Dupray v. Jai Dining , 245 Ariz. 578 ( 2018 )


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  •                                  IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    MARK H. DUPRAY, et al., Plaintiffs/Appellees,
    v.
    JAI DINING SERVICES (PHOENIX), INC., Defendant/Appellant.
    No. 1 CA-CV 17-0599
    FILED 11-15-2018
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. CV2014-007697
    The Honorable Daniel G. Martin, Judge
    VACATED AND REMANDED
    COUNSEL
    Knapp & Roberts, P.C., Scottsdale
    By Craig A. Knapp, David S. Friedman
    Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellees
    Schneider & Onofry, P.C., Phoenix
    By Timothy O’Connor
    Co-Counsel for Defendant/Appellant
    Osborn Maledon, P.A., Phoenix
    By Kimberly A. Demarchi
    Co-Counsel for Defendant/Appellant
    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    OPINION
    Presiding Judge Randall M. Howe delivered the opinion of the Court, in
    which Judge Jon W. Thompson and Judge Diane M. Johnsen joined.
    H O W E, Judge:
    ¶1            JAI Dining Services (Phoenix), Inc. (“JAI”) appeals a jury
    verdict finding it liable for negligently overserving alcohol to a patron who
    later drove while intoxicated and caused a collision that seriously injured
    Mark Dupray. JAI claims that the trial court erred in denying its motion for
    judgment as a matter of law (“JMOL”) because it did not breach its duty of
    care to Dupray, and even if it did overserve the patron, the patron’s
    decisions to drive while intoxicated after safely leaving JAI’s establishment
    were intervening and superseding causes that absolved JAI of liability for
    Dupray’s injuries. JAI also claims that the trial court abused its discretion
    in rejecting a proposed jury instruction on intervening and superseding
    cause.
    ¶2            We vacate the jury’s verdict. The trial court correctly denied
    the motion for JMOL because the jury was presented with sufficient
    evidence to support the verdict. But the court erred in failing to give JAI’s
    proposed instruction on intervening and superseding cause. The
    instruction properly stated the law on the issue and the issue was critical to
    the jury’s determination of liability.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶3            Pedro Panameno, who had been living in his car, spent the
    morning of August 5, 2013, at his girlfriend’s house, the house he
    considered his “home.” At 2:30 p.m., Panameno drove his girlfriend’s
    brother to see their mutual friend, who lived about thirty minutes away.
    They stayed at the friend’s house until 4:00 p.m., when the friend drove
    them to the mall in his car. On the way, they went to a drive-through liquor
    store and purchased a fifth of bourbon and two 16-ounce alcoholic energy
    drinks. Panameno had not yet drunk any alcohol that day. By the time they
    reached the mall, however, Panameno had drunk both alcoholic energy
    drinks and about half of the bourbon; his friend had one “swig” of the
    bourbon.
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶4           After a short stay at the mall, the friend drove them to Jaguars,
    a gentlemen’s club JAI operated. On the way, Panameno drank the rest of
    the bourbon. Arriving around 5:00 p.m., the men ordered three or four
    buckets of beers, each containing eight 12-ounce bottles. Panameno drank
    eleven or twelve bottles of beer over the next three hours. Panameno
    became intoxicated and, by his own admission at trial, was in his “own little
    world.”
    ¶5             The group left the club around 8:00 p.m. By that time,
    according to Panameno, “[e]verybody was probably pretty much toasted at
    that moment[,]” and “[e]verybody had more than their share, especially
    me.” Panameno’s friend drove them back to his house, about eight to ten
    minutes away. Panameno and his girlfriend’s brother stayed at the friend’s
    house for fifteen to twenty minutes, and then Panameno drove the brother
    back to his girlfriend’s house. When they arrived at the house twenty to
    twenty-five minutes later, Panameno’s girlfriend began arguing with him
    for bringing her brother home later than she had expected. She told
    Panameno that he looked intoxicated and should not be driving and tried
    to take his car key from him. Panameno became angry and drove off “a little
    aggressive[ly].”
