Four situations that need to bear responsibility:
Case 1: Compulsive persuasion: As a drinker, if there are obvious compulsive persuasion behaviors during drinking, such as deliberately drinking, threatening others with words, refusing to drink, etc. As long as there is subjective fault, drinkers should bear certain fault liability for the occurrence of damage consequences. This kind of persuasion should also include the act of persuading the other person to drink when he is drunk, unconscious and powerless.
Situation 2: Knowing that the other person can't drink: If drinking causes the other person to have a heart attack and other diseases, leading to death and other harmful consequences, whether or not knowing the other person's physical condition becomes the premise of whether the drinker should bear the fault responsibility. If the drinker doesn't know, and the other party induces illness under the condition of persuading a small amount of wine, the drinker doesn't have to bear the fault responsibility at this time. If you continue to persuade alcohol knowingly, drinkers will bear part of the responsibility.
Situation 3: Failure to deliver the drunk safely: If the drinker has lost or is about to lose control of himself, is unconscious and unable to control his behavior, the drinker fails to deliver or safely send him home, or fails to take care of him within a reasonable time (such as no one at home). At this time, if an accident occurs, the drinker should bear certain responsibilities.
Situation 4: Failure to discourage drunk driving: Although the law does not expressly stipulate whether the drinker has the obligation to discourage drunk driving, the drinker may bear certain responsibilities if he knows that the other party is drunk and does not discourage him. If the other party does not listen to dissuasion, the drinker can be excused.