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Drunk Driving Accidents Information Center

Drunk Driving Accidents Information Center

Dram shop liability is the legal idea of holding businesses — like bars, liquor stores and restaurants — accountable for the harm that intoxicated or underage patrons cause. When a bar over-serves someone or when a liquor store sells to an underage person, these businesses can sometimes be forced to pay for the harm they indirectly cause.

Dram Shop Acts

According to the Arizona Department of Transportation, drunk driving accidents lead to hundreds of injuries and deaths each year in Arizona. While criminal laws often punish drunk drivers for DUI, personal injury attorneys can make them responsible to injured people and families for the harm they cause.

If you were injured by a drunk driver after he or she left a bar, restaurant or other place serving alcohol, you may have a claim against that establishment under your state's dram shop act. Contact Solomon & Relihan in Phoenix, Arizona to speak with an attorney knowledgeable in dram shop liability for more information.

Alcohol Vendor Liability

Dram shop acts impose liability on commercial vendors who provide alcoholic beverages to intoxicated patrons who then injure innocent parties. Those who sell alcohol for a profit owe a duty to those traveling on public roadways to protect them from foreseeable dangers. Given the number of accidents and fatalities caused by drunk drivers each year, it is foreseeable that an intoxicated person leaving a bar could injure someone in a motor vehicle accident.

To maintain an action under a dram shop act, the plaintiff must be able to prove:

  • The vendor furnished alcoholic beverages to someone he or she knew or should have known was noticeably intoxicated
  • The vendor knew or should have known this noticeably intoxicated person was going to drive a motor vehicle after consuming alcoholic beverages

The plaintiff must be able to prove that the vendor knew or should have known the person was intoxicated. This knowledge can be inferred from circumstantial evidence. The plaintiff does not have to prove the vendor actually witnessed the drunken behavior. Rather, the intoxicated person's conduct must have been "visible, evident and easily observed." This can include slurred speech, erratic body movements and smell of alcohol on the breath. The patron must be impaired to the point of incapacity. Merely consuming a couple of drinks may not rise to the level of intoxication under the statute.

Additionally, some state laws provide that the beverage must have been an "intoxicating liquor." The definition of intoxicating liquor may require the drink to have included hard alcohol or a certain percentage of alcohol before it will qualify under the act, which may exclude beer.

Eligible Parties

Dram shop acts provide relief for persons who suffered injury to themselves, their property or to their means of support - e.g. if the breadwinner is no longer able to work. Parties who may bring dram shop suits include innocent parties who were injured, their estate and their families. The families of the intoxicated driver also can bring dram shop claims.

The intoxicated person or his or her estate cannot sue the vendor for damages under dram shop acts.

Conclusion

Not all states have dram shop acts. To learn more about your jurisdiction's laws, contact an experienced attorney at Solomon & Relihan in Phoenix, Arizona today.

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