    ¶6             A short distance away, Dupray was stopped at a red light on
    his “Vespa-type scooter.” Panameno, traveling about forty-five miles per
    hour, rear-ended Dupray, severely injuring him. A police officer
    responding to the collision found three 12-packs of beer in Panameno’s car,
    with two bottles missing or broken. When the police interviewed
    Panameno at the hospital, they observed signs of intoxication, including
    slurred speech, bloodshot and watery eyes, and a strong odor of alcohol on
    his breath. An officer drew Panameno’s blood a few hours after the
    collision, and an analysis showed that his blood alcohol concentration at the
    time of the collision was between 0.210 and 0.274.
    ¶7             Dupray and his wife sued (1) Panameno for negligence and
    negligence per se for causing the collision and (2) JAI for “common law
    dram shop negligence” and negligence per se for overserving Panameno to
    the point of intoxication. JAI moved for summary judgment, asserting that
    it had met the standard of care as a matter of law and that Panameno’s
    decisions to drive were intervening and superseding causes that relieved
    JAI of all liability as a matter of law. The trial court denied JAI’s motion,
    and the matter proceeded to trial.
    ¶8          After the jury heard the evidence, JAI moved for JMOL under
    Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 50. JAI argued that the Duprays had not
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    presented sufficient evidence from which a jury could find that it breached
    its duty to the Duprays. JAI also claimed that Panameno’s decisions to drive
    after returning to his friend’s house and again after reaching his girlfriend’s
    house were intervening and superseding causes destroying the chain of
    proximate causation. The court denied JAI’s motion.
    ¶9            JAI then proposed a jury instruction that provided that the
    Duprays were required to show that JAI’s acts or omissions produced their
    injuries “unbroken by any intervening and superseding cause[.]” The
    instruction also defined “intervening cause” and “superseding cause.” The
    court rejected this instruction and stated it would give only a general
    causation instruction. The court did allow JAI’s counsel to discuss
    intervening and superseding causes in closing argument, but also
    instructed the jury that “the lawyers’ questions and arguments are not
    evidence.” The jury found for the Duprays, awarding $3,503,494.58 in
    compensatory damages and allocating 60% of the fault to Panameno and
    40% to JAI. The jury also awarded punitive damages of $400,000 against
    Panameno and $4,000,000 against JAI.
    ¶10           After the verdict, JAI renewed its motion for JMOL and in the
    alternative, moved for a new trial with an intervening and superseding
    cause jury instruction. JAI also argued that insufficient evidence supported
    the punitive damages award. The court denied JAI’s motion, and JAI timely
    appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    1. Judgment as a Matter of Law
    ¶11           JAI argues that the trial court erred in denying its JMOL
    motion because (a) it did not breach its duty of care to the Duprays and
    (b) Panameno’s actions in driving away from his friend’s house and then
    his girlfriend’s house were intervening and superseding causes of the
    Duprays’ injuries. We review the denial of the motion de novo but view the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the Duprays. See Crackel v. Allstate
    Ins. Co., 
    208 Ariz. 252
    , 259–60 ¶ 20 (App. 2004). A court may grant JMOL
    only when “a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient
    evidentiary basis to find for [a] party” on an issue that is necessary to the
    party’s claim or defense. Ariz. R. Civ. P. 50(a). In considering a JMOL
    motion, the trial court “may not weigh the credibility of witnesses or resolve
    conflicts of evidence and reasonable inferences drawn therefrom[,]”
    McBride v. Kieckhefer Assocs. Inc., 
    228 Ariz. 262
    , 265 ¶ 11 (App. 2011), but
    “must give ‘full credence to the right of the jury to determine credibility,
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    weigh the evidence, and draw justifiable conclusions therefrom[,]’” 
    id. (quoting State
    v. Clifton, 
    134 Ariz. 345
    , 348 (App. 1982)). Because JAI failed
    to show that the jury could not reasonably find that it breached its duty of
    care to the Duprays or proximately caused their injuries, the trial court
    correctly denied the motion.
