On review of a decision of the court of appeals reversing judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint for failure to state a cause of action pursuant to the Minnesota Civil Damage Act, Minn.Stat. § 340A.801, subd. 1 (1990), we reaffirm the necessity for a direct causal relationship between the intoxication and the injury and reverse the decision of the court of appeals.
Kryzer v. Champlin American Legion No. 600,
Dale Kryzer’s complaint alleges only that Champlin American Legion No. 600 “illegally sold and bartered intoxicating liquor to Linda Kryzer when Linda Kryzer was obviously intoxicated” and that “[a]s a direct result of said illegal sale and barter of intoxicating liquor to Linda Kryzer, Linda Kryzer was caused to be removed from the bar by an employee of the defendant which resulted in injury to her wrist.” The complaint alleged neither that the illegal sale contributed to Linda Kryzer’s intoxication nor that her intoxication contributed to cause the injury.
On defendants’ motion for dismissal pursuant to Rule 12.02(e), Minn.R.Civ.P., the trial court properly tested the complaint by assuming the existence of all facts consistent with the allegations of the complaint.
Northern States Power Co. v. Franklin,
The trial court concluded, however, that even if it were proved that Mrs. Kryzer was removed from the bar because of her intoxication, and that she was injured when she was ejected from the bar, those facts do not permit an inference that Mrs. Kry-zer’s intoxication directly contributed to cause her injuries or those of the plaintiffs. The trial court went on to declare that the logical connection between the intoxication and the injury was too remote to support a cause of action pursuant to the civil damage act.
Forty years ago this court ruled that in order to establish liability pursuant to the civil damage act, then Minn.Stat. § 340.95, the liquor illegally sold need not be the sole cause of intoxication, that it is enough if it be a
“proximately
contributing cause.”
Hahn v. City of Ortonville,
It is elementary that before plaintiffs are entitled to recover in these cases they must show by competent proof that defendants or any of them unlawfully furnished intoxicating liquor * * * which caused or contributed to * * * intoxication and that the same was a proximate cause of the [claimant’s] injuries * * * *
Although we have not since had occasion to expressly require that the causal relationship be proximate, this court has never retreated from that requirement. Over the intervening years there have been references to “the causation requirements which this court has established,”
see Trail v. Village of Elk River,
Nevertheless, after declaring that this court had never articulated a standard for establishing the connection between the intoxication and the injury, the court of appeals created its own test for causal connection — opting for a “but for” connection, which may or may not signify a causal connection. In ruling that the complaint in this action met the causation requirement of the civil damage act, the court of appeals said “but for wife’s intoxication, she would not have been removed from the bar; and but for her removal from the bar, wife would not have been injured.”
As long ago as 1882, Minnesota distinguished between the occasion and the cause of an injury.
Nelson v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co.,
[I]t was neither the design nor the effect of the statute to make a railroad company liable absolutely for all injuries which would not have occurred had a fence been built, regardless of the fact whether such injury was the direct and natural, or only the remote and accidental, consequence of the absence of a fence, or whether the neglect to fence was merely the occasion and not the natural cause of the injury.
Id.
at 76,
In
Childs v. Standard Oil Co.,
The fact that damage would not have happened but for defendant’s tortious act does not, as a matter of law, necessitate the conclusion that such act was the proximate cause of the damage.
In the
Childs
case, as here, the act of a third party precipitated the injury for which the plaintiff sought recovery. The
Childs
court held that the defendant’s act had become injurious only through the wrongful act of another and that liability attached only to the last act.
Id.
at 171,
Here, Mrs. Kryzer’s intoxication may have been the occasion for her ejection from the legion club, but it did not cause either her injury or that sustained by the plaintiff. The complaint alleges only that it was an act of a club employee in ejecting her which caused the injury. Although the conduct of the employee in removing Mrs.
Reversed and judgment of dismissal reinstated.
