Lodi News-Sentinel

Gas stations can be sued for selling gas to drunken drivers

- Jenni Bergal STATELINE.ORG

Gas station retailers are reeling from a recent New Mexico Supreme Court decision that finds the stores can be held civilly liable for selling gas to intoxicate­d drivers.

The July ruling could have major ramificati­ons for service stations and other kinds of businesses, industry representa­tives say. It also could set an example for other states, legal experts note.

“The court overreache­d to make a new rule in New Mexico,” said Doug Kantor, general counsel for the National Associatio­n of Convenienc­e Stores, a trade group. “It sets a new precedent and it’s a troubling one.”

But some advocates for drunk driving victims argue that it’s a good decision that could help save lives.

“From the victim’s perspectiv­e, this is absolutely a win to help them achieve full justice,” said Lindsey Valdez, regional executive director for Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) in New Mexico, Arizona and Nevada.

Until now, Tennessee was the only state with a high court ruling that service station employees have a “duty of reasonable care” not to sell gasoline to a driver they know or ought to know is intoxicate­d.

“People in other states with similar cases might look at it and say they’re going to bring one in their state,” Candace McCoy, an attorney and professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, said of the New Mexico decision.

The theory behind the ruling, she said, is that gas station attendants who sell fuel to intoxicate­d drivers are similar to bartenders who serve liquor to people who are very drunk and immediatel­y leave, drive away and injure or kill someone.

The service station clerk’s duty would be to refuse to sell such customers gas, she said, and call the police if the person becomes belligeren­t.

The New Mexico Supreme Court case centered on a December 2011 incident in which a man who had been drinking all night drove his car until it ran out of gas. He and his passenger, both intoxicate­d, walked to a gas station, where he tried to buy a gallon of water and empty it to use as a container for gas. The clerk initially refused to sell to them, but ultimately relented.

The two then went back to the car, drove to the gas station and put nine more gallons into the car. The man left, dropped off his passenger and returned to the highway, where he crossed the center line and crashed into an oncoming vehicle, killing that driver, according to the court.

A blood sample later revealed the man’s blood alcohol content was 0.176%, more than twice the legal limit. He was arrested for driving under the influence and vehicular homicide.

The dead man’s father sued the service station, saying it was liable for selling gas to an obviously impaired driver.

The state Supreme Court ruled 3-1 that while there was no law preventing the sale of gas to a drunken driver, vendors have a legal responsibi­lity not to sell to someone who is drunk.

“Providing gasoline to an intoxicate­d driver is like providing car keys to an intoxicate­d driver,” the judges wrote.

The court also cited the earlier Tennessee Supreme Court ruling that found that selling gas to drunk drivers provides “mobility” that they otherwise wouldn’t have had, thereby creating a risk on roadways.

While the New Mexico court recognized that many gas purchases occur at unattended stations where a clerk may not be observing or interactin­g with the driver, it said those types of issues are better left to a jury.

Now-retired New Mexico Supreme Court Justice Barbara Vigil, who dissented, wrote that selling or serving alcohol is regulated and statutes don’t warrant extending liability for drunken driving to retail stores that sell nonalcohol­ic goods. She called the ruling a “sea change in the law [that] could have far-reaching consequenc­es for retail businesses.”

“Thus auto parts stores, tire shops, mechanics, and others will be left guessing as to whether they are subject to the new duty and, if so, how to behave so as to avoid liability,” Vigil wrote.

Kantor, of the convenienc­e store group, likewise called it a bad ruling. Convenienc­e stores sell about 80% of the gas in the U.S., according to Kantor.

“There are clear laws about age restrictio­ns. You’ve got to make sure someone is old enough to sell them alcohol or tobacco,” he said. “But store clerks who sell gas just aren’t in a position to police whether people have been drinking or not, or whether their mental state is impaired or not.”

Placing that responsibi­lity on a convenienc­e store worker also can be risky, he added. During the COVID-19 pandemic, customers have gotten angry, and at times violent when asked to wear a mask in a convenienc­e store.

“Now it appears they are supposed to refuse to sell the gas, but if you’re dealing with someone intoxicate­d, that person could be belligeren­t or dangerous,” Kantor said. “It puts a heavy burden on a clerk in a way that could provoke a confrontat­ion.”

And most businesses that sell gas are pay-atthe-pump, Kantor noted.

“What in the world are you supposed to do when there’s someone outside and there’s a clerk in the store who never has contact with that person? The ruling doesn’t say one way or the other.”

While he doesn’t know what the effect of the New Mexico court’s ruling will be, he said it’s “certainly creating big risks and a lot of concern and anxiety” in his industry.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? A recent New Mexico Supreme Court decision has gas station retailers reeling after finding the stores can be held civilly liable for selling gas to intoxicate­d drivers.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE A recent New Mexico Supreme Court decision has gas station retailers reeling after finding the stores can be held civilly liable for selling gas to intoxicate­d drivers.

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