OPINION
Plaintiff Joy Davis 1 appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Venture One Construction, Inc. (“Venture One”) on her claim for injuries sustained when, during a remodeling of her employer’s premises, a door, temporarily removed and stored outside of the construction zone, fell on her because it was stored upright and where, if placed there at all, it should have been laid on its side at an angle. Because the district court erred in concluding that defendant had no duty to plaintiff, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Davis worked at a Pilot Travel Center in Monroe County, Michigan. Pilot had contracted with Venture One to remodel certain areas within the Pilot facility. The primary purpose of the contract was to relocate a Subway sandwich shop within the travel center. While construction was taking place, an original door was unhinged, removed, and leaned upright against a wall in a backroom outside of the construction zone. Unhinged doors should *572 have been stored outside near the dumpster so as to be away from Pilot employees and members of the general public.
James Blank, proprietor of JDB Design, a subcontractor of Venture One 2 which performed finishing work on the remodeling job, testified in a deposition that he and one of his employees moved the unhinged door and leaned it in the backroom. He testified that he did not move it out to the dumpster storage area because it was to be used at a later time and that Brian Ellis, the Venture One superintendent on the remodeling project, was aware that the door was stored there.
Ellis swore in an affidavit that-neither he “nor any Venture One employee removed the door in question and stored it in the cooler area [in the backroom].” He further testified that he had no knowledge of the door’s being leaned in that way, but there is a factual dispute regarding his knowledge. Ellis also testified that if he had seen a door propped vertically against an interior wall, he would have recognized it as a hazard and would have required someone to move it. . Greg Kovach, President of Venture One, testified that Ellis, in his role as construction manager, was tasked with remedying hazards outside of the construction zone. Sherlyn Rice, the Subway manager at that Pilot location, testified that Ellis in fact entered the backroom “all the time” and failed to remedy the leaned door whose method of temporary storage he could not have failed to observe.
Remodeling work began on November 1, 2005. Rice testified that the door was removed and placed in the backroom on the first day of the remodeling job. On November 15, 2005, Davis went into the backroom to retrieve a dustpan and broom when the door fell on her back, causing her injuries.
II.
Relying on Michigan law in this diversity case, and especially on
Fultz v. Union-Commerce Assocs.,
The district court ruled against Davis, holding that the door was not a new hazard because the plain language of the construction contract imposed the duty to initiate, maintain, and supervise construction including precautions for safety, and Davis
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had not shown that a duty is owed to her independent of the contract, as illustrated in
Bertz v. Norfolk Southern Railway,
No. 3:03CV7011,
The contract, in relevant part, states:
§ 10.1 SAFETY PRECAUTIONS AND PROGRAMS
§ 10.1.1 The Contractor shall be responsible for initiating, maintaining and supervising all safety precautions and programs in connection with the performance of the Contract.
§ 10.2 SAFETY OF PERSONS AND PROPERTY
§ 10.2.1 The Contractor shall take reasonable precautions for safety of, and shall provide reasonable protection to prevent damage, injury or loss to:
1. employees on the Work and other persons who may be affected thereby;
§ 10.2.6 The Contractor shall designate a responsible member of the Contractor’s organization at the site whose duty shall be the prevention of accidents. This person shall be the Contractor’s superintendent unless otherwise designated by the Contractor in writing to the Owner and Architect.
The district court used this language from the contract to emphasize Venture One’s duties to Pilot to supervise the safety aspects of the job. Per Fultz, the failure to perform a job does not create a new hazard, it merely leaves alone existing hazards or allows contemplated hazards to manifest themselves. The district court phrased its discussion of Venture One’s actions in terms of what it did not do — the contractual duties of prevention and supervision it did not carry out.
III.
A premises owner and a contractor enter into a contract, and a third party is injured on the premises of the premises owner. The fundamental question at issue here is under what circumstances does a duty of care arise between the contractor and the third party? The Michigan Supreme Court “believe[s] [that] the ‘slippery distinction’ between misfeasance and nonfeasance of a duty undertaken obscures the proper initial inquiry: Whether a particular defendant owes any duty at all to a particular plaintiff.”
