Plaintiffs’ decedents were killed in a tragic automobile collision near Iowa City in November 1980. The pickup truck in which they had been traveling collided with an automobile which had been stolen by minors and which was being driven by an intoxicated fourteen-year-old boy. This wrongful death suit was brought against the minors’ parents, two taverns the youths had visited during the evening, and the owners of the stolen car. After ruling uрon a motion to adjudicate law points pursuant to Iowa rule of civil procedure 105 the trial court summarily dismissed plaintiffs’ claims. We affirm.
Decedent Kimberly Smith was driving the pickup truck north on а Johnson County highway. Decedent Michael J. Hans-man, who owned the pickup, was a passenger. About a mile north of Iowa City they were struck when an automobile driven by Virgil Lee Lewis, fourteen, сrossed the center line of the highway. Lewis was also killed; the only survivor of the accident was his passenger Joseph P. Costello, fifteen.
Lewis and Costello were intoxicated and they had stolen the vehicle Lewis was driving. The car had been taken two hours earlier outside a bar in which the youths had been seen playing pool. The boys bragged they had consumed a bottle оf whiskey but did not buy or consume any beer or liquor on the premises. They visited the tavern operated by the other defendant tavern owners during the same evening.
The city (Anamosa), by local ordinance, then had a 10 p.m. curfew for minors. The youths’ parents conceded the boys were violating the curfew.
*855 I. As amended, the suits against the two defendant tavern operators did not allege the taverns sold or gave intoxicating liquor to Lewis in violation of the dramshop statute. Iowa Code § 123.92 (1979). Rather, the tavern owners were charged under a theory that the tavern operators had an affirmative duty to inform authorities and parents when intoxicated juveniles were on their premises or on the streets after curfew and of their presence in a bar in violation of Iowa statutes and local ordinances. 1
The trial court was correct in rejecting this theory. We have long recognized that negligence is “the breach of [a] duty or obligation rеcognized by the law [which requires one] to conform to a certain standard of conduct, for the protection of others against unreasonable risks” of harm.
Lewis v. State,
(1) the existence of a duty to conform to a standard of conduct for the protection of others; (2) failure to conform to that standard; (3) a reasonably close causal connection ...; and (4) damages.
Haafke v. Mitchell,
The first element in an action for negligence, a “standard of conduct” or “duty,” can arise in severаl contexts. Plaintiffs here rely on legislative standards of conduct (a negligence per se theory) in their claims against the tavern operators.
See
Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 285, 286 (1965). In
Lewis,
In
De More v. Dieters,
As we did in De More, we think the Lewis holding cannot be stretched to reach the facts these plaintiffs present. The obligations they propose were not imposed by the legislature. At most a bar owner is required to order minors to leave the premises. It scarcely needs pointing out that the accident in question did not occur by reason of youths being illеgally in the taverns. The difficulties arose after they left. *856 We have found no statute or ordinance, and none has been cited by the plaintiffs, which would require a tavern owner to assume an аffirmative duty to notify authorities of an intoxicated minor’s illicit presence in the tavern. Such a requirement would be tantamount to making informants out of bar owners and would represent an unjustifiablе extension of the scheme devised by the legislature in the dramshop statute. The trial court was correct in so holding.
II. The suit against the owners of the stolen vehicle was based on commоn law negligence. Plaintiffs asserted the owner wrongfully left the car parked with the key in the ignition knowing “that a theft of such car would occur and was more likely to occur [than] not”; and moreоver, “that injury to persons and property was a probable result of the danger of a car being stolen.” The plaintiffs alleged that the owner’s negligence in leaving their keys in the unlocked car was a proximate cause of the accident and resulting deaths.
The controlling case on the assignment is
Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piekenbrock,
Plaintiffs think the facts here fall under the special circumstances exemption mentioned in Piekenbrock but base the contention only on the fact that the car was parked outside a tavern. There is no claim the tavern is in a high-crime or “hard-drinking” area. In order to contend for the special circumstances exception plaintiffs are thus forced to contend that persons who frequent taverns might be more likely than citizеns generally to steal automobiles. This is an assumption we are unwilling to make.
The assignment is without merit.
III. The suit against the parents alleges they failed to “properly rear, supervise, instruct and give guidance” to the youths. Plaintiffs also claim the parents violated an Anamosa ordinance which made it unlawful for parents to “allow or permit” their children to violate the curfew. 2
At common law pаrents are not liable for damages caused by their children unless the damages can be attributed to some action or inaction of the parent. W. Prosser,
Law of Torts
§ 17, at 892 (3d ed. 1964);
Note, Iowa Parental Responsibility Act,
55 Iowa L.Rev. 1037, 1038-39 (1970). There are only two situations in which a parent Will be held liable: (1) where the child is acting as an agent for the parent; or (2) where the parent’s own negligence is the proximate cause of the child’s сonduct. 55 Iowa L.Rev. at 1039;
see also
Annot.,
Liability for Injury or Damage Intentionally Inflicted by Minor Child,
54 A.L. R.3d 1020 (1974); Restatement (Second) of Torts § 316 (1965);
Van Camp v. McAfoos,
We think the trial court was correct in dismissing the claim. No failure on the part of the parents was a proximate cause of the accident. No parental failure was a substantial factor in bringing about the collision. It was not the parents’ fail
*857
ure to supervise but rather their childrens’ independent decision to become intoxicated, steal a car, and recklessly operate it which cаused the accident.
See Iowa Electric Light & Power Co. v. General Electric Co.,
The assignment is without merit.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In November 1980, Anamosa ordinance no. 439 was in effect, making it "unlawful for any ‘Class B’ permit holder to allow within his place of business any minor under the age of nineteen”; and, ordinance no. 461 which established a 10 p.m. curfew for minors. The ordinance stated:
It is unlawful for any person, firm or corporation operating a place of business or amusement to allow оr permit any minor to be in or upon any place of business ... operated by them within the curfew hours.
Also in effect on the date of the accident, and relied upon by the plaintiffs, were Iowa Code section 123.46 (prohibiting public intoxication), Iowa Code section 123.49(2)(j) (forbidding a liquor licensee to allow "criminal activity” on the premises), Iowa Code section 233.1 (prohibiting cоntribution to the delinquency of a minor) and Iowa Code sections 703.1 and 703.3 (accessory after the fact statute and aiding and abetting statute).
. Plaintiffs make no claim under Iowa Code section 613.16 (parents liable up to $1000 for unlawful acts of unemancipated children).
