Pautz v. Cal-Ros, Inc.

340 N.W.2d 338, 1983 Minn. LEXIS 1345
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 23, 1983
DocketCX-82-544
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 340 N.W.2d 338 (Pautz v. Cal-Ros, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pautz v. Cal-Ros, Inc., 340 N.W.2d 338, 1983 Minn. LEXIS 1345 (Mich. 1983).

Opinions

COYNE, Justice.

Defendants, a liquor vendor and its owners, appeal from an order for summary judgment of the district court dismissing the vendor’s third-party action for contribution against the allegedly negligent and intoxicated person. Contribution was denied because the allegedly intoxicated person [339]*339was the husband and father of the plaintiffs in the main action, who were suing for their own injuries. We grant discretionary review and reverse.

The plaintiffs, Mary Pautz and her daughter Melanie Pautz, sustained personal injuries from a fire in their home on October 22, 1977. Respondent Dennis Pautz (hereinafter “Pautz”), husband and father of plaintiffs, respectively, allegedly set the fire by improperly operating a heater in their home while he was intoxicated. The plaintiffs sued defendants, Cal-Ros, Inc., and others, for damages under the Civil Damages Act, Minn.Stat. § 340.95 alleging that a bar owned and operated by Cal-Ros served Pautz liquor when he was obviously intoxicated and that his intoxication was a cause of the fire.

Cal-Ros brought a third-party action against Pautz seeking contribution, and Pautz moved for summary judgment dismissing the third-party action. The district court ordered summary judgment in favor of Pautz, dismissing the third-party action 'on the ground that contribution in this case would be inconsistent with the purposes of the Civil Damage Act. Cal-Ros appeals from this order, claiming that since common liability exists, contribution is available.

Since 1966 Minnesota has recognized the availability of contribution in actions involving liability imposed pursuant to the Civil Damage Act, Minn.Stat. § 340.95 (1982). As we pointed out in Farmers Insurance Exchange v. Village of Hewitt, 274 Minn. 246, 249, 143 N.W.2d 230, 233 (1966), “Contribution rests on common liability, not on joint negligence or joint tort. Common liability exists when two or more actors are liable to an injured party for the same damages, even though their liability may rest on different grounds.” Hence, although the liability of an intoxicated driver for damages sustained by third persons injured in an automobile accident rested on negligence and the liability of the vendors who illegally sold intoxicating liquor to the driver rested on the Civil Damage Act, the driver’s insurer was permitted contribution from the vendors of aliquot shares of the amount paid in settlement of the injured persons’ claims. Ibid. Subsequently, we held that a vendor liable pursuant to the Civil Damage Act was entitled to contribution from another liable vendor. Skaja v. Andrews Hotel Co., 281 Minn. 417, 161 N.W.2d 657 (1968). A mere violation of the statutes governing the sale of intoxicating liquor does not preclude the recovery of contribution since proof of an illegal sale is not in itself sufficient to support a reasonable inference that the violator committed an intentional wrong.

Inasmuch as interspousal immunity and parent-child immunity, once an absolute defense to tort liability, have been abolished in Minnesota, Beaudette v. Frana, 285 Minn. 366, 173 N.W.2d 416 (1969); Silesky v. Kelman, 281 Minn. 431, 161 N.W.2d 631 (1968); and Anderson v. Stream, 295 N.W.2d 595 (Minn.1980), it is apparent that if the appellant vendor is liable to these plaintiffs, so also is the respondent husband/father whom the plaintiffs allege was intoxicated. Farmers Insurance Exchange v. Village of Hewitt, supra. The respondent, who is commonly liable with the appellant vendor for the same damages, is, therefore, liable to the vendor for contribution. Id. Each wrongdoer must share equitably their common burden. Nor does the plaintiffs’ election to sue only the vendor deprive the vendor of its right to contribution from the intoxicated wrongdoer. Common liability is created at the instant the tort is committed whether or not the injured person chooses to assert his claim. Hammerschmidt v. Moore, 274 N.W.2d 79 (1978).

The respondent contends, however, that a vendor of intoxicating liquor is barred by our decisions in Ascheman v. Village of Hancock, 254 N.W.2d 382 (Minn.1977), and Conde v. City of Spring Lake Park, 290 N.W.2d 164 (Minn.1980), and also by the terms of the Civil Damage Act from seeking contribution from an allegedly intoxicated person.

In Ascheman v. Village of Hancock, supra, and Conde v. City of Spring Lake Park, supra, we denied the liquor vendor a right [340]*340of contribution against an intoxicated person whose injuries provided the basis for an action pursuant to the Civil Damage Act. In both cases the plaintiffs were members of the intoxicated person’s family who were suing for loss of their means of support, and the language of the two cases must be understood in that context.

Ascheman and Conde held that since the intoxicated person could not be liable to his family for injuring himself, the common liability between the liquor vendor and the intoxicated person was lacking.1 We declined, as we had earlier in Spitzack v. Schumacher, 308 Minn. 143, 241 N.W.2d 641 (1976), to relax the requirement of common liability in order to permit contribution where the liability of the party seeking contribution is based on the Civil Damage Act. Ascheman and Conde went on, however, in language that might be characterized as either dictum or an alternative holding, to offer two further reasons for denying contribution in those cases: (1) to allow contribution further diminishes the intoxicated person’s already diminished ability to support his or her family; and (2) the penal characteristic of the Civil Damage Act is served by declining to dilute the liquor vendor’s liability for the support lost by the family.

To allow the liquor vendor contribution from the intoxicated person when that person’s family is suing for loss of support would defeat the very purpose of the action. It makes no sense to create a remedy to compensate a family for support lost by reason of injury to the breadwinner and then to reduce that compensation because the breadwinner was at fault. But the sensible policy of denying contribution in that instance has little application when family members are suing, like any other plaintiff, for injury to their own person. Nor do Ascheman and Conde address directly this entirely different situation.

Ascheman and Conde also mention that contribution should be denied because the Civil Damage Act is, in part, penal in nature and that when liquor causes harm, the vendor should pay the price of that harm. This means nothing more, however, than that the Act provides a remedy against the liquor vendor where none existed at common law and that certain defenses — such as lack of guilty knowledge — are unavailable. See Adamson v. Dougherty, 248 Minn.

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Pautz v. Cal-Ros, Inc.
340 N.W.2d 338 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
340 N.W.2d 338, 1983 Minn. LEXIS 1345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pautz-v-cal-ros-inc-minn-1983.