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A Decision About Duties Print E-mail
The Supreme Court of Canada has just released its much-anticipated decision in a case called Childs v. Desormeaux. As someone who has taught tort law at the University of Ottawa Faculty of Common Law, I've been asked by the media for my comments on the decision. I'm quoted, for example, in these articles by CBC News and SUN News, and on CBC Radio, and on CTV News.
 
The case is about whether or not the hosts of a BYOB party must take reasonable steps to prevent their guests from driving drunk and injuring someone as a result. It is tremendously significant for every Canadian who hosts a party, insurance companies and homeowners, and perhaps most of all, victims of drunk driving.
 
The trial judge and Court of Appeal both found that no legal duty of reasonable care exists. The Supreme Court has affirmed those decisions and held that social hosts cannot be liable for the harms inflicted on victims of drunk driving by the hosts' intoxicated guests. Party hosts can apparently ignore the fact that their guests may leave the party driving drunk, without doing anything about it. The Court justified this decision on the grounds of individual autonomy and responsibility, saying that when an adult makes the choice to consume alcohol and drive drunk, “there is no reason why others should be made to bear its costs.” Of course, without sufficient insurance to cover all losses, the practical result of this ruling is that Zoe Childs and other innocent victims of drunk driving will bear these costs.
 
Importantly, the Court did note that this case concerned a BYOB party. The result might be different in a case where hosts serve alcohol to a guest, are relied upon to monitor consumption and/or know or ought to know that a guest is about to drive drunk. The fact that hosts know about a guest’s history of alcohol abuse and drunk driving is immaterial, according to the Court. The Court was also careful to distinguish social hosts from commercial hosts. Commercial hosts serve alcohol for profit, are able to control patrons’ consumption and are required by regulations to do so.
 
In the social context, however, today’s ruling leaves drunk drivers as the only ones legally responsible for the injuries of their victims. It means governments may now have to consider alternative schemes, for example compensation funds for victims of drunk driving supported by levies on alcohol retailers or consumers.

The decision is highly relevant to my recent research on intellectual property ownership obligations and responsibilities in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries, although the link may not be immediately apparent. First, the case makes a statement about how we as a society view our moral and legal responsibilities for harms we have at least partially contributed to. That is an issue that goes beyond social hosts and drunk driving. Second, liabilities in these other contexts will turn on the extent to which courts are willing to draw analogies to already-established categories of duties or recognize novel ones, such as was the case with social and commercial host liability. Right now, the rules for analyzing these questions are overwhelming ambiguous and complex. In Childs v. Desormeaux, the Supreme Court had an opportunity to simplify the legal test for deciding whether or not a duty of care exists. That opportunity was missed and lower courts will likely continue to muddle through the existing awkward framework.

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1. 04-12-2007 13:15
 
Mr. De Beer: I have read your article and I also have done research on drunk driving. Below are many things I like you to read. And no it is not a plug for my web site it is just my research over the past year. 
Drunk driving has entered our families lives twice now. Twenty years ago a drunk driver left my brother permanently brain damaged. His wife had to have her ruptured spleen removed and various pins and rods put in her shattered arm. Their son we waited through the night to see if his spleen would also have to be removed. The drunk driver got away without a scratch and sentenced to 1 week in the county jail and a 100 hours community service. 6 months later he was caught again drinking and driving. Not much really has changed in 20 years on how we view that drunk driver. Drunk driving entered into my life again on March 17,2006 and took the life of my only grand-daughter who just turned 5 years old. My research on the drunk driver and why this continues are based on fact that I myself looked at. Below is the letter that I wrote our politicians and the recent poem I made is also pasted on my web site. Titled When Will You Stand? All links below are viewable and will take you to these sites once you click on them. Thank-You for taking the time to read this and feel free to ask me anything you want. Below is one of many letters to our politicians. 
 
To Whom It May Concern: My name is Edwin I. Lindsey Jr. And at the present time I have wrote our many leaders here in Pennsylvania. And I also wrote M.A.D.D. And my many letters continued throughout the year. I wrote them to change some laws and support and fund other laws that our leaders passed without funding or support. Drunk driving will continue because of the simple fact it generates revenue and opens up jobs and charities such as rehabs,hospitals,interlock system companies,monitoring bracelets,court systems,restitution's,fines and a vast array of things. To be rid of drunk driving would most certainly cause a loss of jobs. Not much has really changed on a drunk driver in the last past 20 years. More laws are for the drunk driver than the life that the drunk driver takes. The drunk driver has been a useful commodity throughout the United States. My opinions are based on facts and yet they are my opinions. I have researched this for over a year now and came up with my conclusion. Why is it an interest of mine. I lost my only grand-daughter who just turned 5 to a drunk driver on March 17th 2006. The article below was in one of our local newspapers and it was wrote by an editor who also had to look up facts on a O.L.L. License ( Occupational Limited License) in which in one form or another every state has this. And in the article is the facts on how my grand-daughter perished. Below is a link to the news article. 
http://72.29.197.14:591/rconline/FMPro?-db=rconline.fp5&-format=record%5fdetail.html&-lay=detail&-sortfield=currentrecordid&-sortorder=descend&TopStory=Y&ArticleStatus=Current&-max=20&-recid=12584048&-find= 
 
 
 
And here are my two web sites on my research that I and my daughter in law put up. 
 
www.freewebs.com/edlind12/ and http://stopdui.250free.com/ 
 
 
 
My last letter to our leaders here in Pennsylvania is located on the first site and titled Who Was Megan Madeline Thomas? 
 
