Liability for Serving Alcohol to Minors
Liability for Serving Alcohol to Minors
California law is very clear in placing the responsibility for injuries, deaths, and property damage resulting from drunk driving upon the individual who chooses to drink and drive rather than upon businesses who sold them alcohol or upon hosts who have given them alcoholic beverages that contributed to drunk driving incidents. There are, however, significant exceptions related to serving alcohol to minors.
The Sad Toll of Drunk Driving in the United StatesA recent report from the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration provides numbers that are a mixed bag of hopeful and sad for trends in alcohol-related traffic fatalities in the United States. NHTSA defined “alcohol impaired driving” as being instances where a vehicle operator was found to have been driving with a blood alcohol concentration of .08 grams per deciliter or greater. (Most states place statutory limits for blood alcohol concentration at .08 or .10 g/dL as the level above which a driver is automatically considered to be driving illegally.)
Examining compiled data for the year 2019, the NHTSA report noted that:
- Fatalities due to alcohol impaired driving were down slightly in both total numbers (10,142) and as a percentage of total traffic fatalities;
- Alcohol impaired driving fatalities were down by small percentages for drivers in light trucks, passenger cars, and large trucks, but spiked upward for motorcycle operators;
- Despite these slight reductions, nearly one out of every three traffic accident fatalities are still alcohol-related.
This final point is most significant, since alcohol-related traffic accidents are entirely avoidable, especially those that result from serving alcohol to minors.
What Are Social Host and Dram Shop Laws?Most every state in the U.S. has both “social host” laws and “dram shop” laws, although they may not be specifically referred to by both those names in every case. Dram shop laws simply refer to those laws in each state that relate to the licensed sale of alcoholic beverages and specify the criminal, civil, and regulatory rules for those sales. Among other things, dram shop laws specify when and if a business that sells alcoholic beverages can be civilly liable for injuries caused by a customer to whom they have provided alcohol.
Social host laws are on the books in most states, and they usually serve to limit or specify the potential civil liability of individual and business hosts who provide alcohol to guests — these usually apply to private events like a party at an individual’s residence or at a business’s office.
Laws About Serving Alcohol to Minors in CaliforniaThe social host and dram shop laws in California generally eliminate the possibility of civil liability for individuals and businesses who provide alcoholic beverages to customers and guests who subsequently cause injuries while driving drunk. California has gone farther than most states to limit individual and business liability in these situations — California law stresses that the drinker and not the host is the responsible party for causing injuries while driving under the influence.
The significant exceptions are for serving alcohol to minors:
- Civil Code Section 1714. This is the code section in California that relieves social hosts of liability for injuries and/or property damage caused by or to drunk drivers to whom the hosts had provided alcohol. It does, however, provide the one exception, when noting that it does not preclude a claim against a host who provides alcohol to a drinker who the host knows or should have known to be under 21-years-old.
- Business & Professions Code 25602.1. This statute within the California dram laws also makes an exception for serving alcohol to minors, although it’s an even narrower exception than the social host exception. This law allows a cause of action for injuries to be brought against an alcoholic beverage vendor who provides alcohol “to any obviously intoxicated minor” where the providing of alcohol is found to be a legal cause of the injury or death.
A national organization that advocates for reducing drunk driving accidents analyzed data (as of 2018) comparing alcohol related traffic fatalities in California to the same occurrences nationwide. Although California was a bit better than nationwide statistics on traffic fatalities in general, it lags the nationwide numbers in several alcohol-related circumstances:
- A higher rate of alcohol-related traffic fatalities — 30% of all traffic fatalities in California versus 28.8% nationwide.
- A higher proportion of alcohol-related fatalities involving under 21 drivers — 10.6% caused by minors in California compared to 9.3% nationally.
- A higher rate of fatalities (from any cause) among under 21 drivers that involved alcohol — 28.8% in California against 24% in the entire U.S.
- A significantly worse change in the rate of alcohol-related traffic fatalities over the last decade — although this rate declined by 8.4% nationwide, it actually increased by 8.1% in California.
Although drunk driving and related fatalities have decreased significantly over past decades, these incidents — including tragic, alcohol-related fatalities involving underage drivers — still occur, despite being entirely preventable.
View this local news video about the “Every 15 Minutes” program designed to inform and warn teens of the dangers of drunk driving:
Sacramento Personal Injury LawyersHello, my name is Ed Smith, and I’m a Sacramento personal injury lawyer. Alcohol-related traffic injuries and deaths are particularly tragic, because they are entirely, 100% avoidable – anyone who has had too much to drink can choose not to drive. And although the primary responsibility is with the person who chooses to drink and drive, the exceptions described above also hold private individuals and businesses liable in at least some instances where they have been serving alcohol to minors. If you or a loved one has suffered a serious injury in a traffic incident involving a drunk driver, please give us a call at (916) 921-6400 or (800) 404-5400 for free, friendly advice. You can also reach us through our online contact form.
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