OPINION
In this personal injury action, plaintiff/appellant Steven Riddle appeals from the trial court’s judgment dismissing his complaint under Ariz.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), 16 A.R.S., based on the court’s legal conclusion that defendant/appellee Arizona Oncology Services, Inc. (AOS) owed no duty to plaintiff. We affirm.
“Because the trial court granted a motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim, we must take the alleged facts as true.”
Petolicchio v. Santa Cruz County Fair and Rodeo Ass’n, Inc.,
The material allegations of plaintiff’s complaint are as follows. In September 1992, Kelly Sutton was employed by AOS as a radiology technician. She had a history of drug abuse which was known to AOS. On the morning of September 21, 1992, Sutton came to work at AOS high on cocaine and consumed additional cocaine while at work. She was conspicuously intoxicated and incapable of performing her work duties. Recognizing Sutton’s condition and severely impaired motor function, her supervisor, in furtherance of AOS’s business interests, ordered Sutton to leave AOS’s premises before the end of her work shift. AOS, through its employees, knew or should have *466 known that Sutton could not safely operate a vehicle in her intoxicated condition.
In compliance with her employer’s order, Sutton left work. Shortly after leaving AOS’s premises, Sutton drove her vehicle across the centerline, colliding head-on with plaintiffs vehicle and seriously injuring him. The accident occurred at approximately 3:30 p.m., during Sutton’s normal work shift.
Plaintiffs complaint further alleged that “[hjaving exercised its authority and control over Sutton by the affirmative act of ordering her from the premises under the circumstances described herein, [AOS] had a duty to act reasonably to protect third parties such as the Plaintiff from the foreseeable risk of harm.”
1
Relying on
Bruce v. Chas Roberts Air Conditioning, Inc.,
The only issue addressed in the trial court and requiring our decision now is whether, assuming the truth of all of plaintiffs factual allegations, AOS owed a duty to third party motorists such as plaintiff. Relying primarily on
Petolicchio v. Santa Cruz County Fair and Rodeo Ass’n, Inc.,
As our supreme court has stated:
1. The question of duty is decided by the court. The question is whether the relationship of the parties was such that the defendant was under an obligation to use some care to avoid or prevent injury to the plaintiff. If the answer is no, the defendant is not liable even though he may have acted negligently in light of the foreseeable risks----
2. If there is a duty, then the law requires that the defendant conform to a standard of care. In negligence cases that is usually “reasonable care under the circumstances,” though it may differ, depending on the relationship____ All of these standards carry with them an implicit requirement that defendant act reasonably in light of the known and forseeable [sic] risks. It is here, in determining whether the defendant acted reasonably or negligently, that the law concerns itself with specifics of defendant’s conduct.
Markowitz v. Arizona Parks Bd.,
Contrary to plaintiffs contention, the legal determination of duty does not totally hinge on foreseeability of risk or injury. As plaintiff correctly notes, foreseeability of harm appears to be an element of duty under Arizona case law.
See, e.g., Alhambra Sch. Disk v. Superior Court,
“In the absence of precedent, unraveling the legal doctrines pertaining to duty and applying them to a particular situation is often a difficult task.”
Davis v. Cessna Aircraft Corp.,
In affirming a summary judgment for the defendant/employer, this court declined to find “any duty on the part of the social host ... not to furnish intoxicating beverages to an intoxicated guest in order to protect a person who might be injured by the guest’s drunk driving after leaving the premises.”
Keckonen,
In Bruce, an employee became intoxicated while attending an impromptu social gathering with co-employees after work on the employer’s premises. The employer’s supervisors knew about the workers’ beer drinking at and around the work yard and did not object or prohibit it. The employee spent about three hours socializing and drinking beer in or near the work yard. His blood alcohol content would have been between .27% and .29%, and he would have been visibly intoxicated to an unimpaired person, when he left the employer’s premises. Approximately three hours later, while driving home, the employee collided head-on with plaintiffs vehicle.
The court in
Bruce
rejected plaintiffs contention that the employer “had a duty to exercise reasonable care to prevent [the employee] from leaving his premises while intoxicated and that for breach of that duty, [the employer] may be held independently liable for the resulting injuries.”
Bruce,
*468
Plaintiff attempts to distinguish
Keckonen
and
Bruce
on several grounds, none of which we find persuasive. He first contends that there “was no evidence that the employer [in
Bruce
] knew the employee was intoxicated nor appreciated that the employee could not safely operate a vehicle.” However, the employer’s supervisors “knew about the workers’ occasional beer drinking at and around the yard,”
Plaintiff also contends that, unlike AOS, the employers in Keckonen and Brace did not affirmatively order their employees to leave the workplace or cause them to drive from the employer’s premises in an intoxicated condition. We first note that plaintiff’s complaint only alleges that AOS’s “supervisor ordered Sutton to leave the Defendant’s premises prior to the end of her work shift.” There is no allegation that AOS ordered or required Sutton to drive.