 
 
Edwin I. Lindsey Jr. 
 
R.R.1 Box 122D 
 
Susquehanna, Pennsylvania 18847 
 
 
 
Phone: 570-756-2435 
 
E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Guest
 
2. 29-02-2008 10:42
 
Drunk And Driving In America And Why It Continues. 
 
Many factors contribute to why drunk driving continues in America and elsewhere. The crime drunk driving is not taken seriously and its penalties are sometimes just a slap on the wrist. We use rehabilitation on drunk drivers to little or no effect and we retrain drunk drivers also and give them back their privilege to drive. We also see these results of the repeat offender in our daily news and newspapers throughout the United States. A repeat offender kills a family of 5, a repeat offender kills his fiancé found drunk behind the wheel again. And the lists go on. Many states also endorsed what is called a Dram Shop Act and the act simply states that if a bar tender or anyone gives another drink to a person that they know is already drunk that the bar tender and establishment is held accountable. The Dram Shop Act also includes stadiums on semi pro and pro games such as baseball, hockey, basketball and any game that sells alcohol. How good is the Dram Shop Act? Try finding witnesses after a drunk driver took your family member’s life. Try investigating a bar or bar tender to see if he or she actually gave that person another drink knowing that person was already drunk. No, the Dram Shop Act was passed without any funding or support or even the enforcement to back it up. We do sting operations on underage sale of cigarettes to minors; we do sting operations on internet predators. But for the Dram Shop Act there is nothing and probably never will be. We do not tread on the drunk drivers rights that would be unconstitutional. But still in all what about the rights of the many innocent people that this drunk driver and the person that gave this drunk driver excessive amounts of alcohol and now is standing over your dead family member. A murder is a murder my own father would say and no matter what you do you just simply can not bring that person or living thing back. And yet this murder is acceptable in today’s society. The drunk driver is a commodity and the crimes that the drunk driver commits bring in a vast amount of revenue to the states and also to the organizations that are suppose to introduce laws to stop drunk driving. They support companies that hire a work force to make interlock systems and monitoring bracelets and the many scientific remedies to stop the drunk driver they say. How well is this working? If we do not remove a driver’s license permanently or confiscate the tool of the crime such as the vehicle that crime will continue. If we do not hold bars and bar tenders and vendors that sell alcohol at games accountable that crime will continue. I ‘am not opposed to anyone having a few drinks, but I ‘am opposed at this person that is drunk and now is behind a wheel of a vehicle, and the persons that put him there in the first place. The issue is not on why agencies and television and broadcasts advertise heavily on alcohol ads and how much money is spent airing these ads and the loss of sales if these ads discontinue. Prohibition taught us many things and we certainly do not want that back again and organized crime is still alive and well in America as throughout the world today. We already have seen what did and did not happen to the cigarette industry and also the money from the many lawsuits against this industry on which all these states received. What was the money spent on from these suits? What is the vast and excessive amount of taxes put on cigarettes used for? Cures for cancer? People that lost loved ones to lung cancer? We also have seen devastating results from alcohol use on a recent case and this was not even drunk driving and reported throughout the year. The missing Holloway woman and really what will the end and final judgment be for Van Sloot. That will be left up to his peers and also on what he will confess to. How much pressure is put on your Representatives and Senator’s by the alcohol industry? How much pressure is put on sports and news and any broadcasting agency? I have all the answers that I could possibly need or even want from many people. They are from ordinary people that lost loved ones, politicians who state that it is a major concern but do not want to step forward or introduce anything. News agencies that simply shrug off any conception about alcohol and yes newspapers and magazines. Investigative reporting starts with a news agency and that is what investigative reporting is. My hope is to not let another family or loved one lose their life whether if he or she was drunk or just another innocent person die by the hands of another drunk driver such as my only grand-daughter did.
Guest
 
3. 09-04-2008 17:02
 
The problem here is when does personal accountability step in? I have practiced in both the United States (I am licensed in AZ, UT, and ID) and Canada. We are faced with the fact that drinking is become so socially acceptable, responsibility for the same is not enforced. I feel for the folks with the stories above. However, anecdotal evidence is often the most flawed. In most cases, obviously not the ones above, if a drunken driver kills someone, they will invariably go to jail. This does not help with the civil righting of the wrong, just "society's". In other words, while the driver is punished, often times the victim(s) is left hanging. I believe, although something about it bothers me, that a slush-type fund, as you have described, for victims of these senseless crimes is the best solution. One thing that has to be understood, though, is that in the United States, insurance companies are allowed to underwrite their liability policies at $15,000 limits (AZ), and $25,000/$50,000. This is different from Alberta, where the liability limits are much higher and people have a chance to be protected. In addition, under and uninsured coverage should be bought by everyone. Unfortunately, all too often US citizens do not buy this insurance at all. So when there is no coverage on the liable party, peoples' own policies do not pick up the remainder because folks simply are too cheap to buy effective protection. This is not to say that it is the victim's fault, but insurance agents and insurance companies really need to advise their clients of their real risks. In all to many cases they fail to do so and legislatures are weaklings when it comes to raising minimum limits. I do not know the solution. I'm not sure I fully understand the problem from a holistic standpoint. I do know that part of the problem is big insurance and their powerful lobbies.
Guest
 

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Last Updated on Sunday, 19 November 2006
 

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I am an Associate Professor at the University of Ottawa's Faculty of Law. My expertise is in the area of technology and intellectual property law. Read more details or follow me on twitter.

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