The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This matter arises from an accidental injury sustained by a worker on a construction site. The injured worker was employed as a driver for an excavating subcontractor that had agreed to deliver crushed stone to a general paving contractor. As she was attempting to unload the crushed stone at the construction site, the worker was injured as a result of a defective mechanical component of the dump truck.
The issue in this appeal is whether a general or prime contractor has a duty to assure the safety of an employee of a subcontractor; and, more specifically, whether that duty encompasses the safety of equipment supplied by the subcontractor and used by its employee at the contractor’s work site. In addressing that issue, we must also consider the relevance of statutory and regulatory safety standards governing the responsibilities of employers over workplace safety in determining the existence and the scope of such a duty of care.'
I
In August 1990, American Development Company (“American Development”) entered into a construction contract with Shop-Rite of Pennington, Inc. (“Shop-Rite”) to renovate and convert the interior of a warehouse building at the Bradlees Shopping Center on Route 206 in Bordentown, New Jersey into a Shop-Rite *226 Supermarket. Vornado, Inc. owned the property and undertook to renovate the exterior of the premises. American Development hired American Management Company (“American Management”) and American Refrigeration Company (“American Refrigeration”), two closely related companies, to manage and oversee the interior renovations. American Refrigeration used its employee, James Burlingame, as project manager.
During the renovations, Shop-Rite requested that a special exterior ramp be constructed for loading purposes. Shop-Rite contacted Burlingame to help arrange for the exterior paving work. Burlingame, on behalf of Shop-Rite, contracted with Pat Pavers, Inc. (“Pat Pavers”), an experienced paving and grading contractor. Burlingame informed Shop-Rite that he would oversee Pat Pavers’s work, but only as a professional courtesy. He wanted to ensure that Pat Pavers did not damage already completed construction and that the ramp was properly finished.
Pat Pavers relied on its employee, Fred Bernhard, as grading foreman for the paving crews. David Radlinski, another Pat Pavers employee, was placed in charge of mechanical maintenance. Pat Pavers subcontracted with other entities to provide vehicles and drivers to transport paving materials. In particular, Pat Pavers subcontracted with Fred Bernhard Excavating Co. (“Bernhard Excavating”), a company owned by Pat Pavers employee, Fred Bernhard. Plaintiff Terry Alloway was an employee of Bernhard Excavating and drove one of its trucks. Bernhard Excavating provided both truck and driver to Pat Pavers on a perdiem basis.
The contractual relationship between Pat Pavers and Bernhard Excavating was not committed to writing. Bernhard Excavating paid its own drivers, purchased its own insurance, and maintained its own vehicles. Plaintiff received her wages and workers’ compensation insurance from Bernhard Excavating and received no compensation or benefits from Pat Pavers.
The dump truck driven by plaintiff has a power take-off system that activates the lifting mechanism to raise the dumpster on the *227 track. The system is engaged by a button within the passenger compartment of the track. Plaintiff experienced problems with the power take-off system and the day before the accident discovered that a hydraulic pump, an integral part of the system, had fallen off a connecting bracket underneath the truck and was dragging on the roadway. Plaintiff brought this problem to the attention of her supervisor and Pat Pavers employee, Fred Bern-hard.
Bernhard called Pat Pavers and discussed the matter with a superintendent, Keith Harvilla. Bernhard asked Pat Pavers to repair the pump on the track because there was a load of asphalt already in its dumpster. Plaintiff subsequently drove the track to Pat Pavers’s garage, where Harvilla and another Pat Pavers employee, David Rablinsky, welded the pump back into place underneath the truck.
Plaintiff then drove the track to another construction site. Harvilla followed. When plaintiff attempted to unload asphalt at the site, the bed of the track would not raise. Harvilla used a 36” piece of steel manually to move a lever under the track and engage the power take-off system. The track bed then rose.
Harvilla informed plaintiff that the cable line required repair because it was stretched and did not allow the dump bed to rise. Harvilla also called Fred Bernhard at home that day, informing him that the cable must be fixed. Later in the evening, Fred Bernhard called plaintiff at home and informed her that the cable would be repaired or replaced by the next day. The cable was never fixed.
