Dram Shop Cases
New York Dram Shop Laywers
New York Dram Shop Attorneys
Under New York State law, the owner and operator of an establishment that sells liquor has an obligation not to serve a person that is obviously intoxicated or under age. These laws are often referred to as Dram Shop laws. If the bar, club or restaurant violates these duties and someone is injured as a result of the intoxicated person’s actions, the establishment can be held responsible.
Common situation in which this occurs include when a patron drives while intoxicated and gets into a car accident or where an drunk patron assaults someone, either in the bar or elsewhere. These situations often result in very serious injuries including death, quadriplegia, paraplegia, gunshot wounds, facial slashing with permanent disfigurement, and broken bones which require surgery. The life of the victim and his/her families can be shattered. They can incur significant loss of earnings, medical expenses and pain and suffering, all of which the irresponsible establishment is accountable for.
Contact the Firm
Sullivan & Brill, LLP has extensive experience filing lawsuits throughout New York City (Manhattan, Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island) as well as Nassau, Suffolk and Westchester and upstate counties against corporations that have violated New York's Dram Shop laws. For a free consultation with an experienced Dram Shop lawyer, call 212-566-1000 or complete the form at the left.
The firm also has an office in Bayamon, Puerto Rico staffed by an experienced personal injury/medical malpractice attorney.
February 15, 2012: Drunk Man Can't Sue Bar for Injuries He Got Crossing Busy Highway
A judge has ruled that Alan Berger, the New Jersey man who was extremely intoxicated and struck by a car while crossing a busy highway, cannot sue the Greenwich Village bar he was at that night for his injuries. Wicked Willy’s, located on Bleeker Street, was hosting a beer pong tournament that night and was providing patrons playing the game with unlimited pitchers of beer without monitoring the consumption. Beer pong is a fast paced drinking game in which two teams try to throw or bounce ping pong balls into cups of beer, if a shot is made the beer is drank by a player on the opposite team. Due to its fast pace, players tend to become very intoxicated, even more so after playing for a prolonged period of time.
On the night of the accident in June 2009, Berger played the game for 3 ½-hours with friends before leaving Wicked Willy’s and boarding a bus back to New Jersey. After the bus ride, Mr. Berger was still so highly intoxicated that he attempted to cross the busy Highway-9 and was hit by a car traveling 50 miles per hour. Berger suffered severe injuries including a broken hip, leg and foot, tears in both knees and a lacerated liver. At the hospital, nearly four hours after leaving the bar, his blood alcohol content was .26 which is more than three times the legal limit. The lawsuit charged that the bar should have been monitoring the games to make sure players weren’t getting “visibly drunk”.
In the decision, Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Lucy Billings threw out Berger’s lawsuit against the defendant bar citing that he had signed up for the drinking game of his own free will. Billing’s wrote: “Despite the game tables, cups and alcohol [that the] defendant bar made available to plaintiff and other bar patrons without serving the alcohol or monitoring its consumption, plaintiff voluntarily engaged in the drinking game” and “consumed alcohol to the point of diminished capacity,”. The Supreme Court Justice found that beer pong players are playing at their own risk and that the bar had “no duty” to warn players of the risks involved with playing or monitor their alcohol consumption during the games. The court’s ruling upholds that under state law bars can be held accountable for drunken patrons injuring other people, but they are not necessarily responsible for those who injure themselves.
If you or someone you know has been seriously injured due to someone else’s negligence, you should immediately seek advice from a personal injury lawyer that is experienced. For a free consultation with such an attorney, complete the form to the left or call 212-566-1000. Based in New York City, Sullivan & Brill, LLP represents clients throughout the United States, as well as in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Bronx, Staten Island, Nassau County, Suffolk County, Westchester County and other upstate New York counties.
Dram Shop Cases News
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February 15, 2012: Drunk Man Can't Sue Bar for Injuries He Got Crossing Busy Highway
A judge has ruled that Alan Berger, the New Jersey man who was extremely intoxicated and struck by a car while crossing a busy highway, cannot sue the Greenwich Village bar he was at that night for his injuries. Wicked Willy’s, located on Bleeker Street, was hosting a beer pong tournament that ...
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Office Locations
New York
Trinity Centre
115 Broadway, 17th Floor
New York, NY 10006
(212) 566-1000
Puerto Rico
#73 Santa Cruz St., Suite 407
Santa Cruz Medical Building
Bayamon, Puerto Rico
Case Results
- $750,000 Settlement for Medical Malpractice Victim
- $500,000 Settlement for Victim of Sexual Assault
- $375,000 Settlement for Delayed Diagnosis of Ankle Fracture
- $350,000 Settlement for Failure to Diagnosis of Skin Cancer
- Jury Awards $320,000 to Women with Fractured Ankle
- $250,000 Settlement Obtained for Victim of False Arrest
- $200,000 Settlement Obtain for Family of Man that Committed Suicide
- $180,000 Settlement for Man with Herniated Disc
- $175,000 Settlement Obtained for Child that Sustained Hernia
- $135,000 Settlement for Injury from Fall in Store
- $130,000 Settlement for Women that Tripped on Sidewalk and Fractured Wrist
- Slip on Ice Causing Knee Injury Results in $95,000 Settlement
- $90,000 Settlement for Women with Herniated Disc
- $88,000 Settlement Obtained for Man Who Injured Wrist in Car Accident
- $80,000 Settlement for Women with Carpal Tunnel Syndrome


