Thе appellants are. plaintiffs in a wrongful-death action brought after their children were killed in an automobile accident; in addition the appellant in case No. 53847 seeks damages for another child’s injury sustained in the same accident. The action was originally brought against Robеrt DeReus, a minor, and Marvin DeReus, his father; the younger DeReus was the driver of a car which struck that occupied by the appellants’ children, and the elder DeReus was the owner of the car being driven by his son. The Kroger Company was added as a defendant subsequent to the filing of the original action.
The Kroger Company moved for and received summary judgment, and the plaintiffs below appeal. The record is voluminous, and, construing the evidence offered therein against Kroger and in favor of the plaintiffs’ claim under the procedural posture of the case, the following facts appear: On the day in question, the younger DeReus was in possession of his father’s car and had as passengers therein several other teenage friends. These minors decided to drive to the Kroger store to purchase beer; apparently the storе had a reputation among local high school students as an establishment where beer could be obtained by them, and these juveniles had themselves secured beer there on previous occasions. The minors pooled their resources and gave the common funds to onе youth; four of them then entered the store, and each took an eight-pack of beer to the check-out counter where the juvenile with the merged funds attempted to pay for the purchase. The bag boy at the check-out line was a fellow classmate, and told the сashier to ask for identification to determine the age and eligibility to buy beer; the cashier did ask for and was shown the youth’s driver’s license. The license indicated the purchaser’s age to be sixteen; the cashier’s deposition indicates that she made an arithmetical miscalсulation, erroneously concluded the minor to be twenty years of age, and sold him the beer. The youths left the Kroger *24 store with thirty-two bottles of beer, and proceeded to drive around, visiting several places. The driver of the car, young DeReus, apparently shared in the consumрtion of the purchased beer. While driving at an excessive speed, he ran his automobile through a stop sign, and struck another vehicle in the intersection; five persons were killed in the crash. The record shows that the driver DeReus’ blood sample indicated 0.10% by weight of alcohol at the time of the accident.
The Kroger Company urges that, upon this evidence, there was no genuine issue of material fact, and that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The trial judge agreed. The issue as we perceive it is this: What is the liability of one who supplies alcohоl to a minor, for injuries sustained by another at the hands of the intoxicated minor? Held:
At common law there could be no recovery by one injured by an intoxicated person from the party who supplied the intoxicant. In
Belding v. Johnson,
Since the decision in
Belding v. Johnson,
supra, Ga. L. 1937-38, Extra. Sess., pp. 103,118 (Code § 58-1061) was enacted, making the supply of liquors to minors, intoxicated persons and habitual drunkards a
*25
misdemeanor. That statute received consideration in
Henry Grady Hotel Co. v. Sturgis,
We did not, at the time of
Belding,
as that court held, have a "special statute in this State authorizing such recovery.”
Belding was decided in 1890. By that time, it had long since been unlawful to furnish liquor to minors (Ga. L. 1875, p. 102), to intoxicated persons (Code of 1863, § 1381; Ga. L. 1888-89, p. 140) and to habitual drunkards (Ga. L. 1882-83, p. 130). Those were the provisions which were carried forward in the various codes and which now appear as Code Ann. §§ 58-611, 58-612, with duplication in § 1061. Since they were of force at the time of Belding, they were thus held to afford no basis for civil recovery when that court ruled "we have no special statute in this state authorizing such recovery.” 1
*26
The decision in
Henry Grady Hotel Co. v. Sturgis,
As was recognized in the Belding case, Georgia has no dramshop or civil-damage statute imposing vicarious liability on the seller of liquor for injury inflicted by the intoxicated or minor purchaser upon a third party; therefore, liability must be found within the rules of the common law. The general rule is stated at 48 CJS 716, 717, Intoxicating Liquors, § 430, which provides: "At common law, and apart from statute, no redrеss exists against persons selling, giving, or furnishing intoxicating liquor, or their sureties, for resulting injuries or damages due to the acts of intoxicated, persons .. .While civil damage lawshave been enacted in a number of jurisdictions creating a right of action against the dispenser of intoxicating liquors,... a remedy exists only to the extent provided for by such statutes, and the common-law rule prevails in a case not coming within their terms, or in jurisdictions where such statutes have not been enacted or are not in effect.”