    a. Breach of the Duty of Care
    ¶12           A liquor licensee “is under a duty, imposed both by common
    law principles and statute, to exercise affirmative, reasonable care in
    serving intoxicants to patrons who might later injure themselves or an
    innocent third party, whether on or off the premises.” Patterson v. Thunder
    Pass, Inc., 
    214 Ariz. 435
    , 438 ¶ 13 (App. 2007). Arizona’s “dram shop”
    statute, A.R.S. § 4–311(A), provides that a licensee is liable for property
    damage or personal injuries if the licensee sold liquor to an obviously
    intoxicated person and that person’s consumption of the liquor proximately
    caused the plaintiff’s injury. “Obviously intoxicated” means “inebriated to
    such an extent that a person’s physical faculties are substantially impaired
    and the impairment is shown by significantly uncoordinated physical
    action or significant physical dysfunction that would have been obvious to
    a reasonable person.” A.R.S. § 4–311(D). A licensee also cannot serve liquor
    to an obviously intoxicated person or allow an obviously intoxicated person
    to remain on the premises longer than thirty minutes after the obvious
    intoxication becomes known or should become known. A.R.S. § 4–244(14).
    Nor can a licensee serve more than forty ounces of beer to one person at one
    time for that person’s consumption. A.R.S. § 4–244(23).1
    ¶13            The Duprays presented evidence that JAI did not exercise
    reasonable care in serving intoxicants to Panameno. Panameno testified
    that in the hour before he arrived at the club, he had drunk two 16-ounce
    alcoholic energy drinks and all but one “swig” of a fifth of bourbon. Once
    at the club, he drank eleven or twelve 12-ounce bottles of beer—between
    132 and 144 ounces of alcohol in total—over the next three hours. He said
    that he became intoxicated and was in his “own little world.” A forensic
    toxicologist testified that, based on an analysis of the toxicology reports of
    Panameno’s blood after the collision, Panameno’s blood alcohol
    concentration reached 0.10—the point at which a person would become
    visibly intoxicated—while he was at the club. The Duprays’ expert on the
    standard of care for liquor licensees testified that based on Panameno’s
    toxicology reports and the other evidence about Panameno’s activities the
    1     This statute has since been amended to increase the limit to fifty
    ounces of beer.
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    night of the collision, Panameno was obviously intoxicated at the club, and
    club personnel did not comply with industry standards in serving alcohol
    to him. According to the expert, club personnel did not monitor
    Panameno’s drinking to determine if he was or had become intoxicated, nor
    did they prevent him from causing injury to others in his intoxicated state.
    This evidence provided a legally sufficient basis for the jury to find that JAI
    breached its duty of care to the Duprays, which precluded the trial court
    from granting JMOL for JAI.
    ¶14            JAI presents two arguments to the contrary. First, it argues
    that the trial court should have granted JMOL because Panameno’s
    testimony about how much alcohol he drank at the club was inconsistent
    with expert testimony that he could have reached the blood alcohol
    concentration he had at the time of the collision only by drinking after he
    had left the club. But a trial court ruling on a motion for JMOL cannot weigh
    witness credibility or resolve conflicts in evidence, 
    McBride, 228 Ariz. at 265
    ¶ 11; it can determine only whether sufficient evidence was presented for
    the jury to resolve the fact at issue. The jury had evidence that JAI
    overserved Panameno to the point of obvious intoxication, which was
    reason to deny the JMOL motion.
    ¶15             JAI argues second that it did not breach its duty because the
    evidence was undisputed that Panameno left the club safely. For this
    proposition, JAI relies on this Court’s decision in Patterson. But Patterson
    does not support such a limited view of the scope of a tavern’s duty. In that
    case, a tavern served alcohol to a patron who was obviously 
    intoxicated. 214 Ariz. at 436
    ¶ 3. When the patron attempted to leave the tavern,
    however, a tavern employee took the patron’s car key from her and drove
    her home in a different car, gave the patron back her key, and returned to
    the tavern. 
    Id. Within an
    hour after the tavern employee left and
    unbeknown to the tavern personnel, the patron made her way back to the
    tavern parking lot, retrieved her car, drove off, and subsequently caused a
    collision. 
    Id. This Court
    affirmed summary judgment for the tavern because
    the tavern’s employees “fulfilled their legal duty of affirmative, reasonable
    care to [the patron] and the public by separating [the patron] from her
    vehicle and arranging for, as well as subsequently providing, the safe
    transportation of [the patron] to her residence.” 
    Id. at 439
    ¶ 16.