The following day plaintiff was sent to the Shop-Rite construction site to dump stone. Plaintiff had loaded and operated the dump truck once without incident that morning at another site. At the Shop-Rite site, however, the power take-off would not engage. Plaintiff got out of the track. She attempted manually to engage the power take-off lever on the bottom of the truck. She shifted the lever as Harvilla had done the previous day, except instead of using a metal bar, she used her arm to reach *228 under the truck. The power take-off'drive shaft engaged and started to spin. Plaintiffs hair and right hand .became caught, and she was pulled under the truck. Plaintiff sustained serious injuries as a result.
The Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration (“OSHA”) conducted an investigation following the accident. As a result, Bernhard Excavating was cited for noncompliance with OSHA regulation 29 C.F.R. § 1926.21(b)(2), for failing adequately to train its employees engaged in operating a dump truck with the hazards associated with the power take-off device.
Plaintiff filed this action in the Superior Court, Law Division, Mercer County. Plaintiff named as defendants, among other parties, American Development, American Management, American Refrigeration, James Burlingame, Pat Pavers, and Bernhard Excavating.
Plaintiff alleged that these defendants owed her a duty to provide a reasonably safe workplace. Plaintiff contended that they breached this duty by failing to make inspections of hazardous equipment, namely, the dump truck, and failing to instruct her on the proper operation of such equipment. Defendants conceded that they owed plaintiff a duty to provide a reasonably safe workplace but denied that they breached this duty.
The trial court granted motions for summary judgment brought by all defendants. Plaintiff thereafter filed, an appeal to the Appellate Division, which affirmed the decision of the Law Division. Following the denial of a motion
for
reconsideration, plaintiff then filed a petition for certification, which the Court granted. 152
N.J.
191,
II
The basic issue in this case is whether defendant Pat Pavers, a paving contractor, owed a duty as a prime or general contractor to assure the safety of plaintiff, an employee of Bernhard Excavating, a subcontractor engaged to deliver paving materials, and *229 whether that duty extended to the subcontractor’s equipment, a truck, which injured plaintiff while she was attempting to unload the materials at the work site. Determination of that issue necessarily involves consideration of the relevance of statutory and regulatory requirements, more specifically, OSHA regulations, imposed on general or prime contractors relating to the safety of employees of subcontractors at the work site.
The Appellate Division’s primary holding was that Pat Pavers (as well as the other defendants) was not liable to plaintiff under general common-law negligence principles. The court considered and applied the traditional common-law rule that relieves a general contractor from liability for the negligence of a subcontractor, citing
Wolczak v. National Electric Products Corp.,
66
N.J.Super.
64,
Plaintiff argues that although the prevailing rule is that a general or prime contractor is not responsible for the safety of the employees of a subcontractor in the performance of the subcon
*230
tractor’s work, a different rule should apply in this case. She cites
Kane v. Hartz Mountain Industries,
278
N.J.Super.
129,
In finding liability, the Appellate Division relied heavily on the relevance of a statutory mandate, an OSHA regulation requiring safety nets, as supporting tort liability. Id. at 137,
A major consideration in the determination of the existence of a duty of reasonable care under “general negligence principles” is the foreseeability of the risk of injury.
Carey v. Lovett,
132
N.J.
44, 57,
Invoking these principles, the Court in
Carvalho v. Toll Brothers & Developers,
143
N.J.
565,
The Court first considered the foreseeability of the risk, including its nature and severity. It found that the danger of collapse posed by the deep trenches was apparent and the facts “point[ed] clearly to the foreseeability of the risk of injury to workers in the circumstances surrounding decedent’s accident.”
Id.
at 574,
The Court also considered the relationship between the parties. It noted that the engineer’s express contractual responsibility was to ensure compliance with construction plans and the rate of work progress.
Id.
at 575,
The Court further stressed the “opportunity and capacity of [the] defendant to have avoided the risk of harm.”
Id.
at 576,
Finally, the Court considered fairness and policy in imposing a duty of care under the circumstances. Combining and weighing all relevant factors — the foreseeability of the nature and severity of the risk of injury based on the defendant’s actual knowledge of
*232
dangerous conditions, the relationship of the parties and the connection between the defendant’s responsibility for work progress and safety concerns, and the defendant’s ability to take corrective measures to rectify the dangerous conditions — the Court concluded that considerations of fairness and sound public policy impelled the recognition of a duty in the engineer to exercise reasonable care to avoid the risk of injury to employees of subcontractors on the construction site.
