Reynolds v. Hicks Case Brief

Master Washington Supreme Court held that social hosts who furnish alcohol to minors owe no duty to third parties injured by the minors; negligence per se does not extend to such third-party claims. with this comprehensive case brief.

Introduction

Reynolds v. Hicks is a foundational Washington torts decision delineating the boundaries of social host liability. It answers whether a private host who unlawfully furnishes alcohol to a minor can be liable to an uninvolved third party later injured by that minor. The court's answer—no duty to the third party—clarifies that while Washington recognizes negligence-based duties for commercial alcohol vendors and allows certain claims by minors against social hosts, it draws a firm line against extending liability to third parties injured by intoxicated minors in the social-host context.

The case is also a staple in negligence-per-se analysis. Invoking the statute that forbids furnishing alcohol to those under 21, the plaintiffs argued that violating that statute should establish the host's negligence toward the injured third party. The court rejected that move, emphasizing that negligence per se does not create a duty where none exists and that the statute protects minors themselves rather than the general public. Reynolds thus teaches two central lessons: identify who owes a duty to whom, and analyze whether the plaintiff falls within the statute's protected class and the harm within the statute's protective purpose.

Case Brief
Complete legal analysis of Reynolds v. Hicks

Citation

134 Wn.2d 491, 951 P.2d 761 (Wash. 1998)

Facts

The Reynolds family hosted a private wedding reception where alcohol was made available. A guest under the legal drinking age consumed alcohol at the event. After leaving the reception, the underage guest drove and was involved in an automobile accident that injured Hicks, an unrelated third party. Hicks sued the social hosts (the Reynolds), alleging negligence and negligence per se based on the Washington statute prohibiting furnishing alcohol to minors (RCW 66.44.270). The trial court granted summary judgment to the Reynolds, holding that social hosts owed no duty to third persons injured by an intoxicated minor. The Court of Appeals reversed, but the Washington Supreme Court granted review to resolve whether social hosts could be held liable to third-party victims under these circumstances.

Issue

Do social hosts who furnish alcohol to a minor owe a duty to an uninvolved third party later injured by that minor, such that the host may be liable in negligence or negligence per se under RCW 66.44.270?

Rule

In Washington, a social host who furnishes alcohol to a minor does not owe a duty to third persons injured by that minor; therefore, the host cannot be held liable in negligence to such third parties. Negligence per se applies only if the plaintiff is within the class of persons the statute was intended to protect and the harm is of the type the statute was designed to prevent. RCW 66.44.270, which prohibits furnishing alcohol to persons under 21, is intended to protect minors themselves, not the general public, and thus does not create or supply a duty from a social host to third-party victims. By contrast, Washington recognizes that commercial vendors may owe a duty to third parties for negligent service of alcohol based on distinct policy considerations relating to regulation, profit motive, and capacity to monitor consumption.

Holding

No. A social host who furnishes alcohol to a minor owes no duty to third persons injured by that minor. Negligence per se under RCW 66.44.270 does not extend to third-party claims. The Washington Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals and reinstated summary judgment for the social hosts.

Reasoning

The court began with duty, noting that Washington tort law has recognized a duty by commercial vendors to the general public for negligent service of alcohol. That duty reflects policy rationales unique to commercial establishments: vendors are licensed and regulated, profit from alcohol sales, and are in a position to monitor and control service. Extending that framework to private social hosts would represent a major expansion of liability that the court declined to undertake absent legislative direction. Turning to negligence per se, the plaintiffs invoked RCW 66.44.270, which makes it unlawful to furnish alcohol to those under 21. The court explained that negligence per se does not create a duty; rather, it may substitute a statutory standard of care for an existing common-law duty only if the plaintiff is within the statute's protected class and the harm is within the statute's scope of risk. Prior Washington precedent had allowed a minor to sue a social host under this statute because minors fall squarely within the protected class and the statute seeks to prevent harms to minors resulting from underage drinking. However, third parties like Hicks are not in that protected class. The statute's principal purpose is to protect minors from the risks of alcohol, not to protect the general motoring public from intoxicated minors. Because the plaintiff fell outside the statute's protected class, negligence per se could not be used to impose a duty on social hosts to third-party victims. The court emphasized that foreseeability of harm alone does not create a duty and declined to rest liability on broad foreseeability. It also pointed to practical and policy concerns: policing private gatherings would be difficult, and equating social hosts with vendors would alter social relationships and expectations without clear legislative guidance. Having found no duty, the court did not need to address proximate cause in depth. Accordingly, summary judgment for the social hosts was appropriate.

