This appeal arises from an order of the Trial Court (Wyman, J.) granting the defendant’s motion for summary judgment. The issue presented is whether a subsequent purchaser of a home may sue the builder for damages based on the builder’s negligent performance of the original construction contract. We hold that a builder has no tort obligation to subsequent purchasers of a house to prevent economic harm resulting from defects in the house. A purchaser’s action for damages for the cost of remedying defects sounds in contract; accordingly, in the absence of privity of contract between the purchaser and the builder, no action can be maintained.
In 1978, the defendant completed construction of a single-family residence in Peterborough. The clapboards installed on the house were selected by Dennis Balog, the original owner. Balog took possession of the house in January 1978, but sold the house to his employer before the year’s end. His employer in turn sold the house to the plaintiffs in February 1979. The contract between the seller and the plaintiffs provided that the “purchasers agree to accept the premises ... in ‘as is’ condition.”
The plaintiffs took possession of the house in February 1979. Thereafter, they observed that the clapboards were warping and cracking. The plaintiffs complained to the defendant, but the defendant refused to repair the siding. The plaintiffs then hired another contractor to replace the clapboards, and in March 1983 instituted this action, alleging that the clapboards were defective and that the defendant had failed to install them in a workmanlike manner.
The complaint may be read as raising both a claim in contract, for breach of implied warranty of habitability, and a claim in tort, for negligence. At oral argument, the plaintiffs waived the implied warranty issue, acknowledging that there was no privity of contract between themselves and the defendant. They contend, however, that the lack of privity should not bar their negligence action. According to the plaintiffs, a subsequent homeowner is entitled to the same protection as the original purchaser of a house because latent defects, such as defective clapboards, should be known to the builders who handle the materials but are difficult for potential purchasers to detect. Thus, they conclude, the defendant contractor
In their brief, the plaintiffs rely almost exclusively on cases from other jurisdictions that extend an implied warranty of habitability to subsequent purchasers, see, e.g., Richards v. Power craft Homes, Inc.,
Although we are cognizant of the problems a subsequent homeowner may face, we decline to follow the example of these cases and thereby depart from the traditional principles upon which contract and tort actions are predicated. Two decisions from other jurisdictions are instructive in this regard. In Redarowicz v. Ohlendorf
“The warranty of habitability is a creature of public policy. It is a judicial innovation that has evolved to protect purchasers of new houses upon discovery of latent defects in their homes. While the warranty of habitability has roots in the execution of the contract for sale, we emphasize that it exists independently. Privity of contract is not required.”
Id. at 183,
We agree with the dissenting justice in Redarowiez, who stated that allowing an action for breach of .implied warranty in the absence of privity of contract was tantamount to imposing strict liability in tort.
Plaintiffs who lack privity of contract but would otherwise have a claim for implied warranty may under certain limited circumstances sue under a theory of strict liability in tort. See Elliott supra. We have recently emphasized that only the user or consumer of an unreasonably dangerous product, for whom proof of negligence would be practically impossible, may proceed on a theory of strict liability. See Bagley v. Controlled Environment Corp.,
The second case we consider is Cosmopolitan Homes, Inc. v. Weller,
“[T]he ‘contractual obligation is not the touchstone of civil liability in tort. It is only the matrix from which an independent tort obligation may arise.’ A contractual obligation gives rise to a common law duty to perform the work subject to the contract with reasonable care and skill. The*363 fact that a contract may have existed between the builder and the original purchaser of the home does not transform the builder’s contractual obligation into the measure of its tort liability arising out of its contractual performance.”
Id. at 1043 (citations omitted). The court concluded that foreseeability determined the scope of the duty owed and that the builders owed a duty to the plaintiffs to prevent defects in workmanship such as structural deficiencies. Id. at 1045.
We agree that the absence of privity of contract does not necessarily bar a negligence action that arises from improper performance of a contract. See Robinson v. Colebrook Savings Bank,
In support of the proposition that a builder has a tort duty to protect all foreseeable third parties from injury due to its negligent work, the plaintiffs cite Russell v. Whitcomb,
The property damage caused by the defendant in Russell is different, however, from the type of harm alleged in the present case. The plaintiffs’ claim does not involve property damage per se.
Our decision in Morvay v. Hanover Ins. Companies,
We find it inappropriate to extend a similar cause of action in the present case. The construction contract between the defendant and the original owner contemplated no services to third parties, as did the contract in Morvay. Nor was it foreseeable that the plaintiffs would be affected by the builder’s work. Where the potential plaintiff is identifiable, and injury to that plaintiff is therefore actually foreseeable, a duty of care to prevent economic or other loss may extend to that plaintiff. See Morvay supra. To allow any subsequent purchaser of a home to sue the builder in tort, however, would be to subject a builder to the specter of unlimited liability. Therefore, although the law traditionally accords any reasonably foreseeable party a remedy for personal injury or property damage, we hold that no similar remedy exists in tort for economic loss in the circumstances of this case.
In Roberts v. Richard & Sons, Inc.,
In this case, defects allegedly caused by the defendant’s negligence resulted in a diminution of the value of the house. Nonetheless, the obligation to build the house in a workmanlike manner existed only because of the manifested intent of the defendant and the original owner. See Prosser & Keeton, supra § 92, at 656. No contractual obligation ran to the plaintiffs, who did not deal with the defendant. Accordingly, the plaintiffs cannot sue for the builder’s failure to give them the benefit of the bargain.
Affirmed.