    ¶16           Here, by contrast, the evidence does not show that the club’s
    personnel took any action to see that Panameno reached home safely. No
    evidence shows that the club’s personnel were even aware of Panameno’s
    presence at the club. The fact that Panameno was transported away from
    the club by a friend does not by itself absolve JAI from liability for failing
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    to “exercise affirmative, reasonable care” in serving alcohol to Panameno.
    Thus, the trial court did not err by denying JAI’s motion for JMOL on this
    issue.
    b. Proximate Cause
    ¶17             A plaintiff suing for negligence must prove, inter alia, a
    “causal connection” between the defendant’s breach and the plaintiff’s
    resulting injuries. Quiroz v. ALCOA Inc., 
    243 Ariz. 560
    , 564 ¶ 7 (2018). In this
    context, “cause” has two components: actual cause or “causation-in-fact,”
    and proximate or legal cause. Ontiveros v. Borak, 
    136 Ariz. 500
    , 505–06
    (1983); 
    Patterson, 214 Ariz. at 438
    –39 ¶¶ 13–14; Barrett v. Harris, 
    207 Ariz. 374
    , 378 ¶ 11 (App. 2004). Actual cause exists if the defendant’s act “helped
    cause the final result” and the result “would not have happened without
    the defendant’s act.” 
    Ontiveros, 136 Ariz. at 505
    . A defendant is liable even
    if his conduct contributed “only a little” to the plaintiff’s injuries. 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    An act that is the actual cause of injuries will also be the
    proximate cause unless an intervening event supersedes the defendant’s
    liability for the injuries. 
    Id. at 505–06;
    Patterson, 214 Ariz. at 438
    –39 ¶ 14. An
    event that contributes to the injuries is intervening if it has an independent
    origin for which the defendant is not responsible. 
    Patterson, 214 Ariz. at 438
    –39 ¶ 14. Such an event is superseding if it “was unforeseeable by a
    reasonable person in the position of the original actor” and “looking
    backward, after the event, the intervening act appears extraordinary.”
    
    Ontiveros, 136 Ariz. at 506
    . When the injuries are “produced by an
    intervening and superseding cause, even though the original negligence
    may have been a substantial factor in bringing about the injury,” the
    defendant is not liable “because the necessary proximate causation is
    lacking.” 
    Patterson, 213 Ariz. at 439
    ¶ 14 (quoting Herzberg v. White, 
    49 Ariz. 313
    , 321 (1937)).
    ¶18            The existence of proximate cause “requires consideration of
    all the facts,” and “is usually a question for the jury, unless reasonable
    people could not differ.” McMurtry v. Weatherford Hotel, Inc., 
    231 Ariz. 244
    ,
    256 ¶ 38 (App. 2013). This includes the question whether an intervening
    and superseding cause exists. See Robertson v. Sixpence Inns of Amer., Inc.,
    
    163 Ariz. 539
    , 547 (1990) (holding that the trial court erred in granting
    summary judgment on issue of intervening and superseding cause).
    ¶19           The trial court here properly denied JAI’s motion for JMOL
    because the jury had sufficient evidence to find that JAI’s conduct was the
    actual and proximate cause of the Duprays’ injuries. The jury heard
    evidence that Panameno became intoxicated at the club and, traveling
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    forty-five miles per hour in an intoxicated state, rear-ended Dupray,
    severely injuring him. Of course, the jury also heard contrary evidence.
    JAI’s expert testified that Panameno’s blood alcohol concentration at and
    after the collision was inconsistent with the allegation that he left the club
    intoxicated. The jury heard testimony that Panameno was not driving when
    he arrived or left the club and that he voluntarily drove from his friend’s
    house to his girlfriend’s house and then away from his girlfriend’s house
    until he finally collided with Dupray. But the existence of conflicting
    evidence precludes granting a JMOL. See 
    McBride, 228 Ariz. at 265
    ¶ 11.
    ¶20             JAI nevertheless argues that it was entitled to JMOL because
    Panameno’s decision to drive after he had been driven away from the club
    constituted an intervening and superseding cause of the Duprays’ injuries.
    It again relies on Patterson. In addition to holding that the tavern had
    fulfilled its duty to its patron and the public by separating the patron from
    her car and taking her home, this Court also held that the patron’s decision
    to leave home and return to retrieve her car while intoxicated was an
    intervening and superseding cause. 