Id.
at 577-578,
In applying these general principles of tort liability in this ease, we are constrained to consider and weigh the facts most favorably in support of plaintiffs contentions, which were rejected on the basis of defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
See Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.,
142
N.J.
520,
The risk of injury was clearly foreseeable. As in Carvalho, where the on-site engineer knew of the danger, the record here reflects actual knowledge on the part of Pat Pavers of the risk of harm. On the day prior to the accident, three Pat Pavers employees, including two supervisors, knew that the truck was defective, and had attempted to correct the defect. When plaintiff was unable to unload asphalt at the site because the dump bed would not raise, Pat Pavers supervisor Harvilla used a metal rod manually to engage a lever under the truck and empty its contents. The lever was located under the truck in an area unguarded from the power take-off drive shaft responsible for lifting the bed. Under the circumstances, it was reasonably foreseeable that this defective component presented a danger to a person who would attempt to correct the defect by manually engaging the mechanism.
Further, there was a substantial and close relationship between the parties that could and did implicate workplace safety concerns. Pat Pavers was responsible under its contract with Shop-Eite for constructing a special exterior ramp on the site for loading *233 purposes and had engaged Bernhard Excavating as a subcontractor to deliver paving materials with its own truck and driver. The principal of Bernhard Excavating, Fred Bernhard, was also a superintendent of Pat Pavers; Bernhard supervised paving crews and had direct knowledge of the requirements of the work. There was a clear connection between plaintiffs performance on behalf of Bernhard Excavating and Pat Pavers’s own contractual interests. A breakdown or accident involving deliveries of paving materials by Bernhard Excavating would have resulted in an interruption and a delay in Pat Pavers’s work.
The relationship of the parties also created both the opportunity and capacity on the part of Pat Pavers to exercise authority and control over the equipment of Bernhard Excavating if safety concerns were implicated. Pat Pavers’s President, James M. Tuozzolo, acknowledged in depositions that .Pat Pavers’s supervisors had the authority to “dismiss” Bernard Excavating’s trucks from its work site “if there were a problem that developed with an independent trucker’s truck at the site [that] related to [the] job,” such as a “truck [that] was mechanically deficient and couldn’t pick up or dump the load,” and “if they felt that the truck could not be operated without a danger to [Pat Pavers’s] employees or other employees on the premises[ ].” The ability of Pat Pavers to undertake remedial measures is further evidenced by the fact that it had actually taken such steps to correct the mechanical defect in the truck the day before the accident.
The combination of these several factors — the foreseeability of harm, the relationship between the parties, and the opportunity and capacity to take corrective action — strongly supports the imposition of a duty of reasonable care on Pat Pavers to assure the safety of plaintiff on the work site as a matter of fairness and sound policy.
Ill
In determining the scope of the duty owed by Pat Pavers to plaintiff and the possible- breach of such a duty, the applicability *234 of federal safety regulations, specifically OSHA regulations, is highly relevant. The significance of such regulatory standards arises because the circumstances surrounding plaintiffs injury resulted in a violation of OSHA regulations by plaintiffs employer, Bernhard Excavating. The Appellate Division, however, concluding that OSHA regulations were not relevant, ruled that as a general matter there was “no merit to Alloway’s contention that the general contractor owed a duty to see that subcontractors complied with OSHA regulations.” 1
We consider first whether the federal OSHA statutory and regulatory standards impose an independent duty of care that can be applied to Pat Pavers. The Appellate Division in
Kane, supra,
held that although a “violation of the obligations imposed by the federal [OSHA] regulations supports a tort claim under state law,” 278
N.J.Super.
at 141,
The analysis undertaken by the Appellate Division in
Kane
reiterates that earlier made in
Bortz v. Rommel,
151
N.J.Super.
312,
When a legislative provision proscribes or requires certain conduct for the benefit of a class of persons but does not provide a civil remedy for the violation, the court may, if it determines that the remedy is appropriate in furtherance of the purpose of the legislation and needed to assure the effectiveness of the provision, accord to an injured member of the class a right of action, using a suitable existing tort action or a new cause of action analogous to an existing tort action.
