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Church v. Callanan Industries Inc.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Nov 19, 2002
99 N.Y.2d 104 (N.Y. 2002)

Summary

describing the first Espinal exception as applying to circumstances "where the promisor, while engaged affirmatively in discharging a contractual obligation, creates an unreasonable risk of harm to others, or increases that risk"

Summary of this case from Guzman v. Wackenhut Corp.

Opinion

137

Decided November 19, 2002.

Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Joseph R. Cannizzaro, J.), entered January 18, 2002, in Albany County, dismissing the complaint as against defendant San Juan Construction and Sales Company, and dismissing all cross claims and counterclaims by and among all defendants and third-party defendants. The appeal brings up for review a prior nonfinal order of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Third Judicial Department, entered July 5, 2001, which, with two Justices dissenting, modified, on the law, and, as modified, affirmed an order of the Supreme Court (Joseph C. Teresi, J.), entered in Albany County, denying motions by Callanan Industries, Inc. and San Juan Construction and Sales Company for summary judgment. The modification consisted of reversing so much of the order of Supreme Court as denied the motion by San Juan Construction and Sales Company for summary judgment, granting the motion, awarding summary judgment to that movant, and dismissing the complaint as against it.

Michael J. Hutter, for appellants.

Arete K. Spiro, for respondent.

William D. Fireman of counsel, for New York State Trial Lawyers Association, amicus curiae.

Terence J. Burke and Frederick W. Clark III of counsel, for Empire State Subcontractors Association, amicus curiae.

James J. Barriere and Stephen M. Buhr of counsel, for Associated General Contractors of America, New York State Chapter, Inc. et al.,amici curiae.

Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Smith, Ciparick, Wesley, Rosenblatt and Graffeo concur.



Plaintiff Ned Church, age nine, received catastrophic spinal injuries December 26, 1992, when the driver of a Volkswagen Jetta in which he was a rear seat occupant fell asleep at the wheel. The vehicle veered off the southbound traffic portion of the New York State Thruway near mile post marker 132.7, careened down a non-traversable embankment and crashed in a V-shaped ditch at the bottom. The Thruway site where the vehicle left the highway was within a 22-mile resurfacing and safety-improving project, which was completed in 1986 pursuant to an agreement between the Thruway Authority and Callanan Industries Inc., as general contractor.

Pursuant to its contract with the Thruway Authority, Callanan agreed, by a date certain, to "construct and complete in the most substantial and workmanlike manner, the construction, improvement or reconstruction of the project" identified in the project plans and specifications. The project specifications called for the removal of some 275 feet of existing guiderail in the vicinity of mile marker 132.7 and its replacement by a longer (312.5 feet) guiderail system. The contract documents also contemplated Callanan's use of subcontractors on the project.

In a related agreement, the Thruway Authority engaged the construction engineering firm of Clough, Harbour Associates as project "Engineer" to inspect and supervise Callanan's compliance with the contract plans and specifications. Under the Thruway Authority's agreement with Callanan, the Engineer's recommendation was required before final acceptance of the contractor's work.

Callanan entered into a subcontract with defendant San Juan Construction and Sales Company for the installation of the guiderail system in question. The subcontract incorporated the general contract by reference. It also stipulated that "[a]ll drawings, * * * certifications [and] approvals of the Subcontractor shall be submitted for approval of the Architect or Engineer," that is, "the person appointed by the Owner to supervise the work of the Contractor on behalf of the Owner." In addition, Callanan reserved the right to demand at any time that San Juan furnish evidence of its ability to fully perform the subcontract in the manner and within the time specified in the subcontract.

