Mary Linda PAUTZ, natural mother and guardian of Melanie Elizabeth Pautz, a minor child, et al., Respondents, v. CAL-ROS, INC., et al., Appellants, v. Dennis A. PAUTZ, Respondent.
No. CX-82-544.
Supreme Court of Minnesota.
Nov. 23, 1983.
340 N.W.2d 338
Steven A. Nelson, International Falls, for respondents Mary Linda and Melanie Pautz.
Steven M. Shermoen, Shermoen & Shermoen, International Falls, for respondent Dennis Pautz.
COYNE, Justice.
Defendants, a liquor vendor and its owners, appeal from an order for summary judgment of the district court dismissing the vendor‘s third-party action for contribution against the allegedly negligent and intoxicated person. Contribution was denied because the allegedly intoxicated person
The plaintiffs, Mary Pautz and her daughter Melanie Pautz, sustained personal injuries from a fire in their home on October 22, 1977. Respondent Dennis Pautz (hereinafter “Pautz“), husband and father of plaintiffs, respectively, allegedly set the fire by improperly operating a heater in their home while he was intoxicated. The plaintiffs sued defendants, Cal-Ros, Inc., and others, for damages under the Civil Damages Act,
Cal-Ros brought a third-party action against Pautz seeking contribution, and Pautz moved for summary judgment dismissing the third-party action. The district court ordered summary judgment in favor of Pautz, dismissing the third-party action on the ground that contribution in this case would be inconsistent with the purposes of the Civil Damage Act. Cal-Ros appeals from this order, claiming that since common liability exists, contribution is available.
Since 1966 Minnesota has recognized the availability of contribution in actions involving liability imposed pursuant to the Civil Damage Act,
Inasmuch as interspousal immunity and parent-child immunity, once an absolute defense to tort liability, have been abolished in Minnesota, Beaudette v. Frana, 285 Minn. 366, 173 N.W.2d 416 (1969); Silesky v. Kelman, 281 Minn. 431, 161 N.W.2d 631 (1968); and Anderson v. Stream, 295 N.W.2d 595 (Minn.1980), it is apparent that if the appellant vendor is liable to these plaintiffs, so also is the respondent husband/father whom the plaintiffs allege was intoxicated. Farmers Insurance Exchange v. Village of Hewitt, supra. The respondent, who is commonly liable with the appellant vendor for the same damages, is, therefore, liable to the vendor for contribution. Id. Each wrongdoer must share equitably their common burden. Nor does the plaintiffs’ election to sue only the vendor deprive the vendor of its right to contribution from the intoxicated wrongdoer. Common liability is created at the instant the tort is committed whether or not the injured person chooses to assert his claim. Hammerschmidt v. Moore, 274 N.W.2d 79 (1978).
The respondent contends, however, that a vendor of intoxicating liquor is barred by our decisions in Ascheman v. Village of Hancock, 254 N.W.2d 382 (Minn.1977), and Conde v. City of Spring Lake Park, 290 N.W.2d 164 (Minn.1980), and also by the terms of the Civil Damage Act from seeking contribution from an allegedly intoxicated person.
In Ascheman v. Village of Hancock, supra, and Conde v. City of Spring Lake Park, supra, we denied the liquor vendor a right
Ascheman and Conde held that since the intoxicated person could not be liable to his family for injuring himself, the common liability between the liquor vendor and the intoxicated person was lacking.1 We declined, as we had earlier in Spitzack v. Schumacher, 308 Minn. 143, 241 N.W.2d 641 (1976), to relax the requirement of common liability in order to permit contribution where the liability of the party seeking contribution is based on the Civil Damage Act. Ascheman and Conde went on, however, in language that might be characterized as either dictum or an alternative holding, to offer two further reasons for denying contribution in those cases: (1) to allow contribution further diminishes the intoxicated person‘s already diminished ability to support his or her family; and (2) the penal characteristic of the Civil Damage Act is served by declining to dilute the liquor vendor‘s liability for the support lost by the family.
