Fazio v. Lincoln Restaurant Group, Inc.

18 Mass. L. Rptr. 239
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedAugust 27, 2004
DocketNo. 014368
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Mass. L. Rptr. 239 (Fazio v. Lincoln Restaurant Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fazio v. Lincoln Restaurant Group, Inc., 18 Mass. L. Rptr. 239 (Mass. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Fabricant, J.

INTRODUCTION

This wrongful death action arises from a fatal collision between a vehicle operated by Roy Stewart and one operated by Antonio Fazio. Fazio was killed in the collision, leaving his pregnant wife and three young children. The plaintiff, as executrix of the estate of her late husband, seeks to recover damages from two establishments where Roy Stewart drank alcoholic beverages on the evening before the collision. Before the Court are the defendants’ motions for summary judgment. For the reasons that will be explained, Dakota’s motion will be denied, and Locke-Ober’s motion will be allowed.

BACKGROUND

The record before the Court, considered in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, provides the following factual background. As of Wednesday, May 26, 1999, Roy Stewart was President of the Massachusetts Workers’ Compensation Rating Bureau, located on the fifth floor of 101 Arch Street in Boston. He is five feet, ten and a half inches tall, and weighed about 205 pounds at the time. Stewart’s drink of choice at the time was Absolut vodka on the rocks. Absolut vodka is 80 proof.

That afternoon, Stewart drank three Absolut vodka drinks with lunch at Café Marliave, in Boston. His credit card receipt from Café Marliave shows that he paid his bill at “13:31,” or 1:31 p.m.1 After lunch, Stewart returned to his office, where he conversed with his administrative assistant, Donna LaRose. It did not appear to her, by either smell or observation, that Stewart had consumed any alcohol at lunch.

[270]*270After work, Stewart went to Dakota’s, which is located on the second floor of 101 Arch Street, and LaRose met him there.2 Stewart was a regular customer at Dakota’s, and was generally known to its staff, including Andrea Coughlan, who was the server for the table that evening. Coughlan started a tab for the table at 5:36 p.m., although her testimony indicates that Stewart had been served his first drink somewhat earlier than that time; she recalls him arriving at about 5:00. Richard Underwood, an attorney who provided representation to the Rating Bureau, joined Stewart and LaRose at Dakota’s at about 6:30 p.m. Faith Lawlor, a client of Underwood’s, completed the foursome sometime thereafter. The Dakota’s tab for the table shows nine items entered as “extra,” four items entered as “prem br,” and three items entered as “opn wine.” Handwritten notations on the side of the tab indicate nine “extra,” four “heinekin,” and three “p. grigio sp.” Underwood paid the tab for the group. The credit card receipt shows a time of 18:12, or 6:12 p.m., but testimony indicates that the clock was off by an hour, so the actual time was 7:12 p.m.

Stewart, according to deposition testimony of all witnesses who claimed knowledge on the subject, drank Absolut vodka. No one testified to observing him drink anything else. Coughlan testified that, to the best of her recollection, she served Stewart approximately four drinks. Underwood, according to his deposition testimony, was drinking Heinekin beer, and was the only member of the group who did so. LaRose testified that she drank VO and water, and nothing else. According to her testimony, she and Stewart had “a couple” of drinks before Underwood joined them, then “maybe we had another one”; she would be surprised if she had four drinks altogether at Dakota’s, and she certainly did not have five. Stewart, to her observation, had no more to drink than she. No one at the table, according to her testimony, drank wine. Lawlor testified that she had one drink, an Absolut vodka martini. She observed LaRose drinking from a short glass, not a wine glass; she agreed with LaRose that no one at the table was drinking wine. She also testified that Underwood ordered a round of drinks for two or three women at another table who were celebrating a birthday. Underwood did not remember doing so on that occasion, but acknowledged that he might have. Coughlan also did not remember Underwood ordering for another table on that occasion, but acknowledged the possibility. Coughlan did testify, however, that another unidentified individual joined the group for a time and ordered a drink that was recorded as an “extra.” None of the members of the group corroborated that testimony.

Maureen McGovern, Dakota’s manager, appearing on its behalf pursuant to Rule 30b(6), F.R.Civ.P., testified that Dakota’s does not serve “doubles,” and that Dakota’s bartenders do not measure alcohol, but would free-pour approximately two ounces of alcohol for any drink ordered as “straight up” or “on the rocks.” Drinks are entered on the tab in different categories depending on price, with “extra” identifying more expensive drinks, “call” less expensive, and “well” the least expensive. She testified that Absolut vodka would be entered as an “extra,” but that she “believed” a VO would be charged as a “call.” Coughlan, however, testified that she “probably” would have rung a VO and water in as an “extra.”

At a little after six o’clock on the evening in question, McGovern went by the table where Stewart and his companions were sitting, and observed a glass of wine, a bottle of beer, and two “rocks glasses” on the table. She observed Stewart drinking Absolut, Underwood drinking Heineken, and one of the women drinking Pinot Grigio. She testified that “it was my understanding that the second female guest was also drinking Absolut.”

Underwood and Lawlor left Dakota’s at sometime between 7:15 and 7:45, and went to Locke-Ober. Stewart stood up when Underwood and Lawlor left. Stewart and LaRose stayed at Dakota’s somewhat longer, and then joined the other two at Locke-Ober. Surveillance videotapes show them leaving 101 Arch Street through the exit where Dakota’s is located at approximately 7:59 p.m. They went directly to LockeOber, a two- to five-minute walk, and did not consume any alcohol on the way. LaRose testified that Stewart walked “at a rather fast clip.” Stewart had one Absolut vodka drink at Locke Ober, served at approximately 8:18 p.m., along with clam chowder and rolls. LaRose had one VO and water drink, and clam chowder. Stewart and LaRose left Locke-Ober together and walked back to 101 Arch Street, where surveillance tapes recorded their entry at 8:45 p.m. Coughlin saw them enter the building, as did security guards Patrick Holbrook and Walter Alukonis.

With the exception of visits to the restroom, LaRose and Stewart stayed together in the office until they left the building together. LaRose did not observe Stewart consume anything. Surveillance tapes show them walking through the garage at 101 Arch Street at 10:58 p.m., and then driving out. Stewart drove to the Mansfield train station, where LaRose had left her car; he dropped her off there at approximately midnight. Stewart then proceeded north on Route 495 to Route 1, where the collision occurred in Wrentham a few minutes later. LaRose, Underwood, Lawlor, McGovern, and Coughlin all testified that they never observed Stewart exhibit any sign of intoxication at any time during the evening. McGovern and Coughlin were trained to identify signs of intoxication, and were working in capacities that required them to do so. Lawlor also had such training, having worked as a bartender and restaurant server. Security guards Alukonis and Holbrook also testified that they observed no sign of intoxication when they saw Stewart returning to the building at 8:45 p.m.

Stewart testified at his deposition that he does not remember the events of May 26, 1999. He further [271]

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Bluebook (online)
18 Mass. L. Rptr. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fazio-v-lincoln-restaurant-group-inc-masssuperct-2004.