Per Curiam.
Plaintiff appeals as of right from an order of summary judgment entered in favor of defendants James A. and Patricia A. Hoholik doing business as The Teddy Bear (defendants).
On June 10, 1980, Rosetta Newman filed this dramshop action against defendants on behalf of plaintiff John Everett Newman, a minor. In his complaint, plaintiff alleged that defendants unlawfully served intoxicating liquor to plaintiff’s father, John B. Newman, and, as a result, plaintiff’s father was involved in an automobile accident. Plaintiff sought damages for economic loss and loss of his father’s companionship and society. Plaintiff’s complaint did not name John B. Newman, the alleged intoxicated person, as a defendant in the lawsuit.
On January 19, 1983, defendants filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to GCR 1963, 117.2(1), based upon plaintiff’s failure to name and retain the alleged intoxicated person as required by MCL 436.22; MSA 18.993.
Plaintiff’s motion to
amend his complaint to add John B. Newman as a party defendant was granted. Following the filing of the amended complaint and service of process upon John B. Newman, Newman’s default was taken.
On April 22, 1983, defendants renewed their motion for summary judgment due to plaintiff’s failure to name and retain the alleged intoxicated person within two years after the cause of action accrued. The trial court ruled that the name and retain provision, as interpreted by the Supreme Court in
Putney v Haskins,
414 Mich 181; 324 NW2d 729 (1982),
reh den
414 Mich 1111 (1982), mandates that the alleged intoxicated person be named and retained in every dramshop action. Since plaintiff had not done so in the instant case, the court held that no cause of action had been stated within the statutory period and dismissed the action with prejudice.
I
In
Scholten v Rhoades,
67 Mich App 736; 242 NW2d 509 (1976), this Court addressed the issue of the applicability of the name and retain provision of the dramshop act where a father sought to recover damages he incurred when his minor son injured himself as a result of consuming beer sold to him in violation of the dramshop act. The Court classified dramshop actions into three groups:
"[Actions] (I) by a parent or child killed or injured
by a third party as a
result of intoxicants served to the third party by a defendant dramshop establishment; (II)
by a parent or child killed or injured
through the child’s or parent’s own misdoing
by reason of intoxicants served to them by a defendant dramshop establishment; (III) by an intoxicated adult or minor for injuries sustained as a result of being served intoxicants by defendant dramshop establishment.”
Scholten,
pp 740-741.
The Court recognized that in Group I situations the name and retain provision operated to eliminate the practice whereby the intoxicated person enters into a settlement with the injured plaintiff for a token sum and then assists the plaintiff with the prosecution of a suit against the tavern owner. A similar potential for collusion does not exist in a Group II situation.
"A parent is legally responsible for the medical bills of his minor child and to secure a judgment for such sums against the child is meaningless. Furthermore, unlike Group I situations where plaintiff has a recognized cause of action against the third-party intoxicant, a child has no cause of action against his father or father’s estate for injuries or death of the father due to the father’s voluntary intoxication. Nor does a parent have a cause of action against his minor child for expenses incurred by the father on behalf of the child due to the child’s voluntary intoxication. While it makes good sense to name and retain a party defendant where there is a cause of action against the defendant, it makes no sense at all to do so where recovery is impossible because no cause of action exists. Additionally, we more than faintly suspect that were we to hold that the plaintiff father must name and retain the minor child as a party defendant the effect would be to confuse a jury and thus deny to the parent a right of recovery which existed prior to the amendment. * * * In short, we find that in situations where no cause of action otherwise exists by a parent against a child who is not a third party tortfeasor, the mandatory application of the name and retain amendment is awkward, strained and absurd.”
Scholten,
pp 743-744.
The holding in
Scholten
was followed by this Court in
Dickerson v Heide,
69 Mich App 303, 308; 244 NW2d 459 (1976), and
Schutz v Murphy,
99 Mich App 386, 389-391; 297 NW2d 676 (1980).
This Court’s view of the purpose of the name and retain provision as preventing collusion between the intoxicated person and the injured plaintiff was approved by the Supreme Court in
Salas v Clements,
399 Mich 103, 108-110; 247 NW2d 889 (1976). The Supreme Court recognized that, although the provision, literally construed, would require every dramshop plaintiff to name and retain the alleged intoxicated persons, the provision should not be applied to produce "an unreasonable, unjust result, a result which is inconsistent with the purpose of the 'name and retain’ amendment”.
Salas, supra,
p 109. Accordingly, the Court recognized an exception to the "name and retain” requirement where an injured party did not know the identity of the alleged intoxicated person since it would be "patently absurd” to suggest that collusion would occur under such circumstances.
