McClelland v. Harvie Kothe-Ed Rieman, Post No. 1201, Veterans of the Foreign Wars of the United States, Inc.

1989 OK 33, 770 P.2d 569, 1989 Okla. LEXIS 30, 1989 WL 18534
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 7, 1989
DocketNos. 64079, 64684 and 69621
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1989 OK 33 (McClelland v. Harvie Kothe-Ed Rieman, Post No. 1201, Veterans of the Foreign Wars of the United States, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClelland v. Harvie Kothe-Ed Rieman, Post No. 1201, Veterans of the Foreign Wars of the United States, Inc., 1989 OK 33, 770 P.2d 569, 1989 Okla. LEXIS 30, 1989 WL 18534 (Okla. 1989).

Opinion

OPALA, Vice Chief Justice.

The issue dispositive of all three appeals is whether a claim against an alcoholic beverage vendor for harm occasioned to an intoxicated consumer or another is actionable when the injurious event occurred before the effective date of our pronouncement in Brigance v. Velvet Dove Restaurant, Inc. [Brigance I]1 We now grant certiorari in all three cases, consolidate them for disposition by a single opinion and answer the question in the negative.

I.

THE CRITICAL FACTS OF THE THREE CASES ON CERTIORARI

A.

APPEAL NO. 64079

Billy T. and Bessie McClelland [plaintiffs] sued Harvie Kothe — Ed Rieman, Post No. 1201, Veterans of the Foreign Wars of the United States, Inc. [defendant], for serving alcoholic beverages in its lounge to an intoxicated person who, while recklessly driving his car in an inebriated state, struck and seriously injured Billy T. McClelland in July 1982.

The plaintiffs alleged that the defendant had a duty 1) not to serve alcoholic beverages either to an already intoxicated person or to one who is known to drink and drive frequently and 2) to operate its business in a manner which protects the public from the very harm which generated this lawsuit. Furthermore, the terms of 37 O.S.1981 § 537(a)(2),2 which prohibit the sale of alcoholic beverages to an intoxicated person, were alleged to have created a duty whose breach gives rise to a legally cognizable claim.

[571]*571Upon defendant’s motion, the trial court dismissed the suit for failure to state a claim. The Court of Appeals held that the common law and the terms of § 537(a)(2), as well as those of 76 O.S.1981 §§ 1 and 5(a),3 impose a duty whose breach is redres-sible in a civil action.

B.

APPEAL NO. 64684

The plaintiffs in this case are Gregory Arnold and his parents, Thomas S. and Vicki Arnold. They sued the Musket Corporation, d/b/a Love’s Country Store (Liberal, Kansas) [defendant], for selling beer to their co-plaintiff son, who had driven to Kansas to buy the beverage in February 1984. He was nearly 16 years old at the time. After returning to this state, he drank several cans of beer, became intoxicated and was injured in Oklahoma when he lost control of his vehicle.

Viewing the claim as one based on a violation of the Kansas statute which prohibits the sale of beer to minors, the trial court concluded that our law affords no relief against a beer vendor for injuries sustained by a purchaser who is injured after becoming intoxicated from drinking the beverage.4 Summary judgment went to the defendant.

The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that because, like Kansas, Oklahoma also prohibits by statute the sale of intoxicating beverages to minors,5 this state’s public policy imposes on the defendant a duty not to sell any beer to a minor.

C.

APPEAL NO. 69621

Pearl Matlock [plaintiff] sued Tumbleweed Ballroom, Inc. [defendant], alleging negligence in serving alcoholic beverages to her nineteen-year-old son, Donald Kent Matlock, after he had already become noticeably intoxicated. Soon after leaving the premises, the minor died in a one-car accident. The injurious event occurred in February 1986.

The trial court dismissed the action for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that because the statute prohibiting the sale of liquor to minors as well as to intoxicated persons creates a duty not to do so, its breach is civilly actionable.

II.

THE COMMON LAW’S (PRE-BRIGANCE I) CAUSATION RULE POSES AN INSUPERABLE BARRIER TO RECOVERY IN ALL THREE CASES

By the common law of England and that effective in Oklahoma before Brigance I,6 a tavern owner may not be held liable for furnishing alcoholic beverages to one who, after becoming intoxicated, injures either [572]*572himself or another.7 The rule applies even when the inebriated consumer is a minor above the age of discretion.8 Claims do not lie against liquor vendors because — at common law — it is the drink’s voluntary consumption rather than its sale that constitutes the proximate cause of the injuries sought to be redressed.9 The common-law causation rule ascribes to the voluntary act of excessive ingestion the causa causans of the harm — its sole efficient legal cause. By force of law, voluntary consumption effectively and completely insulates the seller, as the original actor, from all civil liability.10

Oklahoma’s jurisprudence underwent a drastic metamorphosis with our pronouncement in Brigance I. There, we departed from the common law, holding for the first time that a commercial vendor of alcoholic beverages for on-the-premises consumption must exercise reasonable care not to sell or furnish liquor to persons who, by their noticeable inebriation, may appear to lack the capacity safely to operate a motor vehicle and are thus likely to subject others to an unreásonable risk of harm.11 The rule announced in Brigance I applies prospectively — only to that case and to all claims arising from and after October 3, 1986, the date mandate issued.12

At the time of his injury the Arnold minor was nearly sixteen and Matlock minor nineteen years of age. Neither of them was below the common-law age of capacity or discretion.13 All three claims before us clearly arose before the Brigance I mandate; they are hence governed by the common-law concept of causation which was then in force.14

[573]*573The plaintiffs sought to predicate their demands on common-law negligence, negligence per se resulting from violation of a statute, or directly on a breach of duty imposed by a penal statute. Because the common law’s causation barrier stood un-abrogated at the time each of the injurious events occurred and hence raises an insuperable impediment to recovery on any theory of liability that was pressed below,15 none of the claims can be deemed actionable.16

OPINIONS BY THE COURT OF APPEALS VACATED AND THE TRIAL COURTS’ DECISIONS AFFIRMED.

HARGRAVE, C.J., and HODGES, LAVENDER, SIMMS, DOOLIN and SUMMERS, JJ., concur. ALMA WILSON, J., concurs in result. KAUGER, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.

Appeals Nos. 64684 and 69621

HARGRAVE, C.J., and HODGES, LAVENDER, SIMMS and DOOLIN, JJ., concur.

ALMA WILSON, J., concurs in result.

KAUGER, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.

SUMMERS, J., dissents.

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1989 OK 33, 770 P.2d 569, 1989 Okla. LEXIS 30, 1989 WL 18534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclelland-v-harvie-kothe-ed-rieman-post-no-1201-veterans-of-the-okla-1989.