Mandal v. Hoffman Construction Company

527 P.2d 387, 270 Or. 248, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 297
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 527 P.2d 387 (Mandal v. Hoffman Construction Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mandal v. Hoffman Construction Company, 527 P.2d 387, 270 Or. 248, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 297 (Or. 1974).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, C. J.

This is an action to recover damages suffered by plaintiff in carrying out his contract with the city of Salem as a result of the negligent conduct of defendant in failing to perform its contract with the city. Defendant’s demurrer was sustained and plaintiff appeals.

This litigation arises out of the construction of the Salem Civic Center. The complaint, in substance recited the following. Plaintiff contracted with Landscaping, Inc., to do the landscaping work which Landscaping, Inc. had contracted to do for the city. Defendant was hired directly by the city to do site development work. Included in these duties was the obligation to place upon the site fertile soil, free of noxious weeds. Defendant was required to submit a sample of the soil to the city’s architect for approval. Defendant was also obligated to place the topsoil to proper subgrade and compaction for planting of trees. Plaintiff, by contract, was given 89 days in which to landscape after defendant completed its tasks. However, allegedly because defendant was negligent in the performance of its duties in failing to submit soil sam *250 pies to the city’s architect, in failing to deposit weed-free soil on the site, and in failing to prepare proper snbgrade and compaction for planting, plaintiff was unable to complete his work within the prescribed time. Plaintiff claims as damages as a result of the delay the additional expenses such as wages, insurance premiums, and profits lost from other jobs he would have been able to perform had he been able to complete the project on time. It is this amount, plus recovery for “mental anguish” which plaintiff seeks to recover.

Plaintiff does not contend that defendant owes any kind of a contractual duty to him. His theory is that defendant’s duties under its contract, “coupled with the realization that the failure to carry out the terms of the contract, will cause substantial harm to plaintiff, raises a duty at law to proceed under the contract.” Plaintiff advances as “an even stronger reason,” the fact that this court has repudiated “the older doctrine that the lack of privity of contract between the contractor and the third person bars responsibility of the contractor to the third person” (quoting from Strandholm v. General Construction Co., 235 Or 145, 157, 382 P2d 843 (1963)).

The removal of the privity obstacle does not establish defendant’s liability in the present case because even if privity is no obstacle to recovery, there still remains the question of whether defendant owes a duty to plaintiff resting in tort.

If defendant had delayed the performance of its contract with the city solely for the purpose of causing damages to plaintiff, its conduct would be tortious as *251 to plaintiff, although incidentally it would arise out of the contract and would also render defendant liable to the city for breach of contract. The imposition of tort liability in such circumstances would rest upon the need to interdict reprehensible conduct which does not comport with the moral sense of the community.

There are cases which have held defendant liable where he has not intended to harm the plaintiff but has made a conscious choice not to perform and “has merely pursued his own ends, knowing that his conduct is certain, or substantially so, to prevent performance of the contract, but without any desire or primary object of doing so.” Among these cases are situations, as in the present case, in which defendant has broken his own contract upon which plaintiff’s contract depends.

It is not necessary for us to decide whether we would adopt such a rule because the complaint does not *252 allege that defendant pursued a course of conduct knowing that his conduct was substantially certain to cause plaintiff harm. Although the complaint alleges that defendant “was well aware of the terms of said contract and the reasonable time for completion,” it goes on to allege only that defendant “was negligent in the performance and non-performance of its duties under its contract with the city of Salem in the following particulars:

“1. In failing to prepare the project slopes to proper subgrade and compaction for planting in a timely manner and with reasonable diligence.
“2. In failing to use reasonable care to deposit weed free topsoil upon planting surfaces.
“3. In failing to use reasonable care to submit soil samples and obtain architect’s approval prior to hauling topsoil to site.”

These allegations do not purport to charge that defendant knew its failure to act would cause harm to plaintiff. Nor do they even purport to say that defendant knew of alternatives which would affect plaintiff differently. The conduct recited as constituting negligence could consist of a failure to hire adequately trained workmen, or failure properly to inspect the topsoil for weeds before depositing it, or other similar careless activities constituting a-breach of defendant’s contract with the city of Salem.

The question is whether non-intentional conduct of this nature will constitute a breach of duty, within the framework of the law of torts, to a person in the position of plaintiff in this case. "We hold that there is *253 no such duty where the only negligence charged is the failure to perform a contract with a third party.

We have tried to make a careful analysis of the cases in which it is contended that the defendant’s “non-feasance” in the performance of his contractual duties to his promisee has resulted in damage to the plaintiff through the interference with bis contractual relations, or by inflicting upon him economic loss in some other way. In most of these cases recovery has been denied. It has been suggested by eminent authority that this result can be explained on the ground “that the courts are deliberately refusing to protect any contract against negligence, influenced by fear of an undue burden upon freedom of action, the relative severity of the penalty which may be imposed upon mere negligence, the possibility of collusive claims and increased litigation, and the difficulty of apportioning damages.” It is further observed that this policy may be “too narrow.”

Although there may be grounds for taking a broader view in some of the cases where harm flows from the non-performance of contract, we do not think that the present case calls for such treatment. There is no way to express a concrete formula establishing *254 the point at which the non-performance of a contract will also generate tort liability to third persons. The most that the courts can do is to identify the factors which are relevant to the solution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
527 P.2d 387, 270 Or. 248, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandal-v-hoffman-construction-company-or-1974.