Kiriakos v. Phillips Dankos v. Stapf

139 A.3d 1006, 448 Md. 440
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 5, 2016
Docket20/15
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 139 A.3d 1006 (Kiriakos v. Phillips Dankos v. Stapf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kiriakos v. Phillips Dankos v. Stapf, 139 A.3d 1006, 448 Md. 440 (Md. 2016).

Opinion

ADKINS, J.

Although young people “are close to a lifelong peak of physical health, strength, and mental capacity,” 1 they are still developing in profound ways suggesting that they, in contrast to adults, are not capable of handling the more dangerous elements this world offers. See Terry A. Maroney, The False Promise of Adolescent Brain Science in Juvenile Justice, 85 *449 Notre Dame L. Rev. 89, 100 (2009) (“[B]y the early 2000s neuroscience supported the notion that teen brains are structurally and functionally different from those of both children and adults.”). Prominent among these dangers, and front and center in these cases, is alcohol. Today we address to what extent adults who allow underage persons to drink alcohol on their property — in violation of Md. Code (2002, 2012 Repl. Vol.), § 10-117(b) of the Criminal Law Article (“CR”) — are liable for injuries arising from the youth’s intoxication.

The harm that alcohol poses to youths is pernicious, pervasive, and deadly 2 especially when motor vehicles are involved. See H.B. 299, Fiscal & Policy Note, 2009 Reg. Sess., at 5 (Md. 2009) (“According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, alcohol-impaired driving is one of the nation’s deadliest crimes.”); id. (explaining that, among all fatally injured alcohol-impaired drivers, the percentage of such drivers aged 16 to 20 “has hovered around 25%” since 1995). 3

Maryland established the minimum drinking age of 21 in 1982. See Maryland Code (1957, 1996 Repl. Vol.), § 400A of *450 Article 27; H.B. 85, Reg. Sess. (Md. 1982). 4 Unsurprisingly, underage people attempt to drink in spite of this law. One way underage people can circumvent a minimum drinking age law is to turn to adults over 21.

The General Assembly targeted adults in the fight to protect youths from alcohol when, in 1996, it enacted CR § 10-117(b). CR § 10-117(b), which contains exceptions not pertinent to the cases before us, 5 states that “an adult may not knowingly and willfully allow an individual under the age of 21 years actually to possess or consume an alcoholic beverage at a residence, or within the curtilage of a residence that the adult owns or leases and in which the adult resides.”

It is against this backdrop that we confront two cases with the dangerous common denominator of underage people drinking alcohol on an adult’s property, and then leaving that property in a motor vehicle. With respect to both cases, the facts are as alleged by the Petitioners in their complaints, or in the Kiriakos case, in the Motion For Summary Judgment, Opposition, or attachments thereto. In both cases, the consumption of alcohol was done with the knowledge and consent of the adult property owner.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

Case No. 55: Dankos

17-year-old Steven Dankos (“Steven”) became intoxicated during a party at Linda Stapfs house on the evening of *451 November 28, 2009. 6 When Steven left early the next morning, still intoxicated, he rode in the bed of David Erdman’s pickup truck. Erdman, another intoxicated partygoer who was 22 years old, crashed the truck shortly after leaving, and Steven was killed.

When Stapf first came home during the party, she found a large crowd at her house. 7 Stapf told her son Kevin that some people would have to leave, but she permitted him and some others to continue partying in the garage. Although Stapf knew some (like Kevin) were under 21 and some under 18, she allowed them to keep drinking.

During the party, Stapf sat in the kitchen near the garage and played solitaire. Alcohol was kept in the garage and made available to all guests. At least four times, she entered the garage to observe the goings-on. Although Stapf asked them to turn down the music, she did not ask or tell them to limit or stop drinking.

When Kelsey Erdman (“Kelsey”) approached Stapf in the kitchen to express her concerns about her brother driving while intoxicated, Stapf did nothing. Stapf did not tell Kelsey to drive Erdman home, nor call Erdman’s parents, nor even check on his condition. Stapf also did not attempt to prevent any intoxicated guests from driving off her premises.

Erdman crashed shortly after leaving the party. Steven, who rode in the truck bed, was ejected and killed. 8 The State charged Stapf with violating CR § 10 — 117(b), but ultimately stetted this charge.

In May 2018, Nancy Dankos, Steven’s mother, filed an amended complaint (“Amended Complaint”), 9 alleging various *452 claims against Stapf that sounded in negligence: common law social host liability; breach of duties arising out of Maryland criminal law statutes; 10 breach of a duty to act; 11 a wrongful death claim; and a survival action. Stapf filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, arguing principally that Dankos had failed to allege the breach of a legally cognizable duty. The Circuit Court for Howard County granted the motion in substantial part. 12

Following her timely notice of appeal, 13 the Court of Special Appeals affirmed. Davis v. Stapf, 224 Md.App. 393, 398, 120 A.3d 890, cert. granted sub nom. Dankos v. Stapf, 445 Md. 4, 122 A.3d 974 (2015). 14 Although the intermediate appellate court concluded that Dankos properly alleged a duty, it still affirmed the dismissal for lack of proximate cause. Id. at 424-25, 120 A.3d 890. The court’s conclusion about proximate cause was also fatal to Dankos’s other claims of breach of a duty. Id. at 425-29, 120 A.3d 890.

Case No. 20: Kiriakos

Manal Kiriakos was walking her dogs on the sidewalk one morning when 18-year-old Shetmiyah Robinson, driving a *453 large sport utility vehicle, hit Kiriakos, causing her life-threatening injuries. 15

The prior afternoon and evening, Robinson had been working with Brandon Phillips and another man at Phillips’s house. 16 They began drinking a bottle of vodka and some champagne around 10:00 p.m. Phillips himself mixed the vodka in Robinson’s drink with orange juice.

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Bluebook (online)
139 A.3d 1006, 448 Md. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kiriakos-v-phillips-dankos-v-stapf-md-2016.