Lead Opinion
OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
A.
The plaintiff, Bruce E. Wilson, in his complaint alleged that the defendant (debt- or), on November 5, 1980, was the owner and operator of a Corvette automobile in which plaintiff was a passenger; that defendant operated said vehicle while he was
voluntarily intoxicated and was driving under the influence of said intoxicants, was aware of his intoxicated condition and was aware of the probable dangerous consequences of his conduct, and willfully and deliberately failed to avoid said consequences. At said time and place, defendant caused the vehicle he was operating to run off State Highway 33 and collide with a Southern California Edison Pole. T.R. 7 (Appellant’s Excerpts of Trial Record).
The complaint further alleged or implied that the claim resulted from defendant’s “grossly careless, reckless, negligent and wanton conduct.”
Plaintiff seeks damages for serious injury suffered by him as a result of the defendant’s wrongful conduct contending that liability for such misconduct is nondis-chargeable by virtue of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6).
The defendant answered that plaintiff’s cause of action was “in the nature of negligence and not the result of willful and malicious injury caused by the debtor.” Defendant also filed and noted for hearing a Motion to Dismiss Adversary Proceeding for Failure to State a Claim.
B.
At the hearing on the motion to dismiss, plaintiff proffered affidavits from witnesses who were in vehicles passed by the Corvette who observed that its speed was in excess of 80 miles per hour and that plaintiff was waving his arms and looking panic stricken. T.R. 40-43. These statements were not considered by the court below.
Plaintiff in his statement of the case avers that defendant was arrested at the scene for violation of California Vehicle Code § 23101 (driving under the influence of liquor and causing injury) and pled guilty to that charge. The police estimated that his speed at the time of the accident was 83.8 miles per hour. It is not clear how these facts became part of the record but they are not challenged and are implicitly accepted by appellee in his responding brief.
The trial court in entering its memorandum of decision and judgment, while adverting to findings and conclusions appears to have rendered its judgment on the legal issue tendered by the motion to dismiss. The court focused on plaintiff’s allegation that his injury and damage resulted from debtor’s grossly careless, reckless, negligent and wanton misconduct which plaintiff contended should be held nondischargeable under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6). The court concluded that intoxication unaccompanied by specific intention to injure or harm is not a basis, under § 523(a)(6), for nondis-chargeability of the claim of a party whose injury was caused by the drunk driver. The court cited in support of its conclusion In re Bryson,
Appellee cites the foregoing cases to this court and urges that they are determinative because an intoxicated driver who does not intend harm is by definition not “willful and malicious” as required by § 523(a)(6). Appellee states:
Nowhere is it alleged that appellee intended to harm appellant. Defendant may have intentionally become intoxicated and may have intentionally drove {sic) at high speed, but he did not intend to injure or harm appellee. Nor is there a substantial certainty that appellee’s acts would result in harm to plaintiff. Defendant’s acts may have been reckless, but they do not present acts which show a substantial certainty of injury to appellant.”2
Appellee recognizes that the case was decided in the context of a motion to dismiss, stating: “Finally appellant is unable in his pleadings to state a prima facie case to show that appellee acted willfully. Further, it is unlikely that appellant, at trial, could make an offer of proof to prove that appellee acted willfully to injure appellant.”
III. DISCUSSION
A. Application of Tinker v. Colwell
Two lines of authority have developed in drunk driving discharge cases under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6). These eases for the most part focus their respective views on the applicability of Tinker v. Colwell,
The present trend, however, seems to be toward revitalizing Tinker. An excellent summary of present caselaw is found in In re Callaway,
B. Standard of Review on Motion to Dismiss
In general, the allegations of a complaint and all inferences to be fairly drawn from them are taken as true. Dismissal is warranted only where plaintiff has not stated and cannot state a claim. Conley v. Gibson,
IY. RELATIONSHIP OF § 523(a)(6) TO VOLUNTARY INTOXICATION
As indicated, the extent of Tinker’s current viability is subject to controversy. In any event, little if any illumination will be cast on the dischargeability of a claim against a drunk driver by considering the relevance or logic of this early case dealing with the tor,t of criminal conversation.
CONCLUSION
One who voluntarily embarks upon a course, which a reasonable person knows, or should know, may significantly impair ability to exercise reasonable care, should be held to have intended the consequences which occur as a result of the diminished capacity.
We hold that a driver who ingests an intoxicating substance should be subject to a claim of nondischargeability under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(6), if it be proved that lack of reasonable care resulting from intoxication caused the accident and injury. On the record before us the complaint was not subject to dismissal.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. The foregoing approach was applied by In re Rainey,
. Tinker may have some relevance insofar as it demonstrates what Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. in The Common Law stated over one hundred years ago:
The life of law has not been logic: it has been experience. The felt necessities of the time, the prevalent moral and political theories, intuitions of public policy, avowed or unconscious. Even the prejudices which judges share with their fellow-men, have had a good deal more to do than the syllogism in determining the rules by which men should be governed.
It may be that the lack of clarity in legislation and divergence in court rulings on the issue before us reflect ambivalence resulting from legalized and widespread consumption of alcohol and the consequent need to control the great and pervasive damage resulting from its disabling effects. Congress in 1984 enacted legislation which appears to except drunk driving judgments from discharge. 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(9). That section is not applicable in this case. However, it may reflect current prevalent societal leanings which demonstrate the continuing truth of Holmes’ observation.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring and dissenting:
I concur with the other members of this panel that this judgment should be reversed but cannot agree with the reasoning the majority provides to guide the trial court on remand.
