Muntz v. Com., Dept. of Transp.

630 A.2d 524, 157 Pa. Commw. 514, 1993 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 484
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 5, 1993
Docket2410 C.D. 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 630 A.2d 524 (Muntz v. Com., Dept. of Transp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muntz v. Com., Dept. of Transp., 630 A.2d 524, 157 Pa. Commw. 514, 1993 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 484 (Pa. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

*515 CRAIG, President Judge.

Susan C. Muntz and Frederick F. Muntz appeal an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County that granted summary judgment in favor of two of the defendants in this case, Andrew Kositsky and Laura Ann Semmelroth, dismissing those two minors from the plaintiffs personal injury action, based on the conclusion that liability as a “social host” cannot be imposed on minors.

The Muntzes were injured in an automobile accident on December 17, 1988. The Muntzes filed a tort action in the trial court against (1) Paid Williams, the operator of the other car involved in the accident; (2) William Williams, Paul’s father and the person who leased the car to Paul Williams; and (3) the Department of Transportation, which allegedly acted negligently by fading to erect a median barrier at the location of the accident. The Muntzes amended their complaint by adding as defendants (1) the manufacturer of the car the Muntzes drove; and (2) the car dealer which apparently sold the car. The Muntzes filed a second amended complaint adding as defendants Kositsky, Eidle, Semmelroth and Gold-stein, based on allegations that they served Paul Williams alcohol in such amounts as to cause him to become intoxicated, which allegedly caused him to lose control of his vehicle and crash head-on into the Muntzes’ vehicle.

The two minor defendants filed motions for summary judgment, seeking the court’s dismissal of them as defendants, based on the argument that minors cannot be held tortiously liable under a social host theory of liability for serving alcohol to other minors.

The trial court granted the motions on the basis of the Pennsylvania Superior Court’s decisions in Kapres v. Heller, 417 Pa.Superior Ct., 371, 612 A.2d 987 (1992) and Goldberg v. Delta Tau Delta, 418 Pa.Superior Ct. 207, 613 A.2d 1250 (1992), in which the Superior Court concluded that minors could not be held liable for serving other minors under a social host theory of liability.

*516 The Muntzes raise the following issues in this appeal: (1) whether the defendants, who are nineteen and twenty years of age, can be held liable for damages for planning and funding a party and for supplying alcohol at the party to a nineteen-year-old who becomes intoxicated and thereafter seriously injures a third-party in an automobile accident; and (2) whether persons who are eighteen years of age and older, but younger than twenty-one, can be held liable as social hosts for supplying alcohol to a person who is under twenty-one years of age and who, as a result of his intoxication, injures a third party while driving an automobile during a state of intoxication.

Of course, although this court may look to decisions of the Superior Court for guidance, those decisions, unlike decisions of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, are not controlling on this court.

1.

The Muntzes first assert that this court should reverse the trial court’s decision because the Superior Court’s decisions conflict with the Supreme Court’s decision in Alumni Association v. Sullivan, 524 Pa. 356, 572 A.2d 1209 (1990).

In Alumni Association, the Supreme Court considered whether a national fraternity could be held liable under a social host theory for serving alcohol to minors. One of the questions in that case was whether a party must have “knowingly furnished” alcohol or “knew or should have known.” The court concluded that the pivotal inquiry is not whether a social host “intentionally and substantially aided and encouraged the consumption of alcohol by a minor guest”, but only whether a party had actual knowledge rather than imputed knowledge based on the party’s relationship to the minor. The court recognized that persons who actually participated in funding and planning of a social event, at which minors consume alcohol, as well as those who actually serve a minor alcohol, may be held liable under the social host theory.

The Muntzes, having pleaded facts alleging that the two minors either helped plan the social event or supplied beer for *517 the social event, could satisfy the standard developed in Alumni Association, that persons who plan or fund a social event may be held liable under a social host theory.

2.

We must now address the question of whether or not to follow the majority opinion of the Superior Court in Kapres and Goldberg.

As the Muntzes indicate in their brief, Judge Beck filed a dissent in both cases, in which she expresses her disagreement with the majority’s resolution of the present issue.

The leading cases in this area are Klein v. Raysinger, 504 Pa. 141, 470 A.2d 507 (1983) and Congini v. Portersville Valve Company, 504 Pa. 157, 470 A.2d 515 (1983).

In Klein, the Supreme Court held that an adult social host cannot be held tortiously liable to an adult guest for serving the guest an excessive amount of alcohol, and hence, that the social host could not be held responsible to plaintiffs who were injured in an automobile accident involving an intoxicated adult guest. The court based its decision on the “view that in the case of an ordinary able bodied man it is the consumption of the alcohol, rather than the furnishing of the alcohol, which is the proximate cause of any subsequent occurrence.” 504 Pa. at 148, 470 A.2d at 510. (Emphasis added.)

In Congini, the Supreme Court held that the conduct of an adult social host in serving a minor constituted negligence per se, and thus such a host could be held responsible for injuries that are the proximate result of a minor’s intoxication.

Thus, Congini is similar to the present case in that the court recognized that social host liability attaches where a minor is served alcohol at a social event; however, the case is distinguishable because it involved an adult social host, over the age of twenty-one or more.

In Kapres and Goldberg, the Superior Court, relying on Klein and Congini, concluded that the legislature, in enacting section 6308 of the Crimes Code, 18 Pa.C.S. § 6308, which makes the attempt to purchase, the purchase, the consump *518 tion, or the possession of alcohol

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Bluebook (online)
630 A.2d 524, 157 Pa. Commw. 514, 1993 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muntz-v-com-dept-of-transp-pacommwct-1993.