To allow the liquor vendor contribution from the intoxicated person when that person‘s family is suing for loss of support would defeat the very purpose of the action. It makes no sense to create a remedy to compensate a family for support lost by reason of injury to the breadwinner and then to reduce that compensation because the breadwinner was at fault. But the sensible policy of denying contribution in that instance has little application when family members are suing, like any other plaintiff, for injury to their own person. Nor do Ascheman and Conde address directly this entirely different situation.
Ascheman and Conde also mention that contribution should be denied because the Civil Damage Act is, in part, penal in nature and that when liquor causes harm, the vendor should pay the price of that harm. This means nothing more, however, than that the Act provides a remedy against the liquor vendor where none existed at common law and that certain defenses—such as lack of guilty knowledge—are unavailable. See Adamson v. Dougherty, 248 Minn. 535, 81 N.W.2d 110 (1957). It is also true that the negligence of the intoxicated person is no defense; the intoxicated person‘s negligence affords no excuse to the liquor vendor but, to the contrary, provides the causal connection between the vendor‘s sale and the plaintiff‘s injury required to impose liability on the vendor. Allowing contribution to the liquor vendor does not disturb these “penal” characteristics of the Act. And when the intoxicated person injures nobody but himself, the Civil Damage Act even makes the liquor vendor liable to the intoxicated person‘s spouse and other dependents for their loss of means of support—regardless whether or not the intoxicated person was negligent. The loss of means of support action is itself another penal aspect of dramshop liability, and Ascheman and Conde, recognizing that this is so, state that even if family members could sue the intoxicated person for loss of means of support, contribution would not be allowed.
It is, however, one thing to recognize the legislative purposes of the Civil Damage Act—to penalize the illegal sale of liquor and to provide a remedy to those damaged
Contribution is by its very nature reciprocal; each party must bear a share of the loss for which all are liable. Although these plaintiffs have elected to sue the vendor alone, there can be little doubt that some persons injured as a result of the conduct of an intoxicated relative may have compelling reason to sue a wrongdoing family member either alone or together with the liquor vendor. We have recognized the right of the intoxicated person to recover contribution from the vendor, Farmers Insurance Exchange v. Village of Hewitt, supra, although we have denied the existence of a right to indemnity. Empire Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. Williams, 265 Minn. 333, 121 N.W.2d 580 (1963). See also, Randall v. Village of Excelsior, 258 Minn. 81, 103 N.W.2d 131 (1960). To deny the vendor a reciprocal right of contribution, absent evidence of a willful violation of statute, would be a repudiation of the essential principle of contribution.
The respondent also contends that, notwithstanding the existence of common liability and the general availability of contribution, the Civil Damage Act itself precludes contribution in an action brought by members of the intoxicated person‘s family. We cannot agree.
Traditionally, contributory negligence was not a defense to liability imposed pursuant to the Civil Damage Act. Kvanli v. Village of Watson, 272 Minn. 481, 485, 139 N.W.2d 275, 278 (1965); Beck v. Groe, 245 Minn. 28, 35, 70 N.W.2d 886, 892 (1955). But, see Heveron v. Village of Belgrade, 288 Minn. 395, 181 N.W.2d 692 (1970) (complicity a defense even though plaintiff ignorant of companion‘s minority); Turk v. Long Branch Saloon, Inc., 280 Minn. 438, 159 N.W.2d 903 (1968) (complicity a defense). When, in 1969, Minnesota modified the common law doctrine of contributory negligence and its long established acceptance of equal contribution by adoption of a statutory scheme of comparative negligence—proportionate contribution,
Moreover, the subsequent history of
Reversed and remanded.
TODD, Justice (dissenting).
I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion in this case for two reasons. The first is based on a construction of the Civil Damages Act, Minnesota Statutes section
1. The Civil Damages Act, quoted in the majority opinion, mandates that comparative fault will be used to allocate fault and thereby apportion liability for violations of the Act.
