This is an action by which the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for the personal injuries sustained by him when he fell off the bar in one of the defendant’s restaurants. After the partiеs had answered each other’s written interrogatories, the defendant moved for summary judgment under Mass.R.Civ.P. 56(b),
The following undisputed facts appear from the answers to interrogatories and the affidavits. Around noontime on Sunday, May 15, 1977, the plaintiff, age twenty-five, entered the defendant’s establishment in Rockland at which it was licensed (under G. L. c. 138) to sell alcoholic beverages to be drunk on the premises. After having something to eat, the plaintiff started drinking with sоme of his friends. He purchased and consumed numerous drinks which were served him by one or the other (possibly both) of the two experienced bartenders who were then on duty. At somе point the plaintiff became intoxicated, but (according to the affidavits) the bartender (s) continued to serve him and to receive payment and tips. By approximаtely 10:30 p.m. the plaintiff had been served and consumed at least fifteen Heineken beers and six martinis. He advised one of the bartenders that he intended to dance on the bar. “He acknowledged me and walked away. I stepped up on the chair beside me and then onto the bar where I stood up and then fell sideways landing directly on my right leg and knee.” In response to an interrogatory which inquired as to the cause of the fall, the plaintiff asserted that “[t]he cause of my accident was that I was intoxicated.”
1. It is obviоus from the allegations of the plaintiff’s amended complaint, from his answers to interrogatories,
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and from his affidavits that he is attempting to proceed at common law on the theory that his injuries resulted from the negligence of the defendant in continuing to serve him drinks after he had become intoxicated, with a violation of G. L. c. 138, § 69,
1
constituting evidence of such negligence. See and compare
Three Sons, Inc.
v.
Phoenix Ins. Co.,
In the
Adamian
case the Supreme Judicial Court had the following to say: “
Thе statute . . . was undoubtedly enacted with a purpose to safeguard,
not only
the intoxicated person
himself, but members of the general public as well.
The legislative policy,
being
clear,
is not to be rendered futile of practical accomplishment because of the repeal at the end of the prohibition era of the Dram Shop Act which gave an express right of action to persons suffering damage due to a violation of the act ....
Nor is the statute to be nullified by an inflexible adherence to the theory that the drinker alone is responsible, regardless of how intoxicated he may be when a bartender repeatedly serves him”
(emphasis supplied).
The New Jersey court has moved on to an express holding that a tavern keeper who violates a regulation against selling alcoholic beverages to anyone actually or apparently intoxicated may be held civilly accountable for injuries which proximately result to the intoxicated person.
Soronen
v.
Olde Milford Inn, Inc.,
2. In addition to concluding that the plaintiff was not within the intended protection of § 69, the judge appears to have attached importance to what he characterized as the plaintiff’s “concession” that the “cause” of his accident was that he was intoxicatеd. It seems likely (although we cannot be certain) that the judge was influenced to a belief that the plaintiff’s intoxication was the sole, or at least the proximate, cаuse of his injury, to the exclusion of the possibility that the cause of the injury may have been the defendant’s continuing to serve the plaintiff after he had become intoxicatеd. If the judge so concluded, we think he overlooked the principle that “inferences to be drawn from the facts contained in the pleadings . . . and other materials must be drawn against the movant and in favor of the party opposing” a motion for summary judgment.
Community Natl. Bank
v.
Dawes,
3. The defendant all but concedes that an injury such as that sustained by the plaintiff was a foreseeable consequence of сontinuing to serve alcoholic beverages to a person who is intoxicated. See
Adamian
v.
Three Sons, Inc.,
4. Finally, the defendant cоntends that the plaintiff should be barred from maintaining the action because he was injured in the course of disturbing the peace within the meaning of G. L. c. 272, § 53. The short answer to any such contention would appear to be that the second paragraph of G. L. c. 231, § 85, is explicit that “[t]he violation of a criminal statute . . . by a plaintiff which contributed to [his] injury . . . shall be considered as evidence of negligence of [the] plaintiff, but the violation of said statute . . . shall not as a matter of law and for that reason alone, serve to bar [the] plaintiff from recovery.” No reason has been suggested why § 85 should not apply here.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
General Laws c. 138, § 69, as amended by St. 1973, c. 287, provides in pertinent part that “[n]o alcoholic beverage shall be sold or delivered on any premises licensed under this chapter . . . to an intoxicated person.” Criminal penalties for violation of that sеction are imposed by G. L. c. 138, § 62, as appearing in St. 1935, c. 440, § 39.
There is a jury claim on the complaint in the present case.
All the cases from other jurisdictions which have been cited by the parties have been examined with care. Some of the cases which deny recovery to the injured consumer rest on the same proposition as the
Nelson
case. Other of the cases (see, e.g.,
Collier
v.
Stamatis,