Suit was brought on behalf of the infant plaintiff against Callanan, San Juan and Clough Harbour. The gravamen of the action was both the negligent failure to complete the full 312.5 feet of new guiderailing called for by the Callanan general contract and the San Juan subcontract, and Clough Harbour's negligent inspection and approval of the installation despite such non-completion. Specifically, the complaint alleged that (1) San Juan installed only some 212 of the 312.5 feet of guiderailing called for by the contracts; (2) the missing portion of the guiderail installation included the place where the Jetta went out of control and left the highway; and (3) as a result of the negligent non-completion of the guiderail installation, the infant plaintiff incurred devastating injuries when the Jetta crashed at the bottom of the embankment.

After joinder of issue and discovery, Callanan and San Juan moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint, based in part on the contention that, as purely contracting parties with respect to installation of the guiderailing, they owed no duty to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs' response was that both defendants undertook a duty to perform safety improvements and were liable for their "negligent performance of these improvements [which] directly caused Ned Church's injuries." Plaintiffs described the duty claimed here as follows: "It is well established law that where one undertakes work on a public highway which if not done carefully will create dangerous conditions to the general public, he is under a duty to use requisite care and that duty cannot be delegated." They submitted opinion evidence that, had the guiderailing been completed in accordance with the Callanan and San Juan contracts, the Jetta would have been prevented from plunging down the embankment and crashing at the bottom, thereby causing the infant plaintiff's serious injuries. Supreme Court denied the motion for summary judgment. On appeal from that denial, the Appellate Division reversed and granted summary judgment to San Juan ( 285 A.D.2d 16). After further proceedings not relevant to this appeal, a final judgment was entered at Supreme Court.

During the pendency of the appeals, plaintiffs settled their suits against Callanan and Clough Harbour.

The case is before this Court as of right, pursuant to CPLR 5601(d), on the basis of the two-Justice dissent at the Appellate Division. We now affirm.

The threshold and dispositive question on this appeal is whether San Juan owed the infant plaintiff a duty of care. The existence and scope of a duty of care is a question of law for the courts entailing the consideration of relevant policy factors (see Hamilton v. Beretta U.S.A. Corp., 96 N.Y.2d 222, 232). In this case, any duty San Juan had with respect to the installation of guiderailing at mile post marker 132.7 on the southbound Thruway arose exclusively out of San Juan's contractual undertakings set forth in its subcontract with Callanan. In other words, San Juan had no preexisting duty imposed by law to install guiderailing at that point on the Thruway.

Beginning with Chief Judge Cardozo's landmark decision in H.R. Moch Co. v. Rensselaer Water Co. ( 247 N.Y. 160), we have consistently held that, ordinarily, breach of a contractual obligation will not be sufficient in and of itself to impose tort liability to non-contracting third parties upon the promisor (see Eaves Brooks Costume Co. v. Y.B.H. Realty Corp., 76 N.Y.2d 220, 226). Rather, the injured party is relegated to contractual remedies, if any. This reflects generally accepted legal principles, largely derived from Moch. "[I]f the alleged obligation to do or not to do something that was breached could not have existed but for a manifested intent [to contract], then contract law should be the only theory upon which liability would be imposed" (Prosser Keeton, Torts § 92, at 656 [5th ed][emphasis in original]).

As more extensively discussed in Espinal v. Melville Snow Contrs., Inc. ( 98 N.Y.2d 136, 139-141), our cases have nevertheless thus far identified three sets of circumstances, as exceptions to the general rule, in which a duty of care to non-contracting third parties may arise out of a contractual obligation or the performance thereof. In such cases, the promisor is subject to tort liability for failing to exercise due care in the execution of the contract. The first is where the promisor, while engaged affirmatively in discharging a contractual obligation, creates an unreasonable risk of harm to others, or increases that risk (see id. at 139, 141-142 ["a defendant who undertakes to render services and then negligently creates or exacerbates a dangerous condition may be liable for any resulting injury" (citing Moch, 247 N.Y. at 167)]).Moch describes that conduct, subjecting the promisor to tort liability, as "launch[ing] a force or instrument of harm" ( 247 N.Y. at 168; see Cubito v. Kreisberg, 51 N.Y.2d 900,affirming for reasons stated in opn below 69 A.D.2d 738).

