Davis v. Summerfield.

63 L.R.A. 492, 45 S.E. 654, 133 N.C. 325, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 10, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 63 L.R.A. 492 (Davis v. Summerfield.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Summerfield., 63 L.R.A. 492, 45 S.E. 654, 133 N.C. 325, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 65 (N.C. 1903).

Opinion

Montgomeey, J.

One of the questions presented by this appeal is a most important one, and that question is whether *326 or not the owner of a city lot is liable for an injury done to an adjoining proprietor’s brick wall, through the negiigence of an independent contractor in excavating for the purpose of building a-wall against and alongside the adjoining proprietor’s wall, and where the excavation extended below the foundation of the wall of the adjoining proprietor.

There was evidence offered on the trial tending to show that the excavating, which the jury found was the cause of the injury to the plaintiff’s wall, was done by the defendant himself, and from that evidence the jury might have found that the injury was- caused by the direct and active agency of the deféndant himself. But for the purposes of this discussion it will be assumed that the contractor performed the work.

For what negligent acts of an independent contractor employed to do work entirely under his own control which have resulted in injury to third persons the employer may be liable is a subject that has .often been before the courts. The principle appertaining to that relation in respect to such liability is that when work is performed by a competent contractor under an agreement, which imposed upon him complete control and of such persons as he may employ to labor under him, such persons will be the servants of the contractor and not the servants of the employer, and the employer will not be liable for damages arising from injuries caused by negligence of the contractor or his workmen, for the reason that the relation of master and servant does not exist between the employer and the contractor’s servant.

In the domain of the law of negligence the general rule is that where an injury has been sustained by one through the negligence of another, the party injured must seek his remedy against that one whose actual negligence caused the injury, and against that one only — he being alone liable. There are exceptions to this general rule, as, for instance, where the rela *327 tion of master and servant exists. In that case the negligence of the servant is to be imputed to the maser in cases where, the servant, in the performance of the act which causes the injury, is acting within the line of his duty — the scope of his employment. The reasoning upon which this exception rests is perfectly dear; and it is because the servant is acting for the master and by his direction, and the master having-selected and being in control of his servant makes him his representative in the business in which he is employed. But in the complication of business and social affairs it is often necessary that some who follow special and independent vocations should be intrusted by others — owners of property— with the alteration or improvement of that property, and such persons are employed in many ways under varying conditions, not as servants to follow the method and plans directed and ordered by the employer, but as independent contractors to do work for which they are specially fitted to do, according to their own ideas and upon their own responsibility. In such a case the duty which the contractor owes arises out of the contract and not under the relation of master and servant, or principal and agent, and the maxim qui facit per alium facit per se does not apply; and neither public policy nor the relation between the employer and the independent contractor demands or requires that the negligence of either one should subject the other to liability to third persons. And it seems well established in principle that no liability exists in favor of third persons against the innocent party in such eases. Any person who may have been injured has his remedy against the real one who has done the wrong. There are, of course, exceptions to this rule of exemption, well settled and understood; such as in a ease where a statute imposes a duty, or where the contract between the employer and the contractor is unlawful or provides for the execution of an act which when completed will create a nuisance. A statutory duty *328 cannot be delegated so as to exempt the one who bas taken npon himself the duty imposed from responsibility; and one who creates a nuisance would be forbidden by public policy to shield himself, the real author of tire wrong, from responsibility by casting it upon another. There is yet another class of cases where there is an exception to the exemption, and that is where the thing contracted to be done is necessarily attended with danger, however skilfully and carefully performed, said by Judge Dillon to be “intrinsically dangerous.” There the employer cannot escape liability for an injury resulting from the doing of the work, although the act performed might be lawful. 2 Dillon on Mun. Corp., sec. 1029. And there is still another class of cases to be excepted from the exemption, and that is where the contract requires an- act to be performed on the premises which will probably be injurious to third persons if reasonable care is omitted in the course of its performance. The liability of the employer in such a case rests upon the view that he cannot be the author of plans and actions dangerous to the property of others without exercising due care to anticipate and prevent injurious consequences. The case before us, it seems to us, falls under this exception to- the general rule.

This last class of cases probably ought to be regarded as rather an extension of the one where the act to be done is “intrinsically dangerous” than a separate class.

In the ease of Bower v. Peate, 1 Q. B. Div., 321 (1875-’76), the facts were almost identical with those in the present case. There the contention of the defendant was that the removal of the soil, to the support of which the adjoining owner was entitled, was not wrongful in itself, and that it only became so when followed by injury to the neighbor; and that, therefore, if such injurious consequences could have been averted by efficient means, artificial, for the natural support previously afforded by the soil, the removal of the soil *329 was not wrongful; that the defendant engaged the contractor to execute the work and to take the necessary precaution to protect the plaintiff’s premises, and therefore, if the work had been done according to the contract, it would have been lawful and would have been attended with no injurious consequences; that the injuries arose from the negligence of the contractor alone, and the defendant was, therefore, entitled to the benefit of the general rule; that when a person employs a contractor to do work, lawful in itself and involving no injurious consequences to others, and damage arises to another from the negligence of the contractor or his servants, the contractor and not his employer is liable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 L.R.A. 492, 45 S.E. 654, 133 N.C. 325, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-summerfield-nc-1903.