Warr v. JMGM Group, LLC
Annotate this CasePlaintiffs were the parents of a daughter who died and another daughter who received injuries after Michael Eaton struck the Plaintiffs' car. Plaintiffs filed suit against the owner of the Dogfish Head Alehouse (Dogfish Head), claiming that Dogfish Head had served alcohol to Eaton while he was "clearly intoxicated" and thus breached its duty to them not to furnish alcohol to intoxicated persons. The circuit court granted summary judgment for Dogfish Head, concluding that the court was bound by the Supreme Court's decisions in State v. Hatfield and Fedler v. Butler in which dram shop liability was not recognized as a cause of action in the state. At issue before the Court of Appeals was whether it should recognize dram shop liability. The Court affirmed the judgment, holding (1) Maryland does not recognize a cause of action against a tavern for harm caused off premises by an intoxicated person in the absence of a special relationship between the tavern and the person harmed or the actor who caused the harm; and (2) absent such a relationship in this case, Dogfish Head did not owe a duty to Plaintiffs, as members of the general public, to prevent the harm caused by Eaton.
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