[Id. at 321,376 A.2d 1261 .]
The court concluded that the statutory safety mandates did not impose direct liability on the contractor.
Id.
at 322,
In a later case,
Meder v. Resorts International Hotel,
240
N.J.Super.
470, 476-77,
These cases are grounded in the fact that OSHA and its predecessor, the Construction Safety Act, view regulatory enforcement, and not independent civil remedial action, as the central means to achieve workplace safety. As Kane, supra, recognized, while it is feasible to make liability turn on the violation of an OSHA regulation, a sounder approach accords the violation relevance, but not dispositive weight, in the liability inquiry:
[T]he paramount consideration of a worker’s safety is more clearly placed in focus by a more comprehensive rule which makes the primary contractor and each tier of subcontractor responsible for the safety of the workers under them on general negligence principles. This appears preferable to limiting liability to a specific finding of a violation of a regulation, which in some instances may be obscure, vague or difficult to comprehend or apply.
[278 N.J.Super. at 143,650 A.2d 808 .]
*236
Moreover, in the area of workplace safety, the common law provides ample remedial relief that is flexible and adaptive of changing circumstances.
See, e.g., Carvalho, supra,
143
N.J.
565,
We find the reasoning of those decisions to be sound, and determine that the violation of OSHA regulations without more does not constitute the basis for an independent or direct tort remedy. Accordingly, we agree with the court in
Kane, supra,
that “the finding of an OSHA violation does not
ipso facto
constitute a basis for assigning negligence as a matter of law; that is, it does not constitute negligence
per se.”
278
N.J.Super.
at 144,
Nevertheless, OSHA regulations are pertinent in determining the nature and extent of any duty of care. We find applicable in the circumstances of this case the well-established principle that the violation of a legislated standard of conduct may be regarded as evidence of negligence if the plaintiff was a member of the class for whose benefit the standard was established.
J.S. v. R.T.H.,
155
N.J.
330, 349,
Applying that principle to workplace settings, the Appellate Division in
Bortz, supra,
stated that “proof of deviation from a statutory standard of conduct, while not conclusive on the issue of negligence in a civil action, is nevertheless a relevant circumstance to be considered by the trier of fact in assessing tort liability.” 151
N.J.Super.
at 320,
In
Meder, supra,
the court observed that OSHA regulation 29
C.F.R.
§ 1926.16 imposed the same non-delegable duty for workplace safety on a general contractor as had the Construction Safety Act. 240
N.J.Super.
at 476,
The Appellate Division in
Kane, supra,
considered the effect of OSHA regulations on the existence and scope of a duty of care, and stated that general and subcontractors have a joint, nondelegable duty to maintain a safe workplace that includes “ensur[ing] ‘prospective and continuing compliance’ with the legislatively imposed non-delegable obligation to all employees on the job site, without regard to contractual or employer obligations.” 278
N.J.Super.
at 142-43,
The issue thus presented is whether, in the circumstances of this case, any OSHA regulations were applicable to defendant Pat Pavers in respect of the accident that caused plaintiffs injuries, and whether their violation may constitute evidence of negligence. That issue must focus initially on whether OSHA regulations were applicable to Pat Pavers and whether plaintiff was an individual intended to be protected by those OSHA regulations.
*238
The court in
Bortz, supra,
concluded that the State’s statutory imposition of a duty on the general contractor expressed a clear legislative intention “to ensure the protection of all of the workers on a construction project, irrespective of the identity and status of their various and several employers, by requiring, either by agreement or by operation of law, the designation of a single repository of the responsibility for the safety of them all.” 151
N.J.Super.
at 321,
Several OSHA regulations may apply to Pat Pavers in respect of the accidental injury to plaintiff at its work site. We cannot, however, on this record, in the ábsence of a more complete development of relevant facts and presentation of this issue, resolve the applicability of such regulations and whether their alleged violation by Pat Pavers can be considered evidence of negligence. Those issues, we conclude, must be further considered and determined in a trial of this matter.
