“A complaint is deemed sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) where no insurmountable bar to recovery appears on the face of the complaint and the complaint’s allegations give adequate notice of the nature and extent of the claim.”
Presnell v. Pell,
With respect to the allegations contained in “Count Four” of plaintiff’s amended complaint, defendants argue that dismissal was proper in that a general contractor’s negligence in hiring an independent contractor to perform construction work is not actionable; alternatively, defendants argue that even if such negligence were actionable, dismissal was proper in that “plaintiff’s Complaint neglects to allege those facts demonstrating defendants’ failure to exercise reasonable care in hiring” the independent contractor.
In determining whether there is any cause of action for the negligent hiring of an independent contractor, the following statement from
Page v. Sloan,
The general rule is that an employer or contractee is not liable for the torts of an independent contractor committed in the performance of the contracted work. . . . However, a condition prescribed to relieve an employer from liability for *278 the negligent acts of an independent contractor employed by him is that he shall have exercised due care to secure a competent contractor for the work. Therefore, if it appears that the employer either knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care might have ascertained that the contractor was not properly qualified to undertake the work, he may be held liable for the negligent acts of the contractor. . . . “An employer is subject to liability for physical harm to third persons caused by his failure to exercise reasonable care to employ a competent and careful contractor (a) to do work which will involve a risk of physical harm unless it is skillfully and carefully done, or (b) to perform any duty which the employer owes to third persons.”
Hence, a general contractor may be subject to liability for an injury done to a plaintiff as a proximate result of the general contractor’s negligence in hiring an independent contractor to perform construction work.
The next inquiry is whether plaintiffs “Count Four” was subject to dismissal for insufficiently pleading the facts constituting defendants’ alleged negligent hiring of an independent contractor. A motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) may not be successfully interposed to a complaint which was formerly labeled a “defective statement of a good cause of action;” for such complaint, other provisions of Rule 12, the rules governing discovery, and the motion for summary judgment provide procedures adequate to supply information not furnished by the complaint.
Sutton v. Duke,
With respect to “Count Five” of plaintiffs amended complaint, we turn to the law on an employer’s liability for the torts of an independent contractor in the conduct of peculiarly risky activities. “[WJhere it is reasonably foreseeable that harmful consequences will arise from the activity of . . . [an independent] contractor unless precautionary methods are adopted, the duty rests upon the employer to see that these precautionary measures are adopted and he cannot escape liability by entrusting this duty to the independent contractor.”
Dockery v. World of Mirth Shows, Inc.,
Since this vicarious liability of the employer for the torts of the independent contractor obtains only when the independent contractor is performing certain kinds of activity for the employer, it is necessary to elaborate further on the kind of activity which will occasion an employer’s vicarious liability for his independent contractor’s torts. On the one hand, this activity must be “work which, as a general rule may be carried out with safety if certain precautions are observed, [but] will likely cause injury if these precautions are omitted,”
Evans v. Elliott, supra
at 259,
[i]t is not essential, to come under the rule, that the work shall involve a major hazard ...[;] [i]t is sufficient if there is a recognizable and substantial danger inherent in the work, *280 as distinguished from a danger collaterally created by the independent negligence of the contractor, which latter might take place on a job itself involving no inherent danger.
Evans v. Elliott, supra
at 259,
[t]he rule in regard to “intrinsically dangerous work” is based upon the unusual danger which inheres in the performance of the contract, and not from the collateral negligence of the contractor . . . [; m]ere liability to injury is not the test, as injuries may result in any kind of work where it is carelessly done, although with proper care it is not specially hazardous!
Vogh v. F. C. Geer Co.,
There also remains the following question: Is the determination of whether an activity is sufficiently dangerous to allow for employer’s vicarious liability one of law, or of fact? In the following cases, the determination was made by the court as a matter of law:
Evans v. Elliott, supra; Peters v. Carolina Cotton & Woolen Mills, Inc.,
In the present case, “Count Five” of plaintiff’s amended complaint alleges that defendant’s independent contractor, W. E. Jackson Construction Company, was negligent in its operation of the ramset gun during construction work, and that the operation of the ramset gun during construction work was an activity involving a “dangerous instrumentality.” Hence, if the operation of a ramset gun during apartment construction were intrinsically dangerous, plaintiff’s “Count Five” would state a legally recognizable claim for relief, to wit, defendants’ vicarious liability
*281
for the negligent torts of their independent contractor in the performance of a peculiarly risky activity. In determining whether an activity is sufficiently hazardous to create a non-delegable duty of taking precautions in its performance, known conditions under which the contract is to be carried out, and the time, place, and circumstances attending the work must be considered.
Evans v. Elliott, supra.
Plaintiffs allegations here, however, state only that the ramset gun was a “dangerous instrumentality” which propels nails, that the gun was being used during apartment construction, and that its use was within the contemplation of defendants, who had a nondelegable duty to supervise its use. There are no allegations of circumstances which would render the activity unusually and inherently dangerous as opposed to the ordinary dangerousness which accompanies countless activities when they are negligently performed; nor are there allegations or circumstances which would constitute an insurmountable bar to a finding that the activity was inherently dangerous. As in
Orange County v. North Carolina Department of Transportation,
We hold that the order allowing defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motions be reversed, and that the cause be remanded to superior court for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
