Thе plaintiffs, James F. O’Gorman and the executors of the estate of Sylvia S. McKinney, commenced an action in the Superior Court against the defendant, Antonio Rubinaccio & Sons, Inc., аsserting claims of negligence, wrongful death, and loss of consortium and services.
*759
The case raises the issue whether the defendant, a licensed bar, owed a duty to the general publiс to prevent an intoxicated person from driving his car. This issue arises under facts which indicate that the defendant had not served the intoxicated person any liquor but had taken his car keys, attempted to sober him up, and then, upon the person’s request, returned the keys, allowing him to drive while still intoxicated. A judge in the Superior Court allowed the defendant’s motion for summary judgment рursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 56 (c),
In passing upon the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, the judge properly assumed that all of the facts favorable to the plaintiffs were to be taken as true, and that the plaintiffs were to have the benefit of any favorable inferences. See
Coveney
v.
President & Trustees of the College of the Holy Cross,
On January 19, 1986, Grover Grеenleaf entered the defendant’s establishment, T.J.’s Lounge & Pizza. Greenleaf had arrived by car and was obviously drunk. One month before, Greenleaf had been thrown out of an athletic club because of obnoxious and drunken conduct. Greenleaf ordered an alcoholic drink from the bartender and, upon being refused, asked to see the defendant’s owner, Antonio Rubinaccio (Rubinaccio). Rubinaccio knew Greenleaf personally, as Greenleaf had been to the bar once or twice a week during the preceding months. It is unclear whеther Rubinaccio knew that Greenleaf had been ejected from the athletic club or whether he had seen Greenleaf drunk before January 19.
*760 Rubinaccio convinced Greenleaf to stay at the bar and served him some food. He also took Greenleafs car keys, telling him that he would return them when Greenleaf was ready. In taking this action, Rubinaccio was аttempting to be “a good Samaritan trying to straighten [Greenleaf] up.” A police officer was present in the parking lot during this time in order to investigate a hit and run accident. Although the officer was notified that there was an intoxicated person in the bar, the officer was never asked to enter the bar and never did enter the bar.
After a space of two hours Greenleaf, who was still drunk, wanted to leave. Rubinaccio offered him a ride, but Green-leaf refused it because he said he was only going a few miles. Greenleaf asked for his keys, and Rubinacсio returned them. Rubinaccio did not feel he had a right to keep Greenleafs keys at this point, and noted that Greenleaf looked a lot better anyway.
T.J.’s Lounge & Pizza is located on а dangerous stretch of Route 2 in the town of Erving. At about 6 p.m., Greenleaf drove onto Route 2 in the fog and rain and lost control of his vehicle, crossing the center line and hitting another car head-on. The accident took place within minutes of his leaving T.J.’s Lounge & Pizza. The driver of the other car, Sylvia S. McKinney, was killed, and a passenger, James F. O’Gorman, was seriously injured. Greеnleaf was also killed. At an autopsy Greenleafs blood alcohol level was found to be .16, which is sixty per cent over the legal intoxication limit.
In order for the plaintiffs to prevаil, it must appear that Rubinaccio had a duty of care to prevent Greenleaf from harming travelers who were using the highway. See
Dhimos
v.
Cormier,
Several decisions have recognized a duty owed by a defendant to the driving public resulting from a defendаnt’s act
*761
of selling or serving alcoholic beverages to someone who the defendant knew, or reasonably should have known, was intoxicated or underage. See
McGuiggan v. New England Tel. & Tel. Co.,
We reject the plaintiffs’ contention that a duty should be imposed here because the circumstances of Rubinaccio’s contact with Greenleaf somehow created a “special relationship” with the driving public. For this contention, the plaintiffs rely essentially on the discussion in
Irwin
v.
Ware,
Rubinaccio had nothing to do with Greenleaf s intoxication, assumed no duty with respect to Greenleaf, and had no right to сontrol Greenleaf s conduct or the use of his motor vehicle.
3
Rubinaccio, therefore, owed no duty to intervene on behalf of anyone at risk because of Greenleafs actions, because he did not create or contribute to the danger. See
Black
v.
New York, N.H. & H.R.R.,
This case was a proper one for entry of summary judgment.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In several cases from other jurisdictions relied upon by the plaintiffs, liability was premised largely on the aсt of serving alcohol, which created the dangerous condition. See
Chastain
v.
Litton Syss., Inc.,
Also not on point is the plaintiffs’ argument that certain regulations of the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission create a basis of liability. The regulations state that no holder of a liquor license “shall permit any disorder, disturbance or illegally of any kind to take place in or on the licensed premises.” 204 Code Mass. Regs. § 2.05 (2) (1986). This regulation describes a preexisting common law duty which licensees owe to their patrons or guests. See
Kane
v.
Fields Corner Grille, Inc.,
The mere furnishing of some help to Greenleaf would not support a conclusion that Rubinaccio had assumed a duty to the plaintiffs. Nothing that Rubinaccio did inсreased the risk of harm to the plaintiffs. In fact, everything Rubinaccio did was aimed at preventing Greenleaf from going back on the road and, if anything, served to diminish the risk of harm. For these reasons, the principles stated in Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 323, 324A, and 876 (1975) are of no help to the plaintiffs.
By contrast, the decisions cited by the plaintiffs either involve a defendant who wаs required by his job to take action to restrain an intoxicated driver or a defendant who did something to enable an intoxicated person to drive. See
Doggett
v.
United States,
The plaintiffs cite one cаse from the Superior Court of New Jersey in which the defendant’s motion for summary judgment was denied where the defendant nonowner returned keys to the intoxicated owner after driving that car to his own house.
Lombardo
v.
Hoag,
