The heirs of Marjorie A. Ek appeal the district court’s entry of summary judgment against them in their wrongful death action against the alleged tortfeasor’s employer.
BACKGROUND
Defendant David Hill, who owns a logging operation in Idaho, hired Herrington as an independent contractor to haul logs from a place of logging to two mills. While en route to one of the mills in May 1988, carrying a load that was аt least 10,000 pounds overweight, Herrington’s truck drifted across the centerline as it gained speed at the bottom of a hill. The logs broke loose from the truck and landed on the Ek’s vehicle, resulting in Mrs. Ek’s death. All of Herrington’s brakes were out of adjustment at the time.
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Hill, holding that Ek was not in the class of persons (employees) protected by the Idaho Minimum Safety Standards and Practices for Logging (“Standards”) promulgated by the Idaho *841 Industrial Commission, and that, under these circumstances, Hill could not be held vicariously liable for the injuries resulting from any negligеnce of his independent contractor.
DISCUSSION
This court reviews a grant of summary judgment de novo.
United Steelworkers of Am. v. Phelps Dodge Corp.,
All parties in this case agree that Herrington was an independent contractor. Under the common law, as a general rule, an employer cannot be held liable for injuries caused by the negligence of an independent contractor.
Gates v. Pickett & Nelson Constr. Co.,
1. IDAHO SAFETY STANDARDS
The appellants argue first that the Idaho Standards abrogate the common law rule shielding employers from liability for the torts of their indеpendent contractors. If a statute or regulation imposes a duty on an employer to provide “specified safeguards or precautions for the safety of others,” a court may hold that the employer “is subject to liability to the others for whose protectiоn the duty is imposed for harm caused by the failure of a contractor employed by him to provide such safeguards or precautions.”
Id.
at § 424. This duty can create liability for an employer in favor of only those persons whom the regulation is designed to protect.
Sanchez v. Galey,
By their own terms, the Standards abolish the distinction between employers and independent contractors with respect to independent contractors’ employees. An employer is defined as including
the owner or lessee of premises, or other person who is virtually the proprietor or operator of the business there carried on, but who, by reason of there being an independent contractor, or for any other reason, is not the dirеct employer of the workmen there employed.
Standards,
§ 1.6. Consequently, in
Peone v. Regulus Stud Mills, Inc.,
Our reading of the Idaho Safety Standards persuades us that they provide a comprehensive set of regulations governing the obligations of an employer toward his employees. The Standard describing employers’ general safety responsibilities begins as follows:
a. Every employer shall furnish employment and maintain places of employment which are safe according to the standards as set forth herein.
b. Eyery employer shall adopt and use practices, means, methods, operations and processes which are adequate to render such employment and place of employment safe. Every employer shall do every other thing necessary within the framework of this Code to protect the life and safety of employees.
Standards, chap. A., 3., Standard 3(a) and (b). These paragraphs emрhasize an employer’s duty to furnish safe employment for employees. The last phrase, “to protect the life and safety of employees,” is repeated several times in succeeding paragraphs:
d. No employer shall fail or neglect:
iii. To do every other thing necessary within the framework of this Codе to protect the life and safety of employees.
Standard 3(d)(iii).
g. No person shall fail or neglect to do everything necessary within the requirements of this Code to protect the life and safety of employees.
Standard 3(g).
q. Management Responsibility:
iii. Every employer shall furnish employment which shall be safe for the employees therein and shall furnish such devices and safeguards and shall adopt and use such practices, means, methods, operation and processes as are adequate to render such employment and places of employment safe to protect the life and safety of employees.
Standard 3(q)(iii). Our reading of these sections in context simply provides no evidence that the Idaho Industrial Commission intended to create a duty in favor of the general public in the Standards.
Cf. Cooper,
II. FEDERAL MOTOR CARRIER REGULATIONS
The appellants next contend that federal motor carrier regulations, see generally 49 C.F.R. Part 390, create a duty for Hill that extends to members of the general public. We disagree. The regulations apply to employers “engaged in a business affecting interstate commerce who own[] or lease[] a commercial motor vehicle in connection with that business, or assign[ ] employees to operаte it_” 49 C.F.R. § 390.5. Hill did not “own or lease” the commercial motor vehicle in the ease. Herrington owned the truck. The regulations impose no safety inspection duties on Hill that extend to Herrington’s truck.
