Florida's "Dram Shop" statute permits liability against a bar or restaurant for the actions of a person who may become intoxicated and cause harm in only two circumstances. | The first is when a vendor willfully and unlawfully sells or furnishes alcohol to an underage patron who then causes injury or damage to another.1 Although proof of willful misconduct on the part of the vendor is one of the necessary elements that must be established in dram shop actions involving underage patrons, the Florida Supreme Court recently confirmed that the cause of action is still a negligence claim. Guardianship of Jacquelyn Anne Faircloth v. Mainstreet Entertainment, Inc. d/b/a Potbelly's, No. SC2022-0910 (Fla. March 7, 2024). |
Faircloth arose from a November 2014 motor vehicle accident
involving a 20-year-old driver who was served alcohol at
Potbelly's bar and an 18-year-old pedestrian who was served
alcohol at Cantina 101. The guardianship for the injured minor
argued that the willful and unlawful sale of alcohol to a minor
constituted an intentional tort rather than negligence and,
therefore, comparative negligence and comparative fault principles
did not apply. The trial court agreed, precluding Potbelly's
from using these defenses at trial. Indeed, due to application of
the joint and several liability doctrine, which applies to
intentional torts, Potbelly's stood to bear the burden of
satisfying the entire $28.6 million judgment entered against both
bars.
Potbelly's prevailed on its appeal to the First District Court of Appeal, which held that Potbelly's could utilize the comparative negligence defense between itself and the other bar, but not between the two minors. The District Court emphasized that, because vendors in these actions are derivatively liable for the underage patron's actions, a jury may not balance fault between the vendor and underage patron that it served or, as the Court noted, between a "willful actor" and a "negligent actor." Yet, the District Court noted further that "if circumstances permitted," a vendor would be entitled to ask the jury to compare its fault with the negligent actor.
Recognizing the significance of these issues, the First District
Court of Appeal certified the following question to the Florida
Supreme Court as one of great public importance:
Whether the comparative fault statute, section 768.81, Florida
Statutes, applies to tort actions involving the dram-shop exception
contained in section 768.125, Florida Statutes, against a vendor
who willfully and unlawfully sold alcohol to an underage patron,
resulting in the patron's intoxication and related injury?
The Florida Supreme Court answered in the affirmative holding
that dram shop lawsuits involving underage patrons are negligence
actions. In reaching this conclusion, the Florida Supreme Court
emphasized that the term "willfully," as used in section
768.15 of the Florida Statutes, means that a vendor knew that the
recipient was underage – nothing more. Accordingly, the
statute's willfulness requirement is distinguishable from a
"deliberate intent to injure" or knowledge that injury or
death is "substantially certain to occur" required for an
intentional tort.
Notably, the Florida Supreme Court chose not to address how
liability could be apportioned between the vendors and the minors.
On remand, the door is open to interpretation of what
"circumstances" referenced by the First District Court of
Appeal, will permit an apportionment of fault between the vendors
and the "negligent actor."
Footnote
1. In Florida, a vendor of alcoholic beverages who knowingly serves a person habitually addicted to the use of alcoholic beverages may also become liable for injury or damage caused by or resulting from the intoxication of such person (which is known as the "habitual drunkard exception").
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