The second set of circumstances giving rise to a promisor's tort liability is where the plaintiff has suffered injury as a result of reasonable reliance upon the defendant's continuing performance of a contractual obligation (see Espinal, 98 N.Y.2d 136 ["where the plaintiff detrimentally relies on the continued performance of the contracting party's duties"]; see also Prosser Keeton,supra, at 658; Restatement [Second] of Torts § 324A [c]).

Third, we have imposed tort liability upon a promisor "where the contracting party has entirely displaced the other party's duty to maintain the premises safely" (Espinal, 98 N.Y.2d at 140 [citing Palka v. Servicemaster Mgt. Servs. Corp., 83 N.Y.2d 579, 589 (1994)]). In contrast to the first exception, the promisor under such circumstances may indeed be liable for failing to make conditions safer for the injured party.

Plaintiff fails to qualify under any of the foregoing exceptions. There is no evidence in the record that San Juan's incomplete performance of its contractual duty to install 312.5 feet of guiderailing falls within the first exception — i.e., that it created or increased the risk of the Jetta's divergence from the roadway beyond the risk which existed even before San Juan entered into any contractual undertaking. In this respect, San Juan classically exemplifies the promisor described in Moch who is immune from liability because the breach of contract consists "merely in withholding a benefit * * * where inaction is at most a refusal to become an instrument for good" (Moch, 247 N.Y. at 167-168). San Juan's failure to install the additional length of guiderail did nothing more than neglect to make the highway at Thruway mile post marker 132.7 safer — as opposed to less safe — than it was before the re-paving and safety improvement project began.

Likewise, this case does not fall within the second exception. It is not (and cannot be) contended here that the tragic loss of control of the Jetta occurred because the driver "detrimentally relie[d] on the continued performance of [San Juan's contractual] duties" (Espinal, 98 N.Y.2d at 140) when she failed to remain awake and alert at the wheel.

Nor can San Juan's liability be sustained under an assumption of the Thruway Authority's safety duty theory under Palka or Espinal, both of which are instructive while reaching opposite results. They teach that tort liability for breach of contract will not be imposed merely because there is some safety-related aspect to the unfulfilled contractual obligation. If liability invariably follows non-performance of some safety-related aspect of a contract, the exception would swallow up the general rule against recovery in tort based merely upon the failure to act as promised. Thus, the open-ended possibility of liability apprehended by Judge Cardozo in Moch would become a reality. Our decision denying the promisors' liability in Eaves Brooks demonstrates that there are limitations on the imposition of liability based upon a defendant's assumption of its promisee's duty to safeguard third persons.

Palka illustrates the kind of additional factors which may support recovery in tort upon the theory that the promisor assumed the promisee's safety responsibilities. In Palka, the plaintiff nurse-employee of a hospital was injured when a defectively maintained fan fell on her while she was caring for a patient. In holding the proof sufficient to impose liability upon the maintenance company with whom the hospital had a service contract, we relied upon the evidence that the contract was "comprehensive and exclusive" ( 83 N.Y.2d at 588) as to preventative maintenance, inspection and repair, thus making the defendant "the sole privatized provider for a safe and clean hospital premises" (id. at 589). Moreover, we pointed out that, in undertaking all aspects of safety inspection and repair at the health facility, "defendant 'does or ought to foresee the likelihood of physical harm to third persons as a result of reasonable reliance by the owner on [it] to discover or repair dangerous conditions'" (id. [quoting Prosser Keeton, supra, § 93, at 670][emphasis supplied]).

Contrariwise, in Espinal, we declined to impose liability upon a snow removal contractor, absent evidence that he created or exacerbated a dangerous condition because, under the terms of the contract, the promisee effectively "at all times retained its landowner's duty to inspect and safely maintain the premises" ( 98 N.Y.2d at 141).

