in two recent cases presenting parallel situations. In
Chastain v. Litton Systems, Inc.,
In Hutchens, supra, an employee of defendant, the owners and operators of a tavern, furnished alcoholic beverages to an intoxicated customer, who, as a result of such intoxication, negligently drove his automobile, injuring plaintiffs. After extensive analysis, this Court reversed the trial court order granting defendant’s motion to dismiss:
If we assume, as we must, to test the sufficiency of the complaint, that the defendant tavern owners unlawfully and negligently sold malt beverages to [the customer] which resulted in his intoxication, which in turn caused or contributed to his negligent operation of the motor vehicle at the time of the accident, then a jury could reasonably find that the plaintiffs’ injuries resulted in the ordinary course of events from defendants’ negligence and that such negligence was, in fact, a substantial factor in bringing them about.
Had the accidents in the instant cases occurred after 1 October 1983, there would be no question but that plaintiffs would *532 have alleged a cause of action arising under the dram shop provisions of the “Safe Roads Act,” enacted by the General Assembly on 3 June 1983. Safe Roads Act, ch. 435, 1983 N.C. Sess. Laws (to be codified as G.S. 18B-120, et seq.). A provision, to be codified as G.S. 18B-121, gives persons who sustain injury as a consequence of the actions of an underage person a claim for relief against a permittee or local Alcoholic Beverage Control Board if:
(1) The permittee or his agent or employee or the local board or its agent or employee negligently sold or furnished an alcoholic beverage to an underage person; and
(2) The consumption of the alcoholic beverage that was sold or furnished to an underage person caused or contributed to, in whole or in part, an underage driver’s being subject to an impairing substance within the meaning of G.S. 20-138.1 at the time of the injury; and
(3) The injury that resulted was proximately caused by the underage driver’s negligent operation of a vehicle while so impaired.
For the reasons we have heretofore stated, plaintiffs have alleged a cause of action existing independent of this new statutory right. What they can prove, however, is another matter. For the reasons stated, the judgments from which the plaintiffs appeal are reversed.
Reversed.
