The problem is whether damage liability may be imposed upon an automobile service station operator for selling gasoline to a recognizably intoxicated motorist who then injures a third person.
The minor plaintiff was injured and his father, mother, sister and brother were killed in a collision with an automobile driven by Herschel Baker, a defendant. In the second count of his complaint plaintiff names as defendants Standard Stations, Inc., operator of a service station near Vacaville, and Associated Oil Company, owner of a station in the nearby community of Winters. He alleges that on the day of the accident both service station operators supplied ‘1 chattels ’ ’ to Baker “knowing or having reason to know that because of [his] intoxicated condition” he would use “said chattels” in a manner involving the unreasonable risk of physical harm to others. The gasoline retailers filed a general demurrer, which the trial court sustained without leave to amend. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment.
Both in the trial court and in their briefs on appeal the parties have indicated that the “chattels” consisted of gasoline supplied to Baker’s automobile.
The complaint is obviously modeled upon the “negligent entrustment” doctrine described in section 390, Restatement Second of Torts: ‘ ‘ One who supplies directly or through a third person 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 whom the supplier should expect to share in or be endangered by its use, is subject to liability for physical harm resulting to them. ’ ’
The negligent entrustment theory is frequently expressed in decisions imposing liability upon an automobile owner who permits its use by an incompetent or intoxicated driver who injures the plaintiff.
(Johnson
v.
Casetta
(1961)
A strongly contrasting result is reached in decisions involving a tavernkeeper who knowingly sells liquor to an intoxicated customer, who then injures himself or another. California decisions exempt the tavernkeeper from liability as a matter of law.
(Cole
v.
Rush
(1955)
Some jurists have confessed inability to distinguish between the defendant who knowingly supplies liquor to a drunken driver and one who places an automobile at his disposal.
(Fleckner
v.
Dionne, supra,
Remarkably enough, the California tavernkeeper decisions unanimously declare that the customer’s intoxication and not
*691
the sale of liquor is the proximate cause of the injury.
(Cole
v.
Rush, supra,
Current judicial analysis considers the outer boundaries of negligence liability in terms of duty of care rather than proximate causation. The imposition of a duty of care and its extension to the expectable conduct of third persons is largely a question of law for the court. Where existence of a duty is brought into question, its affirmation rests in part upon social policy -factors, in part upon an inquiry whether the actor’s conduct involves a foreseeable risk to persons in the plaintiff’s situation.
(Amaya
v.
Home Ice, Fuel & Supply Co.
(1963)
When the facts at hand are approached as a duty of care problem, there may be justification for a rule imposing liability on a service station operator who sells gasoline to a recognizably intoxicated motorist. The operator is negligent as to persons beyond his vision when his conduct creates a recognizable risk of harm to them. (See com. c, Restatement Second of Torts, § 281(b).) The element of foreseeability offers no problem. There is no “freak accident’’ here, no extraordinary combination of events culminating in an unforeseeable injury. (See
Premo
v.
Grigg,
We would at this point turn to those factors were the question of liability an open one. The question is not open.
Stare decisis
requires us to adhere to the rule of
Fleckner
v.
*693
Dionne, supra,
as crystallized in California law by the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Cole
v.
Bush.
In
Fleckner
the complaint alleged that the plaintiff had been injured in an automobile collision with an intoxicated driver and that the defendant tavernkeeper had sold liquor to the driver, knowing of his intoxication and knowing that he would drive his automobile. The trial court had sustained a general demurrer to the complaint and the District Court of Appeal affirmed, after which the Supreme Court denied a hearing. In
Cole
(
Fleckner v. Dionne denied liability of a tavernkeeper alleged to have sold liquor to a known inebriate who would foreseeably drive his ear, thus exposing others to danger. This ease involves one who sells him gasoline. There is no significant distinction of logic, social policy or law between these sellers. 3 Each purveys a different commodity, but these commodities play parallel roles in the combination of circumstances culminating in foreseeable injury. The Supreme Court’s approval (in Cole v. Bush) of a rule exonerating the liquor seller as a matter of law impels us to the conclusion *694 that the gasoline seller must also be exonerated as a matter of law.
There are several complications. First: In
Cole
v.
Rush
the plaintiffs were the heirs of the intoxicated customer who had been killed while fighting with a fellow patron. The complaint did not allege that the defendant sold him liquor knowing that he was drunk, but only that the seller knew of his belligerent disposition when he was intoxicated. Counsel for our present plaintiff point to the statement in the
Cole
opinion that “as to a
competent person
it is the voluntary consumption, not the sale or gift, of intoxicating liquor which is the proximate cause of injury from its use. ...” (Italics ours.) (
Second: In
Cole
the Supreme Court apparently held that the complaint’s allegations demonstrated the decedent’s contributory negligence as a matter of law. (
Third:
Cole
v.
Rush
and its California antecedents approach the initial adjudication of negligence via the obsolete gateway of proximate cause rather than duty. Thus these cases may be unreliable and ripe for qualification or disapproval. In
Cole,
however, the Supreme Court declared that
Fleckner
v.
Dionne
represents the law until disapproved by it. As an intermediate appellate court we take the law as we find it and do not reexamine doctrines approved by the Supreme Court with a view to enunciating a new rule of law.
(Goncalves
v.
San Francisco Unified School Dist.,
Fourth: A possible alternative is offered by the rule of liability prevailing when an automobile is negligently entrusted to an intoxicated driver.
(Knight
v.
Gosselin, supra,
Aside from commenting on the fairly obvious element of foreseeability of danger, we abstain from any attempt to weigh the factors for and against imposition of a duty of care on the service station operator.
Judgment affirmed.
Pierce, P. J., and Regan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 22, 1967, and appellant's petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 28, 1967. Peters, J., Tobriner, J., and Mosk, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Rappaport
v.
Nichols
(N.J.)
supra,
We do not deal with a duty of inquiry into the customer’s sobriety but only with one arising when the service station operator knows or has reason to know that the customer is intoxicated.
An inconsequential difference of law does appear. Bus. & Prof. Code, | 25602, forbidding sale of liquor to an obviously intoxicated person, has no counterpart in the case of the gasoline seller. Since, according to the California tavernkeeper cases, intoxication rather than the sale of liquor is the proximate cause of the injury, § 25602 plays no discernible tort liability role. Referring to this identical statute,
Hitson
v.
Dwyer, supra, states
(