The essence of my disagreement was expressed by In re Hostetler, 3 Bankr.L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 70,186 (Bkrtcy.M.D.Fla.1984):
Courts which have considered the question of the dischargeability, vel non, of a debt resulting from damages or injuries inflicted on innocent victims by an intoxicated driver have struggled to reconcile the stringent intent requirement imposed by the phrase “willful and malicious injury” with the notion of permitting a wrongdoer to escape the consequences of conduct generally considered to be repulsive or at least grossly reprehensible.
The majority stresses preventing the wrongdoer from escaping the consequences of drunk driving.
I.
Section 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code makes nondischargeable any debt for “willful and malicious injury by the debtor to another entity or the property of another entity.” The phrase “willful and malicious injury” has been variously interpreted in drunk driving cases. E.g., In re Greenwell,
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and these panels have not spoken on the issue of recklessness as opposed to specific intent in drunk driving cases, but have recently considered this question in cases of conversion and defamation.
In Matter of Kasler,
In a footnote, Easier recognized the existence of, but declined to extend, a line of cases finding personal injury liabilities arising from reckless or negligent operation of automobiles to be nondischargeable.
[i]n the legislative history accompanying the Bankruptcy Act of 1978, Congress made it unmistakeable that only deliberate or intentional acts should be considered “willful,” and that mere reckless disregard did not qualify. H.R.Rep. No. 595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 365 (1977), reprinted in [1978] U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News, at pp. 5787, 6320-21; S.Rep. No. 989, 95th Cong., 2nd Sess. 79, reprinted in [1978] U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News, at pp. 5787, 5865.
Id. However, Easier then stated that “the new Bankruptcy [Code], which this Congressional intent informed, is not involved in this case.” Id.
The Bankruptcy Code did apply to In re Cecchini,
I do not believe that the Code intended to require actual intent for conversion and defamation but a recklessness standard— or, as the majority seems to be suggesting by talking of reasonable care, a negligence standard — for drunk driving. The question is not what is the proper penalty for drunk driving but what Congress meant by “willful and malicious” injury. If Congress did not draft the statute to include drunk driving, it is not for us to legislate it in.
Instead of an intentional injury, the majority looks to an intent to drink. But, simply stated, the intent to drink cannot be a substitute for the intent to injure because drinking usually does not cause bodily injury to third parties.
II.
The bankruptcy judge dismissed the complaint on motion of the defendant, holding the debt to be dischargeable because there was not explicit intent to injure the plaintiff. This ruling fails to account for the distorting effects of alcohol. Although Easier and Cecchini require an intent to injure the plaintiff, this rule must be modified in drunk driving cases for two reasons: first, a specific intent is difficult— and often impossible — to determine in these cases and, second, the actor should not benefit from interfering with his own ability to form a specific intent.
In these cases, where drinking has clouded the defendant’s thought processes, I would satisfy the specific intent requirement by using the approach announced by In re Rainey,
All consequences which the actor desires to bring about are intended.... Intent is not, however, limited to consequences which are desired. If the actor knows that the consequences are certain, or substantially certain, to result from his act, and still goes ahead, he is treated by the law as if he had in fact desired to produce the result. As the probability ... becomes less than substantial certainty, the actor’s conduct loses the character of intent, and becomes mere recklessness.
Id. at 573 (emphasis added by Rainey). Thus, an injury would be willful and malicious under section 523(a)(6) if it is the result of conduct that the driver knows is substantially certain to cause an injury.
Even this test is flawed, however, to the extent it requires an actual understanding of the risks when voluntary intoxication prevents full recognition of those risks. Instead of a futile search for what was in the driver’s mind, the test must be modified into an objective standard: whether or not a person in normal control of his faculties
III.
The majority finds exception from discharge whenever there is (1) intoxication
Two examples illustrate my thinking. In the first, the debtor is driving on an unlighted road at a speed well within the speed limits. Suddenly, the plaintiff, dressed in dark clothing, runs across the road. The debtor has had only a small amount to drink, but enough to impair his driving so that he cannot swerve in time to miss the plaintiff. On these facts, the words “willful and malicious” simply do not apply. In the second example, the debtor has had a large amount to drink and his driving ability is seriously impaired. He has a history of drunk driving injuries. Observers have suggested that he not drive. Nevertheless, he drives down a crowded road at a great speed, crosses into oncoming traffic, and strikes plaintiff. On these facts, the conduct is “willful and malicious” because the debtor should have realized that he created a substantial certainty of injury.
CONCLUSION
Although I join in condemning the defendant’s alleged misconduct here, I cannot stretch “willful and malicious” to include all drinking that results in reckless or negligent injury, as the majority has done. I would reverse the judgment but require a substantial certainty standard upon the remand.
. As used here, "drunk driving" is a general term referring to driving whenever the driver's ability is impaired to any extent by alcohol or other drugs.
. This language does not support the majority’s reasoning. The majority’s standard distinguishes the drunk driver who endangers life from the sober driver who endangers life, not the drunk driver who endangers property from the one who endangers life as the Kasler footnote suggests.
. As the majority points out, the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-353, added a new 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(9) that excepts from discharge certain judgment debts arising from driving while "legally intoxicated.” This is one solution to the problem posed by drinking and driving. This legislation does not affect whether conduct also falls under the “willful and malicious injury” standard.
. See, e.g., Taylor v. Superior Court,
. The majority gives us no definition of "intoxication.” Does it mean, e.g., slightly impaired ability, markedly impaired ability, "falling down drunk,” or a specific blood alcohol level?