More importantly, Sutton’s intoxication was not caused, contributed to or condoned by AOS. In contrast, Keckonen and Bruce involved situations where alcohol was consumed on tjie employer’s premises with the employer’s knowledge and tacit consent. Indeed, in Keckonen the employer’s supervisors participated in the purchase and consumption of the alcohol on the employer’s premises. Inasmuch as no duty was found in those cases, we are hard-pressed to find any duty here, where AOS did not facilitate or tolerate the employee’s use of drugs or intoxicated condition.
In a further effort to distinguish Keckonen and Bruce, plaintiff notes that the employees’ chinking and driving there occurred after work at a time and place where the employers no longer could exercise control over the employees, whereas this accident occurred shortly after Sutton left AOS’s premises and during her regular work shift. That distinction makes no difference in resolving the duty issue here. For all practical purposes, Sutton’s shift terminated, albeit prematurely, when she was told to leave. To base the determination of duty on the precise timing of events would be arbitrary. It would have been no different had Sutton appeared for work in an intoxicated condition near the end of the workday and been told to leave at quitting time, and the accident occurred after work hours.
AOS did not furnish Sutton with any intoxicants or with a vehicle. It simply instructed her to leave the premises because of her intoxicated condition and inability to work. Under those circumstances, AOS did not have a duty to control Sutton’s actions or to prevent her from operating a vehicle. We agree with AOS’s contention that “[i]f an employer has no duty to third persons injured by an employee who became intoxicated at a company-related event and then was negligent on the way home [as in Keckonen and Bruce], then it has no duty to third persons injured by an intoxicated employee sent home from work because of her intoxicated condition” which the employer did not contribute to, participate or acquiesce in. It would be anomalous to impose a duty on an employer who had no role in the employee’s consumption or condition simply for telling an intoxicated employee to leave the workplace, but to impose no duty on the employer who furnished alcohol to an employee on the job site and then permitted the intoxicated employee to leave in an impaired condition which the employer caused or contributed to.
With certain limited exceptions, “the common law imposes no duty to control the actions of another.”
Tamsen v. Weber,
As in
D’Amico,
the accident did not occur on the employer’s premises nor did it involve the employer’s property. Thus, as that court found, the mere fact that there is an employer-employee relationship does not create a legal duty on the part of the employer. The court in
Bruce
rejected plaintiffs contention under Restatement § 317 because the employer “had no duty under [that section] to exercise care to control [the employee’s] conduct in any respect once he left the [employer’s premises] and headed for home,”
Bruce,
The court in
Bruce
also found no duty under Restatement § 319
5
in the absence of evidence that the employer “took charge of or otherwise exercised control over [the employee].”
Id.
at 228,
To the extent
Otis Engineering
supports plaintiff’s position, we reject it. In that case, the employer’s supervisor sent an obviously intoxicated employee home in the middle of his work shift, escorting him to the company’s parking lot and “sendpmg] him out on the highway.”
As the dissent in
Otis Engineering
further noted: “No court in any jurisdiction has ever held that an employer who has not contributed to an employee’s state of intoxication will be liable for that employee’s off-duty, off-premises torts.”
Id.
at 319. We have found no other authority supporting that view, nor has plaintiff furnished any. On the other hand, a number of courts have reached the opposite conclusion, that the employer owes no duty to third parties in cases similar to this.
See, e.g., Wienke v. Champaign County Grain Ass’n,
The court in
Bruce
not only distinguished
Otis Engineering
but also impHcitly disagreed with it, “agreeing] instead with decisions Hke D’Amico...”
Bruce,
“The decision by a court to impose liability is a policy decision.”
Keckonen,
Notes
. Plaintiff did not allege that Sutton was acting within the course and scope of her employment at the time of the accident. Thus, he claims only independent negligence, not respondeat superior vicarious liability, against AOS.
.
Petolicchio
is not particularly helpful to our analysis here. Our supreme court simply held
inter alia
that "a licensee storing alcohol has a duty to exercise reasonable care to guard that substance from those who will foreseeably endanger the public by its use.”
. There is some confusion and lack of clarity in Arizona law, however, as to what extent, if any, foreseeability issues bear on the initial legal determination of duty.
Compare Rager v. Superior Coach Sales & Serv. of Ariz.,
. In
Markowitz,
our supreme court cited
Kecko-nen
as an illustrative case where the defendant was under no obligation "to use some care to avoid or prevent injury to the plaintiff” and therefore not liable, even though “he may have acted negligently in light of the foreseeable risks.”
Markowitz,
. Restatement § 319 provides: "One who takes charge of a third person whom he knows or should know to be likely to cause bodily harm to others if not controlled is under a duty to exercise reasonable care to control the third person to prevent him from doing such harm.”
. Plaintiff's attempt to distinguish D’Amico on the basis that the employee there was fired before being ordered to leave the premises is unavailing. Indeed, it may have been even more foreseeable that an intoxicated employee who not only was ordered to leave work early but also was fired would drive negligently and cause an accident. Aside from that one fact, D’Amico otherwise is directly on point with this case, and we choose to follow it.