This case falls comfortably within the Espinal precedential orbit. Unlike the circumstances presented by Palka, San Juan did not comprehensively contract to assume all the Thruway Authority's safety-related obligations with respect to the guiderail system. Instead, the Thruway Authority retained a separate project engineer to provide inspection and supervision of all aspects of the project, including contract compliance with respect to the stipulated length of the guiderail system. These roles of the project engineer were specifically incorporated into both sets of the relevant contract documents, which required the engineer's approval of the work.

Contrary to plaintiffs' contention, Espinal and the cases it discusses cannot be distinguished on the basis that the contractual obligations in all of them were executory, rather than executed, as in the instant case. The principles outlined in Espinal equally apply to executed contracts, such as an undertaking to repair a single device (see Prosser Keeton, supra, § 93, at 669-670).

The San Juan contract can be contrasted with Callanan's. In its contract with the Thruway Authority, Callanan assumed significant obligations to assure that the construction complied with the project specifications and that such work was completed in a timely fashion, thus inferably undertaking an obligation to inspect and oversee all aspects of the subcontractors' work.

Undisputably, under the contractual framework, San Juan never assumed the Thruway Authority's common law tort duty to oversee and insure the installation of the adequately safe length of guiderailing in the vicinity of mile post marker 132.7 of the southbound Thruway. Likewise, inspection responsibilities as to the proper length of guiderail were never contractually shifted to San Juan (see Prosser Keeton,supra, § 93, at 669]["Tort Liability for Physical Harm to Persons and Tangible Things Resulting from Failure to Repair or Inspect"]). Rather, the Thruway Authority (owner) either retained those safety responsibilities (see Espinal, 98 N.Y.2d at 141), or delegated them under contracts with Callanan or Clough Harbour. That being so, San Juan had no reason "to foresee the likelihood of physical harm to third persons as a result of reasonable reliance by [the Thruway Authority] on [it] to discover [the safety shortfall]" (Palka, 83 N.Y.2d at 589).

For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that San Juan owed no cognizable duty to plaintiff to complete its contractual obligation under the circumstances of this case. Accordingly, the judgment of Supreme Court and the prior order of the Appellate Division brought up for review should be affirmed, with costs.

Judgment appealed from and order of the Appellate Division brought up for review affirmed, with costs.


Summaries of

Church v. Callanan Industries Inc.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Nov 19, 2002
99 N.Y.2d 104 (N.Y. 2002)

describing the first Espinal exception as applying to circumstances "where the promisor, while engaged affirmatively in discharging a contractual obligation, creates an unreasonable risk of harm to others, or increases that risk"

Summary of this case from Guzman v. Wackenhut Corp.

describing the first Espinal exception as applying to circumstances "where the promisor, while engaged affirmatively in discharging a contractual obligation, creates an unreasonable risk of harm to others, or increases that risk"

Summary of this case from Guzman v. Wackenhut Corporation

explaining that the first Espinal exception does not allow for imposition of liability where the contracting party merely "fail[ed] to make conditions safer for the injured party" and finding no duty where the defendant failed to perform its contractual duty to install additional guiderails, thus resulting in car accident, because the defendant's conduct did not "create or increase the risk of the [car's] divergence from the roadway beyond the risk which existed even before [the defendant] entered into any contractual undertaking"

Summary of this case from Doe v. Hobart & William Smith Colls.

applying Espinal to the allegedly negligent installation of highway guardrails

Summary of this case from Klein v. City & Cnty. Paving Corp.

In Church, the court held that no duty of care existed between the defendant, who was under a contractual duty to install a guiderail along a portion of the highway, and the plaintiff, who was injured when his car diverged from the road at a point where defendant had failed to complete installing the guiderail.

Summary of this case from Connolly v. Chemtreat, Inc.

In Church, a plaintiff, injured when the vehicle in which he was a passenger veered off a highway and careened down an embankment, sued the subcontractor which had failed to complete performance of its contract for the installation of a guiderail along the section of the roadway where the car plunged off the road.