Defendants concede that
Scholten v Rhoades
and
Schutz v Murphy, supra,
directly support plaintiffs contention that he was not required to name and retain his father in the instant dramshop action. However, defendants question the precedential value of
Scholten
and
Schütz
in light of
Putney v Haskins, supra.
The facts of
Putney v Haskins, supra,
were as follows. Plaintiffs’ decedent was killed when the motorcycle he was driving was struck from the rear by an automobile. Plaintiffs filed suit against Paul and Judith Gibson, the driver and owner of
the automobile, and against the Haskinses, the owners of the bar which had illegally sold alcohol to Paul Gibson. On the second day of trial, plaintiffs’ counsel informed the court that plaintiffs had settled with the Gibsons. Although counsel for the Gibsons participated to a limited extent in the examination of witnesses, at the close of proofs, the trial court ruled that the. jury should be informed that the Gibsons were no longer parties to the suit. The Haskinses’ motion to dismiss the dramshop action was denied, the jury was informed that the suit against the Gibsons had been dismissed, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs.
In ruling that the trial court erroneously denied the dramshop defendants’ motion to dismiss, the Supreme Court stated:
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Per Curiam.
Plaintiff appeals as of right from an order of summary judgment entered in favor of defendants James A. and Patricia A. Hoholik doing business as The Teddy Bear (defendants).
On June 10, 1980, Rosetta Newman filed this dramshop action against defendants on behalf of plaintiff John Everett Newman, a minor. In his complaint, plaintiff alleged that defendants unlawfully served intoxicating liquor to plaintiff’s father, John B. Newman, and, as a result, plaintiff’s father was involved in an automobile accident. Plaintiff sought damages for economic loss and loss of his father’s companionship and society. Plaintiff’s complaint did not name John B. Newman, the alleged intoxicated person, as a defendant in the lawsuit.
On January 19, 1983, defendants filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to GCR 1963, 117.2(1), based upon plaintiff’s failure to name and retain the alleged intoxicated person as required by MCL 436.22; MSA 18.993.
Plaintiff’s motion to
amend his complaint to add John B. Newman as a party defendant was granted. Following the filing of the amended complaint and service of process upon John B. Newman, Newman’s default was taken.
On April 22, 1983, defendants renewed their motion for summary judgment due to plaintiff’s failure to name and retain the alleged intoxicated person within two years after the cause of action accrued. The trial court ruled that the name and retain provision, as interpreted by the Supreme Court in
Putney v Haskins,
414 Mich 181; 324 NW2d 729 (1982),
reh den
414 Mich 1111 (1982), mandates that the alleged intoxicated person be named and retained in every dramshop action. Since plaintiff had not done so in the instant case, the court held that no cause of action had been stated within the statutory period and dismissed the action with prejudice.
I
In
Scholten v Rhoades,
67 Mich App 736; 242 NW2d 509 (1976), this Court addressed the issue of the applicability of the name and retain provision of the dramshop act where a father sought to recover damages he incurred when his minor son injured himself as a result of consuming beer sold to him in violation of the dramshop act. The Court classified dramshop actions into three groups:
"[Actions] (I) by a parent or child killed or injured
by a third party as a
result of intoxicants served to the third party by a defendant dramshop establishment; (II)
by a parent or child killed or injured
through the child’s or parent’s own misdoing
by reason of intoxicants served to them by a defendant dramshop establishment; (III) by an intoxicated adult or minor for injuries sustained as a result of being served intoxicants by defendant dramshop establishment.”
Scholten,
pp 740-741.
The Court recognized that in Group I situations the name and retain provision operated to eliminate the practice whereby the intoxicated person enters into a settlement with the injured plaintiff for a token sum and then assists the plaintiff with the prosecution of a suit against the tavern owner. A similar potential for collusion does not exist in a Group II situation.
"A parent is legally responsible for the medical bills of his minor child and to secure a judgment for such sums against the child is meaningless. Furthermore, unlike Group I situations where plaintiff has a recognized cause of action against the third-party intoxicant, a child has no cause of action against his father or father’s estate for injuries or death of the father due to the father’s voluntary intoxication. Nor does a parent have a cause of action against his minor child for expenses incurred by the father on behalf of the child due to the child’s voluntary intoxication. While it makes good sense to name and retain a party defendant where there is a cause of action against the defendant, it makes no sense at all to do so where recovery is impossible because no cause of action exists. Additionally, we more than faintly suspect that were we to hold that the plaintiff father must name and retain the minor child as a party defendant the effect would be to confuse a jury and thus deny to the parent a right of recovery which existed prior to the amendment. * * * In short, we find that in situations where no cause of action otherwise exists by a parent against a child who is not a third party tortfeasor, the mandatory application of the name and retain amendment is awkward, strained and absurd.”
