Appellant sued to recover damages alleged to have resulted from injuries suffered from a blow adminis *152 tered to him by one Peter Chavez, a drunk man. The parties were in a saloon whose proprietor had been requested on numerous occasions not to furnish Mr. Chavez alcoholic beverages sufficient to cause him “to become intoxicated thereon.” After the jury had been empaneled and a witness had been sworn, defendants’ objection to the first question and to plaintiff’s motion to amend his complaint having been sustained, defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings was granted. Now, on appeal it is contended that such rulings were prejudicially erroneous and that the judgment should be reversed.
The complaint alleges that appellant was in defendants’ establishment by invitation; that with knowledge that one Chavez is pugnacious and quarrelsome when drunk, respondent received him in a sober condition and served alcohol to him “until and after said defendant, Pete Chavez, became intoxicated”; that respondent previously had refused to discontinue serving Chavez alcohol until the latter had become inebriated; that as a proximate result of the blow, appellant “was injured in his health, strength and activity, received . . . numerous contusions about the body and person . . . receiving multiple fractures of the right leg” etc.
The serious feature of the pleading has been the subject of similar causes presented to the appellate courts. No allegation of a negligent supervision of the saloon appears. Neither does the complaint allege that respondent had an opportunity to prevent the battery or that the blow was dealt in the presence of respondent. There is no allegation that the injuries of appellant were the proximate result of respondent’s negligence. Interpreting the complaint liberally, the most that can be reasonably inferred is that respondent sold to Chavez alcoholic beverages knowing him to be quarrelsome and pugnacious when drunk; that Chevez became intoxicated and struck appellant and that the blow caused the latter’s injuries. Such allegations are ■ not enough to state a cause of action against respondent.
(Cole
v.
Rush,
While it is clear that merely by reason of the sale of the intoxicating liquor to Chavez appellant is not entitled to recover from respondent, yet the complaint indicates that it might be so amended as to declare a valid cause of action. Respondent was concededly operating a barroom where the proprietor is obligated to be on the alert for quarrelsome and pugnacious characters who may at any time come to provoke others or to breach the peace. It is true that the mere sale of an alcoholic beverage to a bibulous and pugnacious person is not actionable, yet, if the proprietor of a saloon is so negligent as to the character of his patrons who frequent his establishment that he is as likely to cause damage to his innocent patrons by neglecting to guard them against the violence of known pugnacious, drunken men and evildoers as by neglecting to prevent a good citizen from falling on a newly waxed floor or from falling through a trapdoor into *154 his cellar, then he is liable for his negligent failure to protect the innocent patron.
The result of a proprietor’s negligence where he has knowledge of a customer’s pugnacious character was the subject of a learned opinion by Judge Dimond in the federal court of Alaska in
Cherbonnier
v.
Rafalovich,
The proprietor of a place where intoxicating liquors are dispensed owes a duty of exercising reasonable care to protect his patrons from injury at the hands of fellow guests. Any guest of such a place has the right to assume that he is in an orderly house and that the proprietor or his employees will exercise reasonable care in maintaining appropriate decorum. (30 Am.Jur., p. 574.) Such is the law of California as decided recently in
Winn
v.
Holmes,
In the instant action the court below had its attention directed to the California holdings that a mere sale of liquor to a pugnacious person does not constitute a valid cause of action against the vendor. It was not advised by the pleading that the proprietor of a saloon is under duty to look out for and guard his guests against accidents and vicious people. While the acts alleged did not state a cause of action, it is not improbable that the plaintiff can allege other acts of neglect which would make the proprietor of the saloon liable to a quiet, conservative patron injured by reason of negligence. In such event, the amendment should be allowed. A lawsuit is not a game to be won by the cleverest performer, but is a solemn action authorized to right wrongs and to determine where justice lies.
Section 473, Code of Civil Procedure, has received very liberal interpretations. An amendment should be allowed unless an attempt is made to present an utterly different set of facts.
(Klopstock
v.
Superior Court,
Here no change in theory is contemplated. Appellant’s motion was to amend his “complaint by inserting after the comma on page 3, line 27, the following words •.1 and said other defendants negligently failed to protect plaintiff from said assault or to preserve order for the protection of plaintiff. ’ ” The denial of such amendment or any amendment on the plaintiff’s first application that would make the pleading a valid cause of action is not such liberal treatment of a pleader as is suggested by the decisions of the appellate courts. (Klopstock v. Superior Court, supra.)
It is ordered that the judgment is reversed with instructions to allow plaintiff to file an amended complaint as herein suggested, if he be so advised.
Ashburn, J., and Richards, J. pro tem, * concurred.
Notes
‘
The common. law of England, so far as it is not repugnant to or inconsistent with, the Constitution of the United States, or the Constitution or laws of this State, is the rule of decision in all the courts of this State.” Civ. Code, § 22.2;
Cole
v.
Rush, 45
Cal.2d 345, 355 [
Alcoholic beverages are not included in “habit-forming drugs,” the sale of which has, at times, entitled a wife to recover from the vendor the damages caused by the consumption of such merchandise. (Best., Torts, vol. 4, $ 696.)
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