*843 III. NONDELEGABLE DUTY
Lastly, we address the appellants’ argument that, under the common law, Hill is liable for Herrington’s аctions because Herrington was performing a nondelegable duty. Idaho has used the
Restatement (Second) of Torts
in developing its law regarding employer liability for independent contractors’ torts.
See, e.g., Peone,
Therefore, the threshold question for application of these exceptions to emplоyer nonliability is whether the work poses a peculiar risk in its normal operation that must be countered with special precautions. This question is a question of fact for the jury, unless, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party in a summary judgment motion, the answer is clear аs a matter of law.
See Fagundes v. State,
Driving a logging truck on steep mountain roads presents dangers that brakes will malfunction or that logs will fall off, as happened in this case. The Restatement suggests that the danger that brakes will malfunction is an ordinary one, requiring ordinary precautions, but that transporting several tons of logs poses peculiar risks that require special precautions in securing the logs:
Thus if a contractor is employed to transport the employer’s goods by truck over the public highway, the employer is not liable for the contractor’s failure to inspect the brakes on his truck, or for his driving in excess of the speed limit, because the risk is in no way a peculiar one, and only an ordinary precaution is called for. But if the contractor is employed to transport giant logs weighing several tons over the highway, the emрloyer will be subject to liability for the contractor’s failure to take special precautions to anchor them on his trucks.
Restatement § 416, comment d. It is undisputed that the logging truck in this case was overloaded by at least 10,000 pounds under Idaho regulations and that the overload, combined with the dеfective brakes, caused the accident. However, there is no evidence that the manner of fastening the *844 logs was inadequate or that it contributed to the accident. Both of the investigating officers at the scene of the accident, Corporal Eric Mescher and Officer Steve Richardson, stated that they could not speculate whether the manner of fastening the logs contributed to the accident. Ek v. Herrington, No. 88-3074, Deposition of Cpl. Eric W. Mescher at 35-36 (D.Idaho July 13, 1989); Id., Affidavit of Officer Steve Richardson at H 7 (D.Idaho August 31, 1989). The plaintiffs offered no evidence that the manner of fastening the logs was defective and have not argued it in the district court or on appeal.
We accept the Restatement’s suggestion that the risk posed by malfunctioning brakes is an ordinary one that an employer of an independent contractor hаs no duty to provide against. Similarly, we hold that the risk posed by overloading a logging truck is not a peculiar risk that arises in the normal course of logging and for which special precautions must be taken. It is a risk that would not arise, but for the independent contractor’s negligence, аnd which can be avoided by the ordinary precaution of not overloading the truck. 5 An employer of an independent contractor is justified in presuming that a careful contractor will not create that risk and, therefore, has no nondelegable duty to prevent it. The duty rests solely on the shoulders of the independent contractor.
Inasmuch as no other cause for the accident is argued by the plaintiffs, we hold that Hill had no duty to protect against either of the possible dangers, malfunctioning brakes and the spilling of overloaded logs, that may havе caused the accident and Ek’s death.
Summary judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Contrary to the appellants’ suggestions, whether the plaintiff is in the class of protected persons is the threshold question of all statutory tort law, not just a component of negligence per se.
See Cooper v. Unimin Corp.,
. In answering other questions which we certified to the Idaho Supreme Court regarding the
*842
Peone
case, the Idaho court pointed out that the Standards may or may not create a duty in employers for the benefit of employees of the independent contractors, but that it had not been asked to decide that question.
Peone v. Regulus Stud Mills, Inc.,
. The Restatement comments make it clear that these sections almost duplicate each other. § 413 comment a; § 416 comments a, b; § 427 comment a. Section 413 addresses the direct liability of employers for not requiring special precautions in their contracts with independent contractors. Sections 416 and 427 address the employers’ vicarious liability for an independent contractor’s failure to take those precautions, whether provided for in the contract or not.
.
See also Castro v. State,
. Comment d to Restatement § 427 says:
[This Section] has no application where the negligence of the contractor creates a new risk, not inherent in the work itself or in the ordinary or prescribed way of doing it....
