*415 OPINION
Appellant alleged that while walking across a parking lot at the Washoe County fairgrounds, he was struck by a vehicle driven by one David Thayer, receiving injuries which have left him paralyzed. Among other defendants, appellant sued respondent Eskey, doing business as Kietz-Mill Minit Mart (Mart). He alleged that the Mart sold alcoholic beverages to a minor, in “willful and wanton disregard” of the laws of the State of Nevada and of the consequences of the sale, proximately causing the injuries to appellant in that Thayer “consumed the alcoholic beverages sold by [respondents], became intoxicated and thereafter caused [appellant’s] injuries”.
Respondents moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim, and presented to the court the transcript of a deposition taken by appellant’s counsel of one Robert Bill. Mr. Bill testified that he had been six weeks short of his twenty-first birthday when he purchased beer at the Mart, where no one asked him for identification. He further testified that he delivered the beer to Lane Newman, a friend of Thayer’s, on the evening appellant was injured.
The district court granted respondents’ motion to dismiss and certified the judgment pursuant to NRCP 54(b). We affirm.
Since matters outside the pleadings were presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion was treated as a motion for summary judgment. NRCP 12(b); Cummings v. City of Las Vegas Mun. Corp.,
*416
Appellant has attempted to characterize respondents’ conduct, as willful and wanton, on the basis of the allegation that respondents had previously “engaged in regularly, repeatedly and knowingly, for profit, selling intoxicating beverages to minors.” Appellant has cited no cases in which past instances of serving minors would transform the nature of a sale such as that alleged here into wanton and willful misconduct. We have described as willful or wanton misconduct an act “that the actor knows, or should know, will very probably cause harm”, Rocky Mt. Produce v. Johnson,
Appellant also argues that the act of selling liquor to a minor should be held to constitute common law negligence or negligence per se. He urges us not to apply our holding in Hamm v. Carson City Nugget, Inc.,
“Negligence is not actionable unless, without the intervention of an intervening cause, it proximately causes the harm for which complaint was made.” Thomas v. Bokelman,
Taking into consideration that inferences will be drawn in favor of a party opposing a motion for summary judgment, “the opponent must nevertheless show he can produce evidence at the trial to support his claim.” Thomas v. Bokelman,
supra
at 14,
Similarly, in Elliott v. Mallory Electric Corp.,
As we have noted, “[c]ourts are reluctant to grant summary judgment in negligence cases because foreseeability, duty, proximate cause and reasonableness usually are questions of fact for the jury. . . . But when plaintiff as a matter of law cannot recover, defendant is entitled to a summary judgment.” Thomas v. Bokelman,
supra at
13,
The judgment of the district court is accordingly affirmed.