Fultz,
A seminal opinion on duty by Judge Cardozo explains when a duty of care arises to a third party. “[0]ne who assumes to act, even though gratuitously, may thereby become subject to the duty of acting carefully, if he acts at all.”
H.R. Moch Co. v. Rensselaer Water Co.,
While time and physical proximity separate these decisions, they share the same analytic tradition. The Court in
Fultz
looked at
Hart v. Ludwig,
The rule in
Hart,
adopted and applied in
Fultz,
is summarized simply: the “defendant’s failure to complete his contracted-for performance” does not give rise to a tort action for lack of duty.
The rest of
Fultz
is dicta. The majority in
Fultz
appears to reject Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A(b), which states that liability of a person to a third person arises when that person “has undertaken to perform a duty owed by [an]other to the
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third person.”
See Fultz,
This is a complicated way to arrive at a simple idea that is embedded deep within the American common law of torts and that has been part of Michigan law at least since 1956 with
Hart:
if one “having assumed to act, does so negligently,” then liability exists as to a third party for “failure of the defendant to exercise care and skill in the performance itself.”
After these machinations, we return to where we began with a fuller understanding of the rule in
Fultz.
A contract itself does not give rise to a duty of a contracting party to a third party to perform the services described by the contract. A duty, “separate and distinct” from the duty to perform the contract, arises between a contracting party and a third party when the contracting party creates a “new hazard.”
Fultz,
Our case, then, is straightforward because Davis, the party opposing summary judgment, has presented evidence that raises a genuine issue of material fact on the element of duty. She presents evidence that, while construction was taking place, an original door was unhinged, removed, and leaned upright against a wall in a backroom. The backroom was outside of the construction zone. Pilot employees accessed this backroom on a regular basis as part of their work. Unhinged doors should have been stored outside near the dumpster so as to be away from Pilot employees and members of the general public. The door was moved by James Blank, proprietor of JDB Design and a subcontractor chosen by Venture One, and his employee and leaned, unsecured and upright, in the backroom. Blank testified that he did not move it out to the dumpster because it was to be used at a later time, and that Ellis was aware that the door was stored there. Ellis testified that he did not know about the door, but if such a door was stored in the way that it was, he would have recognized it as a safety hazard. In short, persons working for Venture One increased the risk of physical injury outside of the construction zone to nearby Pilot employees which it did not remedy. Therefore, a duty of due care to Pilot employees from Venture One arose after persons working for Venture One stored the door and left it leaning there.
Venture One’s creation of a new hazard distinguishes this case from
Fultz
and
Bertz.
In
Fultz,
the defendant snow removal service failed to prevent or remove the icy conditions that caused the plaintiffs fall.
The hazard created by Venture One is a new hazard because it was outside of the construction zone and within the area that Pilot employees worked. The district court held that “Plaintiff was injured by the same sort of construction-site hazard that Pilot Travel contracted with Defendant to prevent.” That defendant has assumed contractual obligations does not limit its legal duties owed to third parties in the execution of the contract. Just because a person acts pursuant to a contract does not mean other common law duties disappear. Further, the hazard did not exist on the construction site, it existed in a backroom that was outside of the construction zone. Nobody disputes this fact. Pilot employees who access the backroom off the construction site are like pedestrians who traverse “sidewalk[s], steps, and walkway[s]” which abut the premises upon which the defendant has been contracted to eliminate hazards.
Osman,
Common law duties in tort are determined without regard to contractual duties. Here, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Davis, the contractor created the hazard when persons working for it leaned and left the door unsecured in an area outside the construction zone that it was aware that employees of Pilot used. For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. Joy Davis’s husband, James Davis, is also a plaintiff in this action, claiming damages based on loss of consortium.
. Blank was Venture One's servant.
See Saums v. Parfet,
