This case requires us to address an issue left open in
Harris v. Suniga,
We take the facts from the Court of Appeals opinion and the summary judgment record. Plaintiffs hired defendant Keith Lucas to be general contractor for the completion of their house, after substantial work had been done by other contractors. Plaintiffs signed a contract with Lucas that required him to perform all work “in a workmanship like manner and in compliance with all building codes and other applicable laws.” Plaintiffs also contracted with defendant Kevin Mayo to do the framing for the house. 2 Plaintiffs’ house was substantially complete by January 1998. More than six years later, plaintiffs discovered extensive water damage, including rotting sheathing and framing, which they claim resulted from defects in defendants’ work. 3
Plaintiffs filed this action alleging breach of contract and negligence. Plaintiffs’ negligence claim presented three overlapping grounds for relief. Plaintiffs claimed that
Plaintiffs appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment on the contract claim and reversed on the negligence claim.
4
First, the court surveyed
the law governing tort claims between contracting parties and determined that plaintiffs could not bring a common law negligence action without establishing .a standard of care independent of the terms of the contract. That standard of care could arise from a “special relationship” between the parties or it could be expressed in a statute or administrative rule.
Abraham,
The court then examined whether plaintiffs had shown that they were in a “special relationship” with defendants that established a standard of care independent of the contract. The court noted that parties are in a “special relationship” when one party delegates to the other the authority to make decisions for her benefit, such as a client’s relationship with her attorney. The court determined that plaintiffs had not established that they had delegated responsibility to defendants to make independent decisions on behalf of plaintiffs and in plaintiffs’ interest. Rather, plaintiffs had entered into an arm’s-length transaction with defendants in which each party acted for its own benefit. Id. at 572. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals agreed with the trial court that plaintiffs and defendants were not in the kind of “special relationship” that imposed on defendants a heightened duty, the breach of which could be the basis for a tort action.
The Court of Appeals, however, did agree with plaintiffs that a statute or administrative rule could establish a standard of care independent of the contract and that plaintiffs’ allegations that defendants had failed to comply with the building code, thereby causing damage to plaintiffs’ property, were sufficient to state a negligence claim under that theory.
5
Id.
at 573. The court also held that plaintiffs had
demonstrated that there was a genuine issue of material fact by providing an affidavit from their counsel stating that she had retained experts
On review, defendants argue that the Court of Appeals erred by holding that the building code created a standard of care independent of the contract between the parties. 6 In defendants’ view, a party to a contract may bring a tort claim arising out of the breach of that contract only when the parties are in a “special relationship” that implicates a standard of care independent of the terms of the contract. For the reasons set out below, we conclude that neither a special relationship nor a statutory standard of care, such as the building code, is necessary to bring a negligence claim here. In our view, plaintiffs stated a common law negligence claim based on defendants’ alleged failure to exercise reasonable care to avoid foreseeable harm to plaintiffs’ property. That negligence claim is not foreclosed by their contract with defendants, because the terms of the contract do not purport to alter or eliminate defendants’ liability for the property damage plaintiffs claim to have suffered.
This case requires us to examine the circumstances in which harm to a person’s property, caused by another, may be the basis for a contract claim or a tort claim — or both. Contract obligations are “ ‘based on the manifested intention of the parties to a bargaining transaction,’ ” whereas tort obligations are “ ‘imposed by law — apart from and independent of promises made and therefore
apart from the manifested intention of the parties
— to avoid injury to others.’ ”
Conway v. Pacific University,
“[UJnless the parties invoke a status, a relationship, or a particular standard of conduct that creates, defines, or limits the defendant’s duty, the issue of liability for harm actually resulting from defendant’s conduct properly depends on whether that conduct unreasonably created a foreseeable risk to a protected interest of the kind of harm that befell the plaintiff.”
Id. at 17. Thus, Fazzolari lays out a framework to address whether a common law negligence claim is legally cognizable even when there is a contractual relationship between the parties. In answering that question, we first consider whether plaintiffs alleged that defendants unreasonably created a foreseeable risk of harm to a protected interest, resulting in injury to plaintiffs. If so, we must determine whether the contract between the parties altered or eliminated defendants’ common law duty to avoid harming plaintiffs. If it did not, then the contract does not bar plaintiffs from bringing a negligence action against defendants.
Plaintiffs assert that contractors are subject to the common law negligence standard of care.
See Harris,
Defendants do not dispute that plaintiffs’ alleged injury is property damage and not a purely economic loss. Defendants, however,
The contract’s reference to performing the work “in a workmanship like manner and in compliance with all building codes and other applicable laws” simply reiterated the common law negligence standard that would have applied to defendants’ work in the absence of a contract. It did not “create” or “define” any duty defendants did not already have. The question then is whether that reference “limited” plaintiffs’ claims against defendants.
Nothing in this court’s cases suggests that, by entering into a contract, a party necessarily waives tort claims against another party to the contract.
See Estey v. Mackenzie Engineering Inc.,
“When the relationship involved is between contracting parties, and the gravamen of the complaint is that one party caused damage to the other by negligently performing its obligations under the contract, then, and even though the relationship between the parties arises out of the contract, the injured party may bring a claim for negligence if the other party is subject to a standard of care independent of the terms of the contract. If the plaintiffs claim is based solely on a breach of a provision in the contract, which itself spells out the party’s obligation, then the remedy normally will be only in contract, with contract measures of damages and contract statutes of limitation. That is so whether the breach of contract was negligent, intentional, or otherwise.”
