Lydecker v. Board of Chosen Freeholders

103 A. 251, 91 N.J.L. 622, 1918 N.J. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 4, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 103 A. 251 (Lydecker v. Board of Chosen Freeholders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lydecker v. Board of Chosen Freeholders, 103 A. 251, 91 N.J.L. 622, 1918 N.J. LEXIS 190 (N.J. 1918).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bergen, J.

This action was instituted by an infant to recover for injuries caused by being thrown from his bicycle while riding along a public highway recently covered with oil by the defendant the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, under a contract with the hoard of chosen freeholders of the county of Passaic, which had control of the highway, and under a duty to keep it in repair. The action was brought against the county of Passaic and the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, and at the trial the proceedings were amended to include a claim by the father of the infant for the cost of medical services.

The trial court directed a judgment of nonsuit in favor of the county, and a verdict in favor of the oil company, as to both plaintiffs from which they appeal. The complaint states different causes of action against each defendant. That against the Standard oil company being that it entered into [624]*624a contract with the county in which it agreed to oil certain public roads with a preparation of oil; to protect the road from traffic for at least six hours after placing the oil, or until the oil had permeated the surface of the road; to oil but one side at a time and leave the other open to traffic until the oil spread on the other side had sufficiently penetrated the roadbed to allow traffic on it; that in violation of the agreement of the defendant the oil company negligently and improperly placed the oil over the entire surface of the road in large and excessive quantities so that it did not penetrate the roadbed hut rendered the surface slippery and dangerous, and failed to close the road to traffic, or warn persons using it of its dangerous condition.

The only negligence averred in the complaint against the oil company is a violation of the contract in the foregoing-particulars. The contract also provided that the oil shordd be distributed, by means of a suitable. sprinkler satisfactory to the county engineer or supervisor, at not more than one-quarter gallon per square yard. There was evidence from which a jury might infer that the quantity of oil which the contract provided for was more than was necessary to accomplish the required purpose, but none that it was in excess of that required by the contract, or that the distribution was not made as required by the contract. It is well settled in this state that no duty to the plaintiff from the defendant the oil company arose out of the contract, as he was a stranger to it, and also that he cannot complain if the parties to it chose to alter the contract and distribute oil over the entire surface of the road at one time instead of one-half of it. Such a change, if made under the direction of the county and with its consent, was a matter which did not concern the plaintiff. Marvin Safe Co. v. Ward, 46 N. J. L. 19; Styles v. Long, 70 Id. 301.

In his complaint the plaintiff relies upon a violation of the contract which the proof did not sustain. To hold a contractor liable for an injury to a third person because of negligence in the execution of his contract, there must be a duty or liability, independent of the contract, due from [625]*625the contractor to the person injured. Marvin Safe Co. v. Ward, supra, where it was said: “Such a contract creates the ordinary relation of employer and employe. It does not put off from the board of chosen freeholders the duty and responsibility which, the statute fixes upon them, nor does it create any duty or liability on the part of the other contracting party except such as arises inter sese from the terms of the contract. * * * Ho injustice can arise from the application of the principle adjudged in Winterbottom v. Wright; for if the work contracted for be such as that a duly exists towards third persons with respect to it, the party who contracts to have the work done will be liable for damages arising from a breach of the duty, although the injury arose from the fault o f the person with whom ho contracted.” Tho fact that a county is made liable by statute for the insufficiency of a bridge while there is no such statutory imposition for an imperfect highway, does not alter the legal principle. It may be that the want of a statute putting maintenance of highways in a class with bridges works a hardship in this and similar cases, hut the cure is through legislative action. A contractor would lie liable if he did any act independent of his contract, resulting in a nuisance, oven if not negligent in its performance, as it may be that the more perfect the execution the greater the nuisance. In the present case, the, plaintiff rested Ms complaint upon the non-performance of a duty imposed by the contract, which was not supported by any proof, and to that issue only could his proofs apply.

The appellant, in order to avoid the rule that the defendant owes him no duty under a contract to which he was a stranger, now argues that “this case, however, did not arise out of the failure of the Standard oil company to perform its contract. The cause of action in the case at bar was the creation and maintenance of a nuisance.” The trouble with this claim is that it is not within the pleadings, and if it was, can only be applicable to some act independent of the contract, of which there is no proof, and the proposition itself implies performance of an act provided for by the contract, nor does this question appear to have been raised in the trial [626]*626court where the case was dealt with as presented by the pleadings and the proof in support of the issue tendered.

The motion for direction was rested on performance of the contract, and, as in the Marvin case, “the defendant was under no obligation to make the temporary roadway a good and substantial structure, except under the terms of his contract, and that if he was in no personal default, he cannot be held for the injuries sustained.” It is true that when the work is not in itself a nuisance, and the injury results from the negligence of a contractor in its execution, the contractor alone is liable (Cuff v. Newark and New York Railroad Co., 35 N. J. L. 17), but this is not applicable where the work designed by the principal is not obviously likely to create a nuisance, but because of error in design does so, although performed according to the contract, for in such case the negligence is in design and not in execution. In the present case, the contract calls for the spreading of a given quantity of oil per square yard, for a lawful purpose, by the use of a particular machine' — that is, one approved by the county, and the nuisance resulted only because the county erred in its specification of what was required. We think that in such case the negligence, if any, was that of the county, and it alone is liable, otherwise every contractor will be an insurer of the sufficiency of all specifications for public work, and we can perceive no difference between a contract to repair a bridge and one for the repair of a highway, a.t least where the work contracted for is not obviously or inherently dangerous, and, if properly performed, not likely to produce a nuisance. The method and means used was that specifically prescribed by the conntv. In Longmied v. Holliday, 6 Exch. 761, Baron Parke said that if a mason contract to build a bridge and does so, not according to the contract, and the defects are a nuisance, he is liable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 A. 251, 91 N.J.L. 622, 1918 N.J. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lydecker-v-board-of-chosen-freeholders-nj-1918.