SENATE BILL REPORT
SHB 2733
AS OF FEBRUARY 21, 1992
Brief Description: Imposing liability for furnishing liquor to minors.
SPONSORS: House Committee on Judiciary (originally sponsored by Representatives Brough, Appelwick, Padden, Ludwig, Forner, Vance, Wineberry, P. Johnson and Mitchell)
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY
SENATE COMMITTEE ON LAW & JUSTICE
Staff: Lidia Mori (786‑7755)
Hearing Dates: February 26, 1992
BACKGROUND:
Individuals who furnish intoxicating liquor to minors may be charged under Washington law with a misdemeanor. However, they may not be held accountable through civil lawsuits for any injury to persons or damage to property resulting from the minor's consumption except in a few limited situations. Washington statutes do not authorize civil lawsuits in these areas, and Washington courts have repeatedly rejected suits based on the common law theory of negligence. The courts reason that the injuries are not caused by the person who furnishes the liquor but by the independent act of the minor who drinks it.
The limited common law exceptions to nonliability include situations where someone furnishes liquor to an obviously intoxicated person, to a person in a state of helplessness, or to a person in a special relationship to the furnisher. To date, these exceptions have not been used successfully against a person who supplies liquor to another in a purely social setting. Over the past several years, the court has vacillated on the possibility of extending a common-law exception to situations where a person supplies liquor to a minor.
In an action based on negligence, the fact that a defendant violated a law of conduct, such as the law prohibiting the sale of liquor to a minor, can be used to help a plaintiff prove the defendant acted negligently. Generally, courts will accept such evidence as either absolute proof of negligence ("negligence per se") or as merely one fact to be considered among many. The Washington Tort Reform Act of 1986, however, expressly requires that violation of a statute may not be considered negligence per se, but only as one factor among many in determining negligence.
Damages recoverable in negligence cases may include economic or noneconomic damages or both. Washington law defines economic damages as objectively verifiable monetary losses such as medical expenses or costs of property repair. Non-economic damages mean subjective, non-monetary damages such as pain and suffering or disfigurement.
SUMMARY:
When an adult over the age of 18 years furnishes liquor to a minor under the age of 21 years in a commercial, social, or any other setting, a civil cause of action is created whereby the adult may be held liable for the economic damages resulting from the minor's consumption.
Violation of the statute that prohibits furnishing liquor to minors is negligence per se in such actions.
The creation of this right of action does not prohibit any person from pursuing an alternative cause of action based on other statutes, ordinances, regulations, or the common law.
Appropriation: none
Revenue: none
Fiscal Note: requested