Significance

Reynolds v. Hicks is a key case for learning how courts cabin negligence duties and for understanding the limits of negligence per se. It contrasts commercial vendor liability with social host nonliability to third parties, highlighting how duty turns on institutional roles and legislative policy. For exam purposes, it teaches students to: (1) start with duty before leaping to breach and causation; (2) apply the negligence-per-se test by identifying the statute's protected class and risk; and (3) distinguish between claims by the minor (potentially viable) and claims by third parties (barred against social hosts under Washington law).

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Reynolds v. Hicks eliminate all social host liability in Washington?

No. Reynolds holds that social hosts owe no duty to third parties injured by intoxicated minors. However, Washington has recognized that a minor may have a negligence-based claim against a social host who furnished alcohol to the minor because the statute prohibiting furnishing alcohol to minors is intended to protect minors themselves. Reynolds draws the line at third-party claims; it does not abolish a minor's potential claim.

How does negligence per se operate in this case?

Negligence per se allows a statute to supply the standard of care when a duty already exists and when the plaintiff is within the statute's protected class and the harm is of the type the statute was designed to prevent. The court concluded that RCW 66.44.270 protects minors, not the general public. Because the injured party was a third person, not a minor, the statute could not be used to impose a duty on the social host to that third party.

Why are commercial vendors treated differently from social hosts?

Commercial vendors are licensed, regulated, profit from alcohol sales, and are better positioned to monitor consumption and verify age or intoxication. Courts have recognized vendor duties to the public in part because of these regulatory and policy considerations. Social hosts lack those characteristics, and imposing vendor-like duties on them would expand liability substantially and raise enforcement and privacy concerns. Reynolds preserves this distinction.

Would the result change if the social host personally and knowingly served alcohol to a visibly intoxicated minor?

Under Reynolds, the dispositive question for a third-party plaintiff remains duty. Even if the host knowingly served a visibly intoxicated minor, the decision holds there is no duty owed by a social host to third persons injured by the minor's intoxication. While those facts might strengthen moral blame or foreseeability, they do not create a legal duty to third parties under Washington law as articulated in Reynolds.

What should plaintiffs injured by an intoxicated minor consider after Reynolds?

They may pursue claims directly against the intoxicated minor (e.g., negligence). Claims against commercial vendors might be viable if a vendor negligently served the minor contrary to statutory or common-law duties. But claims against purely private social hosts for furnishing alcohol to the minor are barred with respect to third-party victims under Reynolds.

How should law students use Reynolds on exams?

Use Reynolds to structure a duty-first negligence analysis. Distinguish social hosts from commercial vendors, identify the potential duty source (common law or statute), and apply the negligence-per-se test by asking whether the plaintiff is in the statute's protected class and whether the harm is within its scope. Note that foreseeability alone is insufficient to create a duty.

Conclusion

Reynolds v. Hicks is a clear statement by the Washington Supreme Court that negligence liability for alcohol-related injuries depends on the nature of the supplier and the identity of the plaintiff. Social hosts are not the functional equivalent of commercial vendors, and courts will not impose a generalized duty to third parties on private hosts absent legislative direction.

For students and practitioners, the case offers a precise framework for duty and negligence-per-se analysis: identify the correct defendant category, verify whether any statute supplies a standard of care and to whom, and keep the protected-class inquiry front and center. Reynolds remains a leading authority limiting third-party claims against social hosts while preserving distinct avenues of recovery against minors themselves and, where appropriate, commercial vendors.

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