Kapalczynski v. Globe Construction Co.

172 N.W.2d 852, 19 Mich. App. 396, 1969 Mich. App. LEXIS 960
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1969
DocketDocket 4,578
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 172 N.W.2d 852 (Kapalczynski v. Globe Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kapalczynski v. Globe Construction Co., 172 N.W.2d 852, 19 Mich. App. 396, 1969 Mich. App. LEXIS 960 (Mich. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

Levin, P. J.

The plaintiffs, Thomas Kapalczynsld and Kathleen Kapalczynsld (husband and wife), commenced this action to recover damages resulting from injuries sustained by Kathleen Kapalczynsld when she fell into a hole in a street in Manistee, Michigan. The hole was at an access point to gas transmission lines running under the street. The access point and the transmission lines are owned by defendant Michigan Consolidated Gas Company. 1 Defendant Globe Construction Company had resurfaced the street in September, 1965, a little over a year before the date, November 10, 1966, on which Mrs. Kapalczynsld was injured. The plaintiffs covenanted not to sue the city of Manistee before this action was commenced.

The trial judge granted a motion for accelerated judgment and dismissed the complaint. He ruled that the city was primarily liable and that the defendants had no contractual obligation to the plaintiffs. For purposes of this appeal, we assume the truth of the plaintiffs’ pleaded allegations that Mrs. Kapalczynsld’s injuries were caused by the defendants’ negligence.

The principal issue concerns the liability of a contractor after completion and acceptance of negligently-done work. In many jurisdictions the accepted work doctrine has insulated a contractor from liability for foreseeable harm to third persons resulting from his negligent performance of a completed contract. The conceptual bases of this doctrine are the absence of privity of contract between the contractor and the third person, the third person’s nonreliance on the contract between the de *399 fendant contractor and the owner, and the asserted lack of a “proximate” cansal connection because of the intervening negligence of the owner in accepting and thereafter maintaining the work.

Most courts have grafted exceptions to this rule of nonliability. Contractors have been held liable in cases where it was shown that the defective condition was imminently dangerous to life, or the contractor knew of the defect or willfully concealed such knowledge, or the condition created a nuisance, or the plaintiff’s use was intended or anticipated or, as it was sometimes put, the plaintiff was “impliedly invited.” 2

For reasons which we will now relate, we have concluded that the accepted work doctrine is not the law in Michigan and, accordingly, remand this case for trial. This conclusion is based on a series of cognate decisions establishing the right of injured persons to recover in products liability cases.

The leading case in Michigan (and a leading case in the law nationally) is Spence v. Three Rivers Builders & Masonry Supply, Inc. (1958), 353 Mich 120, where a manufacturer of cinder building blocks was held accountable for property damage caused by defective blocks which had been used in the construction of the plaintiff’s home. The Court viewed the question before it to be (p 128) “whether we are going to continue to be hobbled by such an obsolete rule [privity] and its swarming progeny of exceptions.” The Court abandoned the privity requirement after a thorough résumé of its complex history and a review of the historic decision in MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co. (1916) 217 NY 382 (111 NE 1050).

*400 Three Rivers was followed by Manzoni v. Detroit Coca-Cola Bottling Company (1961), 363 Mich 235; Barefield v. La Salle Coca-Cola Bottling Company (1963), 370 Mich 1; Hill v. Harbor Steel & Supply Corporation (1965), 374 Mich 194, and, most recently, Piercefield v. Remington Arms Company, Inc. (1965), 375 Mich 85, where an innocent bystander, injured when the barrel of a shotgun exploded because of a claimed defect in the ammunition used, was allowed to proceed to trial against the manufacturer of the ammunition, and the wholesaler and retailer. In a cogent opinion summarizing the law developed in the cited cases, the Piercefield Court stated that an injured plaintiff may recover upon proof of (pp 98, 99) “a defect attributable to the manufacturer and a causal connection between the defect and the injury or damage of which he complains.” 3

Whether the accepted work doctrine has survived this emphatic rejection of the privity requirement in products liability cases, is, we believe, now a somewhat rhetorical question. 4

Although the accepted work doctrine is referred to in Benton Harbor Malleable Industries, Inc. v. Pearson Construction Company (1957), 348 Mich 471, the Court did not base its decision on that doctrine. The plaintiff (who sued as subrogee of a *401 third person) had employed the defendant contractor to install a large complex machine in the plaintiff’s plant. The plaintiff had supervised the installation of the machine with bolts that it supplied. The Supreme Court ruled (p 481) that the contractor was not liable for an injury which occurred when one of the devices broke loose from its moorings because (1) there was no proof that the defendant was negligent, (2) the plaintiff’s negligence in failing to inspect the machine was the cause of the injury, 5 and (3) plaintiff could not hold the defendant responsible for fastening the device with bolts furnished by, and inserted under, plaintiff’s orders and instructions. 6

*402 In Benton Harbor, the plaintiff conceded that the (p 479) “general rule is that an independent contractor is not liable for injuries to third parties, where he has completed the work and turned it over to the contraetee, but claim[ed] there is an exception where * * * defendant’s work was so negligently performed as to be imminently dangerous to third parties.” The concession of the Benton Harbor plaintiff that the accepted work doctrine is the “general rule” means that the question whether the accepted work doctrine is part of our jurisprudence was assumed, not decided, in Benton Harbor. 7

In Sitta v. American Steel & Wire Division of U. S. Steel Corporation (CA6, 1958), 254 F2d 12, a products liability case involving a defective excavating machine, Benton Harbor was interpreted not as a departure from the modern rule eliminating the requirement of privity, but as a case where the contractor did not cause the injury. Benton Harbor’s precedential value is further undermined by the fact that two of the cases which it cites have been overruled; both New Jersey and New Mexico have now adopted the so-called modern rule.* *** 8

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Bluebook (online)
172 N.W.2d 852, 19 Mich. App. 396, 1969 Mich. App. LEXIS 960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kapalczynski-v-globe-construction-co-michctapp-1969.