HOLIDAY PARTIES AND AN EMPLOYERS LIABILITY By:
Janet E. Lanyon
During holiday seasons, employers often worry they may expose
themselves to liability if employees become intoxicated at a company
function and subsequently injure others.
Under current Michigan law, an employer is not liable to a third
party for injuries caused by an employee who became intoxicated during
a company function unless the plaintiff proves the employer required
the employee to attend the function, and that there was a foreseeable
risk that the employee would consume alcoholic beverages to the point
where he would become a risk to others.
In order to establish an employers liability for an employees
actions, a plaintiff must first show that the employee was acting within
the scope of his or her employment.
In general, voluntary attendance at employer-sponsored social
functions has been deemed insufficient to meet this requirement.
For example, in Rowe v Colwell, a loan officer was invited
to a party by a corporation doing business with his employer.
He consumed alcohol during this party as well as during a dinner
which the group had at a second location.
After dinner, a bank vice president invited the employee to his
home to play pool. The
employee again consumed alcoholic beverages at the vice presidents
home. While driving home,
the employee struck and seriously injured a pedestrian.
In holding that the bank was not liable for the employees
actions, the court emphasized that the function was purely social and
that the employee was not required to attend.
The court also noted that the function was after working hours
and that no business was transacted. Even where an employee is required to attend a function as part of his job duties, an employer may not be liable for injuries to third parties sustained as the result of the employees intoxication where the risk of harm to others was not foreseeable. The controlling case on this issue in Michigan is Millross v Plum Hollow Golf Club. In that case, a "caddie master" at a golf club was required by his employer to attend a foundation dinner at the club. During the dinner, liquor was served and the employee became intoxicated. While driving home from work, the employee struck and killed a pedestrian. The court in Millross found that the golf club was not liable for the death, holding that "the special relationship between employer and employee does not of itself require the employer to protect third parties from off-premises injuries, either by supervising the consumption of alcohol or providing alternate transportation." The decision specifically declined, however, to absolve an employer from liability where the facts establish that there was a foreseeable risk that employees would consume alcoholic beverages to the point where they become a risk to others. |