About Sarah E. Argo

Sarah is a member of the Casualty Department, focusing exclusively on insurance defense litigation. Her clients include insurance carriers, political subdivisions, self insureds and national retail chains. She regularly handles matters involving premises liability, trucking and motor vehicle liability, municipal liability, insurance bad faith and dram shop claims. Sarah also has experience handling UM/UIM claims, natural gas drilling claims, and product liability.

As part of her practice, Sarah has successfully litigated claims against local agencies arising out of alleged dangerous conditions of publicly owned properties and successfully defended clients in motor vehicle liability claims. She has represented entities in negligence claims involving Pennsylvania's Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act, represented clients in claims involving motor vehicle liability, premises liability and bad faith and has assisted in handling various high-exposure trucking matters, products liability and other personal injury/property matters.

Sarah graduated summa cum laude from King's College in 2005 with a Bachelor's degree in Accounting. She received her juris doctor in 2009 from The Pennsylvania State University's Dickinson School of Law.

Sarah is admitted to practice in both the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania and United States District Court of New Jersey. She is also a member of the Pennsylvania Bar Association, Lackawanna County Bar Association and Luzerne County Bar Association.

Honors & Awards

•The Best Lawyers in America, Litigation - Insurance (2024-2026)

Classes & Seminars Taught

Boardable and Recoverable Economic Damages, CLE seminar, 2018
Punitive Damages in Trucking Litigation, CLE seminar, 2015
The Social Media Age and Your Auto Claim, Client Seminar, 2014

Thought Leadership

Defense Digest

Who May Be Liable Under the Dram Shop Act?

December 1, 2023

Key Points: Pennsylvania’s Dram Shop Act does not merely apply to “any person” but, rather, imposes an obligation on particular persons and entities. To establish a basis for Dram Shop liability, it must be shown that the defendant “is either a licensee, or stepped into the shoes of a licensee.” The absence of “profit or other indicia of commercial sale of liquor” renders the Dram Shop Act inapplicable.Under your argument, you’re saying if I have a party and I overserve people, you’re OK with me not being liable. But if I say, ‘Folks, try to contribute 5 to 10 bucks because I spent a lot of money to put this party on,’ under your theory, I’m liable?” - Justice David Wecht In Klar v. Dairy Farmers of America, 300 A.3d 361 (Pa. 2023), the Pennsylvania Supreme Court revisited the extent to which an event host may be held liable for the actions of an intoxicated guest. Klar involved a golf outing sponsored by Dairy Farmers of America for its employees that required employees to provide a monetary contribution to help defray the costs of green fees, food, and alcohol associated with the event. During the event, Roger Williams, an employee of Dairy Farmers, became intoxicated and was subsequently involved in a motor vehicle accident with David Klar. While Klar sought to impose liability under theories of common law negligence and violation of Pennsylvania’s Dram Shop Act, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court refused to extend the scope of the Dram Shop Act to include an organization, such as Dairy Farmers of America, that hosts an event at which alcohol is provided but is not a liquor licensee.With regards to his Dram Shop claim, Klar argued that Dairy Farmers of America fell into the “any other person” category of the Dram Shop Act, and by collecting money from its employees to purchase alcohol for the event, Dairy Farmers received consideration and then sold alcohol to a visibly intoxicated person. The Supreme Court, however, declined to extend the scope of the Dram Shop Act to this scenario, explaining that the Act’s applicability to “any other person” does not mean that every individual in this Commonwealth is exposed to Dram Shop liability. Rather, the meaning of “any other person” is cabined by its context and simply refers to persons whose actions place them into the same category as the preceding entities, i.e., those who engage in the commercial or quasi-commercial sale of alcohol for profit. In other words, in the context of the Dram Shop Act, “any other person” is one who, notwithstanding their lack of a license, engages in the business of selling alcohol.While the court explained that an individual or organization could potentially assume “licensee status,” thus triggering liability pursuant to the Act, such was not the case here, where the factual averments in Klar’s complaint were insufficient to establish that Dairy Farmers received any sort of “remuneration” to implicate liability. The court noted that Klar did not allege that Dairy Farmers collected funds from its employees to profit from the sale of alcohol; rather, the allegations that Dairy Farmers asked for a monetary contribution to offset event costs dispelled any suggestion that it organized the event to sell alcohol for financial gain. As explained by the court, the mere pooling of money for a collective purchase of alcohol for shared consumption, absent any indicia of commercial sale or profit-seeking, does not implicate the Dram Shop Act. The court reasoned that, under Klar’s interpretation of “any other person” in the context of the Dram Shop Act, liability could be imposed upon a group of friends who pitch in money to (legally) purchase a bottle of liquor or a case of beer for their shared consumption. This interpretation is inconsistent with the long line of Pennsylvania cases which have held that only licensees are civilly liable for violations of the Dram Shop Act. While Klar also raised a common law negligence theory of liability, the Supreme Court held that the plaintiff’s argument was foreclosed by well-established precedent refusing to extend common law liability to social hosts, which it found no reason to disturb. Pennsylvania courts continue to uphold the longstanding precedent that there is no social host liability at common law since competent adults are responsible for their own actions. In other words, it is the consumption of alcohol, not the furnishing of it by a social host, which is the proximate cause of any subsequent occurrence. Indeed, the very reason for the enactment of dram shop laws is the fact that, under the common law of torts, liability could not be imposed upon one who provided another with alcohol. Such statutes were an effort to supersede the common law; to provide an avenue for imposing liability upon the purveyors of alcohol where the common law did not. It is worth noting that Klar’s claims against Dairy Farmers were dismissed at the pleadings stage. While the Supreme Court declined to extend the scope of the Dram Shop Act in this case, it has provided plaintiffs with a roadmap for drafting complaints in such a way as to set forth sufficient factual averments, which, at the very least, may permit a Dram Shop Act violation in a similar scenario to proceed beyond the pleadings stage. *Sarah is a shareholder in our Scranton, Pennsylvania, office. She can be reached at 570.496.4654 or SEArgo@mdwcg.com. Defense Digest, Vol. 29, No. 4, December 2023, is prepared by Marshall Dennehey to provide information on recent legal developments of interest to our readers. This publication is not intended to provide legal advice for a specific situation or to create an attorney-client relationship. ATTORNEY ADVERTISING pursuant to New York RPC 7.1. 2023 Marshall Dennehey. All Rights Reserved. This article may not be reprinted without the express written permission of our firm. For reprints, contact tamontemuro@mdwcg.com.