Scholten,
pp 743-744.
The holding in
Scholten
was followed by this Court in
Dickerson v Heide,
69 Mich App 303, 308; 244 NW2d 459 (1976), and
Schutz v Murphy,
99 Mich App 386, 389-391; 297 NW2d 676 (1980).
This Court’s view of the purpose of the name and retain provision as preventing collusion between the intoxicated person and the injured plaintiff was approved by the Supreme Court in
Salas v Clements,
399 Mich 103, 108-110; 247 NW2d 889 (1976). The Supreme Court recognized that, although the provision, literally construed, would require every dramshop plaintiff to name and retain the alleged intoxicated persons, the provision should not be applied to produce "an unreasonable, unjust result, a result which is inconsistent with the purpose of the 'name and retain’ amendment”.
Salas, supra,
p 109. Accordingly, the Court recognized an exception to the "name and retain” requirement where an injured party did not know the identity of the alleged intoxicated person since it would be "patently absurd” to suggest that collusion would occur under such circumstances.
Defendants concede that
Scholten v Rhoades
and
Schutz v Murphy, supra,
directly support plaintiffs contention that he was not required to name and retain his father in the instant dramshop action. However, defendants question the precedential value of
Scholten
and
Schütz
in light of
Putney v Haskins, supra.
The facts of
Putney v Haskins, supra,
were as follows. Plaintiffs’ decedent was killed when the motorcycle he was driving was struck from the rear by an automobile. Plaintiffs filed suit against Paul and Judith Gibson, the driver and owner of
the automobile, and against the Haskinses, the owners of the bar which had illegally sold alcohol to Paul Gibson. On the second day of trial, plaintiffs’ counsel informed the court that plaintiffs had settled with the Gibsons. Although counsel for the Gibsons participated to a limited extent in the examination of witnesses, at the close of proofs, the trial court ruled that the. jury should be informed that the Gibsons were no longer parties to the suit. The Haskinses’ motion to dismiss the dramshop action was denied, the jury was informed that the suit against the Gibsons had been dismissed, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs.
In ruling that the trial court erroneously denied the dramshop defendants’ motion to dismiss, the Supreme Court stated:
"We hold that a defendant has not been 'retained in the action’, within the meaning of the statute, if a settlement of any kind is reached between the plaintiff and the allegedly intoxicated defendant before 'the litigation is concluded by trial or settlement’.”
Putney v Haskins, supra,
p 184.
Defendants argue that
Putney
should be read as establishing, unequivocally, that the "name and retain” requirement is to be applied without exception. For the following reasons, we decline to so broadly interpret the
Putney
decision.
The Supreme Court expressly states the issue in
Putney
as "whether the plaintiffs were properly allowed to continue their suit against the defendant 'dramshop’ after settling with the allegedly intoxicated defendant”.
Putney, supra,
pp 183-184. The Court refused to except from the "name and retain” requirement cases where the trial court finds both the absence of fraud and collusion and
that the settlement with the alleged intoxicated person was not a "token” settlement.
Nowhere in the
Putney
opinion does the Supreme Court expressly or impliedly suggest that the name and retain requirement admits of no exception.
To the contrary, the Court affirms the continuing viability of
Salas v Clements, supra,
both in terms of the specific exception recognized in
Salas
and the underlying rationale that the "name and retain” provision should not be construed to produce an "unreasonable, unjust result” in light of the purpose of the provision.
Putney, supra,
pp 186, 190.
Conspicuously absent from the
Putney
opinion is any reference to
Scholten, supra, Dickerson, supra,
or
Schutz, supra.
We find no indication in
Putney
that the Supreme Court impliedly abrogated the holdings in those opinions. Instead, the Court’s seemingly deliberate use of narrow language, express affirmance of
Salas, supra,
and omission of any reference to
Scholten
or its progeny, convince us that
Scholten
is still "good law”. And since, in our opinion, it is, indeed, a good and sensible law which permits an injured person to maintain a dramshop action without naming and retaining as a party defendant a close family member against whom the plaintiff has no cause of action, we hold that John E. Newman was not required to name and retain his father in order to maintain his action against the defendants Hoholik.
Our disposition of this case renders it unnecessary to consider the other issues raised by plaintiff. We reverse the order of summary judgment and remand this case to the circuit court for trial.