    Patterson, 214 Ariz. at 440
    ¶ 19. This
    Court held that the patron’s decision was “unforeseeable and
    extraordinary” and “negated any negligence on the part of the tavern or its
    employees.” 
    Id. ¶21 JAI’s
    argument—that Panameno’s decisions to drive once he
    was safely away from the club constituted intervening and superseding
    causes that broke the chain of causation between JAI’s negligence and the
    Duprays’ injuries—does have some force. But this case is not like Patterson
    in two respects. First, unlike the tavern patron in that case, Panameno, who
    lived in his car, did not go to his own home after leaving the club, but went
    to the homes of others. Whether the homes of his friend or his girlfriend
    were places of repose, which might make unforeseeable his decision to
    leave them and continue driving, were factual questions for the jury, not
    the trial court, to determine. Second, the record contains no evidence that
    club personnel knew how Panameno arrived or departed from the club,
    where he was heading after he left, or where he was staying. Thus, a jury
    could have reasonably concluded that Panameno’s collision with Dupray
    was foreseeable from JAI’s perspective. Because JAI was not entitled to
    JMOL on the issue of causation, the trial court did not err in denying JAI’s
    motion for JMOL.
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    2. Requested Jury Instruction
    ¶22            JAI also argues that the trial court erred by refusing to give a
    jury instruction on intervening and superseding cause. This Court reviews
    a refusal to give a requested jury instruction for an abuse of discretion and
    will not reverse if the requesting party cannot show resulting prejudice.
    Brethauer v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    221 Ariz. 192
    , 198 ¶ 24 (App. 2009). We review
    jury instructions as a whole, A Tumbling-T Ranches v. Flood Control Dist. of
    Maricopa Cty., 
    222 Ariz. 515
    , 533 ¶ 50 (App. 2009), and view the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the requesting party, Anderson v. Nissei ASB
    Mach. Co., Ltd., 
    197 Ariz. 168
    , 178 ¶ 39 (App. 1999). “A trial court must give
    a requested [jury] instruction if (1) the evidence supports the instruction,
    (2) the instruction is proper under the law, and (3) the instruction pertains
    to an important issue, and the gist of the instruction is not given in any other
    instructions.” 
    Brethauer, 221 Ariz. at 198
    ¶ 24 (quoting DeMontiney v. Desert
    Manor Convalescent Ctr. Inc., 
    144 Ariz. 6
    , 10 (1985)).
    ¶23           Applying these factors, the trial court abused its discretion in
    denying the requested instruction. First, the parties presented evidence that
    would support a jury finding that JAI’s overserving of Panameno was not
    the proximate cause of the Duprays’ injuries because Panameno’s conduct
    after leaving the club constituted an intervening and superseding cause.
    The evidence showed that after Panameno left the club with his friends, he
    drove from his friend’s house to his girlfriend’s house—the place he
    considered his “home”—and then away from his girlfriend’s house, even
    though he was intoxicated and rejected his girlfriend’s pleas that he was too
    intoxicated to drive. From this evidence, the jury could have concluded that
    although JAI’s negligence in overserving Panameno was an actual cause of
    the collision, the chain of causation was broken by Panameno’s two
    independent decisions to drive from both houses even though he was
    intoxicated and warned that he should not drive.
    ¶24            Second, the instruction properly stated the law. An act that
    causes injuries in a chain of events will be the “proximate cause” of the
    injuries unless an independent and superseding event breaks that chain.
    
    Ontiveros, 136 Ariz. at 505
    –06; 
    Patterson, 214 Ariz. at 438
    –39 ¶ 14;
    Restatement (Second) of Torts § 440 (1965) (A superseding event precludes
    the imposition of liability for injuries.). An event that contributes to the
    injuries is intervening and superseding if it occurred after, and was
    independent of, the original negligent act and was, looking back,
    extraordinary and unforeseeable by a reasonable person in the position of
    the original actor. 