Summary of this case from Timmins v. Tishman Constr. Corp.

In Church (99 NY2d 104, supra), the infant plaintiff was injured when the vehicle in which he was a passenger veered off a highway and careened down an embankment.

Summary of this case from Farrugia v. 1440 Broadway Assocs.

In Church v Callanan Indus., 99 N.Y.2d 104, 111, (2002], this phrase is interpreted as referring to a situation "where the promisor, while engaged affirmatively in discharging a contractual obligation [as McCue did in selling and delivering a shopping cart corral, which it designed for the purpose of sale, to Christmas Tree Shops], creates an unreasonable risk of harm to others, or increases that risk."

Summary of this case from Myles v. Spring Valley Marketplace, LLC

In Church v Callanan Indus., Inc. (99 NY2d 104 [2002]), a contractor failed to install the full length of guard rail it had been hired to place along a highway and plaintiff's decedent died in a car crash along the stretch of road where the shortfall was located.

Summary of this case from Kenny v. Turner Constr. Co.

In Church v Callanan Indus., Inc. (99 NY2d 104 [2002]), a contractor failed to install the full length of guard rail it had been hired to place along a highway and plaintiff's decedent died in a car crash along the stretch of road where the shortfall was located.

Summary of this case from Kenny v. Turner Constr. Co.

In Church v Callanan Indus. (99 NY2d 104), the vehicle in which the infant plaintiff was a passenger veered off a highway, "careened down a nontraversable embankment and crashed in a V-shaped ditch at the bottom" (id. at 109.)

Summary of this case from Fried v. Signe Nielsen Landscape Architect, P.C.

In Church, the roadway, and the danger presented by the adjacent embankment and ditch to the occupant of a vehicle that might leave the roadway, existed before the subcontractor undertook the contractual obligation to install guiderailing.

Summary of this case from Fried v. Signe Nielsen Landscape Architect, P.C.

In Church v Callanan Industries, Inc. (99 NY2d 104), the Court of Appeals revisited its holding in Espinal in the context of a plaintiff who was injured in a car accident when a car in which he was a passenger went off the road at a point where a subcontractor had failed to place guardrails that it had been hired to install.

Summary of this case from Baulieu v. Ardsley Associates

In Church v. Callanan Industries, Inc., 99 NY2d 104 (2002), the court granted a subcontractor's motion for summary judgment, after concluding that it was not liable to the plaintiff for any breaches of it's contract with the State, the entity who hire the contractor.

Summary of this case from Rodriguez v. E P Assoc.

launching an instrument of harm is synonymous with creating or exacerbating a dangerous condition

Summary of this case from Dawson v. Columbus Construction Corp.

In Church, a subcontractor who agreed to install a guiderail system along a portion of the New York State Thruway but did not complete the installation, was held not to have had a duty of care to the infant plaintiff who was severely injured when the driver of the vehicle in which he was riding fell asleep and the car veered off the road at a location where the guiderails were missing.

Summary of this case from MILLING v. CITY OF NEW YORK

In Church v. Callanan Industries, Inc., 99 NY2d 104 (2002), the court granted a subcontractor's motion for summary judgment, after concluding that it was not liable to the plaintiff for any breaches of its contract with the State, the entity who hired the contractor.

Summary of this case from Nasser v. O.W. Hubbell, Inc.

In Church v. Callanan Industries, Inc., 99 NY2d 104 (2002), the Court held that one of the defendants, San Juan, did nothing more than neglect to make the highway safer than it was before, rather than making it less safe.

Summary of this case from Bienaime v. Reyer
Case details for

Church v. Callanan Industries Inc.

Case Details

Full title:NED S. CHURCH, AN INFANT, BY WENDY SMITH, C., ET AL., Appellants, v…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Nov 19, 2002

Citations

99 N.Y.2d 104 (N.Y. 2002)
752 N.Y.S.2d 254
782 N.E.2d 50

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