News

98 Marshall Dennehey Attorneys Recognized in the 2026 Editions of The Best Lawyers in America and the Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch in America

August 20, 2025

 

Awards

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Services

Areas of Law

  • Other 9
    • General Liability
    • Automobile Liability
    • Product Liability
    • Insurance Services - Coverage and Bad Faith Litigation
    • Public Entity and Civil Rights Litigation
    • Trucking & Transportation Liability
    • Hospitality and Liquor Liability
    • Premises and Retail Liability
    • Amusements, Sports & Recreation Liability

Practice Details

  • Firm Information
    Position
    Shareholder
    Firm Name
    Marshall Dennehey
  • Representative Cases & Transactions
    Cases
    Representative Cases & Matters: Obtained a defense verdict in a jury trial stemming from a rear-end motor vehicle accident.
    Obtained a defense verdict in a jury trial stemming from a premises liability case involving issues of municipal liability.
    Obtained a defense verdict in a jury trial stemming from a chain reaction motor vehicle accident.
    Obtained a defense verdict at an arbitration stemming from a tractor-trailer accident.
    Obtained a defense verdict at an arbitration stemming from a motor vehicle versus bicycle accident.
    Assisted with securing the dismissal of a client in a claim involving negligent entrustment.
    Assisted with securing summary judgment in a breach of contract claim.

Experience

  • Bar Admission & Memberships
    Admissions
    2009, Pennsylvania
    2009, New Jersey
    2009, U.S. District Court Middle District of Pennsylvania
    2009, U.S District Court of New Jersey
    Memberships

    Associations & memberships

    Lackawanna County Bar Association
    New Jersey Bar Association
    Pennsylvania Bar Association

  • Education & Certifications
    Law School
    Penn State Dickinson Law
    Class of 2009
    J.D.
    Other Education
    King's College
    Class of 2005
    B.S.
    summa cum laude

Contact Sarah E. Argo

Share Holder at Marshall Dennehey
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50 Glenmaura National BoulevardMoosic, PA 18507U.S.A.

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Attorneys FAQs

  • What year was this attorney first admitted to the bar?
    Sarah E. Argo was admitted in 2009 to the State of New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
  • Is this attorney admitted to the bar in more than one state?
    Yes, Sarah E. Argo is admitted to practice in New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
  • Is this attorney admitted to practice in any U.S. Federal Courts?
    Sarah E. Argo is admitted to practice before the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey and United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania.
  • What law school did this attorney attend?
    Sarah E. Argo attended Penn State Dickinson Law.