As a prime contractor, Pat Pavers may be liable for any of its subcontractor’s violations of OSHA regulations as well as its own by the terms of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.16. That regulation states that “[b]y contracting for full performance of a contract ... the prime contractor assumes all obligations prescribed as employer obligations under the standards contained in this part, whether or not he subcontracts any part of the work.” 29 C.F.R. § 1926.16(b). It further provides that “[wjith respect to subcontracted work, the prime contractor and any subcontractor or subcontractors shall be deemed to have joint responsibility.” 29 C.F.R.. 1926.16(c). It also states: “In no case shall the prime contractor be relieved of overall responsibility for compliance with the requirements of this part for all work to be performed under the contract.” 29 C.F.R. § 1926.16(a).
*239 Plaintiff further contends there was a sufficient connection between Pat Pavers and Bernhard Excavating to posit both vicarious and direct liability on Pat Pavers under OSHA as evidence of negligence. Plaintiff argues that Fred Bernhard and Keith Harvilla were employees of Pat Pavers, and that these employees had specific knowledge of the defect in the truck driven by plaintiff, but did not take adequate measures to prevent her from operating it in an unsafe condition. Therefore, according to plaintiff, Pat Pavers’s employees violated duties required by the OSHA regulation for which Bernhard Excavating, as already noted, was cited, 29 C.F.R. § 1926.21(b)(2), which would require it to “instruct each employee [including employees of a subcontractor] in the recognition and avoidance of unsafe conditions,” as well as the regulation that would require it to check all vehicles at the beginning of each shift “to assure that ... [they] are in safe operating condition ...” 29 C.F.R. § 1926.601(b)(14).
Plaintiff also points out that “Bernhard Excavating rents drivers and vehicles to [Pat] Pavers on a per diem basis,” and that Pat Pavers not only rented the truck from Bernhard Excavating but also “rented [plaintiffs] services.” The issue of whether plaintiff was a rental employee of Pat Pavers was raised for the first time by plaintiff in a motion for reconsideration before the Appellate Division, which denied the motion without reference to that specific point. In any event, the record, including particularly the evidence that Pat Pavers did not exercise general supervisory control over Bernhard Excavating, does not support the finding that a rental arrangement or special-employment relationship existed between plaintiff and defendant Pat Pavers.
See Volb v. G.E. Capital Corp.,
139
N.J.
110,
In sum, although OSHA issued a violation to Bernhard Excavating, and not to Pat Pavers, the failure by OSHA to find a violation against a particular party does not preclude a determination that the party nevertheless was subject to a duty imposed by OSHA regulations and that the standards prescribed by OSHA were violated. If it is determined that OSHA regulations are applicable to Pat Pavers under the circumstances, they may be considered in determining the standard of care that was owed plaintiff and whether that standard was breached.
Ill
We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to withstand defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
Brill, supra,
142
N.J.
520,
In addition, the record further discloses evidence that could support a finding sufficient to apply OSHA regulations to Pat Pavers and determine that there were regulatory violations chargeable to defendant. Facts that demonstrate an OSHA viola
*241
tion constitute evidence of negligence that is sufficient to overcome a motion for summary judgment.
Izzo v. Linpro Co.,
278
N.J.Super.
550, 556,
The conclusion that the record discloses evidence sufficient to resist a motion for summary judgment clearly does not foreclose disputes that will present triable issues of fact, For example, Pat Pavers contends that it repaired the truck only at the request of plaintiffs employer, Bernhard Excavating, indicating that it did not breach any duty that it owed plaintiff. It also contends that it had been informed that Bernhard Excavating had fixed the defective cable in the truck before the truck arrived at the work site on the day of the accident, a contention that raises an issue of fact that might, by way of defenses implicating proximate cause and comparative fault, ultimately avoid or reduce liability. The evidence in support of these contentions, however, does not for purposes of defeating defendant’s motion for summary judgment overcome the evidence that supports the existence of a duty to exercise reasonable care under the circumstances and the breach of that duty by Pat Pavers.
IV
We reverse the Appellate Division’s affirmance of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant Pat Pavers and remand for trial.
For reversal and remandment — Chief Justice PORITZ and Justices HANDLER, POLLOCK, O’HERN, GARIBALDI, STEIN, and COLEMAN — 7.
Opposed — None.
Notes
The Appellate Division correctly noted that any violation of OSHA regulations in this case does not apply to American Development (and, by implication, its subcontractors American Management and American Refrigeration), because those parties were not under contract to perform the grading and paving project that gave rise to plaintiff's injuries.