It appears that the legislature, by drafting this exclusionary language, has made a conscious decision to preclude the comparison and allocation of fault attributable to an intoxicated person in actions brought by a husband, wife, child, guardian or dependent of that intoxicated person. To allow a vendor to shift partial responsibility by seeking contribution from an intoxicated person in a suit brought by a member of his family against the vendor, thwarts the purposes for which the Civil Damages Act was enacted. See Conde v. City of Spring Lake Park, 290 N.W.2d 164, 166 (Minn.1980); Ascheman v. Village of Hancock, 254 N.W.2d 382, 385 (Minn.1977).
Since no fault is attributable to an intoxicated person pursuant to section
The majority opinion, if followed, would distinguish between fault and liability. Even if fault were not to be assigned in this case, the majority still believes liability could. That construction is wholly without support in the statutory law. The legislature clearly, by statutory construction and policy, meant to preclude contribution in cases such as the one currently before us. It is not the province of this court to alter that explicit legislative determination.
2. The purposes behind the Civil Damages Act were clearly enunciated by this court in Conde v. City of Spring Lake Park, 290 N.W.2d 164 (Minn.1980), as both penal and remedial in character. Id. at 166; Martinson v. Monticello Municipal Liquors, 297 Minn. 48, 54, 209 N.W.2d 902, 906 (1973). It is designed to penalize the illegal sale of liquor and to provide a remedy to those damaged by the illegal sale. Ascheman v. Village of Hancock, 254 N.W.2d at 385; Ross v. Ross, 294 Minn. 115, 120, 200 N.W.2d 149, 152 (1972).
The court in Conde also held that by imposing liability on vendors and not allowing contribution from the intoxicated person acts as an incentive to vendors to avoid illegal sales. 290 N.W.2d at 166; See also, Skaja v. Andrews Hotel Co., 281 Minn. 417, 424, 161 N.W.2d 657, 661 (1968). The Conde court found that the failure to allow contribution also “reflects the legislative judgment that the vendors can best bear the loss.” 290 N.W.2d at 166.
Most importantly the court in Conde recognized that allowing contribution from the intoxicated person would thwart the purposes behind section
The majority now aborts that formerly announced policy by allowing contribution against the intoxicated person in the instant case. The majority opinion focuses on
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion.
PETERSON, Justice (dissenting).
I join in the dissent of Mr. Justice Todd.
YETKA, Justice (dissenting).
I join in the dissent of Mr. Justice Todd.
Notes
Every husband, wife, child, parent, guardian, employer, or other person who is injured in person or property, or means of support, by any intoxicated person, or by the intoxication of any person, has a right of action, in his own name, against any person who, by illegally selling or bartering intoxicating liquors, caused the intoxication of such person, for all damages, sustained * * *. Actions for damages based upon liability imposed by this section shall be governed by section 604.01. The provisions of section 604.01, as applied under this section, however shall not be applicable to actions brought by a husband, wife, child, parent, guardian or other dependent of an intoxicated person. * * *
Every husband, wife, child, parent, guardian, employer, or other person who is injured in person or property, or means of support, or incurs other pecuniary loss by any intoxicated person, or by the intoxication of any person, has a right of action, in his own name, against any person who, by illegally selling or bartering intoxicating liquors or non-intoxicating malt liquors, caused the intoxication of that person, for all damages sustained. All damages recovered by a minor under this section shall be paid either to the minor or to his parent, guardian, or next friend, as the court directs. All suits for damages under this section shall be by civil action in any court of this state having jurisdiction. Actions for damages based upon liability imposed by this section shall be governed by section 604.01. The provisions of section 604.01, as applied under this section, do not apply to actions for injury to person, property, or loss of means of support brought by a husband, wife, child, parent, guardian or other dependent of an intoxicated person.
Minn.Laws 1982, c. 528 § 7 .
