Hollerud v. Malamis

174 N.W.2d 626, 20 Mich. App. 748, 1969 Mich. App. LEXIS 912
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1969
DocketDocket 4,173
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 174 N.W.2d 626 (Hollerud v. Malamis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hollerud v. Malamis, 174 N.W.2d 626, 20 Mich. App. 748, 1969 Mich. App. LEXIS 912 (Mich. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

Levin, J.

On December 14,1962, plaintiff Edward Hollerud consumed 12 bottles of beer in Pinky’s Bar, had dinner, and then moved on to the Rainbow Bar where he had four additional beers. In the Rainbow Bar he engaged in an Indian wrestling contest with the bartender and injured fingers on his left hand. 1 The complaint states three separate causes of action :

1. Edward Hollerud’s claim against the owners of the two bars asserting that his injuries were caused by their violations of the dramshop act, MCLA § 436.22 (Stat Ann 1969 Cum Supp § 18.993), and by their negligence in selling him liquor.

2. Karen Hollerud’s claim under the dramshop act alleging that her father’s injuries deprived her of “means of support.”

3. Edward Hollerud’s claim asserting that the bartender at the Rainbow Bar committed an assault and battery upon him.

*752 The trial judge granted the defendants’ motions for summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ claims on the ground that Edward Hollerud failed to state a cause of action and Karen Hollerud failed to show that there is a genuine issue of material fact. 2

I.

The Michigan liquor control act 3 contains two relevant sections, §§ 22 4 and 29. Section 22 (the dramshop act) provides a cause of action against a tavern owner who furnishes liquor to an intoxicated person in favor of “every wife, husband, child, parent, guardian or other persons” damaged by the intoxicated person. Edward Hollerud now concedes that he, the consumer of the liquor, has no cause of action under § 22.

In Malone v. Lambrecht (1943), 305 Mich 58, 62, the Michigan Supreme Court considered and rejected the argument that § 29, “No vendor shall sell any alcoholic liquor to any person in an intoxicated condition”, establishes a statutory duty independent of § 22, and that an intoxicated person injured by a breach of such statutory duty may recover for damage caused by the breach. 5 The *753 Court reviewed its decisions under pre-proMbition dramshop statutes holding that the intoxicated person himself cannot assert a claim and concluded that it was not intended by post-prohibition § 29 to enlarge the category of persons who might recover. Malone’s holding that the intoxicated person has no rights under § 29 was followed in McDaniel v. Crapo (1950), 326 Mich 555, and in Kangas v. Suchorski (1964), 372 Mich 396. 6

Edward Hollerud alternatively asserts that he has a common-law cause of action for negligence independent of the statute. In our opinion this issue is not necessarily foreclosed by the statements of our Supreme Court in Jones v. Bourrie (1963), *754 369 Mich. 473, 476, and Kangas v. Suchorski, supra, p 401, that the dramshop act provides the exclusive remedy. 7 While the Supreme Court may yet declare that the.dramshop act is so far exclusive of other remedies that the tavern owner has no liability whatsoever except under the dramshop act, 8 we prefer -not to anticipate such a holding and note that in both Jones and Kangas the plaintiffs sought to recover for injuries caused by an intoxicated person. Here a claim is advanced on account of injuries sustained by an intoxicated person who, as previously mentioned, has no remedy under the dramshop act. 9 Additionally, this aspect of Edward Hollerud’s common-law theory is not predicated on the absolute liability of §§22 and 29 but, rather, is based on the defendant tavern owners’ alleged fault in selling him liquor when he was visibly intoxicated.

In Cruse v. Aden (1889), 127 Ill 231 (20 NE 73), the Supreme Court of Illinois declared (in dictum), without citation of authority, that at common law it was not a tort to sell or give intoxicating liquor *755 to a strong and able-bodied man. This statement has been repeated by many courts and found its way into the encyclopedias. 10 Recovery has been denied on various theories. In some cases it was simply concluded that the consumption rather than the supplying of the liquor was the “proximate cause” of the intoxicated person’s injury. In other cases, the courts went on to argue that the consumption of the liquor was independent of the sale, the result of the free exercise of the consumer’s will, an intervening cause. Still other courts declared that a consumer could not recover because his condition was caused by his contributory negligence. 11

These judicial pronouncements were modified by statutes (such as our dramshop act) imposing civil liability. Broad-form dramshop acts, like Michigan’s, make the tavern owner liable for damage caused third persons by an intoxicated person to whom the tavern owner sells liquor even if the tavern owner exercised due care to avoid making a sale to an intoxicated person. The enactment of dramshop acts in some 37 states no doubt greatly inhibited the development of the common-law concerning the civil liability of liquor vendors.

*756 Many States repealed their dramshop acts at the beginning or end of national prohibition. Today ten states have broad-form dramshop acts, but many, while eliminating the express remedy of the dramshop act, retained or enacted statutes prohibiting the sale (and sometimes, the giving) of liquor to minors, drunkards or visibly intoxicated persons. 12

The New Jersey statute prohibits the sale of liquor to minors. In Rappoport v. Nichols (1959), 31 NJ 188 (156 A2d 1, 75 ALR2d 821), that state’s Supreme Court rejected the argument that when its legislature repealed its dramshop act it intended to eliminate altogether the civil liability of tavern owners, and held that a third person injured by an inebriated minor could recover for the tavern owner’s common-law negligence in violating the statutory prohibition.

Rappoport is generally regarded as the seminal opinion recognizing a common-law right of action independent of the express remedy provided by a dramshop act. 13 Even though it represents merely *757

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Bluebook (online)
174 N.W.2d 626, 20 Mich. App. 748, 1969 Mich. App. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollerud-v-malamis-michctapp-1969.