    Ontiveros, 136 Ariz. at 506
    ; 
    Patterson, 214 Ariz. at 438
    –39
    ¶ 14; see Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 440 (defining superseding cause),
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    441 (defining intervening force), 442 (identifying considerations in
    determining whether intervening force is a superseding cause). JAI’s
    proposed instruction correctly tracked the law:
    Plaintiffs must show there was a natural and
    continuous sequence of events stemming from [JAI]’s alleged
    act or omission, unbroken by any intervening and
    superseding cause, that produced the injury, in whole or in
    part, and without which the injury would not have occurred.
    An “intervening cause” is an independent cause that
    occurs between the original act or omission and the final harm
    and is necessary in bringing about that harm.
    An intervening cause becomes a superseding cause,
    thereby relieving [JAI] of liability for any original negligent
    conduct, when the intervening force was unforeseeable and
    may be described, with the benefit of hindsight, as
    extraordinary.[2]
    ¶25           Third, the instruction pertained to a critical issue in the case:
    whether Panameno’s actions were intervening and superseding causes of
    the Duprays’ injuries. If the jury decided that Panameno’s two decisions to
    drive while intoxicated after leaving the club constituted intervening and
    superseding causes, JAI would not be liable for the Duprays’ injuries and
    not subject to punitive damages. The trial court’s general causation
    instruction did not address this issue:
    Negligence causes an injury if it helps produce the injury and
    if the injury would not have happened without the
    negligence. There may be more than one cause of an injury.
    ...
    Before you can find [JAI] at fault, you must find that [JAI]’s
    negligence was a cause of Plaintiffs’ injuries.
    2      We infer “force” in the third paragraph of the proposed instruction
    to mean “cause.” We also recognize that the instruction fails to note that
    foreseeability of the intervening cause is assessed from the defendant’s
    standpoint. 
    Ontiveros, 136 Ariz. at 506
    ; 
    Patterson, 214 Ariz. at 439
    ¶ 14. But
    because the issue of foreseeability in this case does not turn on this point,
    this omission is immaterial.
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    Without an instruction defining “intervening cause” and “superseding
    cause,” the jury had no legal standard to apply to determine whether
    Panameno’s acts were intervening and superseding causes. Although the
    trial court allowed JAI’s counsel to argue that Panameno’s acts were
    intervening and superseding causes, closing argument is a poor substitute
    for an instruction by the court, even if the trial court had not also instructed
    the jury that counsel’s arguments were not evidence. The failure to provide
    the instruction to address the concept of intervening and superseding cause
    hampered JAI in arguing that it was not liable for the Duprays’ injuries and
    hampered the jury in properly determining whether JAI was liable.
    ¶26             The Duprays argue that the general instruction was adequate
    and that an instruction on intervening and superseding cause was
    unnecessary. They rely on Ritchie v. Krasner, in which this Court held that a
    general instruction on causation without any specific instruction on
    intervening superseding cause was adequate in a medical malpractice case.
    
    221 Ariz. 288
    , 299–300 ¶ 32 (App. 2009). That decision, however, held only
    that an intervening and superseding cause instruction was unnecessary
    under the facts of that case, 
    id., and did
    not purport to hold that such an
    instruction would be unnecessary or improper in other cases. In this case,
    JAI proposed an instruction that accurately stated the law on proximate
    cause and intervening and superseding cause, and those concepts were
    critical to correctly resolving the case.
    ¶27            The Duprays also argue that JAI’s proposed instruction did
    not matter because the jury found JAI substantially at fault and imposed
    significant punitive damages against it. But the jury’s finding that JAI was
    substantially at fault was made without an instruction on intervening and
    superseding cause. Properly instructed, the jury may have absolved JAI
    from any liability because Panameno’s decisions to drive while intoxicated
    after reaching his friend’s house and then separately rebuffing his
    girlfriend’s pleas to not drive were intervening superseding causes. And if
    the jury did find JAI not liable, JAI would not be subject to punitive
    damages. Thus, the Duprays’ arguments fail. The trial court abused its
    discretion in denying JAI’s proposed instruction on intervening and
    superseding cause.
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    DUPRAY, et al. v. JAI DINING
    Opinion of the Court
    CONCLUSION
    ¶28            We vacate the jury’s verdicts against JAI and remand the case
    to the trial court. Because we vacate the jury’s verdict on this ground, we
    need not address JAI’s claim that insufficient evidence supported the
    punitive damages award.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    12