Id. at 106 (emphasis added).
The parties disagree as to whether Georgetown allows common law negligence principles to provide the “independent standard of care” that must be identified for one party to bring a tort claim against the other, when the parties are in a contractual relationship. In defendants’ view, Georgetown requires a “special relationship” to exist between contracting parties before the negligent performance of contract obligations can be the basis for a tort claim. According to defendants, it is the nature of the relationship between the parties — such as the responsibility of one party to act for the other’s benefit — that implicates an independent standard of care. Plaintiffs respond that Georgetown requires only that there be some applicable standard of care independent of the terms of the contract, and they argue that such a standard can derive from a “special relationship” or from some other source of law, including the common law duty to use reasonable care to avoid injury to others.
Defendants read
Georgetown
too broadly.
Georgetown
was a negligence action by an insured against its insurance •carrier seeking economic damages that the insured had sustained because of the carrier’s failure to use reasonable care in defending the insured. Because the plaintiff was seeking economic
For those reasons, we agree with plaintiffs that
Georgetown
and earlier cases support the conclusion that common law negligence principles apply — notwithstanding a contractual relationship — as long as the property damage for which the plaintiff seeks recovery was a reasonably foreseeable result of the defendant’s conduct. Thus, a negligence claim for personal injury or property damage that would exist in the absence of a contract will continue to exist
unless
the parties define their respective obligations and remedies in the contract to limit or foreclose such a claim. Parties may limit tort remedies by defining their obligations in such a way that the common law standard of care has been supplanted,
see Fazzolari,
Defendants argue that this approach undermines the distinction between contract and tort and would permit
every breach of contract to be brought as a tort claim. Defendants are incorrect. An example will help demonstrate the difference between actions taken in the performance of a contract that can be the basis for a contract claim only, and those that may also provide a basis for a tort claim. If an individual and a contractor enter into a contract to build a house, which provides that the contractor will install only copper pipe, but the contractor installs PVC pipe instead (assuming both kinds of pipe comply with the building code and the use of either would be consistent with the standard of care expected of contractors), that failure would be a breach of contract only.
7
That is so because the contract defined the contractor’s obligation to use a particular material (and no other), which the contractor then failed to do.
See Georgetown,
On the other hand, if the contractor installed the PVC pipe in a defective manner and those pipes therefore leaked, causing property damage to the house, the homeowner would have claims in both contract and tort. The homeowner could recover in contract both for the failure to install copper pipe and for the failure to perform the contract in a reasonably skillful manner.
See Cabal v. Donnelly,
We now return to the terms of the contract here to determine whether plaintiffs’ claim sounded in common law negligence and, if so, whether the parties’ contract altered or eliminated defendants’ common law obligation to avoid reasonably foreseeable harm to plaintiffs’ property or modified the remedies available to plaintiffs.
The contract here provides: “All work shall be completed in a workmanship like manner and in compliance with all building codes and other applicable laws.” The Court of Appeals apparently viewed that promise as implicitly incorporating the common law standard of care into the contract. In rejecting plaintiffs’ argument that common law negligence principles provide an “independent standard of care,” the court stated, “When a contract expressly or implicitly incorporates the general ‘duty’ to take reasonable measures to avoid foreseeable risks, that standard of care is not considered to impose an independent tort duty.”
Abraham,
As noted, in the absence of a contractual relationship, defendants here would be subject to a common law negligence claim by plaintiffs.
See Harris,
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that plaintiffs’ allegations of property damage against defendants state a claim for negligence.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings.
Notes
Plaintiffs brought this action as trustees of a trust that owns the house. Plaintiffs named 11 defendants — other contractors and subcontractors — but only-defendants Lucas and Mayo are parties to this appeal.
Plaintiffs’ contract with Mayo is not in the record. The parties, however, have treated that contract as containing the same terms as the Lucas contract, at least as relevant to the issues on appeal.
The statute of limitations for contract actions is six years. ORS 12.080(1). Tort claims arising out of the construction of a house must be brought within two years of the date that the cause of action accrues, but, in any event, within 10 years of the house being substantially complete. ORS 12.110; ORS 12.135. Tort claims ordinarily accrue when the plaintiff discovers or should have discovered the injury.
Berry v. Branner,
Plaintiffs ask this court to review the Court of Appeals decision that plaintiffs’ contract claims are barred by the statute of limitations. We decline to do so.
Plaintiffs characterized their claim based on defendants’ failure to comply with applicable building codes as “negligence per se.” As the Court of Appeals correctly noted, however, negligence per se is not a separate claim for relief, but is simply shorthand for a negligence claim in which the standard of care is expressed by a statute or rule. See Shahtout v. Emco Garbage Co., 298 Or 598, 601, 695 P2d 897 (1985) (so stating).
Defendant Lucas also argues that the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the affidavit submitted by plaintiffs’ counsel was sufficient to establish a genuine issue of material fact and therefore preclude summary judgment. We reject that argument without discussion.
In
Securities-Intermountain v. Sunset Fuel,
Whether the contractor’s failure to install the contractually specified pipe was intentional or was the result of negligence, the action would, in any event, be for breach of contract.
See Georgetown,
