This appeal follows an order by the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Civil Division, which granted judgment on the pleadings to the appellees and dismissed appellants’ complaint. Appellants, employees of the Motor Coils Manufacturing Company, Inc., brought suit seeking damages for lost wages, alleging that appellees’ negligence caused a train derailment which damaged the Motor Coils plant. As a result of the derailment, production at the plant was curtailed and appellants suffered loss of work and wages. Appellants did not suffer personal injury or property damage from the derailment.
On appeal, the appellants raise two issues. First, appellants argue that Pennsylvania should recognize a cause of *20 action to compensate a party suffering purely economic loss, absent any direct physical injury or property damage, as a result of the negligence of another party. We find this argument to be without merit.
The general rule is stated in the Restatement (Second) of Torts Sec. 766C:
Negligent Interference with Contract or Prospective Contractual Relation. One is not liable to another for pecuniary harm not deriving from physical harm to the other, if that harm results from the actor’s negligently
(a) causing a third person not to perform a contract with the other, or
(b) interfering with the other’s performance of his contract or making the performance more expensive or burdensome, or
(c) interfering with the other’s acquiring a contractual relation with a third person.
Thus, recovery for purely economic loss occasioned by tor-tious interference with contract or economic advantage is not available under a negligence theory.
Local Joint Executive Board of Las Vegas v. Stern,
The roots of this well-established rule reach back to the United States Supreme Court decision of
Robins Dry Dock and Repair Company v. Flint,
(A)s a general rule, at least, a tort to the person or property of one man does not make the tort-feasor liable to another merely because the injured person was under a contract with that other unknown to the doer of the wrong. The law does not spread its protection so far.
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Recently, the Georgia Court of Appeals was faced with a factual setting quite similar to the case at bar. In
Willis v. Georgia Northern Railway Company,
Finally, we note that allowance of a cause of action for negligent interference with economic advantage would create an undue burden upon industrial freedom of action, and would create a disproportion between the large amount of damages that might be recovered and the extent of the defendant’s fault. See Restatement (Second) of Torts Sec. 766C, comment a (1979). To allow a cause of action for negligent cause of purely economic loss would be to open the door to every person in the economic chain of the negligent person or business to bring a cause of action. Such an outstanding burden is clearly inappropriate and a danger to our economic system.
Accordingly, we decline appellants’ invitation to adopt the reasoning of the California Supreme Court in
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J’Aire Corp. v. Gregory,
Appellants' second argument is that the trial court erred in granting appellees' motion for judgment on the pleadings because there were genuine issues of material fact in dispute between the parties. We note that judgment on the pleadings can be awarded on the basis that the appellants failed to state a cause of action.
Enoch v. Food Fair Stores, Inc.,
Order affirmed.