Cases cited by the plaintiff are from jurisdictions which have abrogated the сommon-law rule of non-liability, this abrogation being necessary to do away with the proximate cause principle of the common law, which holds the person who drank the liquor liable, and considers the act of selling it as too remote to be a proximate cause of аn injury resulting from an act of the purchaser of the drink.
Henry Grady Hotel Co. v. Sturgis,
Thus, so long as the common-law rule is adhered to, it matters not whether the act of furnishing liquor may be considered as simple negligence or as negligence per se in violation of the criminal statute — it cannot, alone, leap the common law’s chasm of causation. See Parsons v. Jow,
The courts of the State of Georgia are not alone in such a conclusion. In the case of Holmes v. Circo, 196 Neb.
*28
49 (
"We are mindful of the misery caused by drunken drivers and the losses sustained by both individuals and society at the hands of drunken drivers, but the task of limiting and defining а new cause of action which could grow from a fact nucleus formed from any combination of numerous permutations of the fact situation before us is properly within the realm of the Legislature.
"The imposition of a common law duty of due care would create a situation rife with uncertainty and difficulty. If the commercial vendor is liable for negligence, does the host at a social gathering owe a duty to prospective victims of guests? The difficulties of recognizing intoxication and predicting conduct of an intoxicated patron without imposing somе duty of inquiry are evident. Problems could also arise in the apportionment or sorting out of liability among the owners of various bars visited on 'bar hopping’ excursions. The correct standard of care to be used also presents a problem, as does the determination of whether all acts of the patron, including intentional torts, should be included within the liability of the tavern owner or operator.
". . . We agree with the conclusion of the court in Hamm v. Carson City Nugget, Inc. [
*29 We further observe that we have had a civil-damage statute on our books for over a century. First appearing in our Code as § 2952 of the Code of 1863, it provided under the "Torts” title:
"A father, or if the father be dead, a mother shall have a right of action against any person who sells or furnishes spirituous liquors to his or her son, under age, for his own usе, and without his or her permission.”
That section now appears as Code § 105-1205, again under the title "Torts.” "The effect of this section of the code is to declare the act to which it refers
to be a tort,
and to give the
parent
a right of action therefor.”
Wright v. Smith,
The only substantive change in this section since 1863 has been the enlarging of the word "son” to "child” by the Code of 1933. It has never been amended to create such a right in a third person as in the present case, nor has any other statute so provided.
Now what is the rule where the legislature, in addition to enacting liquor statutes criminal in nature, legislates further and makes the person furnishing the liquor liable in certain situations? It is that the legislature has preempted the field of civil liability with a resulting limitation of liability for negligence per se to the confines of the civil statute; and this is true even though, as here, the remedy provided for by the statute imposing civil liability is not coextensive with the wrongs dеclared by the criminal statutes. Farmers Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Gast,
The only conclusion possible here is that the legislature, by providing a civil remedy for the parent only in Code § 105-1205, has preempted the field and restricted third-party recovery to the terms of that section. Accord, Nolan v. Morelli,
The vice of the position taken by the appellants is that, having proposed that a violation of the statute proscribing the sale of alcoholic beverages to a minor is negligence per se, they then seek to extend that negligence, as a matter of policy, to any injured party. We *30 do not disagree that the injured minor or previously intoxicated person (as well as the parent of the injured minor) may have a claim against the seller of the alcoholic substance, but we cannot, as a court, short of a policy decision, create the legal position that such negligence can be extended to an injured third party in the absence of a specific statutory synapse. There being no statutory declaration in this state, this is a matter best left to the General Assembly. Accordingly, the grant of summary judgment by the trial court as to the defendant Kroger Company is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Other courts are in accord with the rule that regulatory liquor statutes such as §§ 58-611, 58-612 and 58-1061 do not create civil causes of action. "Statutes generally similar to this one exist in most, if not all, of the states. They are not ordinarily considered to change the common law rule of non-liability.” Carr v. Turner,
