Lead Opinion
Following a serious car accident, Ken and Francesca Bragg, individually and co-administrators of the estate of their stillborn daughter, sued Oxford Construction Company for negligent construction of the road where the accident took place. The trial court granted summary judgment to Oxford based on Georgia’s “acceptance doctrine,”
The record reveals that Dougherty County contracted with Oxford to repave and overlay asphalt patches on a road that was owned and maintained by the County. An engineer who was employed by the County and who directed Oxford’s work ordered Oxford to place a “spot overlay patch” on the area of the road where the Braggs’ car accident later took place. Oxford followed the specific instructions given to it in performing its work and performed its work to the satisfaction of the County. It is undisputed that Oxford was not responsible for the design of the road, nor did it hold itself out as an expert on such design. Oxford just did what it was instructed to do by the County, and the County accepted Oxford’s work when the work was completed. Oxford even observed a problem with the finished product and sought permission to attempt to remedy it, which was denied. Because Oxford performed the requested work according to the specifications given to it by the County, and
Application of the acceptance doctrine makes sense in this case. In fact, the dissent makes no effort to explain why the facts of this case would dictate that a change to this longstanding law needs to be made. Instead, the dissent takes this case as an opportunity to reject this established principle of law, and to propose the ad hoc invention of a new legal doctrine, merely because the acceptance doctrine itself is implicated in this case. This is exactly the manner in which new law should not be created, because it is not the role of this Court to formulate new law in the abstract, as the dissent has proposed here. To the contrary, the law as it exists should be applied to the realities of the case presently before the Court. See, e.g., Brawner v. Sterdevant,
Based on the facts of the case currently before the Court, and based on the fact that the Legislature has not changed Georgia’s acceptance doctrine expressly or by necessary implication, the acceptance doctrine must be left intact here, and the decision of the Court of Appeals must therefore be affirmed. Any consideration of the continued viability of the acceptance doctrine should take place in the context of a case where the facts actually demonstrate why the doctrine proves to be inadequate. This is not such a case, and the dissent’s attempt to create new law here is gratuitous.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The acceptance doctrine provides that
where a contractor who does not hold itself out as an expert in the design of work such as that involved in the controversy, performs its work without negligence, and the work is approved and accepted by the owner or the one who contracted for the work on the owner’s behalf, the contractor is not liable for injuries resulting from the defective design of the work. The exceptions [to this rule] for inherently or intrinsically dangerous work, for nuisances per se, and for work so negligently defective as to be imminently dangerous to third persons, apply in cases where the contractor is guilty of negligence in the performance of its work.
David Allen Co. v. Benton,
Where, as here, Oxford did not hold itself out as an expert on the design of the road, it could not be held liable under any other exceptions to the acceptance doctrine unless it performed the requested work in a negligent manner. Thus, to the extent that the Court of Appeals analyzed the other exceptions to the acceptance doctrine after concluding that Oxford had not been negligent, the Court of Appeals committed error. These exceptions to the acceptance doctrine only apply “in cases where the contractor is guilty of negligence in the performance of its work.” David Allen Co., supra,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Because I disagree with the continued adherence to a judicially-created doctrine
Georgia adopted the acceptance doctrine in the case of Young v. Smith & Kelly Co.,
In the context of a manufacturer of goods, the privity requirement was disapproved in MacPherson v. Buick Motor Co.,
a building or construction contractor is liable for injury or damage to a third person even after completion of the work and its acceptance by the owner where it was reasonably foreseeable that a third person would be injured by such work on account of the contractor’s negligence or failure to disclose a dangerous condition known to such contractor.
Emmanuel S. Tipon, Annotation, “Modern Status of Rules Regarding Tort Liability of Building or Construction Contractor for Injury or Damage to Third Person Occurring After Completion and Acceptance of Work; ‘Foreseeability’ or ‘Modern’ Rule,” 75 ALR5th 413 § 3 (2000). See also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 385 (drawing parallel between contractor liability and manufacturer liability). This rule has been applied “not only to contractors doing original work, but also to those who make repairs, or install parts, as well as supervising architects and engineers.” (Footnotes omitted.) Keeton, supra at § 104A, p. 723. Of the states whose appellate courts have considered the issue, three-quarters have chosen to follow the modern rule.
The majority asserts that the facts of this case do not warrant a reconsideration of the merits of the acceptance doctrine. However, the doctrine provided the framework for analysis of those facts in both the trial courts and the Court of Appeals. This hardly makes the issue “abstract.”
“When the rationales which gave meaning and coherence to a judicially created rule are no longer vital, and the rule itself is not consonant with the needs of contemporary society, a court not only has the authority but also the duty to reexamine itsprecedents rather than to apply by rote an antiquated formula. . . . [Cit.]”
Robeson v. Intl. Indemnity Co.,
I am authorized to state that Chief Justice Sears and Justice Benham join in this dissent.
It appears that the appellate courts of Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, North Dakota, South Dakota and Vermont have not addressed the acceptance doctrine. Of the remaining 44 states, 33 have adopted the modern rule. See 75 ALR5th 413 § 3 (listing 31 states) and recent cases Davis v. Baugh Indus. Contractors,
